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rss

GitHub Action

rss-to-issues

v0.0.2

rss-to-issues

rss

rss-to-issues

Create Issues from RSS/Atom feeds

Installation

Copy and paste the following snippet into your .yml file.

              

- name: rss-to-issues

uses: git-for-windows/[email protected]

Learn more about this action in git-for-windows/rss-to-issues

Choose a version

RSS to Issues GitHub Action

This GitHub Action creates issues from an RSS or Atom feed.

New issues will only be created if no issue exists that corresponds to the feed item. Optionally, the issues' titles can be prefixed, and labeled. There are multiple ways to restrict what feed items this Action acts on.

This GitHub Action is a Javascript port of the rss-issues Action. See below for more details.

Inputs

github-token

Required the GITHUB_TOKEN secret.

feed

Required URL of the RSS/Atom feed.

prefix

Prefix added to the created issues' titles.

max-age

If specified, only look at feed items younger than the specified age. For example, 48h will only look at feed items from the last forty-eight hours.

Note: This Action is typically run in a scheduled workflow, and the age should be adjusted in accordance with that schedule. That is, if the workflow is run once per day, max-age should be set to at least 24h (probably a bit more in case GitHub Actions experiences problems).

labels

Labels to add, comma separated.

dry-run

Log issue creation but do nothing

aggregate

Aggregate all items in a single issue

Note: If you use this Action to create issues from multiple aggregated feeds in the same repository, give them different prefixes and/or labels.

character-limit

Limit the issue contents' size

title-pattern

Only create an issue if the title matches the specified regular expression.

To exclude titles based on a pattern, you can use a negative lookahead. For example, to filter out all feed items whose title contains "TEST", use a regular expression like /^(?!.*TEST)/.

content-pattern

Only create an issue if the content matches the specified regular expression.

To exclude items based on their content, you can use a negative lookahead. For example, to filter out all feed items whose text contains "TEST", use a regular expression like /^(?!.*TEST)/.

Outputs

issues

Issue IDs, comma separated.

Example

step

uses: git-for-windows/rss-to-issues
with:
  github-token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
  feed: "https://cloud.google.com/feeds/kubernetes-engine-release-notes.xml"

complete

name: Monitor new Git versions

on:
  schedule:
    # Run this Action every day at 7:37am UTC
    - cron: "37 7 * * *"

jobs:
  gke-release:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: git-for-windows/rss-to-issues@v0
        with:
          github-token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
          feed: https://github.com/git/git/tags.atom
          prefix: "[Git]"
          character-limit: 255
          dry-run: false
          max-age: 48h
          labels: git

Real Usage

Compatibility

This GitHub Action is a Javascript port of the Go version at guilhem/rss-issues-action. The port exists because the Go version has to run in a Docker image, and therefore it is slower to load than the Javascript Action, it has to be pre-compiled, and it has to be uploaded to a Docker registry (i.e. it is subject to network issues when there is a problem connecting from GitHub Actions' build agents).

This Action uses different input names than rss-issues-action (e.g. github-token instead of repo-token). This is the full list of the mappings:

  • repo-token was renamed to github-token
  • lastTime was renamed to max-age
  • characterLimit was renamed to character-limit
  • titleFilter corresponds to title-pattern and is no longer exclusive but inclusive (read: only feed items matching the title-pattern are processed, as opposed to excluding feed items matching the titleFilter pattern)
  • contentFilter corresponds to content-pattern and is no longer exclusive but inclusive (read: only feed items matching the content-pattern are processed, as opposed to excluding feed items matching the contentFilter pattern)

Another big difference is that this Action understands Javascript regular expressions, i.e. it supports lookaheads and friends, something that Go's RE2 does not support.

While at it, the Javascript version fixes the bug where rss-issues-action did not set the output as documented.