Run a CI/CD workflow with a Databricks Asset Bundle and GitHub Actions

This article describes how to run a CI/CD (continuous integration/continuous deployment) workflow in GitHub with GitHub Actions and a Databricks Asset Bundle. See What are Databricks Asset Bundles?

You can use GitHub Actions along with Databricks CLI bundle commands to automate, customize, and run your CI/CD workflows from within your GitHub repositories.

You can add GitHub Actions YAML files such as the following to your repo’s .github/workflows directory. The following example GitHub Actions YAML file validates, deploys, and runs the specified job in the bundle within a pre-production target named “qa” as defined within a bundle configuration file. This example GitHub Actions YAML file relies on the following:

  • A bundle configuration file at the root of the repository, which is explicitly declared through the GitHub Actions YAML file’s setting working-directory: . (This setting can be omitted if the bundle configuration file is already at the root of the repository.) This bundle configuration file defines a Databricks workflow named my-job and a target named qa. See Databricks Asset Bundle configurations.

  • A GitHub secret named SP_TOKEN, representing the Databricks access token for a Databricks service principal that is associated with the Databricks workspace to which this bundle is being deployed and run. See Encrypted secrets.

# This workflow validates, deploys, and runs the specified bundle
# within a pre-production target named "qa".
name: "QA deployment"

# Ensure that only a single job or workflow using the same concurrency group
# runs at a time.
concurrency: 1

# Trigger this workflow whenever a pull request is opened against the repo's
# main branch or an existing pull request's head branch is updated.
on:
  pull_request:
    types:
      - opened
      - synchronize
    branches:
      - main

jobs:
  # Used by the "pipeline_update" job to deploy the bundle.
  # Bundle validation is automatically performed as part of this deployment.
  # If validation fails, this workflow fails.
  deploy:
    name: "Deploy bundle"
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest

    steps:
      # Check out this repo, so that this workflow can access it.
      - uses: actions/checkout@v3

      # Download the Databricks CLI.
      # See https://github.com/databricks/setup-cli
      - uses: databricks/setup-cli@main

      # Deploy the bundle to the "qa" target as defined
      # in the bundle's settings file.
      - run: databricks bundle deploy
        working-directory: .
        env:
          DATABRICKS_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.SP_TOKEN }}
          DATABRICKS_BUNDLE_ENV: qa

  # Validate, deploy, and then run the bundle.
  pipeline_update:
    name: "Run pipeline update"
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest

    # Run the "deploy" job first.
    needs:
      - deploy

    steps:
      # Check out this repo, so that this workflow can access it.
      - uses: actions/checkout@v3

      # Use the downloaded Databricks CLI.
      - uses: databricks/setup-cli@main

      # Run the Databricks workflow named "my-job" as defined in the
      # bundle that was just deployed.
      - run: databricks bundle run my-job --refresh-all
        working-directory: .
        env:
          DATABRICKS_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.SP_TOKEN }}
          DATABRICKS_BUNDLE_ENV: qa

The following GitHub Actions YAML file can exist in the same repo as the preceding file. This file validates, deploys, and runs the specified bundle within a production target named “prod” as defined within a bundle configuration file. This example GitHub Actions YAML file relies on the following:

  • A bundle configuration file at the root of the repository, which is explicitly declared through the GitHub Actions YAML file’s setting working-directory: . (This setting can be omitted if the bundle configuration file is already at the root of the repository.). This bundle configuration file defines a Databricks workflow named my-job and a target named prod. See Databricks Asset Bundle configurations.

  • A GitHub secret named SP_TOKEN, representing the Databricks access token for a Databricks service principal that is associated with the Databricks workspace to which this bundle is being deployed and run. See Encrypted secrets.

# This workflow validates, deploys, and runs the specified bundle
# within a production target named "prod".
name: "Production deployment"

# Ensure that only a single job or workflow using the same concurrency group
# runs at a time.
concurrency: 1

# Trigger this workflow whenever a pull request is pushed to the repo's
# main branch.
on:
  push:
    branches:
      - main

jobs:
  deploy:
    name: "Deploy bundle"
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest

    steps:
      # Check out this repo, so that this workflow can access it.
      - uses: actions/checkout@v3

      # Download the Databricks CLI.
      # See https://github.com/databricks/setup-cli
      - uses: databricks/setup-cli@main

      # Deploy the bundle to the "prod" target as defined
      # in the bundle's settings file.
      - run: databricks bundle deploy
        working-directory: .
        env:
          DATABRICKS_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.SP_TOKEN }}
          DATABRICKS_BUNDLE_ENV: prod

  # Validate, deploy, and then run the bundle.
  pipeline_update:
    name: "Run pipeline update"
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest

    # Run the "deploy" job first.
    needs:
      - deploy

    steps:
      # Check out this repo, so that this workflow can access it.
      - uses: actions/checkout@v3

      # Use the downloaded Databricks CLI.
      - uses: databricks/setup-cli@main

      # Run the Databricks workflow named "my-job" as defined in the
      # bundle that was just deployed.
      - run: databricks bundle run my-job --refresh-all
        working-directory: .
        env:
          DATABRICKS_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.SP_TOKEN }}
          DATABRICKS_BUNDLE_ENV: prod