actions/dependency-submission
Alexis Tual 500e0ee5b3
Add support for short-lived tokens (#224)
The setup-gradle action tries to get a short-lived access token given the supplied Develocity access key.
This key can be passed either with the `DEVELOCITY_ACCESS_KEY` env var or via the  `develocity-access-key` input parameter.
If a token can be retrieved, then the `DEVELOCITY_ACCESS_KEY` env var will be set to the token. 
Otherwise the `DEVELOCITY_ACCESS_KEY` will be set to a blank string, to avoid a leak.

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Co-authored-by: daz <daz@gradle.com>
2024-05-15 16:49:55 -06:00
..
action.yml Add support for short-lived tokens (#224) 2024-05-15 16:49:55 -06:00
README.md Documentation updates (#187) 2024-04-18 09:39:15 -06:00

The dependency-submission action

Generates and submits a dependency graph for a Gradle project, allowing GitHub to alert about reported vulnerabilities in your project dependencies.

The following workflow will generate a dependency graph for a Gradle project and submit it immediately to the repository via the Dependency Submission API. For most projects, this default configuration should be all that you need.

Simply add this as a new workflow file to your repository (eg .github/workflows/dependency-submission.yml).

name: Dependency Submission

on:
  push:
    branches: ['main']

permissions:
  contents: write

jobs:
  dependency-submission:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
    - name: Checkout sources
      uses: actions/checkout@v4
    - name: Setup Java
      uses: actions/setup-java@v4
      with:
        distribution: 'temurin'
        java-version: 17
    - name: Generate and submit dependency graph
      uses: gradle/actions/dependency-submission@v3

See the full action documentation for more advanced usage scenarios.