One of the holy grails of integrating Drummer with everything is connecting through GitHub. #
I have lots of code that pushes stuff to GitHub, it's how I automate my nightly backups, for example. Or the opmltweets project. It's easy when all I want to do is upload to my own repo. I store the credentials in a config.json file on the server, access the file via Node.js and upload via Node. #
But the problem comes up if I want to do something that works for Drummer users. #
Well, Scott Hanson may have the answer in the form of GitHub Actions, which is something that I really don't understand. But here's Scott's explanation. If you're a GitHub person, here's something for you to help with possibly. #
One of the holy grails of integrating Drummer with everything is connecting through GitHub. #
I have lots of code that pushes stuff to GitHub, it's how I automate my nightly backups, for example. Or the opmltweets project. It's easy when all I want to do is upload to my own repo. I store the credentials in a config.json file on the server, access the file via Node.js and upload via Node. #
But the problem comes up if I want to do something that works for Drummer users. #
Well, Scott Hanson may have the answer in the form of GitHub Actions, which is something that I really don't understand. But here's Scott's explanation. If you're a GitHub person, here's something for you to help with possibly. #
Copyright 2021, Dave Winer.
Last update: Sunday December 26, 2021; 3:29 PM EST.