Skip to main content

A webhook server to manage Github reposotories and pull requests.

Project description

github-webhook-server

A FastAPI-based webhook server for managing GitHub pull requests workflow. and manage repositories.

Overview

The tool will manage the following:

Repositories
  • Configure repositories setting
  • Configure branch protection
  • Set itself as webhook for the repository
  • Add missing lables to the repository
Pull requests
  • Add reviewers from OWNER file
  • Manage pull requests labels
  • Check when the pull request is ready to be merged
  • Build container from Dockerfile when pull request is merged
  • Build container from Dockerfile when new release is pushed
  • Push new release to PyPI when new release is pushed
  • Open an issue for each pull request
  • Add pull request size label
Available user actions
  • Mark pull request as WIP by comment /wip to the pull request, To remove it from the pull request comment /wip cancel to the pull request.
  • Block merging of pull request by comment /hold, To un-block merging of pull request comment /hold cancel.
  • Mark pull request as verified by comment /verified to the pull request, to un-verify comment /verified cancel to the pull request.
    • verified label removed on each new commit push.
  • Cherry pick a merged pull request comment /cherry-pick in the pull request.
    • Multiple target branches can be cherry-picked, separated by spaces. (/cherry-pick branch1 branch2)
    • Cherry-pick will be started when pull request is merged
  • Build and push container image command /build-and-push-container in the pull request (tag will be the pull request number).
    • You can add extra args to the Podman build command
      • Example: /build-and-push-container --build-arg OPENSHIFT_PYTHON_WRAPPER_COMMIT=<commit_hash>
  • Add a label by comment use /, to remove, use / cancel
  • Assign reviewers based on OWNERS file use /assign-reviewers
  • Check if pull request can be merged use /check-can-merge

Pre-build container images available in:

  • quay.io/myakove/github-webhook-server

Build container

Webhook server to manage GitHub repositories. On start, it will configure the following for each repository:

  • Set branch protection based on config.yaml

Private repositories are not supported.

Build container

Using podman:

podman build --format docker -t github-webhook-server .

Using docker:

docker build -t github-webhook-server .

Setup

example.config.yaml
docker-compose-example.yaml

Getting started

Setup

Before running the application, ensure to set the following environment variables and configuration file:

  • WEBHOOK_SERVER_LOG_FILE: Path to the log file where the server logs are to be stored.
  • WEBHOOK_SERVER_DATA_DIR: Path to the data directory where the config.yaml file is located.
  • WEBHOOK_SERVER_LOG_LEVEL: App log level.
  • config.yaml: Configuration file that contains settings for the server and repositories, which should be placed in the WEBHOOK_SERVER_DATA_DIR directory.

Follow the instructions to build the container using either podman or docker as described in the Build container section. Once that is done, proceed with the configurations outlined below.

Config file

Minimum config to get started

github-app-id: 123456
webhook_ip: https://IP or FQDN
github-toekns:
  - <GITHIB TOKEN1>

repositories:
  my-repository-name:
    name: my-org/my-repository-name
    protected-branches:
      main: []
  • github-app-id: The ID of the GitHub app. Need to add the APP to the repository.

  • name: repository full name (org or user/repository name)

  • webhook_ip: Ip or FQDN where this app will run, this will be added as webhook in the repository setting

  • github-toekns: List of admin users token for the repositories

  • If slack_webhook_url configured for the repository a slack massages will be sent to the configured channel about new releases to pypi, new containers that was pushed

slack_webhook_url: https://hooks.slack.com/services/<channel>

if pypi configured for the repository a new version will be pushed to pypi on new GitHub release

  • token: pypi token with push permissions
  • tool: The tool to use to build the package, can be twine or poetry
pypi:
  token: pypi-token
  tool: twine

if tox configured for the repository a tox job will run on each push and new commits

  • tox: The tox tests to run, can be set of tests separated by , or all to run all tests defined in tox.ini
tox: all
tox_python_version: python3.11 # if passed run on specified python version else run on default

Top level array which define the defaults required check runs for all the repositories

default-status-checks:
  - "WIP"
  - "dpulls"
  - "SonarCloud Code Analysis"
  - "can-be-merged"
protected-branches:
  main: []

This tool configure branch protection and set required to be run for each branch to pass before the pull request can be merged

if the repository have the file .pre-commit-config.yaml then pre-commit.ci - pr will be added, can be excluded by set it in exclude-runs

  • protected-branches: array of branches to set protection
  • branch name: List of required to be run to set for the branch, when empty set default-status-checks as required
  • include-runs: Only include those runs as required
  • exclude-runs: Exclude those runs from the default-status-checks

By default, we create a verified_job run, for each pull request the owner needs to comment /verified to mark the pull request as verified In order to not add this job set verified_job to false

verified_job: false

if container is configured for the repository we create build-container run that will build the container on each pull request push/commit Once the pull request is merged, the container will be build and push to the repository if release is set to true a new container will be pushed with the release version as the tag if the merged pull request is in any other branch than main or master the tag will be set to branch name, otherwise tag will be used

  • username: User with push permissions to the repository
  • password: The password for the username
  • repository: the repository to push the container, for example quay.io/myakove/github-webhook-server
  • tag: The container tag to use when pushing the container
  • release: if true a new container will be pushed with the release version as the tag
container:
  username: username
  password: password
  repository: repository path
  tag: latest
  release: true

If docker is configured for the repository we log in to docker.io to increase pull rate limit

docker:
  username: username
  password: password

if Jira is configured for the repository we create a new issue (story) for the pull request and assign it to the owner. On new commit create closed sub-task under the pull request story with the commiter as assignee On reviewed pull request create closed sub-task under the pull request story with the reviewer as assignee

  • server: FQDN Jira server url
  • project: project key to open the issue
  • token: Jira token
  • epic: epic name, if provided a new issue will be created under the epic
  • user-mapping: mapping from github username to jira username if different

jira setting can be placed as global (for all repositories) or per repository. jira in repository setting will override jira in global setting for the repository

jira:
  server: jira server url
  project: project key to open the issue
  token: jira token
  epic: epic name # Optional
  user-mapping:
    github username: jira username

To enable jira for a repository, set jira-tracking: true in repository settings

repositories:
  my-repository:
    jira-tracking: true

Supported actions

Following actions are done automatically:

  • Add reviewers from OWNERS file, support add different reviewers based on files/folders.
  • Set pull request size label.
  • New issue is created for the pull request.
  • Issues get closed when pull request is merged/closed.

OWNERS file example

approvers:
  - myakove
  - rnetser
reviewers:
  any: # will be added to all pull requests
    - myakove
    - rnetser
  files: # will be added to pull requests if files in the list are changed
    Dockerfile:
      - myakove
  folders: # will be added to pull requests if folders in the list are changed
    webhook_server_container/libs: # path is relative to the repository root
      - myakove

Supported user actions via adding comment

  • /verified: to verify a pull request
  • /verified cancel: to undo verify
  • /cherry-pick <target_branch_name>: cherry-pick a merged pull request against a target branch
    • Multiple target branches are allowed, separated by spaces
    • If the current pull request is nor merged label will be added and once the pull request is merged it will be cherry-picked
  • /retest tox: run tox
  • /retest build-container: run build-container
  • /retest python-module-install: run python-module-install command
  • /retest all: run all tests
  • /build-and-push-container: build and push container image (tag will be the pull request number)
    • You can add extra args to the Podman build command
      • Example: /build-and-push-container --build-arg OPENSHIFT_PYTHON_WRAPPER_COMMIT=<commit_hash>
  • /assign-reviewers: assign reviewers based on OWNERS file

Supported user labels

Usage:

  • /<label name>: add a label to a pull request
  • /<label name> cancel: remove label

Supported labels:

  • hold
  • verified
  • wip
  • lgtm
  • approve

Note

  • verified label removed on each new commit push.
  • Cherry-picking is supported only on merged pull requests

Issues

  • New issues can be created for this project here

Main Functionalities

Logging Setup

The webhook server configures custom logging with color-coded log level names to enhance readability. It also supports optional logging to a file. See example-config for more details.

Webhook Creation

Webhooks are automatically created for GitHub repositories based on settings defined in webhook.py. These webhooks enable real-time integration with GitHub events such as push, pull requests, and more.

Usage Guide

To use the webhook server, first prepare the config.yaml file with the necessary repository and server configurations. Set the required environment variables, including WEBHOOK_SERVER_DATA_DIR. Build and start the server using the instructions in the 'Build container' section.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

github_webhook_server-1.0.75.tar.gz (108.8 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

File details

Details for the file github_webhook_server-1.0.75.tar.gz.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for github_webhook_server-1.0.75.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 315aeb2ef8b177f3a1aed9569d42cb8664e105eada5f1128b2aade4930e866c1
MD5 4dff8b9f30221a9e6d22873e30d8d3bb
BLAKE2b-256 3e619f39996c167f28a805fd883f026ab72ba74d2e173bcb1f2d0ac3f4f653f2

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page