Action to create, update and close issues based on committed TODO comments.
Features:
- Multiple, customisable comment identifiers (
FIXME
, etc.) - Configurable auto-labeling
- Assignees
- Milestones
- Projects
todo-to-issue
works with almost any programming language.
v5 is the biggest release yet:
- TODO reference handling
- Issue URL insertion
- Update and comment on existing issues
- Support for v2 projects
- Assign milestones by name
- Improved issue formatting
- Link issues to PRs
See Upgrading for breaking changes.
Simply add a line or block comment starting with TODO (or any other comment identifiers configured), followed by a colon and/or space.
Here's an example for Python creating an issue named after the TODO description:
def hello_world():
# TODO: Come up with a more imaginative greeting
print('Hello world!')
Multiline TODOs are supported, with additional lines inserted into the issue body:
def hello_world():
# TODO: Come up with a more imaginative greeting
# Everyone uses hello world and it's boring.
print('Hello world!')
As per the Google Style Guide, you can provide a reference after the TODO identifier:
def hello_world():
# TODO(@alstr): Come up with a more imaginative greeting
# This will assign the issue to alstr.
print('Hello world!')
# TODO(!urgent): This is wrong
# This will add an 'urgent' label.
assert 1 + 1 == 3
# TODO(#99): We need error handling here
# This will add the comment to the existing issue 99.
greeting_time = datetime.fromisoformat(date_string)
# TODO(language): Localise this string
# This will prepend the reference to the issue title
dialogue = "TODO or not TODO, that is the question."
Only one reference can be provided. Should you wish to further configure the issue, you can do so via TODO Options.
A range of options can also be provided to apply to the issue, in addition to any reference supplied.
Options follow the name: value
syntax.
Unless otherwise specified, options should be on their own line, below the initial TODO declaration and 'body'.
Comma-separated list of usernames to assign to the issue:
def hello_world():
# TODO: Come up with a more imaginative greeting
# Everyone uses hello world and it's boring.
# assignees: alstr, bouteillerAlan, hbjydev
print('Hello world!')
Comma-separated list of labels to add to the issue:
def hello_world():
# TODO: Come up with a more imaginative greeting
# Everyone uses hello world and it's boring.
# labels: enhancement, help wanted
print('Hello world!')
If any of the labels do not already exist, they will be created.
Milestone name to assign to the issue:
def hello_world():
# TODO: Come up with a more imaginative greeting
# Everyone uses hello world and it's boring.
# milestone: v3.0
print('Hello world!')
Only a single milestone can be specified. If the milestone does not exist, it will be created.
- ABAP
- ABAP CDS
- Agda
- AutoHotkey
- C
- C++
- C#
- CSS
- Crystal
- Clojure
- Cuda
- Dart
- Elixir
- GDScript
- Go
- Handlebars
- HCL
- Haskell
- HTML
- Java
- JavaScript
- JSON5
- JSON with Comments
- Julia
- Kotlin
- Less
- Liquid
- Lua
- Makefile
- Markdown
- Nix
- Objective-C
- Org Mode
- PHP
- Python
- PureScript
- R
- Razor
- RMarkdown
- Ruby
- Rust
- Sass
- Scala
- SCSS
- Shell
- Solidity
- SQL
- Starlark
- Swift
- TeX
- TOML
- TSX
- Twig
- TypeScript
- Visual Basic for Applications (VBA)
- Vue
- XML
- YAML
New languages can easily be added to the syntax.json
file used by the action to identify TODO comments.
PRs adding new languages are welcome and appreciated. See Contributing.
In the repo where you want the action to run, go to Settings -> Actions (General) -> Workflow permissions
and enable
"Read and write permissions".
Next, create a workflow.yml
file in your .github/workflows
directory:
name: "Run TODO to Issue"
on: [ "push" ]
jobs:
build:
runs-on: "ubuntu-latest"
steps:
- uses: "actions/checkout@v4"
- name: "TODO to Issue"
uses: "alstr/todo-to-issue-action@v5"
The action can insert the URL for a created issue back into the associated TODO.
This allows for tighter integration between issues and TODOs, enables updating issues by editing TODOs, and improves the accuracy of the action when closing TODOs.
A new feature in v5, it is disabled by default. To enable URL insertion, some extra config is required:
name: "Run TODO to Issue"
on: [ "push" ]
jobs:
build:
runs-on: "ubuntu-latest"
steps:
- uses: "actions/checkout@v4"
- name: "TODO to Issue"
uses: "alstr/todo-to-issue-action@v5"
with:
INSERT_ISSUE_URLS: "true"
- name: Set Git user
run: |
git config --global user.name "github-actions[bot]"
git config --global user.email "github-actions[bot]@users.noreply.github.com"
- name: Commit and Push Changes
run: |
git add -A
if [[ `git status --porcelain` ]]; then
git commit -m "Automatically added GitHub issue links to TODOs"
git push origin main
else
echo "No changes to commit"
fi
You will probably also want to use the setting CLOSE_ISSUES: "true"
, to allow issues to be closed when a TODO is
removed.
Please note, URL insertion works best with line comments, as it has to insert a line into the file. If using block comments, you should put the start and end tags on their own lines. This may be improved in the future.
This feature is not perfect. Please make sure you're comfortable with that before enabling.
You can configure the action to add newly created issues to a specified v2 project (i.e., not a classic project).
The action does not have sufficient permissions by default, so you will need to create a new Personal Access Token with
the repo
and project
scopes.
Then, in your repo, go to Settings -> Secrets and variables (Actions) -> Secrets
, and enter the value as a new
repository secret with the name PROJECTS_SECRET
.
Finally, add the following to the workflow file, under with
:
PROJECT: "user/alstr/test"
PROJECTS_SECRET: "${{ secrets.PROJECTS_SECRET }}"
Where PROJECT
is a string of the form account_type/owner/project_name
. Valid values for account_type
are user
or organization
.
All newly created issues will then be automatically added to the specified project.
If you want to add language definitions that are not currently supported, or overwrite existing ones, you can do so
using the LANGUAGES
input.
Just create a file that contains an array of languages, each with the following properties:
Property | Description |
---|---|
language | The unique name of the language |
extensions | A list of file extensions for the custom language |
markers | A list of objects (see example below) to declare the comment markers. Make sure to escape all special Markdown characters with a double backslash. |
For example, here is a language declaration file for Java:
[
{
"language": "Java",
"extensions": [
".java"
],
"markers": [
{
"type": "line",
"pattern": "//"
},
{
"type": "block",
"pattern": {
"start": "/\\*",
"end": "\\*/"
}
}
]
}
]
Next, add the file to the LANGUAGES
property in your workflow file.
Using a Local File:
LANGUAGES: "path/to/my/file.json"
Using a Remote File:
LANGUAGES: "https://myserver.com/path/to/my/file.json"
Multiple paths can be provided by entering a comma-delimited string.
The workflow file takes the following optional inputs, specified under the with
parameter:
Automatically assign new issues to the user who triggered the action.
Default: False
For multiline TODOs, format each line as a new paragraph when creating the issue.
Default: True
Whether to close an issue when a TODO is removed. If enabling this, also enabling INSERT_ISSUE_URLS
is recommended
for improved accuracy.
Default: False
Escape all special Markdown characters.
Default: True
Base URL of GitHub API. In most cases you will not need to change this.
Default: ${{ github.api_url }}
List of custom identifier dictionaries. Use this to add support for FIXME
and other identifiers, and assign default
labels.
Default: [{"name": "TODO", "labels": []}]
Whether to insert the URL for a new issue back into the associated TODO.
See URL Insertion.
Default: False
A collection of comma-delimited regular expressions that match files that should be ignored when searching for TODOs.
Custom template used to format new issues. This is a string that accepts Markdown, linebreaks and the following placeholders:
{{ title }}
: issue title{{ body }}
: issue body{{ url }}
: URL to the line{{ snippet }}
: code snippet of the relevant section
If not specified the standard template is used, containing the issue body (if a multiline TODO), URL and snippet.
A collection of comma-delimited URLs or local paths (starting from the current working directory of the action) for custom languages.
See Custom Languages.
Exclude loading the default syntax.json
and languages.yml
files.
Default: False
A string specifying a v2 project where issues should be added.
Use the format account_type/owner/project_name
. Valid values for account_type
are user
or organization
.
See Projects.
A Personal Access Token with the repo
and project
scopes, required for enabling support for projects.
It should be of the form ${{ secrets.PROJECTS_SECRET }}
. Do not enter actual secret.
See Projects.
There may be circumstances where you want the action to run for a particular commit(s) already pushed.
You can run the action manually by adding support for the workflow_dispatch
event to your workflow file:
name: "Run TODO to Issue"
on:
push:
workflow_dispatch:
inputs:
MANUAL_COMMIT_REF:
description: "The SHA of the commit to get the diff for"
required: true
MANUAL_BASE_REF:
description: "By default, the commit entered above is compared to the one directly before it; to go back further, enter an earlier SHA here"
required: false
jobs:
build:
runs-on: "ubuntu-latest"
steps:
- uses: "actions/checkout@v4"
- name: "TODO to Issue"
uses: "alstr/todo-to-issue-action@v5"
env:
MANUAL_COMMIT_REF: ${{ inputs.MANUAL_COMMIT_REF }}
MANUAL_BASE_REF: ${{ inputs.MANUAL_BASE_REF }}
Head to the actions section of your repo, select the workflow and then 'Run workflow'.
You can run the workflow for a single commit by entering the commit SHA in the first box. In this case, the action will compare the commit to the one directly before it.
You can also compare a broader range of commits. For that, also enter the 'from' or base commit SHA in the second box.
If upgrading from v4 to v5, please note the following:
- Milestones are now specified by name, not ID.
- Support for classic projects has been removed, together with the
user_projects:
andorg_projects:
options, andUSER_PROJECTS
andORG_PROJECTS
workflow settings. - The
todo
label is no longer set on created issues.
- Make sure your file language is in
syntax.json
. - TODOs are found by analysing the difference between the new commit and its previous one (i.e., the diff). This means that if this action is implemented during development, any existing TODOs will not be detected. For them to be detected, you would have to re-commit them, or run the action manually.
- If your workflow is executed but no issue is generated, check your repo permissions by navigating to
Settings -> Actions (General) -> Workflow permissions
and enable "Read and write permissions".
Issues are created whenever the action runs and finds a newly added TODO in the diff. This can lead to duplicate issues if a diff is processed multiple times.
Enabling URL Insertion can help with the detection of existing issues.
If encounter any problems, please file an issue or submit a PR. Everyone is welcome and encouraged to contribute.
If submitting a request to add a new language, please ensure you add the appropriate tests covering your language. In the interests of stability, PRs without tests cannot be considered.
When adding languages, follow the structure of existing entries, and use the language name defined by
GitHub's languages.yml
file.
For full details, please refer to the contributing guidelines.
To run the tests locally, simply run the following in the main repo:
python -m unittest
If you want to fork this action to customise its behaviour, there are a few steps you should take to ensure your changes run:
- In
workflow.yml
, setuses:
to your action. - In
action.yml
, setimage:
toDockerfile
, rather than the prebuilt image. - If customising
syntax.json
, you will want to update the URL inmain.py
to target your version of the file.
The action was originally developed for the GitHub Hackathon in 2020. Whilst every effort is made to ensure it works, it comes with no guarantee.
Thanks to GitHub's linguist repo for the languages.yml
file used by the app to look up file extensions
and determine the correct highlighting to apply to code snippets.
Thanks to all those who have contributed to the further development of this action.
If you’ve found this action helpful and it has made your workflow easier, please consider buying a coffee to help keep it going. Thank you in advance!