Skip to content

A GitHub action to synchronize GitHub Teams with the contents of a teams document

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

rmacklin/team-sync

Use this GitHub action with your project
Add this Action to an existing workflow or create a new one
View on Marketplace

Repository files navigation

team-sync

This is a GitHub action to synchronize GitHub Teams with the contents of a teams document in an organization repository.

Usage

  1. Choose or create a repository in your organization for this action. If your organization is already using a .github repository to manage GitHub files like Issue and PR templates across the organization, that's a good choice.

  2. Create a .github/teams.yml file in that repository with the following format:

    designers:
      description: The amazing design team
      slack: "#design-team"
      members:
      - name: Alice Smith
        github: alicesmith
      - name: Bob Jones
        github: bjonesdev
    fighters:
      members:
      - name: Dave Grohl
        github: dgrohl
      - name: Taylor Hawkins
        github: taylorhawk1

    For the team sync, what's important is that the outer object maps each team name to an object with a members array of objects containing a github key. Any other fields can be included in the members objects (e.g. name, email, etc.) but github is the required one that declares which GitHub users should be part of each team.

    If you provide a description field alongside the members array, this description will be synced to the GitHub Team's description. Any other fields can be included alongside these two (e.g. Slack channel, Trello board URL, etc.), though they will be ignored by the action.

  3. As an organization administrator, generate a Personal Access Token with the admin:org scope. Enable SSO for the token if necessary for your organization. (The admin:org scope is necessary to manage GitHub Teams.) If your repository is private, you also need to include the repo scope.

  4. In the repository settings, create a new Secret called ORG_ADMIN_ACCESS_TOKEN to store the token. (The name of the secret is not important, as long you use that name to configure the repo-token secret below.)

  5. Create a .github/workflows/team_sync.yml file like this:

    name: 'Team Sync'
    on:
      push:
        branches:
          - main
        paths:
          - '.github/teams.yml'
    
    jobs:
      synchronize-teams:
        runs-on: ubuntu-latest
        steps:
        - uses: rmacklin/team-sync@v0
          with:
            repo-token: "${{ secrets.ORG_ADMIN_ACCESS_TOKEN }}"

Now your team can create pull requests that update the teams.yml file and when they are merged to main, the GitHub Teams in your organization will be created/updated according to those changes!

Additional Configuration

prefix-teams-with

For large organizations, it may be more appropriate/practical to manage teams within a subdivision of the larger organization. However, team names still have to be unique across the whole GitHub organization. To support this, you can specify the prefix-teams-with attribute in the action configuration:

.github/workflows/team_sync.yml:

name: 'Team Sync'
on:
  push:
    branches:
      - main
    paths:
      - '.github/teams.yml'

jobs:
  synchronize-teams:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
    - uses: rmacklin/team-sync@v0
      with:
        repo-token: "${{ secrets.ORG_ADMIN_ACCESS_TOKEN }}"
        prefix-teams-with: 'foo'

.github/teams.yml:

designers:
  description: The amazing design team
  members:
  - name: Alice Smith
    github: alicesmith
  - name: Bob Jones
    github: bjonesdev
fighters:
  members:
  - name: Dave Grohl
    github: dgrohl
  - name: Taylor Hawkins
    github: taylorhawk1

This configuration would create the teams foo designers and foo fighters (rather than designers and fighters).

team-data-path

By default, the action looks for the team data in the .github/teams.yml file in your repository. You can specify the team-data-path option to change this. (Note that you'll also want to change the paths configuration specified in the workflow definition.) For example, if you want to keep teams.yml in the root of your repository, you could use:

name: 'Team Sync'
on:
  push:
    branches:
      - main
    paths:
      - 'teams.yml'

jobs:
  synchronize-teams:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
    - uses: rmacklin/team-sync@v0
      with:
        repo-token: "${{ secrets.ORG_ADMIN_ACCESS_TOKEN }}"
        team-data-path: 'teams.yml'

The team_sync_ignored property

You can add "team_sync_ignored": true to a team's properties to prevent that team from being synchronized with a corresponding GitHub Team.

Fine print

Note that if you rename a team (in a way that updates the team's computed slug), this action will create a new team with the new name, rather than updating the old team. This action will not delete any teams since doing so is very destructive and difficult to reverse. (Even if you are using this action to manage GitHub teams, it still permits the existence of other teams in the organization that are managed elsewhere.) So, if you want to rename a team in a way that changes its slug, you should rename the GitHub Team before you update your teams document with the new name. Otherwise you'll need to manually delete the old GitHub Team after this action creates a new GitHub Team using the new name.

About

A GitHub action to synchronize GitHub Teams with the contents of a teams document

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published