This guide is applicable to Dagster+.
In this guide, we'll walk you through setting up Continuous Integration (CI) using Branch Deployments with GitHub Actions.
Using this approach to branch deployments may be a good fit if:
You use GitHub for version control You want Dagster to fully automate Branch Deployments If you don't use GitHub for version control or want full control over your setup , check out the Branch deployments with the dagster-cloud CLI
guide .
To complete the steps in this guide, you'll need:
Organization Admin permissions in Dagster+The ability to run a new agent in your infrastructure . This isn't required if you're using Serverless deployment .The ability to configure GitHub Actions for your repository . This isn't required if you used the Dagster+ GitHub app to connect your repository as a code location .In this step, you'll generate a token for the Dagster+ agent. The Dagster+ agent will use this to authenticate to the agent API.
Sign in to your Dagster+ instance. Click the user menu (your icon) > Organization Settings . In the Organization Settings page, click the Tokens tab. Click the + Create agent token button. After the token has been created, click Reveal token . Keep the token somewhere handy - you'll need it to complete the setup.
While you can use your existing production agent, we recommend creating a dedicated branch deployment agent. This ensures that your production instance isn't negatively impacted by the workload associated with branch deployments.
Select agent type Amazon ECS Docker Kubernetes
Using the tabs, select your agent type to view instructions.
Deploy an ECS agent to serve your branch deployments . Follow the ECS agent setup guide, making sure to set the Enable Branch Deployments parameter if using the CloudFormation template. If you are running an existing agent, follow the upgrade guide to ensure your template is up-to-date. Then, turn on the Enable Branch Deployments parameter.
Create a private Amazon Elastic Registry (ECR) repository . Refer to the AWS ECR documentation for instructions.
After the repository has been created, navigate back to the list of ECR repositories .
In the list, locate the repository and its URI :
Create an IAM user. This user must:
Have push access to the ECR repository, and Have programmatic access to AWS using an access key After the user is created, save the Access key ID and Secret access key values shown on the confirmation page:
Set up a new Docker agent. Refer to the Docker agent setup guide for instructions.
After the agent is set up, modify the dagster.yaml
file as follows:
Set the dagster_cloud_api.branch_deployments
field to true
Remove any deployment
field(s) For example:
# dagster.yaml
instance_class:
module: dagster_cloud.instance
class: DagsterCloudAgentInstance
dagster_cloud_api:
agent_token: <YOUR_AGENT_TOKEN>
branch_deployments: true ## true enables branch deployments
user_code_launcher:
module: dagster_cloud.workspace.docker
class: DockerUserCodeLauncher
config:
networks:
- dagster_cloud_agent
server_ttl:
enabled: true
ttl_seconds: 7200 #2 hours
Set up a new Kubernetes agent. Refer to the Kubernetes agent setup guide for instructions.
After the agent is set up, modify your Helm values file to include the following:
dagsterCloud:
branchDeployments: true
---
workspace:
serverTTL:
enabled: true
ttlSeconds: 7200
If you used the GitHub app to add the repository as a code location, this step isn't required.
Skip to the next step .
In this step, you'll add the required GitHub workflow files to your GitHub repository. The files can be found in our Hybrid quickstart repository or Serverless quickstart repository , depending on the agent you are using.
Copy the following files to your repository (the linked files are shown in the Hybrid repo, there are equivalents in the Serverless repo).
In the next step, you'll modify these files to work with your Dagster+ setup.
In this section, you'll:
Add the agent registry to dagster_cloud.yaml
Configure GitHub Action secrets Update GitHub Workflow files Verify Action runs In the dagster_cloud.yaml
file , replace build.registry
with the registry used by the agent you created in Step 2 .
For example:
locations :
- location_name : example_location
code_source :
python_file : repo.py
build :
directory : ./example_location
registry : 764506304434.dkr.ecr.us- east- 1.amazonaws.com/branch- deployment- agent
In the repository, click the Settings tab. In the Security section of the sidebar, click Secrets > Actions . Click New repository secret . In the Name field, enter the name of the secret. For example, API_TOKEN
In the Value field, paste the value of the secret. Click Add secret . For Hybrid deployments, repeat steps 3-6 for each of the secrets required for your registry type:
Select registry type Amazon ECR Docker
Select the tab for your registry type to view instructions.
DAGSTER_CLOUD_API_TOKEN
- The Dagster+ agent token you created in Step 1 ORGANIZATION_ID
- Your Dagster+ organization IDAWS_ACCESS_KEY
- The Access key ID of the AWS IAM user you created in Step 2 AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
- The Secret access key of the AWS IAM user you created in Step 2 AWS_REGION
- The AWS region where your ECR registry is locatedThe Actions secrets page should look like the following:
DAGSTER_CLOUD_API_TOKEN
- The Dagster+ agent token you created in Step 1 ORGANIZATION_ID
- Your Dagster+ organization IDDOCKERHUB_USERNAME
- Your DockerHub usernameDOCKERHUB_TOKEN
- A DockerHub access token The Actions secrets page should look like the following:
In this step, you'll update the GitHub Workflow files in the repository to set up Docker registry access.
In the .github/workflows/dagster-cloud-deploy.yml
file, uncomment the step
associated with your registry. For example, for an Amazon ECR registry, you'd uncomment the following portion of the workflow file:
jobs :
dagster-cloud-deploy :
steps :
- name : Configure AWS credentials
uses : aws- actions/configure- aws- credentials@v1
with :
aws-access-key-id : ${ { secrets.AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID } }
aws-secret-access-key : ${ { secrets.AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY } }
aws-region : ${ { secrets.AWS_REGION } }
Save and commit the file to the repository.
The last step is to verify that the Action runs successfully.
In the repository, click the Actions tab.
In the list of workflows, locate the latest branch deployment run. For example:
If the run finished successfully, that's it!
Now that Branch Deployments are configured, you can check out the preview in Dagster+. There are two ways to do this:
Every pull request in the repository contains a View in Cloud link:
Clicking the link will open a branch deployment - or a preview of the changes - in Dagster+.
You can also access branch deployments directly in Dagster+ from the deployment switcher :