paint-brush
Clean Stale branches with Github Actionsby@dbudim
3,050 reads
3,050 reads

Clean Stale branches with Github Actions

by Dmytro BudymMarch 22nd, 2022
Read on Terminal Reader
Read this story w/o Javascript
tldt arrow

Too Long; Didn't Read

Automate staled branches management routine with Github Actions.

Companies Mentioned

Mention Thumbnail
Mention Thumbnail
featured image - Clean Stale branches with Github Actions
Dmytro Budym HackerNoon profile picture


Large development teams develop a lot of features. During the lifetime of a repo, the amount of stale branches can grow and snowball. This could be regulated with team rules about what to do with branches after the merge and who should delete them. But as with any manual operation, sometimes someone forgets about it. So once per month or two you should review staled branches and delete them.


My Automation Engineer mind always tries to automate each routine operation like this. So I've configured a cron action that cleans old branches using a pattern.


I’ve used an already existing solution from beatlabs where you can setup the branches to be removed using regexp. Let’s look at the configuration and describe the key moments:


name: CLEAR OLD BRANCHES

on:
  schedule:
    - cron: "0 0 * * 1"
jobs:
  cleaning:
    name: Cleanup old branches
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - name: checkout
        uses: actions/checkout@v2
      - name: clean
        uses: beatlabs/[email protected]
        with:
          repo_token: ${{ secrets.GH_TOKEN }}
          date: '2 month ago'
          dry_run: false
          delete_tags: false
          minimum_tags: 5
          extra_protected_branch_regex: master.*|main|develop|^release.*|.*_p$



First of all, let’s set up a trigger when action should be executed. It might be a push, merge, or any other. In my mind, this action is something like general cleaning so I’ve set up its execution by crone once per week every Monday. To configure an appropriate crone for you I can advise a great resource:

https://crontab.guru


on:
  schedule:
    - cron: "0 0 * * 1"



After that, define Cleaning Job with steps:

  • checkout
  • clean


Checkout is pretty straightforward with actions/checkout@v2 it executes fetch repository. There is no need for any additional configuration.


Clean action has a few important options:


  • token with rights for interactions with the repository.

    repo_token: ${{ secrets.GH_TOKEN }}
    
  • date - limitation period (current example will look for branches older than 2 months).

    date: '2 month ago'
    
  • extra_protected_branch_regex - regular expression for protected branches.

    This example excludes: master, develop, branches which start with “release“ and finish with “_p“ from the cleaning list.

    extra_protected_branch_regex: master|develop|^release.*|.*_p$
    
  • dry_run - executes an action in safe mode. After you test that everything is fine, switch to false. But for more safety, I recommend first trying action in the test repository. And before the first run in a real repository make sure that you have a backup in case something goes wrong because of a mistake.

    dry_run: false
    

Once you’ve completed setup, enjoy cleaning and forget about routine manual management of staled branches.