Implements an all-in-one GitHub Action that can manage multiple labels for both Pull Requests and Issues using configurable matching rules. Available conditions:
- Age: label based on the age of a PR or Issue
- Author can merge: label based on whether the author can merge the PR
- Author is member of team: label based on whether the author is an active member of the given team
- Authors: label based on the PR/Issue authors
- Base branch: label based on the PR's base branch name
- Body: label based on the PR/Issue body
- Branch: label based on the PR's branch name
- Draft: label based on whether the PR is a draft
- Files: label based on the files modified in the PR
- Last modified: label based on the last modification to a PR or Issue
- Mergeable: label based on whether the PR is mergeable
- Size: label based on the PR size, allowing file exclusions
- Title: label based on the PR/Issue title
- Type: label based on record type (PR or Issue)
Please consider supporting the project if your organization finds it useful, you can do this through GitHub Sponsors. Sponsorships also help speed up bug fixes or new features.
Thanks to Launchgood and others that preferred to remain private for supporting this project!
The action is configured by adding a file .github/labeler.yml
(which
you can override). The file contains matching rules expanded in the
Configuration
section below.
The action will strive to maintain backwards compatibility with older configuration versions. It is nevertheless encouraged to update your configuration files to benefit from newer features. Please follow our releases page to stay up to date.
Add GITHUB_API_HOST
to your env variables, it should be in the form
http(s)://[hostname]/
Please consider sponsoring the project if you're using Labeler in your organization!
To trigger the action on events, add a file .github/workflows/main.yml
to your repository:
name: Label PRs
on:
- pull_request
- issues
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: srvaroa/labeler@master
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: "${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}"
Using @master
will run the latest available release. Feel free to pin
this to a specific version from the releases
page. We also maintain a
floating tag on the major v1
. This gets updated whenever a new
minor/patch v1.x.y version is released.
Use the on
clause
to control when to run it.
- To trigger on PR events, use
pull_request
. to trigger on PR events and run on the merge commit of the PR. Usepull_request_target
instead if you prefer to run on the base. - To trigger on issue events, add
issues
.
You may combine multiple event triggers.
A final option is to trigger the action periodically using the
schedule
trigger. For backwards compatibility reasons this will examine all
active pull requests and update their labels. If you wish to examine
issues as well, you'll need to explicitly add the issues
flag in your
config file:
version: 1
issues: True
labels:
- label: "WIP"
title: "^WIP:.*"
Please refer to the action.yml file in the repository for the available inputs to the action. Below is an example using all of them:
name: Label PRs
on:
- pull_request
- issues
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout your code
uses: actions/checkout@v3
- uses: srvaroa/labeler@master
with:
config_path: .github/labeler.yml
use_local_config: false
fail_on_error: false
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: "${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}"
Use config_path
to provide an alternative path for the configuration
file for the action. The default is .github/labeler.yml
.
Use use_local_config
to chose where to read the config file from. By
default, the action will read the file from the default branch of your
repository. If you set use_local_config
to true
, then the action
will read the config file from the local checkout. Note that you may
need to checkout your branch before the action runs!
Use fail_on_error
to decide whether an error in the action execution
should trigger a failure of the workflow. By default it's disabled to
prevent the action from disrupting CI pipelines.
To avoid blocking CI pipelines, the action will never return an error code and just log information about the problem. Typical errors are related to non-existing configuration file or invalid yaml.
Configuration can be stored at .github/labeler.yml
as a plain list of
label matchers, which consist of a label and a set of conditions for
each. When all conditions for a label match, then the Action will set
the given label. When any condition for a label does not match, then
the Action will unset the given label.
All matchers follow this configuration pattern:
<label>: "MyLabel"
<condition_name>: <condition_parameters>
<condition_name>: <condition_parameters>
For example, this .github/labeler.yml
contains a single matcher with
a single condition:
version: 1
labels:
- label: "WIP"
title: "^WIP:.*"
A PR or issue with title "WIP: this is work in progress" would be
labelled as WIP
. If the title changes to "This is done", then the
WIP
label would be removed.
Each label may combine multiple conditions. The action combines all conditions with an AND operation. That is, the label will be applied if all conditions are satisfied, removed otherwise.
For example, given this .github/labeler.yml
:
version: 1
labels:
- label: "WIP"
title: "^WIP:.*"
mergeable: false
A pull request with title "WIP: this is work in progress" and not in a
mergeable state would be labelled as WIP
. If the title changes to
"This is done", or it becomes mergeable, then the WIP
label would be
removed.
If you wish to apply an OR, you may set multiple matchers for the same label. For example:
version: 1
labels:
- label: "WIP"
title: "^WIP:.*"
- label: "WIP"
mergeable: false
The WIP
label will be set if the title matches ^WIP:.*
OR the label
is not in a mergeable state.
Adding a negate
property inside the label block will negate the
result of the evaluation of all conditions inside the label. For
example:
version: 1
labels:
- label: "unknown"
negate: True
branch: "(master|hotfix)"
In this case, label unknown
will be set if the branch does NOT match
master
or hotfix
.
The same behaviour occurs with multiple conditions:
version: 1
labels:
- label: "unknown"
negate: True
branch: "master"
title: "(feat).*"
Only PRs that do NOT match one of the two conditions will get the
unknown
label.
The default behaviour of this action includes removing labels that have a rule configured that does not match anymore. For example, given this configuration:
version: 1
labels:
- label: "WIP"
title: "^WIP:.*"
A PR or issue with title 'WIP: my feature' will get the WIP
label.
Now the title changes to My feature
the label will get remove. This is
because the labeler configuration includes the WIP
label, and its rule
does not match anymore.
In some cases you would prefer that the action adds labels, but never
removes them regardless of the matching status. To achieve this you can
enable the appendOnly
flag.
version: 1
appendOnly: true
labels:
- label: "WIP"
title: "^WIP:.*"
With this config, the behaviour changes:
- A PR with title 'WIP: my feature' will get the
WIP
label. - When the title changes to
My feature
, even though the labeler has a rule for theWIP
label that does not match, the label will be respected.
Below are the conditions currently supported in label matchers, in alphabetical order. Some important considerations:
- Conditions evaluate only when they are explicitly added in configuration. There are no defaults.
- Some conditions are only applicable to pull requests.
- All conditions based on regex rely on Go's
regexp
package, which accepts the syntax accepted by RE2 and described at golang.org. You can use tools like regex101.com to verify your conditions.
This condition evaluates the creation date of the PR or Issue.
If you're looking to evaluate on the modification date of the issue or PR, check on
This condition is best used when with a schedule trigger.
Examples:
age-range:
at-most: 1d
Will label PRs or issues that were created at most one day ago.
age-range:
at-least: 1w
Will label PRs or issues that were created at least one week ago.
The syntax for values is based on a number, followed by a suffix:
- s: seconds
- m: minutes
- h: hours
- d: days
- w: weeks
- y: years
For example, 2d
means 2 days, 4w
means 4 weeks, and so on.
This condition is satisfied when the author of the PR can merge it. This is implemented by checking if the author is an owner of the repo.
author-can-merge: True
This condition is satisfied when the author of the PR is an active member of the given team (identified by its url slug).
author-in-team: core-team
This condition is satisfied when the author of the PR or Issue matches any of the given usernames.
authors: ["serubin"]
This condition is satisfied when the PR base branch matches on the given regex.
base-branch: "master"
This condition is satisfied when the body (description) matches on the given regex.
body: "^patch.*"
This condition is satisfied when the PR branch matches on the given regex.
branch: "^feature/.*"
This condition is satisfied when the PR draft state matches that of the PR.
draft: True
Matches if the PR is a draft.
draft: False
Matches if the PR is not a draft.
This condition is satisfied when any of the PR files matches on the given regexs.
files:
- "cmd\\/.*_tests.go"
- ".*\\/subfolder\\/.*\\.md"
NOTICE the double backslash (
\\
) in the example above. This GitHub Action is coded in Go (Golang), which means you need to pay special attention to regular expressions (Regex). Special characters need to be escaped with double backslashes. This is because the backslash in Go strings is an escape character and therefore must be escaped itself to appear as a literal in the regex.
This condition evaluates the modification date of the PR or Issue.
If you're looking to evaluate on the creation date of the issue or PR, check on
This condition is best used when with a schedule trigger.
Examples:
last-modified:
at-most: 1d
Will label PRs or issues that were last modified at most one day ago
last-modified:
at-least: 1d
Will label PRs or issues that were last modified at least one day ago
The syntax for values is based on a number, followed by a suffix:
- s: seconds
- m: minutes
- h: hours
- d: days
- w: weeks
- y: years
For example, 2d
means 2 days, 4w
means 4 weeks, and so on.
This condition is satisfied when the mergeable state matches that of the PR.
mergeable: True
Will match if the label is mergeable.
mergeable: False
Will match if the label is not mergeable.
This condition is satisfied when the total number of changed lines in the PR is within given thresholds.
The number of changed lines is calculated as the sum of all additions + deletions
in the PR.
For example, given this .github/labeler.yml
:
- label: "S"
size:
below: 10
- label: "M"
size:
above: 9
below: 100
- label: "L"
size:
above: 100
These would be the labels assigned to some PRs, based on their size as reported by the GitHub API.
PR | additions | deletions | Resulting labels |
---|---|---|---|
First example | 1 | 1 | S |
Second example | 5 | 42 | M |
Third example | 68 | 148 | L |
You can exclude some files so that their changes are not taken into
account for the overall count. This can be useful for yarn.lock
,
go.sum
and such. Use exclude-files
, which supports both an explicit
file or a Regex expression:
- label: "L"
size:
exclude-files: ["yarn.lock", "\\/root\\/.+\\/test.md"]
above: 100
This condition will apply the L
label if the diff is above 100 lines,
but NOT taking into account changes in yarn.lock
, or any test.md
file that is in a subdirectory of root
.
NOTICE the double backslash (\\
) in the example above. This GitHub
Action is coded in Go (Golang), which means you need to pay special attention to
regular expressions (Regex). Special characters need to be escaped with double
backslashes. This is because the backslash in Go strings is an escape character
and therefore must be escaped itself to appear as a literal in the regex.
NOTICE the old format for specifying size properties (size-above
and size-below
) has been deprecated. The action will continue
supporting old configs for now, but users are encouraged to migrate to
the new configuration schema.
This condition is satisfied when the title matches on the given regex.
title: "^WIP:.*"
By setting the type attribute in your label configuration, you can specify whether a rule applies exclusively to Pull Requests (PRs) or Issues. This allows for more precise label management based on the type of GitHub record. The type condition accepts one of two values:
pull_request
issue
This functionality increases the adaptability of this GitHub Action, allowing users to create more tailored labeling strategies that differentiate between PRs and Issues or apply universally to both.
- label: "needs review"
type: "pull_request"
name: ".*bug.*"
This rule applies the label "needs review" to Pull Requests with "bug" in the title.
- label: "needs triage"
type: "issue"
name: ".*bug.*"
This rule applies the label "needs triage" to Issues with "bug" in the title.