/unity-builder

Build Unity projects for different platforms

Primary LanguageJavaScriptMIT LicenseMIT

Unity - Builder

Actions status snyk - known vulnerabilities lgtm - code quality codecov - test coverage


GitHub Action to build Unity projects for different platforms.

Part of the Unity Actions collection.


Github Action to build Unity projects for different platforms.

It is recommended to run the Test action from the Unity Actions collection before running this action. This action also requires the Activation step.

Documentation

See the Unity Actions collection repository for workflow documentation and reference implementation.

Usage

Setup builder

By default the enabled scenes from the project's settings will be built.

Create or edit the file called .github/workflows/main.yml and add a job to it.

Personal License

Personal licenses require a one-time manual activation step (per unity version).

Make sure you acquire and activate your license file and add it as a secret.

Then, define the build step as follows:

- uses: webbertakken/unity-builder@v0.11
  env:
    UNITY_LICENSE: ${{ secrets.UNITY_LICENSE }}
  with:
    projectPath: path/to/your/project
    unityVersion: 2020.X.XXXX
    targetPlatform: WebGL
Professional license

Professional licenses do not need any manual steps.

Instead, three variables will need to be set.

  • UNITY_EMAIL (should contain the email address for your Unity account)
  • UNITY_PASSWORD (the password that you use to login to Unity)
  • UNITY_SERIAL (the serial provided by Unity)

Define the build step as follows:

- uses: webbertakken/unity-builder@v0.11
  env:
    UNITY_EMAIL: ${{ secrets.UNITY_EMAIL }}
    UNITY_PASSWORD: ${{ secrets.UNITY_PASSWORD }}
    UNITY_SERIAL: ${{ secrets.UNITY_SERIAL }}
  with:
    projectPath: path/to/your/project
    unityVersion: 2020.X.XXXX
    targetPlatform: WebGL

That is all you need to build your project.

Storing the build

To be able to access your built files, they need to be uploaded as artifacts. To do this it is recommended to use Github Actions official upload artifact action after any build action.

By default, Builder outputs it's builds to a folder named build.

Example:

- uses: actions/upload-artifact@v1
  with:
    name: Build
    path: build

Builds can now be downloaded as Artifacts in the Actions tab.

Caching

In order to make builds run faster, you can cache Library files from previous builds. To do so simply add Github Actions official cache action before any unity steps.

Example:

- uses: actions/cache@v1.1.0
  with:
    path: path/to/your/project/Library
    key: Library-MyProjectName-TargetPlatform
    restore-keys: |
      Library-MyProjectName-
      Library-

This simple addition could speed up your build by more than 50%.

Complete example

A complete workflow that builds every available platform could look like this:

name: Build project

on:
  pull_request: {}
  push: { branches: [master] }

env:
  UNITY_LICENSE: ${{ secrets.UNITY_LICENSE }}

jobs:
  buildForSomePlatforms:
    name: Build for ${{ matrix.targetPlatform }} on version ${{ matrix.unityVersion }}
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    strategy:
      fail-fast: false
      matrix:
        projectPath:
          - path/to/your/project
        unityVersion:
          - 2019.2.11f1
          - 2019.3.0f1
        targetPlatform:
          - StandaloneOSX # Build a macOS standalone (Intel 64-bit).
          - StandaloneWindows # Build a Windows standalone.
          - StandaloneWindows64 # Build a Windows 64-bit standalone.
          - StandaloneLinux64 # Build a Linux 64-bit standalone.
          - iOS # Build an iOS player.
          - Android # Build an Android .apk standalone app.
          - WebGL # WebGL.
          - WSAPlayer # Build an Windows Store Apps player.
          - PS4 # Build a PS4 Standalone.
          - XboxOne # Build a Xbox One Standalone.
          - tvOS # Build to Apple's tvOS platform.
          - Switch # Build a Nintendo Switch player.
    steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@v2
        with:
          lfs: true
      - uses: actions/cache@v1.1.0
        with:
          path: ${{ matrix.projectPath }}/Library
          key: Library-${{ matrix.projectPath }}-${{ matrix.targetPlatform }}
          restore-keys: |
            Library-${{ matrix.projectPath }}-
            Library-
      - uses: webbertakken/unity-builder@v0.11
        with:
          projectPath: ${{ matrix.projectPath }}
          unityVersion: ${{ matrix.unityVersion }}
          targetPlatform: ${{ matrix.targetPlatform }}
      - uses: actions/upload-artifact@v1
        with:
          name: Build
          path: build

Note: Environment variables are set for all jobs in the workflow like this.

Configuration options

Below options can be specified under with: for the unity-builder action.

projectPath

Specify the path to your Unity project to be built. The path should be relative to the root of your project.

required: false default: <your project root>

unityVersion

Version of Unity to use for building the project.

required: false default: 2019.2.1f11

targetPlatform

Platform that the build should target.

Must be one of the allowed values listed in the Unity scripting manual.

required: true

buildName

Name of the build. Also the folder in which the build will be stored within buildsPath.

required: false default: <build_target>

buildsPath

Path where the builds should be stored.

In this folder a folder will be created for every targetPlatform.

required: false default: build

buildMethod

Custom command to run your build.

There are two conditions for a custom buildCommand:

  • Must reference a valid path to a static method.
  • The class must reside in the Assets/Editor directory.

example:

- uses: webbertakken/unity-builder@master
  with:
    buildMethod: EditorNamespace.BuilderClassName.StaticBulidMethod

required: false default: Built-in script that will run a build out of the box.

customParameters

Custom parameters to configure the build.

Parameters must start with a hyphen (-) and may be followed by a value (without hyphen).

Parameters without a value will be considered booleans (with a value of true).

example:

- uses: webbertakken/unity-builder@master
  with:
    customParameters: -profile SomeProfile -someBoolean -someValue exampleValue

required: false default: ""

More actions

Visit Unity Actions to find related actions for Unity.

Feel free to contribute.

Licence

MIT