A Concourse resource for pull requests on Github. Written in Go and based on the Github V4 (GraphQL) API. Inspired by the original, with some important differences:
- Github V4:
check
only requires 1 API call per 100th open pull request. (See #costs for more information). - Fetch/merge:
get
will always merge a specific commit from the Pull request into the latest base. - Metadata:
get
andput
provides information about which commit (SHA) was used from both the PR and base. - Webhooks: Does not implement any caching thanks to GraphQL, which means it works well with webhooks.
Make sure to check out #migrating to learn more.
Parameter | Required | Example | Description |
---|---|---|---|
repository |
Yes | itsdalmo/test-repository |
The repository to target. |
access_token |
Yes | A Github Access Token with repository access (required for setting status on commits). N.B. If you want github-pr-resource to work with a private repository. Set repo:full permissions on the access token you create on GitHub. If it is a public repository, repo:status is enough. |
|
v3_endpoint |
No | https://api.github.com |
Endpoint to use for the V3 Github API (Restful). |
v4_endpoint |
No | https://api.github.com/graphql |
Endpoint to use for the V4 Github API (Graphql). |
paths |
No | ["terraform/*/*.tf"] |
Only produce new versions if the PR includes changes to files that match one or more glob patterns or prefixes. |
ignore_paths |
No | [".ci/"] |
Inverse of the above. Pattern syntax is documented in filepath.Match, or a path prefix can be specified (e.g. .ci/ will match everything in the .ci directory). |
disable_ci_skip |
No | true |
Disable ability to skip builds with [ci skip] and [skip ci] in commit message or pull request title. |
skip_ssl_verification |
No | true |
Disable SSL/TLS certificate validation on git and API clients. Use with care! |
disable_forks |
No | true |
Disable triggering of the resource if the pull request's fork repository is different to the configured repository. |
ignore_drafts |
No | false |
Disable triggering of the resource if the pull request is in Draft status. |
required_review_approvals |
No | 2 |
Disable triggering of the resource if the pull request does not have at least X approved review(s). |
git_crypt_key |
No | AEdJVENSWVBUS0VZAAAAA... |
Base64 encoded git-crypt key. Setting this will unlock / decrypt the repository with git-crypt. To get the key simply execute `git-crypt export-key -- - |
base_branch |
No | master |
Name of a branch. The pipeline will only trigger on pull requests against the specified branch. |
labels |
No | ["bug", "enhancement"] |
The labels on the PR. The pipeline will only trigger on pull requests having at least one of the specified labels. |
disable_git_lfs |
No | true |
Disable Git LFS, skipping an attempt to convert pointers of files tracked into their corresponding objects when checked out into a working copy. |
states |
No | ["OPEN", "MERGED"] |
The PR states to select (OPEN , MERGED or CLOSED ). The pipeline will only trigger on pull requests matching one of the specified states. Default is ["OPEN"]. |
Notes:
- If
v3_endpoint
is set,v4_endpoint
must also be set (and the other way around). - Look at the Concourse Resources documentation for webhook token configuration.
- When using
required_review_approvals
, you may also want to enable GitHub's branch protection rules to dismiss stale pull request approvals when new commits are pushed.
Produces new versions for all commits (after the last version) ordered by the committed date. A version is represented as follows:
pr
: The pull request number.commit
: The commit SHA.committed
: Timestamp of when the commit was committed. Used to filter subsequent checks.approved_review_count
: The number of reviews approving of the PR.
If several commits are pushed to a given PR at the same time, the last commit will be the new version.
Note on webhooks:
This resource does not implement any caching, so it should work well with webhooks (should be subscribed to push
and pull_request
events).
One thing to keep in mind however, is that pull requests that are opened from a fork and commits to said fork will not
generate notifications over the webhook. So if you have a repository with little traffic and expect pull requests from forks,
you'll need to discover those versions with check_every: 1m
for instance. check
in this resource is not a costly operation,
so normally you should not have to worry about the rate limit.
Parameter | Required | Example | Description |
---|---|---|---|
skip_download |
No | true |
Use with get_params in a put step to do nothing on the implicit get. |
integration_tool |
No | rebase |
The integration tool to use, merge , rebase or checkout . Defaults to merge . |
git_depth |
No | 1 |
Shallow clone the repository using the --depth Git option |
submodules |
No | true |
Recursively clone git submodules. Defaults to false. |
list_changed_files |
No | true |
Generate a list of changed files and save alongside metadata |
fetch_tags |
No | true |
Fetch tags from remote repository |
Clones the base (e.g. master
branch) at the latest commit, and merges the pull request at the specified commit
into master. This ensures that we are both testing and setting status on the exact commit that was requested in
input. Because the base of the PR is not locked to a specific commit in versions emitted from check
, a fresh
get
will always use the latest commit in master and report the SHA of said commit in the metadata. Both the
requested version and the metadata emitted by get
are available to your tasks as JSON:
.git/resource/version.json
.git/resource/metadata.json
.git/resource/changed_files
(if enabled bylist_changed_files
)
The information in metadata.json
is also available as individual files in the .git/resource
directory, e.g. the base_sha
is available as .git/resource/base_sha
. For a complete list of available (individual) metadata files, please check the code
here.
When specifying skip_download
the pull request volume mounted to subsequent tasks will be empty, which is a problem
when you set e.g. the pending status before running the actual tests. The workaround for this is to use an alias for
the put
(see #32 for more details).
Example here:
put: update-status <-- Use an alias for the pull-request resource
resource: pull-request
params:
path: pull-request
status: pending
get_params: {skip_download: true}
git-crypt encrypted repositories will automatically be decrypted when the git_crypt_key
is set in the source configuration.
Note that, should you retrigger a build in the hopes of testing the last commit to a PR against a newer version of
the base, Concourse will reuse the volume (i.e. not trigger a new get
) if it still exists, which can produce
unexpected results (#5). As such, re-testing a PR against a newer version of the base is best done by pushing an
empty commit to the PR.
Parameter | Required | Example | Description |
---|---|---|---|
path |
Yes | pull-request |
The name given to the resource in a GET step. |
status |
No | SUCCESS |
Set a status on a commit. One of SUCCESS , PENDING , FAILURE and ERROR . |
base_context |
No | concourse-ci |
Base context (prefix) used for the status context. Defaults to concourse-ci . |
context |
No | unit-test |
A context to use for the status, which is prefixed by base_context . Defaults to status . |
comment |
No | hello world! |
A comment to add to the pull request. |
comment_file |
No | my-output/comment.txt |
Path to file containing a comment to add to the pull request (e.g. output of terraform plan ). |
target_url |
No | $ATC_EXTERNAL_URL/builds/$BUILD_ID |
The target URL for the status, where users are sent when clicking details (defaults to the Concourse build page). |
description |
No | Concourse CI build failed |
The description status on the specified pull request. |
description_file |
No | my-output/description.txt |
Path to file containing the description status to add to the pull request |
delete_previous_comments |
No | true |
Boolean. Previous comments made on the pull request by this resource will be deleted before making the new comment. Useful for removing outdated information. |
Note that comment
, comment_file
and target_url
will all expand environment variables, so in the examples above $ATC_EXTERNAL_URL
will be replaced by the public URL of the Concourse ATCs.
See https://concourse-ci.org/implementing-resource-types.html#resource-metadata for more details about metadata that is available via environment variables.
resource_types:
- name: pull-request
type: docker-image
source:
repository: teliaoss/github-pr-resource
resources:
- name: pull-request
type: pull-request
check_every: 24h
webhook_token: ((webhook-token))
source:
repository: itsdalmo/test-repository
access_token: ((github-access-token))
jobs:
- name: test
plan:
- get: pull-request
trigger: true
version: every
- put: pull-request
params:
path: pull-request
status: pending
- task: unit-test
config:
platform: linux
image_resource:
type: docker-image
source: {repository: alpine/git, tag: "latest"}
inputs:
- name: pull-request
run:
path: /bin/sh
args:
- -xce
- |
cd pull-request
git log --graph --all --color --pretty=format:"%x1b[31m%h%x09%x1b[32m%d%x1b[0m%x20%s" > log.txt
cat log.txt
on_failure:
put: pull-request
params:
path: pull-request
status: failure
- put: pull-request
params:
path: pull-request
status: success
The Github API(s) have a rate limit of 5000 requests per hour (per user). For the V3 API this essentially translates to 5000 requests, whereas for the V4 API (GraphQL) the calculation is more involved: https://developer.github.com/v4/guides/resource-limitations/#calculating-a-rate-limit-score-before-running-the-call
Ref the above, here are some examples of running check
against large repositories and the cost of doing so:
- concourse/concourse: 51 open pull requests at the time of testing. Cost 2.
- torvalds/linux: 305 open pull requests. Cost 8.
- kubernetes/kubernetes: 1072 open pull requests. Cost: 22.
For the other two operations the costing is a bit easier:
get
: Fixed cost of 1. Fetches the pull request at the given commit.put
: Uses the V3 API and has a min cost of 1, +1 for each ofstatus
,comment
andcomment_file
etc.
If you are coming from jtarchie/github-pullrequest-resource, its important to know that this resource is inspired by but not a drop-in replacement for the original. Here are some important differences:
source
:v4_endpoint
(see description above)
put
:comment
(see description above)
source
:repo
->repository
ci_skip
->disable_ci_skip
(the logic has been inverted and itstrue
by default)api_endpoint
->v3_endpoint
base
->base_branch
base_url
->target_url
require_review_approval
->required_review_approvals
(bool
toint
)
get
:git.depth
->git_depth
put
:comment
->comment_file
(because we addedcomment
)
src
:uri
: We fetch the URI directly from the Github API instead.private_key
: We clone over HTTPS using the access token for authentication.username
: Same as abovepassword
: Same as aboveonly_mergeable
: We are opinionated and simply fail toget
if it does not merge.
get
:fetch_merge
: We are opinionated and always do a fetch_merge.
src
:authorship_restriction
label
git_config
: You can now get the pr/author info from .git/resource/metadata.json instead
get
:git.*
(with the exception ofgit_depth
, see above)
put
:merge.*
label
Note that if you are migrating from the original resource on a Concourse version prior to v5.0.0
, you might
see an error failed to unmarshal request: json: unknown field "ref"
. The solution is to rename the resource
so that the history is wiped. See #64 for details.