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GitHub and GitHub Enterprise Server access token

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GitHub and GitHub Enterprise Server access token - AWS CodeBuild

Access token prerequisites

Before you begin, you must add the proper permission scopes to your GitHub access token.

For GitHub, your personal access token must have the following scopes.

  • repo: Grants full control of private repositories.

  • repo:status: Grants read/write access to public and private repository commit statuses.

  • admin:repo_hook: Grants full control of repository hooks. This scope is not required if your token has the repo scope.

  • admin:org_hook: Grants full control of organization hooks. This scope is only required if you are using the organization webhook feature.

For more information, see Understanding scopes for OAuth apps on the GitHub website.

If you are using fine-grained personal access tokens, depending on your use case, your personal access token might need the following permissions:

  • Contents: Read-only: Grants access to private repositories. This permission is required if you are using private repositories as source.

  • Commit statuses: Read and write: Grants permission to create commit statuses. This permission is required if your project has webhook set up, or you have report build status feature enabled.

  • Webhooks: Read and write: Grants permission to manage webhooks. This permission is required if your project has webhook set up.

  • Pull requests: Read-only: Grants permission to access pull requests. This permission is required if your webhook has a FILE_PATH filter on pull request events.

  • Administration: Read and write: This permission is required if you are using the self-hosted GitHub Actions runner feature with CodeBuild. For more details, see Create a registration token for a repository and Tutorial: Configure a CodeBuild-hosted GitHub Actions runner.

Note

If you want to access organization repositories, make sure you specify the organization as the resource owner of the access token.

For more information, see Permissions required for fine-grained personal access tokens on the GitHub website.

Connect GitHub with an access token (console)

To use the console to connect your project to GitHub using an access token, do the following when you create a project. For information, see Create a build project (console).

  1. For Source provider, choose GitHub.

  2. For Credential, do one of the following:

    • Choose to use account credentials to apply your account's default source credential to all projects.

      1. If you aren't connected to GitHub, choose Manage account credential.

      2. For Credential type, choose Personal access token.

    • If you chose to use account level credentials for Service, choose which service you'd like to use to store your token and do the following:

      1. If you choose to use Secrets Manager, you can choose to use an existing secret connection or create a new secret, and then choose Save. For more information how to create a new secret, see Create and store a token in a Secrets Manager secret.

      2. If you choose to use CodeBuild, enter your GitHub personal access token, and then choose Save.

    • Select Use override credentials for this project only to use a custom source credential to override your account's credential settings.

      1. From the populated credential list, choose one of the options under Personal access token.

      2. You can also create new personal access token by selecting create a new personal access token connection in the description.

Connect GitHub with an access token (CLI)

Follow these steps to use the AWS CLI to connect your project to GitHub using an access token. For information about using the AWS CLI with AWS CodeBuild, see the Command line reference.

  1. Run the import-source-credentials command:

    aws codebuild import-source-credentials --generate-cli-skeleton

    JSON-formatted data appears in the output. Copy the data to a file (for example, import-source-credentials.json) in a location on the local computer or instance where the AWS CLI is installed. Modify the copied data as follows, and save your results.

    { "serverType": "server-type", "authType": "auth-type", "shouldOverwrite": "should-overwrite", "token": "token", "username": "username" }

    Replace the following:

    • server-type: Required value. The source provider used for this credential. Valid values are GITHUB, BITBUCKET, GITHUB_ENTERPRISE, GITLAB, and GITLAB_SELF_MANAGED.

    • auth-type: Required value. The type of authentication used to connect to a repository. Valid values are OAUTH, BASIC_AUTH, PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN, CODECONNECTIONS, and SECRETS_MANAGER. For GitHub, only PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN is allowed. BASIC_AUTH is only allowed with Bitbucket app password.

    • should-overwrite: Optional value. Set to false to prevent overwriting the repository source credentials. Set to true to overwrite the repository source credentials. The default value is true.

    • token: Required value. For GitHub or GitHub Enterprise Server, this is the personal access token. For Bitbucket, this is the personal access token or app password. For the auth-type CODECONNECTIONS, this is the connection ARN. For the auth-type SECRETS_MANAGER, this is the secret ARN.

    • username: Optional value. This parameter is ignored for GitHub and GitHub Enterprise Server source providers.

  2. To connect your account with an access token, switch to the directory that contains the import-source-credentials.json file you saved in step 1 and run the import-source-credentials command again.

    aws codebuild import-source-credentials --cli-input-json file://import-source-credentials.json

    JSON-formatted data appears in the output with an Amazon Resource Name (ARN).

    { "arn": "arn:aws:codebuild:region:account-id:token/server-type" }
    Note

    If you run the import-source-credentials command with the same server type and auth type a second time, the stored access token is updated.

    After your account is connected with an access token, you can use create-project to create your CodeBuild project. For more information, see Create a build project (AWS CLI).

  3. To view the connected access tokens, run the list-source-credentials command.

    aws codebuild list-source-credentials

    A JSON-formatted sourceCredentialsInfos object appears in the output:

    { "sourceCredentialsInfos": [ { "authType": "auth-type", "serverType": "server-type", "arn": "arn" } ] }

    The sourceCredentialsObject contains a list of connected source credentials information:

    • The authType is the type of authentication used by credentials. This can be OAUTH, BASIC_AUTH, PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN, CODECONNECTIONS, or SECRETS_MANAGER.

    • The serverType is the type of source provider. This can be GITHUB, GITHUB_ENTERPRISE, BITBUCKET, GITLAB, or GITLAB_SELF_MANAGED.

    • The arn is the ARN of the token.

  4. To disconnect from a source provider and remove its access tokens, run the delete-source-credentials command with its ARN.

    aws codebuild delete-source-credentials --arn arn-of-your-credentials

    JSON-formatted data is returned with an ARN of the deleted credentials.

    { "arn": "arn:aws:codebuild:region:account-id:token/server-type" }
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