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Build configuration for Azure Static Web Apps

The Azure Static Web Apps build configuration either uses GitHub Actions or Azure Pipelines. Each site has a YAML configuration file that controls how a site is built and deployed. This article explains the file's structure and options.

The following table lists the available configuration settings.

Property Description Required
app_location This folder contains the source code for your front-end application. The value is relative to the repository root in GitHub and the current working folder in Azure DevOps. When used with skip_app_build: true, this value is the app's build output location. Yes
api_location This folder that contains the source code for your API application. The value is relative to the repository root in GitHub and the current working folder in Azure DevOps. When used with skip_api_build: true, this value is the API's build output location. No
output_location If your web app runs a build step, the output location is the folder where the public files are generated. For most projects, the output_location is relative to the app_location. However, for .NET projects, the location is relative to the output folder. No
app_build_command For Node.js applications, you can define a custom command to build the static content application.

For example, to configure a production build for an Angular application create an npm script named build-prod to run ng build --prod and enter npm run build-prod as the custom command. If left blank, the workflow tries to run the npm run build or npm run build:azure commands.
No
api_build_command For Node.js applications, you can define a custom command to build the Azure Functions API application. No
skip_app_build Set the value to true to skip building the front-end app. No
skip_api_build Set the value to true to skip building the API functions. No
cwd
(Azure Pipelines only)
Absolute path to the working folder. Defaults to $(System.DefaultWorkingDirectory). No
build_timeout_in_minutes Set this value to customize the build timeout. Defaults to 15. No

With these settings, you can set up GitHub Actions or Azure Pipelines to run continuous integration/continuous delivery (CI/CD) for your static web app.

File name and location

The GitHub action generates the configuration file and is stored in the .github/workflows folder, named using the following format: azure-static-web-apps-<RANDOM_NAME>.yml.

Build configuration

The following sample configuration monitors the repository for changes. As commits are pushed to the main branch, the application is built from the app_location folder and files in the output_location are served to the public web. Additionally, the application in the api folder is available under the site's api path.

name: Azure Static Web Apps CI/CD

on:
  push:
    branches:
      - main
  pull_request:
    types: [opened, synchronize, reopened, closed]
    branches:
      - main

jobs:
  build_and_deploy_job:
    if: github.event_name == 'push' || (github.event_name == 'pull_request' && github.event.action != 'closed')
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    name: Build and Deploy Job
    steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@v2
        with:
          submodules: true
      - name: Build And Deploy
        id: builddeploy
        uses: Azure/static-web-apps-deploy@v1
        with:
          azure_static_web_apps_api_token: ${{ secrets.AZURE_STATIC_WEB_APPS_API_TOKEN }}
          repo_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }} # Used for GitHub integrations (i.e. PR comments)
          action: "upload"
          ###### Repository/Build Configurations ######
          app_location: "src" # App source code path relative to repository root
          api_location: "api" # Api source code path relative to repository root - optional
          output_location: "public" # Built app content directory, relative to app_location - optional
          ###### End of Repository/Build Configurations ######

  close_pull_request_job:
    if: github.event_name == 'pull_request' && github.event.action == 'closed'
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    name: Close Pull Request Job
    steps:
      - name: Close Pull Request
        id: closepullrequest
        uses: Azure/static-web-apps-deploy@v1
        with:
          azure_static_web_apps_api_token: ${{ secrets.AZURE_STATIC_WEB_APPS_API_TOKEN }}
          action: "close"

In this configuration:

  • The main branch is monitored for commits.
  • A GitHub Actions workflow is triggered when a pull request on the main branch is: opened, synchronized, reopened, or closed.
  • The build_and_deploy_job executes when you push commits or open a pull request against the branch listed in the on property.
  • The app_location points to the src folder that contains the source files for the web app. To set this value to the repository root, use /.
  • The api_location points to the api folder that contains the Azure Functions application for the site's API endpoints. To set this value to the repository root, use /.
  • The output_location points to the public folder that contains the final version of the app's source files. It's relative to app_location. For .NET projects, the location is relative to the publish output folder.

Don't change the values for repo_token, action, and azure_static_web_apps_api_token as they're set for you by Azure Static Web Apps.

The Close Pull Request job automatically closes the pull request that triggered the build and deployment. This optional job isn't required for the process to work.

When a pull request is opened, the Azure Static Web Apps GitHub Action builds and deploys the app to a staging environment. Afterward, the Close Pull Request job checks if the pull request is still open and closes it with a completion message.

This job helps keep your pull request workflow organized and prevents stale pull requests. By the runtime automatically closing the pull request, your repository stays up-to-date and your team is notified of the status.

The Close Pull Request job is part of the Azure Static Web Apps GitHub Actions workflow, closing the pull request after it is merged. The Azure/static-web-apps-deploy action deploys the app to Azure Static Web Apps, requiring the azure_static_web_apps_api_token for authentication.

Custom build commands

For Node.js applications, you can take fine-grained control over what commands run during the app or API build process. The following example shows how to define build with values for app_build_command and api_build_command.

Note

Currently, you can only define app_build_command and api_build_command for Node.js builds. To specify the Node.js version, use the engines field in the package.json file.

...

with:
  azure_static_web_apps_api_token: ${{ secrets.AZURE_STATIC_WEB_APPS_API_TOKEN }}
  repo_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
  action: 'upload'
  app_location: '/'
  api_location: 'api'
  output_location: 'dist'
  app_build_command: 'npm run build-ui-prod'
  api_build_command: 'npm run build-api-prod'

Skip building front-end app

If you need full control of the build for your front-end app, you can bypass the automatic build and deploy the app built in a previous step.

To skip building the front-end app:

  • Set app_location to the location the files you want to deploy.
  • Set skip_app_build to true.
  • Set output_location to an empty string ('').

Note

Make sure you have your staticwebapp.config.json file copied as well into the output directory.

...

with:
  azure_static_web_apps_api_token: ${{ secrets.AZURE_STATIC_WEB_APPS_API_TOKEN }}
  repo_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
  action: 'upload'
  app_location: 'src/dist'
  api_location: 'api'
  output_location: ''
  skip_app_build: true

Skip building the API

If you want to skip building the API, you can bypass the automatic build and deploy the API built in a previous step.

Steps to skip building the API:

  • In the staticwebapp.config.json file, set apiRuntime to the correct runtime and version. Refer to Configure Azure Static Web Apps for the list of supported runtimes and versions.
    {
      "platform": {
        "apiRuntime": "node:16"
      }
    }
    
  • Set skip_api_build to true.
  • Set api_location to the folder containing the built API app to deploy. This path is relative to the repository root in GitHub Actions and cwd in Azure Pipelines.
...

with:
  azure_static_web_apps_api_token: ${{ secrets.AZURE_STATIC_WEB_APPS_API_TOKEN }}
  repo_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
  action: 'upload'
  app_location: "src" # App source code path relative to repository root
  api_location: "api" # Api source code path relative to repository root - optional
  output_location: "public" # Built app content directory, relative to app_location - optional
  skip_api_build: true

Extend build timeout

By default, the app and API builds are limited to 15 minutes. You can extend the build timeout by setting the build_timeout_in_minutes property.

...

with:
  azure_static_web_apps_api_token: ${{ secrets.AZURE_STATIC_WEB_APPS_API_TOKEN }}
  repo_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
  action: 'upload'
  app_location: 'src'
  api_location: 'api'
  output_location: 'public'
  build_timeout_in_minutes: 30

Run workflow without deployment secrets

Sometimes you need your workflow to continue to process even when some secrets are missing. Set the SKIP_DEPLOY_ON_MISSING_SECRETS environment variable to true to configure your workflow to proceed without defined secrets.

When enabled, this feature allows the workflow to continue without deploying the site's content.

...

with:
  azure_static_web_apps_api_token: ${{ secrets.AZURE_STATIC_WEB_APPS_API_TOKEN }}
  repo_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
  action: 'upload'
  app_location: 'src'
  api_location: 'api'
  output_location: 'public'
env:
  SKIP_DEPLOY_ON_MISSING_SECRETS: true

Environment variables

You can set environment variables for your build via the env section of a job's configuration.

For more information about the environment variables used by Oryx, see Oryx configuration.

...

with:
  azure_static_web_apps_api_token: ${{ secrets.AZURE_STATIC_WEB_APPS_API_TOKEN }}
  repo_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
  action: 'upload'
  app_location: 'src'
  api_location: 'api'
  output_location: 'public'
env: # Add environment variables here
  HUGO_VERSION: 0.58.0

Monorepo support

A monorepo is a repository that contains code for more than one application. By default, the workflow tracks all files in a repository, but you can adjust the configuration to target a single app.

To target a workflow file to a single app, you specify paths in the push and pull_request sections.

When you set up a monorepo, each static app configuration is scoped to only files for a single app. The different workflow files live side by side in the repository's .github/workflows folder.

├── .github
│   └── workflows
│       ├── azure-static-web-apps-purple-pond.yml
│       └── azure-static-web-apps-yellow-shoe.yml
│
├── app1  👉 controlled by: azure-static-web-apps-purple-pond.yml
├── app2  👉 controlled by: azure-static-web-apps-yellow-shoe.yml
│
├── api1  👉 controlled by: azure-static-web-apps-purple-pond.yml
├── api2  👉 controlled by: azure-static-web-apps-yellow-shoe.yml
│
└── README.md

The following example demonstrates how to add a paths node to the push and pull_request sections of a file named azure-static-web-apps-purple-pond.yml.

on:
  push:
    branches:
      - main
    paths:
      - app1/**
      - api1/**
      - .github/workflows/azure-static-web-apps-purple-pond.yml
  pull_request:
    types: [opened, synchronize, reopened, closed]
    branches:
      - main
    paths:
      - app1/**
      - api1/**
      - .github/workflows/azure-static-web-apps-purple-pond.yml

In this example, only changes made to following files trigger a new build:

  • Any files inside the app1 folder
  • Any files inside the api1 folder
  • Changes to the app's azure-static-web-apps-purple-pond.yml workflow file

Next steps