rails / rails-bot

Github hooks to provide an encouraging atmosphere for new contributors
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Highfive

GitHub hooks to provide an encouraging atmosphere for new contributors

See this bot in action: @rails-bot

Install

To install highfive you just need to execute the setup.py script or use pip directly. Both commands have to be executed from the directory where the setup.py script is located.

$ pip install -r requirements.txt
$ python setup.py install

or

$ pip install -r requirements.txt
$ pip install . # the dot is important ;)

Adding a Project

To make rails-highfive interact with a new repo, add a configuration file in highfive/configs, with a filename of the form reponame.json.

It should look like:

{
    "groups":{
        "all": ["@username", "@otheruser"],
        "subteamname": ["@subteammember", "@username"]
    },
    "dirs":{
        "dirname":  ["subteamname", "@anotheruser"]
    },
    "contributing": "http://project.tld/contributing_guide.html",
    "expected_branch": "develop"
}

The groups section allows you to alias lists of usernames. You should specify at least one user in the group "all"; others are optional.

The dirs section is where you map directories of the repo to users or groups who're eligible to review PRs affecting it. This section can be left blank.

contributing specifies the contribution guide link in the message which welcomes new contributors to the repository. If contributing is not present, the Rails contributing guide will be linked instead.

If PRs should be filed against a branch other than master, specify the correct destination in the expected_branch field. If expected_branch is left out, highfive will assume that PRs should be filed against master. The bot posts a warning on any PR that targets an unexpected branch.

Deploying

rails-highfive can be deployed on Heroku. You'll need to set up the following required environment variables:

To set up a webhook on GitHub for testing your bot, use the following settings on a repo or org: