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Receive updates for GitHub events

amudhanamudhan
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2/3/2026
Official Page

Companion workflow for Github Trigger node docs

workflow-screenshot

Receive Updates for GitHub Events

This n8n workflow simplifies staying informed about activities in your GitHub repositories by acting as a webhook listener for various GitHub events. It provides a foundational trigger that can be extended to integrate with other services for notifications, data logging, or further automation.

What it does

  1. Listens for GitHub Events: The workflow is triggered whenever a configured event occurs in a GitHub repository. This acts as a webhook receiver, waiting for GitHub to send data about an event.

Prerequisites/Requirements

  • GitHub Account: You need a GitHub account with access to the repositories you wish to monitor.
  • n8n Instance: An active n8n instance where this workflow will be deployed.
  • GitHub Credential in n8n: You will need to set up a GitHub OAuth2 or Access Token credential within your n8n instance to allow the workflow to interact with GitHub.

Setup/Usage

  1. Import the workflow: Import the provided JSON into your n8n instance.
  2. Configure GitHub Credential:
    • In the "Github Trigger" node, click on "Credential" and select an existing GitHub credential or create a new one.
    • If creating a new credential, follow the n8n documentation for GitHub credentials (typically OAuth2 or Access Token).
  3. Configure GitHub Webhook:
    • After activating the workflow in n8n, the "Github Trigger" node will provide a webhook URL.
    • Go to your GitHub repository settings -> "Webhooks" -> "Add webhook".
    • Paste the n8n webhook URL into the "Payload URL" field.
    • Set the "Content type" to application/json.
    • Choose which events you want to trigger the webhook (e.g., "Just the push event", "Send me everything", or "Let me select individual events").
    • Click "Add webhook".
  4. Extend the Workflow: This workflow currently only receives the event. To make it useful, you will need to add more nodes after the "Github Trigger" to process the received data. For example:
    • Filter events: Use an "IF" node to filter specific event types (e.g., only pull_request or issues events).
    • Send notifications: Use nodes like "Slack", "Discord", "Email", or "Mattermost" to send alerts.
    • Log data: Use "Google Sheets", "Airtable", or a database node to log event details.
    • Trigger other actions: Connect to other services to automate tasks based on GitHub activity.
  5. Activate the workflow: Ensure the workflow is activated in n8n to start listening for events.

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