--- # See https://github.com/adnanh/webhook/wiki for further information on this # file and its options. Instead of YAML, you can also define your # configuration as JSON. We've picked YAML for these examples because it # supports comments, whereas JSON does not. # # In the default configuration, webhook runs as user nobody. Depending on # the actions you want your webhooks to take, you might want to run it as # user root. Set the rc.conf(5) variable webhook_user to the desired user, # and restart webhook. # An example for a simple webhook you can call from a browser or with # wget(1) or curl(1): # curl -v 'localhost:9000/hooks/samplewebhook?secret=geheim' - id: samplewebhook execute-command: /usr/bin/logger pass-arguments-to-command: - source: string name: '-p' - source: string name: 'daemon.notice' - source: string name: '-t' - source: string name: 'samplewebhook' - source: string name: 'Sample webhook has been invoked. User Agent:' - source: header name: 'user-agent' response-message: | Example webhook executed trigger-rule-mismatch-http-response-code: 400 trigger-rule: match: type: value value: geheim parameter: source: url name: secret # Running an Ansible playbook on pushing to Github, courtesy of Dave # Cottlehuber. - id: ansible execute-command: "/home/ansible/src/ansible/deploy.sh" command-working-directory: "/home/ansible/src/ansible" pass-arguments-to-command: - source: payload name: head_commit.id - source: payload name: pusher.name - source: payload name: pusher.email trigger-rule: and: - match: type: payload-hash-sha1 secret: ..... parameter: source: header name: X-Hub-Signature - match: type: value value: refs/heads/master parameter: source: payload name: ref