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IssueOps Validator

Check dist/ CodeQL Continuous Integration Continuous Delivery Linter Code Coverage

Validate issue form submissions

Important

As of version v2.0.0, this action has been converted to ESM. Because of this, custom validation scripts must be provided in ESM syntax. If you are using CommonJS, you will need to convert your scripts to ESM. See team.js for an example.

About

This action is designed to be used in conjunction with issue forms to allow you to validate submitted issues against their template, as well as any developer-defined logic.

Out of the box, this action supports validating the following details based on the issue forms template used to create the issue.

Field Type Validation
All Required input missing
Required input empty
Invalid input type
input
textarea
dropdown Input required / No selection(s) made
Single-select input / Multiple selection(s) made
Selection(s) not in template
checkboxes Input required / No selection(s) made
Selection(s) not in template
Required selection(s) are not chosen

You can also include your own validation logic to run on the parsed issue! For example, you may want to validate that a team name input is a valid GitHub Team. See Custom Validators for more information.

Feel free to try the action out by submitting a New Thing Request!

Setup

Here is a simple example of how to use this action in your workflow. Make sure to replace vX.X.X with the latest versions of the actions.

name: Issue Opened/Edited

on:
  issues:
    types:
      - opened
      - edited

jobs:
  validate:
    name: Validate Issue
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest

    steps:
      # This is required to access the repository's files. Specifically, the
      # issue forms template and the additional validation configuration.
      - name: Checkout Repository
        id: checkout
        uses: actions/checkout@vX.X.X

      # Parse the issue body and convert it to JSON.
      - name: Parse Issue Body
        id: parse
        uses: issue-ops/parser@vX.X.X
        with:
          body: ${{ github.event.issue.body }}
          issue-form-template: example-request.yml
          workspace: ${{ github.workspace }}

      # Validate the parsed issue body against the issue form template. This
      # example does not use custom validators.
      - name: Validate Issue
        id: validate
        uses: issue-ops/validator@vX.X.X
        with:
          issue-form-template: example-request.yml
          parsed-issue-body: ${{ steps.parse.outputs.json }}
          workspace: ${{ github.workspace }}

      - name: Output Validation Results
        id: output
        run: |
          echo "Result: ${{ steps.validate.outputs.result }}"
          echo "Errors: ${{ steps.validate.outputs.errors }}"

As a more complex example, suppose you want to include custom validation logic that relies on additional npm libraries. In this case, you would need to ensure those libraries are available on the runner before validation takes place.

name: Issue Opened/Edited

on:
  issues:
    types:
      - opened
      - edited

jobs:
  validate:
    name: Validate Issue with Custom Logic
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest

    steps:
      # This is required to access the repository's files. Specifically, the
      # issue forms template and the additional validation configuration.
      - name: Checkout Repository
        id: checkout
        uses: actions/checkout@vX.X.X

      # Install Node.js on the runner.
      - name: Setup Node.js
        id: setup-node
        uses: actions/setup-node@vX.X.X
        with:
          node-version: 20

      # Install dependencies from `package.json`.
      - name: Install Dependencies
        id: install
        run: npm install

      # Parse the issue body and convert it to JSON.
      - name: Parse Issue Body
        id: parse
        uses: issue-ops/parser@vX.X.X
        with:
          body: ${{ github.event.issue.body }}
          issue-form-template: example-request.yml
          workspace: ${{ github.workspace }}

      # Validate the parsed issue body against the issue form template. This
      # example does use custom validators.
      - name: Validate Issue
        id: validate
        uses: issue-ops/validator@vX.X.X
        with:
          issue-form-template: example-request.yml
          parsed-issue-body: ${{ steps.parse.outputs.json }}
          workspace: ${{ github.workspace }}

      - name: Output Validation Results
        id: output
        run: |
          echo "Result: ${{ steps.validate.outputs.result }}"
          echo "Errors: ${{ steps.validate.outputs.errors }}"

Inputs

Input Description
add-comment Add a success/failure comment
Default: true
github-token GitHub PAT for authentication
Default: ${{ github.token }}
issue-form-template Template .yml file in .github/ISSUE_TEMPLATE
issue-number The issue number to validate
Default: ${{ github.event.issue.number }}
parsed-issue-body The parsed issue body to validate
workspace The path where the repository was cloned
Default: ${{ github.workspace }}

Outputs

Output Description
result success or failure
errors A list of validation error messages (if any)

Custom Validators

This action supports custom validation logic in the form of a configuration file and additional JavaScript files in the repository where you are calling this action. For example, the New Thing Request issue form validates that the Read Team and Write Team inputs are valid GitHub Teams.

Check out the following sections for instructions on how to set this up in your repository!

Step 1: Configuration File

First, a configuration file must be created at .github/validator/config.yml. The content of the file should follow the below format:

validators:
  - field: read-team
    script: team
  - field: write-team
    script: team
Property Description
field The id attribute of the input in the issue form template
If id is not provided, the label attribute will be used
Must be camel-cased, and all special characters removed
This matches the output format of the issue-ops/parser action
E.g. My Input Name :D -> my_input_name
script The path and name of the script to call
Relative to the validator directory

Step 2: Validation Script

Next, you must include any validation script(s) referenced in config.yml. These scripts must have the following behavior:

  • Accept inputs of the following types:
    • string (Input and Textarea)
    • string[] (Dropdown)
    • {label: string; required: boolean } (Checkboxes)
  • Return 'success' for successful validation
  • Return an error message (string) for unsuccessful validation

For an example, see team.js.

Isn't running arbitrary scripts dangerous?

πŸ”₯ Yes! πŸ”₯ That's why it is highly recommended to only use this action on event types such as on: issues. In GitHub Actions, certain triggers use files from non-default branches. This can be a big security risk when arbitrary scripts are involved.

The on: issues event will only trigger a workflow run if the workflow file is on the default branch.

Along with this, you must make sure to not pull branches with untrusted validation scripts into the workspace where this action is run (by default the actions/checkout action will pull the default branch).

Step 3: Additional Libraries

If your custom validator requires libraries that are not included on GitHub-hosted runners (or not installed on self-hosted runners), you will need to include additional steps in the workflow to ensure that they are available before this action runs. For example, if you wanted to include the yaml library for parsing YAML files, you would need to do the following:

  1. Create a package.json in your repository

    npm init -y
  2. Install the yaml library

    npm install yaml
  3. Update your GitHub Actions workflow to setup Node.js and install dependencies

    # This is required to access the repository's files. Specifically, the
    # issue forms template and the additional validation configuration.
    - name: Checkout Repository
      id: checkout
      uses: actions/checkout@vX.X.X
    
    # If your validation scripts include any third-party dependencies, you
    # will need to install them. First, setup Node.js on the runner.
    - name: Setup Node.js
      id: setup-node
      uses: actions/setup-node@vX.X.X
      with:
        node-version: 20
        cache: npm
    
    # Next, install the dependencies from `package.json`.
    - name: Install Dependencies
      id: install
      run: npm install
    
    # Now you're good to go!
    - name: Parse Issue Body
      id: parse
      uses: issue-ops/parser@vX.X.X
      with:
        body: ${{ github.event.issue.body }}
        issue-form-template: example-request.yml
        workspace: ${{ github.workspace }}
    
    # Validate the parsed issue body against the issue form template and any
    # custom validation scripts. You can also pass in additional inputs as
    # environment variables.
    - name: Validate Issue
      id: validate
      uses: issue-ops/validator@vX.X.X
      env:
        ORGANIZATION: issue-ops
      with:
        issue-form-template: example-request.yml
        parsed-issue-body: ${{ steps.parse.outputs.json }}
        workspace: ${{ github.workspace }}

GitHub API Permissions

By default, the GitHub token available to workflows has specific permissions that are limited to the repository the workflow is running in. If you have custom validators that need to call other GitHub APIs, you will need to provide either a personal access token (PAT), or use a GitHub App to authenticate. Either one can be passed to the action in the github-token input.

For GitHub App authentication, you can use the actions/create-github-app-token action to generate a token and pass it to the validation step.

- name: Generate App Token
  id: token
  uses: actions/create-github-app-token@vX.X.X
  with:
    app_id: ${{ secrets.ISSUEOPS_DEMO_APP_ID }}
    private_key: ${{ secrets.ISSUEOPS_DEMO_APP_KEY }}

- name: Validate Issue
  id: validate
  uses: issue-ops/validator@vX.X.X
  env:
    ORGANIZATION: issue-ops
  with:
    github-token: ${{ steps.token.outputs.token }}
    issue-form-template: example-request.yml
    parsed-issue-body: ${{ steps.parse.outputs.json }}
    workspace: ${{ github.workspace }}

Comment Templates

If the add-comment input is set to true, a comment will be added to the issue that triggered the action. The comment will include the results of the validation job. By default, the comments look like this:

Default success comment:

:tada: Issue validated successfully!

Default failure comment:

:no_entry: There were errors validating the issue body:

- Error message

You can customize the success/failure comments by including custom templates in the .github/validator/ directory. If either template is present, it will be used to generate the comment that is added after validation completes.

As you can probably guess, these are Handlebars templates πŸ˜‰

Result Template Filename Input Type Input Description
Success success.mustache JSON The parsed issue body
Failure failure.mustache string[] The validation error(s)

You can reference the inputs to each template to customize the presentation and format to your liking. For examples, check out failure.mustache and success.mustache.