Finds outdated issues and generates an output data & message.
Intended to be used with a notification action (Slack/Discord/Email/etc look at the example usage).
Works great with the workflow_dispatch
or schedule
action events.
This action is intended for the case where a repository (or an organization) needs to find out what issues have been stale for a while.
By being agnostic on the result, users can use the output to generate a custom message on their favorite system.
You need to create a file in .github/workflows
and add the following:
name: Find stale issues
on:
workflow_dispatch:
jobs:
fetch:
permissions:
issues: read
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Fetch issues from here
# We add the id to access to this step outputs
id: stale
uses: paritytech/stale-issues-finder@main
with:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
# optional, how many days since the last action for it to be stale
# defaults to 5
days-stale: 10
# example showing how to use the content
- name: Produce result
run: |
echo "There are $AMOUNT stale issues in this repository"
echo "$ACTION_ISSUES"
env:
# a number with the amount of stale issues in the repository
AMOUNT: ${{ steps.stale.outputs.stale }}"
# a formatted markdown message
ACTION_ISSUES: ${{ steps.stale.outputs.message }}"
You can find all the inputs in the action file but let's walk through each one of them:
GITHUB_TOKEN
: Token to access to the repository issues. If you are access a different repository be sure to read theaccessing other repositories
section.- required
- If using on the same repo, you can simply use
${{ github.token }}
.
repo
: name of the repository. Example:https://github.com/paritytech/REPO-NAME-GOES-HERE
- defaults to the repo where this action will be run.
- Setting this value and
owner
allows you to run this action in other repositories (useful if you want to aggregate all the stale issues) - If set, be sure to read the
accessing other repositories
section.
owner
: name of the organization/user where the repository is. Example:https://github.com/OWNER-NAME/stale-issues-finder
- defaults to the organization where this action is ran.
days-stale
: Amount of days since the last activity for an issue to be considered stale.- default: 5
noComments
: Boolean. If the action should only fetch issues that have 0 comments.- Short for
Ignore issues that have comments
. - default: false
- Short for
ignoreAuthors
: Collections of usernames separated by commas that, if an issue was created by any of them, will be ignored.- Short for
Ignore issues coming from these authors
. - optional
- Important: If set be sure to connect the names by comma.
- Example:
username1,username2,user3
- It is not case sensitive.
- Example:
- It works great in conjuction with
paritytech/list-team-members
- It can use the output directly to ignore any issues made by a member of a team.
- Short for
requiredLabels
: Collections of labels separated by commas that should be required when searching for a PR.- Only needs to have one of the included labels.
- If you have labels:
A,B
the issue will be taken into consideration if it has:A
,B
or bothA
andB
.
- If you have labels:
- Short for
Only include issues with at least one of the required labels
. - optional
- Important: If set be sure to connect the names by comma.
- Example:
feature,bug,good first issue
- It is not case sensitive.
- Example:
- Only needs to have one of the included labels.
The action has the ability to access other repositories but if it can read it or not depends of the repository's visibility.
The default ${{ github.token }}
variable has enough permissions to read the issues in public repositories.
If you want this action to access to the issues in a private repository, then you will need a Personal Access Token
with repo
permissions.
Outputs are needed for your chained actions. If you want to use this information, remember to set an id
field in the step so you can access it.
You can find all the outputs in the action file but let's walk through each one of them:
stale
: Amount of stale issues found in the step. It's only the number (0
,4
, etc)repo
: Organization and repo name. Written in the format ofowner/repo
.message
: A markdown message with a list of all the stale issues. See the example below.- If no stale issues were found, it will be
## Repo owner/repo has no stale issues
instead.
- If no stale issues were found, it will be
data
: A json object with the data of the stale issues. See the example below for the format of the data.
The message
and data
objects are sorted from oldest last change to newest.
An example of how the markdown would be produced for this repository:
- Stop AI from controlling the world - Stale for 25 days
- Lint the repo - Stale for 21 days
- Help me with reading - Stale for 18 days
You can send the data in this format to a Slack/Discord/Matrix server. You can also create a new GitHub issue with this format.
[
{
"url": "https://github.com/paritytech/stale-issues-finder/issues/15",
"title": "Stop AI from controlling the world",
"daysStale": "25"
},
{
"url": "https://github.com/paritytech/stale-issues-finder/issues/12",
"title": "Lint the repo",
"daysStale": "21"
},
{
"url": "https://github.com/paritytech/stale-issues-finder/issues/3",
"title": "Help me with reading",
"daysStale": "18"
}
]
In some cases, specially in big organizations, it is more organized to use a GitHub app to authenticate, as it allows us to give it permissions per repository and we can fine-grain them even better. If you wish to do that, you need to create a GitHub app with the following permissions:
- Repository permissions:
- Issues
- Read
- Issues
Because this project is intended to be used with a token we need to do an extra step to generate one from the GitHub app:
- After you create the app, copy the App ID and the private key and set them as secrets.
- Then you need to modify the workflow file to have an extra step:
steps:
- name: Generate token
id: generate_token
uses: tibdex/github-app-token@v1
with:
app_id: ${{ secrets.APP_ID }}
private_key: ${{ secrets.PRIVATE_KEY }}
- name: Fetch issues from here
id: stale
uses: paritytech/stale-issues-finder@main
with:
days-stale: 10
# The previous step generates a token which is used as the input for this action
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ steps.generate_token.outputs.token }}
Be aware that this is needed only to read issues from external private repositories.
If the issue is in the same repository, or the target repository is public, the default ${{ github.token }}
has enough access to read the issues.
Let's make an example. We want to have a workflow that runs every Monday at 9 in the morning and it informs through a slack message in a channel. We can also trigger it manually if we want to.
This issue needs to run on 3 different repositories:
- The current repository
example/abc
repositoryexample/xyz
repository
name: Find stale issues
on:
workflow_dispatch:
schedule:
- cron: '0 9 * * 1'
jobs:
fetch-issues:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Fetch issues from here
id: local
uses: paritytech/stale-issues-finder@main
with:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ github.token }}
- name: Fetch abc issues
id: abc
uses: paritytech/stale-issues-finder@main
with:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ github.token }}
owner: example
repo: abc
- name: Fetch xyz issues
id: xyz
uses: paritytech/stale-issues-finder@main
with:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ github.token }}
owner: example
repo: xyz
- name: Post to a Slack channel
id: slack
uses: slackapi/slack-github-action@v1.23.0
with:
channel-id: 'CHANNEL_ID,ANOTHER_CHANNEL_ID'
slack-message: "Stale issues this week: \n$LOCAL_ISSUES \n$ABC_ISSUES \n$XYZ_ISSUES"
env:
SLACK_BOT_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.SLACK_BOT_TOKEN }}
LOCAL_ISSUES: ${{ steps.local.outputs.message }}"
ABC_ISSUES: ${{ steps.abc.outputs.message }}"
XYZ_ISSUES: ${{ steps.xyz.outputs.message }}"
This will produce a message similar to the following:
Stale issues this week:
- Stop AI from controlling the world - Stale for 25 days
- Lint the repo - Stale for 21 days
- Help me with reading - Stale for 18 days
- La la la - Stale for 25 days
- Help with lalilulelo - Stale for 21 days
- Fix the issue with the word 'Patriot' - Stale for 18 days
To work on this app, you require
Node 18.x
yarn
Use yarn install
to set up the project.
yarn build
compiles the TypeScript code to JavaScript.