This repository contains a GitHub action that merges a pull request by
fast forwarding the target branch. The action is triggered when an
authorized user adds a comment containing /fast-forward
to the pull
request.
The ability to fast forward a branch (the equivalent of doing git merge --ff-only
) is needed to have an unmodified, linear history.
More perspectives on the usefulness of fast forwarding are presented
in this GitHub
discussion.
Unfortunately, it is not currently possible to fast forward a branch using GitHub's web UX. GitHub's web UX allows the user to select from several different merge strategies, but none of the strategies fast forward the target branch even when fast forwarding is possible.
The closest sounding merge strategy is Rebase and merge
. But, it
unconditionally rewrites the commits by changing each commit's
committer
field.
That is, it does the equivalent of git rebase --no-ff
. This results
in the commits having a different hash, and destroys any signatures.
With a bit of work, it is possible to prevent GitHub from modifying the commits. Specifically, it is possible to push changes from a pull request directly to the target branch after any checks have passed. Consider:
$ # We can't directly push to main, because it is protected.
$ git push origin
...
remote: error: GH006: Protected branch update failed for refs/heads/main.
...
$ # We can create a PR, wait for the CI checks to pass, then push directly to main.
$ git push origin HEAD:workwork
$ git push origin
But, this approach isn't very convenient.
The fast-forward
action improves the situation a bit by making it
possible to fast forward directly from the web UX by posting a comment
on the pull request.
See the GitHub Marketplace for other actions that do something similar.
By default the fast-forward
action checks if a pull request can be
merged. It adds a comment to the pull request indicating if this is
the case, or if the pull request needs to be rebased. When the target
branch can't be fast forwarded, the action fails. If the target
branch is protected, this prevents the branch from being merged, which
is normally desired.
To run this check whenever a pull request is opened or updated, add
.github/workflows/pull_request.yml
to your repository with the
following contents:
name: pull-request
on:
pull_request:
types: [opened, reopened, synchronize]
jobs:
check-fast-forward:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
permissions:
contents: read
# We appear to need write permission for both pull-requests and
# issues in order to post a comment to a pull request.
pull-requests: write
issues: write
steps:
- name: Checking if fast forwarding is possible
uses: sequoia-pgp/fast-forward@v1
with:
merge: false
# To reduce the workflow's verbosity, use 'on-error'
# to only post a comment when an error occurs, or 'never' to
# never post a comment. (In all cases the information is
# still available in the step's summary.)
comment: always
To actually fast-forward a branch, add
.github/workflows/fast-forward.yml
to your repository with the
following contents:
name: fast-forward
on:
issue_comment:
types: [created, edited]
jobs:
fast-forward:
# Only run if the comment contains the /fast-forward command.
if: ${{ contains(github.event.comment.body, '/fast-forward')
&& github.event.issue.pull_request }}
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
permissions:
contents: write
pull-requests: write
issues: write
steps:
- name: Fast forwarding
uses: sequoia-pgp/fast-forward@v1
with:
merge: true
# To reduce the workflow's verbosity, use 'on-error'
# to only post a comment when an error occurs, or 'never' to
# never post a comment. (In all cases the information is
# still available in the step's summary.)
comment: always
This workflow is only run when a comment that includes /fast-forward
is added to the pull request. The workflow is careful to check that
the user who triggered the workflow is actually authorized to push to
the repository.
If you prefer to disable comments, you can set the comment
input
variable to false
. The comment
is also written to the comment
output variable so it is possible to use it in a successive step. The
format is a JSON document with a single key, body
. Here's an
example:
name: pull-request
on:
pull_request:
types: [opened, reopened, synchronize]
jobs:
check-fast-forward:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
permissions:
contents: read
# We appear to need write permission for both pull-requests and
# issues in order to post a comment to a pull request.
pull-requests: write
issues: write
steps:
- name: Checking if fast forwarding is possible
id: fast-forward
uses: sequoia-pgp/fast-forward@v1
with:
comment: false
- name: Display comment
env:
COMMENT: ${{ steps.fast-forward.outputs.comment }}
run: echo "The comment is... $COMMENT"
This would display something like:
The comment is... {
"body": "..."
}
Additional fields may be added to the JSON document in the future.