Skip to content

Gather metrics on issues/prs/discussions such as time to first response, count of issues opened, closed, etc.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

MaineC/issue-metrics

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Issue Metrics Action

CodeQL Docker Image CI Python package

This is a GitHub Action that searches for issues/pull requests/discussions in a repository, measures several metrics, and generates a report in form of a GitHub issue. The issues/pull requests/discussions to search for can be filtered by using a search query.

This action, developed by GitHub OSPO for our internal use, is open-sourced for your potential benefit. Feel free to inquire about its usage by creating an issue in this repository.

Available Metrics

Metric Description
Time to First Response The duration from creation to the initial comment or review.*
Time to Close The period from creation to closure.*
Time to Answer (Discussions Only) The time from creation to an answer.
Time in Label The duration from label application to removal, requires LABELS_TO_MEASURE env variable.

*For pull requests, these metrics exclude the time the PR was in draft mode.

*For issues and pull requests, comments by issue/pull request author's and comments by bots are excluded.

To find syntax for search queries, check out the documentation on searching issues and pull requests or searching discussions.

Sample Report

The output of this action is a report in form of a GitHub issue. Below you see a sample of such a GitHub issue.

Sample GitHub issue created by the issue/metrics GitHub Action

Getting Started

Create a workflow file (ie. .github/workflows/issue-metrics.yml) in your repository with the following contents:

Note: repo:owner/repo is the repository you want to measure metrics on

name: Monthly issue metrics
on:
  workflow_dispatch:
  schedule:
    - cron: '3 2 1 * *'

permissions:
  issues: write
  pull-requests: read

jobs:
  build:
    name: issue metrics
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
    - name: Get dates for last month
      shell: bash
      run: |
        # Calculate the first day of the previous month
        first_day=$(date -d "last month" +%Y-%m-01)

        # Calculate the last day of the previous month
        last_day=$(date -d "$first_day +1 month -1 day" +%Y-%m-%d)

        #Set an environment variable with the date range
        echo "$first_day..$last_day"
        echo "last_month=$first_day..$last_day" >> "$GITHUB_ENV"

    - name: Run issue-metrics tool
      uses: github/issue-metrics@v2
      env:
        GH_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
        SEARCH_QUERY: 'repo:owner/repo is:issue created:${{ env.last_month }} -reason:"not planned"'

    - name: Create issue
      uses: peter-evans/create-issue-from-file@v5
      with:
        title: Monthly issue metrics report
        token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
        content-filepath: ./issue_metrics.md

Example use cases

  • As a maintainer, I want to see metrics for issues and pull requests on the repository I maintain in order to ensure I am giving them the proper amount of attention.
  • As a first responder on a repository, I want to ensure that users are getting contact from me in a reasonable amount of time.
  • As an OSPO, I want to see how many open source repository requests are open/closed, and metrics for how long it takes to get through the open source process.
  • As a product development team, I want to see metrics around how long pull request reviews are taking, so that we can reflect on that data during retrospectives.

Support

If you need support using this project or have questions about it, please open up an issue in this repository. Requests made directly to GitHub staff or support team will be redirected here to open an issue. GitHub SLA's and support/services contracts do not apply to this repository.

Use as a GitHub Action

  1. Create a repository to host this GitHub Action or select an existing repository. This is easiest if it is the same repository as the one you want to measure metrics on.
  2. Select a best fit workflow file from the examples directory for your use case.
  3. Copy that example into your repository (from step 1) and into the proper directory for GitHub Actions: .github/workflows/ directory with the file extension .yml (ie. .github/workflows/issue-metrics.yml)
  4. Edit the values (SEARCH_QUERY, assignees) from the sample workflow with your information. See the SEARCH_QUERY section for more information on how to configure the search query.
  5. If you are running metrics on a repository other than the one where the workflow file is going to be, then update the value of GH_TOKEN. Do this by creating a GitHub API token with permissions to read the repo and write issues. Then take the value of the API token you just created, and create a repository secret where the name of the secret is GH_TOKEN and the value of the secret the API token. Then finally update the workflow file to use that repository secret by changing GH_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }} to GH_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GH_TOKEN }}. The name of the secret can really be anything. It just needs to match between when you create the secret name and when you refer to it in the workflow file.
  6. If you want the resulting issue with the metrics in it to appear in a different repository other than the one the workflow file runs in, update the line token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }} with your own GitHub API token stored as a repository secret. This process is the same as described in the step above. More info on creating secrets can be found here.
  7. Commit the workflow file to the default branch (often master or main)
  8. Wait for the action to trigger based on the schedule entry or manually trigger the workflow as shown in the documentation.

Configuration

Below are the allowed configuration options:

field required default description
GH_TOKEN True The GitHub Token used to scan the repository. Must have read access to all repository you are interested in scanning.
SEARCH_QUERY True The query by which you can filter issues/prs which must contain a repo:, org:, owner:, or a user: entry. For discussions, include type:discussions in the query.
LABELS_TO_MEASURE False A comma separated list of labels to measure how much time the label is applied. If not provided, no labels durations will be measured. Not compatible with discussions at this time.
HIDE_AUTHOR False If set to any value, the author will not be displayed in the generated markdown file.
HIDE_TIME_TO_FIRST_RESPONSE False If set to any value, the time to first response will not be displayed in the generated markdown file.
HIDE_TIME_TO_CLOSE False If set to any value, the time to close will not be displayed in the generated markdown file.
HIDE_TIME_TO_ANSWER False If set to any value, the time to answer a discussion will not be displayed in the generated markdown file.
HIDE_LABEL_METRICS False If set to any value, the time in label metrics will not be displayed in the generated markdown file.
IGNORE_USERS False A comma separated list of users to ignore when calculating metrics. (ie. IGNORE_USERS: 'user1,user2'). To ignore bots, append [bot] to the user (ie. IGNORE_USERS: 'github-actions[bot]')

Further Documentation

Contributions

We would ❤️ contributions to improve this action. Please see CONTRIBUTING.md for how to get involved.

License

MIT

More OSPO Tools

Looking for more resources for your open source program office (OSPO)? Check out the github-ospo repo for a variety of tools designed to support your needs.

About

Gather metrics on issues/prs/discussions such as time to first response, count of issues opened, closed, etc.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 98.6%
  • Other 1.4%