This action was deprecated on 2023-09-08 and will no longer receive support or updates.
This action connects to an on-premises hosted windows machine and executes a PowerShell script.
Parameter | Is Required | Description |
---|---|---|
script-path |
true | The local repository path to the script to be executed on the remote machine |
script-arguments |
false | A pipe delimited string, | that contains the arguments for the script. Example: arg1 | arg2 | arg3 |
server |
true | The name of the target server |
service-account-id |
true | The service account name |
service-account-password |
true | The service account password |
The remote script execution action uses Web Services for Management, WSMan, and Windows Remote Management, WinRM, to create remote administrative sessions. Because of this, Windows Action Runners, runs-on: [windows-2019]
, must be used. If the IIS server target is on a local network that is not publicly available, then specialized self-hosted runners, runs-on: [self-hosted, windows-2019]
, will need to be used to broker commands to the server.
Inbound secure WinRm network traffic (TCP port 5986) must be allowed from the GitHub Actions Runners virtual network so that remote sessions can be received.
Prep the remote IIS server to accept WinRM management calls. In general the IIS server needs to have a WSMan listener that looks for incoming WinRM calls. Firewall exceptions need to be added for the secure WinRM TCP ports, and non-secure firewall rules should be disabled. More detailed information on the preparation of an on-prem server can be found in this article: PowerShell Remoting over HTTPS with a self-signed SSL certificate
Here is an example script that would be run on the IIS server:
$Cert = New-SelfSignedCertificate -CertstoreLocation Cert:\LocalMachine\My -DnsName <<ip-address|fqdn-host-name>>
Export-Certificate -Cert $Cert -FilePath C:\temp\<<cert-name>>
Enable-PSRemoting -SkipNetworkProfileCheck -Force
# Check for HTTP listeners
dir wsman:\localhost\listener
# If HTTP Listeners exist, remove them
Get-ChildItem WSMan:\Localhost\listener | Where -Property Keys -eq "Transport=HTTP" | Remove-Item -Recurse
# If HTTPs Listeners don't exist, add one
New-Item -Path WSMan:\LocalHost\Listener -Transport HTTPS -Address * -CertificateThumbPrint $Cert.Thumbprint –Force
# This allows old WinRm hosts to use port 443
Set-Item WSMan:\localhost\Service\EnableCompatibilityHttpsListener -Value true
# Make sure an HTTPs inbound rule is allowed
New-NetFirewallRule -DisplayName "Windows Remote Management (HTTPS-In)" -Name "Windows Remote Management (HTTPS-In)" -Profile Any -LocalPort 5986 -Protocol TCP
# For security reasons, you might want to disable the firewall rule for HTTP that *Enable-PSRemoting* added:
Disable-NetFirewallRule -DisplayName "Windows Remote Management (HTTP-In)"
ip-address
orfqdn-host-name
can be used for theDnsName
property in the certificate creation. It should be the name that the actions runner will use to call to the IIS server.cert-name
can be any name. This file will used to secure the traffic between the actions runner and the IIS server
...
jobs:
execute-remote-script:
runs-on: [windows-2019]
env:
server: 'remote-server.domain.com'
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Execute Script
# You may also reference the major or major.minor version
uses: im-open/remote-windows-machine-script-execution@v2.0.3
with:
script-path: './execute-script.ps1'
script-arguments: 'arg1|arg2|arg3'
server: ${{ env.server }}
service-account-id: ${{ secrets.iis_admin_user }}
service-account-password: ${{ secrets.iis_admin_password }}
...
It's important to note that the contents of the script are:
...copied into a script block and the script block is run on each of the remote computers. This procedure is equivalent to using the ScriptBlock parameter to submit the contents of the script.[1]
When creating PRs, please review the following guidelines:
- The action code does not contain sensitive information.
- At least one of the commit messages contains the appropriate
+semver:
keywords listed under Incrementing the Version for major and minor increments. - The README.md has been updated with the latest version of the action. See Updating the README.md for details.
This repo uses git-version-lite in its workflows to examine commit messages to determine whether to perform a major, minor or patch increment on merge if source code changes have been made. The following table provides the fragment that should be included in a commit message to active different increment strategies.
Increment Type | Commit Message Fragment |
---|---|
major | +semver:breaking |
major | +semver:major |
minor | +semver:feature |
minor | +semver:minor |
patch | default increment type, no comment needed |
The files and directories that are considered source code are listed in the files-with-code
and dirs-with-code
arguments in both the build-and-review-pr and increment-version-on-merge workflows.
If a PR contains source code changes, the README.md should be updated with the latest action version. The build-and-review-pr workflow will ensure these steps are performed when they are required. The workflow will provide instructions for completing these steps if the PR Author does not initially complete them.
If a PR consists solely of non-source code changes like changes to the README.md
or workflows under ./.github/workflows
, version updates do not need to be performed.
If changes are made to the action's source code, the usage examples section of this file should be updated with the next version of the action. Each instance of this action should be updated. This helps users know what the latest tag is without having to navigate to the Tags page of the repository. See Incrementing the Version for details on how to determine what the next version will be or consult the first workflow run for the PR which will also calculate the next version.
This project has adopted the im-open's Code of Conduct.
Copyright © 2023, Extend Health, LLC. Code released under the MIT license.