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SwiftCICD

Note: This project is in its very early stages. Feel free to use it and submit issues with questions or ideas. Pull requests may or may not be accepted while the basic infrastructure is still under active development.

SwiftCICD is a CI/CD scheme written in Swift that leverages the Swift ecosystem. It is designed to run on different CICD platforms. The only supported platform currently is GitHub Actions. Support for other platforms will be added in the future.

Getting Started

GitHub Actions

This guide assumes that you are familiar with the basics of GitHub Actions. If you're new to GitHub Actions, you can learn about them here.

By the end of this guide, you should have a directory structure that looks like this:

.github/workflows/
├─ cicd/
│  ├─ Package.swift
│  ├─ CICD.swift
├─ cicd.yml

1. Swift Package

In order to get started with SwiftCICD using GitHub Actions, you'll first need to create your SwiftCICD executable. This is done by creating a new Swift Package which vends an executable target. Create a new directory at .github/workflows/cicd.

You can name and place your package wherever you want, but if you use .github/workflows/cicd you won't have to specify the package-path parameter later in your workflow file since that is the default value.

Once you've created your package's directory, create the package with an empty manifest by running:

cd .github/workflows/cicd
swift package init --type empty

Then paste the following into the package manifest:

.github/workflows/cicd/Package.swift

// swift-tools-version: 5.7

import PackageDescription

let package = Package(
    name: "cicd",
    platforms: [.macOS(.v13)],
    products: [
        .executable(name: "cicd", targets: ["cicd"])
    ],
    dependencies: [
        .package(url: "https://github.com/swiftcicd/swift-cicd", branch: "main")
    ],
    targets: [
        .executableTarget(
            name: "cicd",
            dependencies: [.product(name: "SwiftCICD", package: "swift-cicd")],
            path: "."
        )
    ]
)

This package manifest creates a new pacakge named cicd and vends an executable product (also named cicd.) The executable target depends on SwiftCICD from the swift-cicd package. Note that by specifying "." as the path parameter of the executable target, we are able remove an additional layer of directory structure. In doing so, the sources for the executable can be placed in the same directory as the package manifest itself.

2. Executable CICD File

Next, create a file in .github/workflows/cicd named CICD.swift. This is the file where you'll define your CICD actions. Let's get started by building and testing an Xcode project.

.github/workflows/cicd/CICD.swift

import SwiftCICD

@main
struct CICD: MainAction, XcodeAction {
    var body: some Action {
        Xcode.Build()
        Xcode.Test(withoutBuilding: true)
    }
}

In this CICD file we define a main action named CICD. When it runs, it will build and then test the project found at the root of the repository.

// TODO: Make a section that describes the automatic discovery logic of Xcode containers. (Xcode.swift, ContextValues.getDefaultXcodeContainer.)

3. GitHub Action Workflow

Lastly, in order to run SwiftCICD, you'll need to create a workflow. Create a file named cicd.yml (you can name your workflow file whatever you want) and place it in the .github/workflows/ directory. Your workflow triggers will likely vary depending on what actions you want to take and when. But for the sake of simplicity in this guide, we'll trigger the workflow whenever a new commit is pushed to main.

.github/workflows/cicd.yml

name: CI/CD

on:
  push:
    branches: main

jobs:
  swift-cicd:
    name: SwiftCICD
    runs-on: macos-13
    steps:
    - uses: actions/checkout@v3
    - uses: swiftcicd/github-action@main

This workflow file has two steps that use pre-built actions. The first step checks out the repo. The second step (- uses: swiftcicd/github-action@main) runs SwiftCICD. This action has an input parameter package-path which is the path to the directory containing your SwiftCICD executable (the directory which contains your Package.swift).

With that, whenever a new commit is pushed to main, GitHub Actions will run your SwiftCICD action which builds and tests the Xcode project. There's a lot more that you can do with SwiftCICD like importing signing assets and uploading release builds to App Store Connect, and on. Feel free to explore the built-in actions in Sources/SwiftCICDActions/.

Next Steps

At this point, you should have a working CICD workflow running in GitHub Actions. Albeit, a very simple one. As with any CICD workflow, things can get complex quite quickly. You may want to check out the following sections for more information on what you can do next.

  • Signing
  • Uploading to App Store Connect
  • Troubleshooting

Running Locally

Building and running locally is easy since SwiftCICD assumes it is running locally until a specific environment variable is added by the platform runner (SWIFT_CICD_CI). You should override the local working directory by either:

  1. Set a LOCAL_WORKING_DIRECTORY environment variable to the root of your project.
  2. Use a custom working directory by choose Product > Scheme > Edit Scheme > Run > Options > Working Directory > "Use custom working directory" and set it to the root of your project.

Signing

// TODO: Secrets needed: App Store Connect API Key, Certificate, Provisioning Profile. How to get each one.

1. GitHub Action Secrets

// TODO: Overview of how to add secrets, and which secrets to add. Tips (including base64 encoding non-text files.) Inject secrets into the environment in the cicd.yml file.

2. Import Signing Assets

// TODO: Overview of the Signing.ImportSigningAssets step. How to read secrets.

3. Using Signing Assets

// TODO:

Uploading to App Store Connect

// TODO: Overview of Xcode.ArchiveExportUpload step. Prequisites.

Troublehsooting

// TODO: Common errors right now. Need to manually choose Xcode 15 by running Xcode.Select(version: "15.0") while the macos13 GitHub Runner defaults to Xcode 14.3

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