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bulldozer's Introduction

bulldozer

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bulldozer is a GitHub App that automatically merges pull requests (PRs) when (and only when) all required status checks are successful and required reviews are provided.

Additionally, bulldozer can:

  • Only merge pull requests that match a whitelist condition, like having a specific label or comment
  • Ignore pull requests that match a blacklist condition, like having a specific label or comment
  • Automatically keep pull request branches up-to-date by merging in the target branch
  • Wait for additional status checks that are not required by GitHub

Bulldozer might be useful if you:

  • Have CI builds that take longer than the normal review process. It will merge reviewed PRs as soon as the tests pass so you don't have to watch the pull request or remember to merge it later.
  • Combine it with policy-bot to automatically merge certain types of pre-approved or automated changes.
  • Want to give contributors more control over when they can merge PRs without granting them write access to the repository.
  • Have a lot of active development that makes it difficult to merge a pull request while it is up-to-date with the target branch.

Contents

Behavior

bulldozer will only merge pull requests that GitHub allows non-admin collaborators to merge. This means that all branch protection settings, including required status checks and required reviews, are respected. It also means that you must enable branch protection to prevent bulldozer from immediately merging every pull request.

Only pull requests matching the whitelist conditions (or not matching the blacklist conditions) are considered for merging. bulldozer is event-driven, which means it will usually merge a pull request within a few seconds of the pull request satisfying all preconditions.

Configuration

The behavior of the bot is configured by a .bulldozer.yml file at the root of the repository. The file name and location are configurable when running your own instance of the server.

The .bulldozer.yml file is read from the most recent commit on the target branch of each pull request. If bulldozer cannot find a configuration file, it will take no action. This means it is safe to enable the bulldozer on all repositories in an organization.

bulldozer.yml Specification

The .bulldozer.yml file supports the following keys.

# "version" is the configuration version, currently "1".
version: 1

# "merge" defines how and when pull requests are merged. If the section is
# missing, bulldozer will consider all pull requests and use default settings.
merge:
  # "whitelist" defines the set of pull requests considered by bulldozer. If
  # the section is missing, bulldozer considers all pull requests not excluded
  # by the blacklist.
  whitelist:
    # Pull requests with any of these labels (case-insensitive) are added to
    # the whitelist.
    labels: ["merge when ready"]

    # Pull requests where the body or any comment contains any of these
    # substrings are added to the whitelist.
    comment_substrings: ["==MERGE_WHEN_READY=="]

    # Pull requests where any comment matches one of these exact strings are
    # added to the whitelist.
    comments: ["Please merge this pull request!"]

    # Pull requests where the body contains any of these substrings are added
    # to the whitelist.
    pr_body_substrings: ["==MERGE_WHEN_READY=="]

    # Pull requests targeting any of these branches are added to the whitelist.
    branches: ["develop"]

  # "blacklist" defines the set of pull request ignored by bulldozer. If the
  # section is missing, bulldozer considers all pull requests. It takes the
  # same keys as the "whitelist" section.
  blacklist:
    labels: ["do not merge"]
    comment_substrings: ["==DO_NOT_MERGE=="]

  # "method" defines the merge method. The available options are "merge",
  # "rebase", and "squash".
  method: squash

  # Allows the merge method that is used when auto-merging a PR to be different based on the
  # target branch. The keys of the hash are the target branch name, and the values are the merge method that
  # will be used for PRs targeting that branch. The valid values are the same as for the "method" key.
  # Note: If the target branch does not match any of the specified keys, the "method" key is used instead.
  branch_method:
    develop: squash
    master: merge

  # "options" defines additional options for the individual merge methods.
  options:
    # "squash" options are only used when the merge method is "squash"
    squash:
      # "title" defines how the title of the commit message is created when
      # generating a squash commit. The options are "pull_request_title",
      # "first_commit_title", and "github_default_title". The default is
      # "pull_request_title".
      title: "pull_request_title"

      # "body" defines how the body of the commit message is created when
      # generating a squash commit. The options are "pull_request_body",
      # "summarize_commits", and "empty_body". The default is "empty_body".
      body: "empty_body"

      # If "body" is "pull_request_body", then the commit message will be the
      # part of the pull request body surrounded by "message_delimiter"
      # strings. This is disabled (empty string) by default.
      message_delimiter: ==COMMIT_MSG==

  # "required_statuses" is a list of additional status contexts that must pass
  # before bulldozer can merge a pull request. This is useful if you want to
  # require extra testing for automated merges, but not for manual merges.
  required_statuses:
    - "ci/circleci: ete-tests"

  # If true, bulldozer will delete branches after their pull requests merge.
  delete_after_merge: true

# "update" defines how and when to update pull request branches. Unlike with
# merges, if this section is missing, bulldozer will not update any pull requests.
update:
  # "whitelist" defines the set of pull requests that should be updated by
  # bulldozer. It accepts the same keys as the whitelist in the "merge" block.
  whitelist:
    labels: ["WIP", "Update Me"]

  # "blacklist" defines the set of pull requests that should not be updated by
  # bulldozer. It accepts the same keys as the blacklist in the "merge" block.
  blacklist:
    labels: ["Do Not Update"]

FAQ

Can I specify both a blacklist and whitelist?

Yes. If both blacklist and whitelist are specified, bulldozer will attempt to match on both. In cases where both match, blacklist will take precedence.

Can I specify the body of the commit when using the squash strategy?

Yes. When the merge strategy is squash, you can set additional options under the options.squash property, including how to render the commit body.

merge:
  method: squash
  options:
    squash:
      body: summarize_commits # or `pull_request_body`, `empty_body`

You can also define part of pull request body to pick as a commit message when body is pull_request_body.

merge:
  method: squash
  options:
    squash:
      body: pull_request_body
      message_delimiter: ==COMMIT_MSG==

Anything that's contained between two ==COMMIT_MSG== strings will become the commit message instead of whole pull request body.

What if I don't want to put config files into each repo?

You can add default repository configuration in your bulldozer config file.

It will be used only when your repo config file does not exist.

options:
  default_repository_config:
    blacklist:
      labels: ["do not merge"] # or any other available config.

Bulldozer isn't merging my commit when it should, what could be happening?

Bulldozer will attempt to merge a branch whenever it passes the whitelist/blacklist criteria. GitHub may prevent it from merging a branch in certain conditions, some of which are to be expected, and others that may be caused by mis-configuring Bulldozer.

  • Required status checks have not passed
  • Review requirements are not satisfied
  • The merge strategy configured in .bulldozer.yml is not allowed by your repository settings
  • Branch protection rules are preventing bulldozer[bot] from pushing to the branch. Unfortunately, GitHub apps cannot be added to the list at this time, but there is a workaround if you are running your own Bulldozer server.

Bulldozer isn't updating my branch when it should, what could be happening?

When using the branch update functionality, Bulldozer only acts when the target branch is updated after updates are enabled for the pull request. For example:

  1. User A opens a pull request targetting develop
  2. User B pushes a commit to develop
  3. User A adds the update me label to the first pull request
  4. User C pushes a commit to develop
  5. Bulldozer updates the pull request with the commits from Users B and C

Note that the update does not happen when the update me label is added, even though there is a new commit on develop that is not part of the pull request.

Can Bulldozer work with push restrictions on branches?

As mentioned above, GitHub Apps cannot be added to the list of users associated with push restrictions. To work around this, you can:

  1. Use another app like policy-bot to implement approval restrictions as required status checks instead of using push restrictions. This effectively limits who can push to a branch by requiring changes to go through the pull request process and be approved.

  2. Configure Bulldozer to use a personal access token for a regular user to perform merges in this case. The token must have the repo scope and the user must be allowed to push to the branch. In the server configuration file, set:

    options:
      push_restriction_user_token: <token-value>

    The token is only used if the target branch has push restrictions enabled. All other merges are performed as the normal GitHub App user.

Deployment

bulldozer is easy to deploy in your own environment as it has no dependencies other than GitHub. It is also safe to run multiple instances of the server, making it a good fit for container schedulers like Nomad or Kubernetes.

We provide both a Docker container and a binary distribution of the server:

A sample configuration file is provided at config/bulldozer.example.yml. Certain values may also be set by environment variables; these are noted in the comments in the sample configuration file.

GitHub App Configuration

To configure Bulldozer as a GitHub App, these general options are required:

  • Webhook URL: http(s)://<your-bulldozer-domain>/api/github/hook
  • Webhook secret: A random string that matches the value of the github.app.webhook_secret property in the server configuration

The app requires these permissions:

Permission Access Reason
Repository administration Read-only Determine required status checks
Checks Read-only Read checks for ref
Repository contents Read & write Read configuration, perform merges
Issues Read & write Read comments, close linked issues
Repository metadata Read-only Basic repository data
Pull requests Read & write Merge and close pull requests
Commit status Read-only Evaluate pull request status

The app should be subscribed to these events:

  • Check run
  • Commit comment
  • Pull request
  • Status
  • Push
  • Issue comment
  • Pull request review
  • Pull request review comment

Operations

bulldozer uses go-baseapp and go-githubapp, both of which emit standard metrics and structured log keys. Please see those projects for details.

Example Files

Example .bulldozer.yml files can be found in config/examples

Migrating: Version 0.4.X to 1.X

The server configuration for bulldozer allows you to specify configuration_v0_path, which is a list of paths to check for 0.4.X style bulldozer configuration. When a 1.X style configuration file does not appear at the configured path, bulldozer will attempt to read from the paths configured by configuration_v0_path, converting the legacy configuration into an equivalent v1 configuration internally.

The upgrade process is therefore to deploy the latest version of bulldozer with both configuration_path and configuration_v0_path configured, and to enable the bulldozer GitHub App on all organizations where it was previously installed.

Development

To develop bulldozer, you will need a Go installation.

Run style checks and tests

./godelw verify

Running the server locally

# copy and edit the server config
cp config/bulldozer.example.yml config/bulldozer.yml

./godelw run bulldozer server
  • config/bulldozer.yml is used as the default configuration file
  • The server is available at http://localhost:8080/

Running the server via Docker

# copy and edit the server config
cp config/bulldozer.example.yml config/bulldozer.yml

# build the docker image
./godelw docker build --verbose

docker run --rm -v "$(pwd)/config:/secrets/" -p 8080:8080 palantirtechnologies/bulldozer:latest
  • This mounts the config directory (which should contain the bulldozer.yml configuration file) at the expected location
  • The server is available at http://localhost:8080/

Contributing

Contributions and issues are welcome. For new features or large contributions, we prefer discussing the proposed change on a GitHub issue prior to a PR.

License

This application is made available under the Apache 2.0 License.

bulldozer's People

Contributors

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