Safe-settings
– an app to manage policy-as-code and apply repository settings to repositories across an organization.
-
In
safe-settings
all the settings are stored centrally in anadmin
repo within the organization. This is important. Unlike Settings Probot, the settings files cannot be in individual repositories.Note It is possible to override this behavior and specify a custom repo instead of the
admin
repo.
This could be done by setting anenv
variable calledADMIN_REPO
. -
The settings in the default branch is applied. If the settings are changed in a non-default branch and a PR is created to merge the changes, it would be run in a
dry-run
mode to evaluate and validate the settings, and checks would pass or fail based on that. -
In
safe-settings
the settings can have 2 types of targets:org
- These settings are applied to theorg
.Org
-targeted settings are defined in.github/settings.yml
. Currently, onlyrulesets
are supported asorg
-targeted settings.repo
- These settings are applied torepos
-
For The
repo
-targeted settings there can be at 3 levels at which the settings could be managed:-
Org-level settings are defined in
.github/settings.yml
Note It is possible to override this behavior and specify a different filename for the
settings
yml repo.
This could be done by setting anenv
variable calledSETTINGS_FILE_PATH
. -
Suborg
level settings. Asuborg
is an arbitrary collection of repos belonging to projects, business units, or teams. Thesuborg
settings reside in a yaml file for eachsuborg
in the.github/suborgs
folder. -
Repo
level settings. They reside in a repo specific yaml in.github/repos
folder
-
-
It is recommended to break the settings into org-level, suborg-level, and repo-level units. This will allow different teams to define and manage policies for their specific projects or business units. With
CODEOWNERS
, this will allow different people to be responsible for approving changes in different projects.
Note
Suborg
andRepo
level settings directory structure cannot be customized.
Note The settings file must have a
.yml
extension only..yaml
extension is ignored, for now.
The App listens to the following webhook events:
-
push: If the settings are created or modified, that is, if push happens in the
default
branch of theadmin
repo and the file added or changed is.github/settings.yml
or.github/repos/*.yml
or.github/suborgs/*.yml
, then the settings would be applied either globally to all the repos, or specific repos. For each repo, the settings that are actually applied depend on the default settings for the org, overlayed with settings for the suborg that the repo belongs to, overlayed with the settings for that specific repo. -
repository.created: If a repository is created in the org, the settings for the repo - the default settings for the org, overlayed with settings for the suborg that the repo belongs to, overlayed with the settings for that specific repo - is applied.
-
branch_protection_rule: If a branch protection rule is modified or deleted,
safe-settings
willsync
the settings to prevent any unauthorized changes. -
repository.edited: If the default branch is renamed,
safe-settings
willsync
the settings, returning the default branch to the configured value for the repo. -
pull_request.opened, pull_request.reopened, check_suite.requested: If the settings are changed, but it is not in the
default
branch, and there is an existing PR, the code will validate the settings changes by running safe-settings innop
mode and update the PR with thedry-run
status. -
repository_ruleset: If the
ruleset
settings are modified in the UI manually,safe-settings
willsync
the settings to prevent any unauthorized changes. -
member_change_events: If a member is added or removed from a repository,
safe-settings
willsync
the settings to prevent any unauthorized changes.
safe-settings
can be turned on only to a subset of repos by specifying them in the runtime settings file, deployment-settings.yml
.
If no file is specified, then the following repositories - 'admin', '.github', 'safe-settings'
are exempted by default.
A sample of deployment-settings
file is found here.
To apply safe-settings
only to a specific list of repos, add them to the restrictedRepos
section as include
array.
To ignore safe-settings
for a specific list of repos, add them to the restrictedRepos
section as exclude
array.
Note The
include
andexclude
attributes support as well regular expressions. By default they look for regex, Example include: ['SQL'] will look apply to repos with SQL and SQL_ and SQL- etc if you want only SQL repo then use include:['^SQL$']
Admins setting up safe-settings
can include custom rules that would be validated before applying a setting or overidding a broader scoped setting.
The code has to return true
if validation is successful, or false
if it isn't.
If the validation fails, the error
attribute specified would be used to create the error message in the logs or in the PR checks
.
The first use case is where a custom rule has to be applied for a setting on its own. For e.g. No collaborator should be given admin
permissions.
For this type of validation, admins can provide custom code as configvalidators
which validates the setting by itself.
For e.g. for the case above, it would look like:
configvalidators:
- plugin: collaborators
error: |
`Admin role cannot be assigned to collaborators`
script: |
console.log(`baseConfig ${JSON.stringify(baseconfig)}`)
return baseconfig.permission != 'admin'
For convenience this script has access to a variable, baseconfig
, that contains the setting that is be applied.
The second use case is where custom rule has to be applied when a setting in the org or suborg level is being overridden. Such as, when default branch protection is being overridden.
For this type of validation, admins can provide custom code as overridevalidators
. The script can access two variables, baseconfig
and overrideconfig
which represent the base setting and the setting that is overriding it.
A sample would look like:
overridevalidators:
- plugin: branches
error: |
`Branch protection required_approving_review_count cannot be overidden to a lower value`
script: |
console.log(`baseConfig ${JSON.stringify(baseconfig)}`)
console.log(`overrideConfig ${JSON.stringify(overrideconfig)}`)
if (baseconfig.protection.required_pull_request_reviews.required_approving_review_count && overrideconfig.protection.required_pull_request_reviews.required_approving_review_count ) {
return overrideconfig.protection.required_pull_request_reviews.required_approving_review_count >= baseconfig.protection.required_pull_request_reviews.required_approving_review_count
}
return true
A sample of deployment-settings
file is found here.
When there are 1000s of repos to be managed -- and there is a global settings change -- safe-settings will have to work efficiently and only make the necessary API calls.
The app also has to complete the work within an hour: the lifetime of the GitHub app token.
To address these constraints the following design decisions have been implemented:
Probot
automatically handlesrate
andabuse
limits.- Instead of loading all the repo contents from
.github/repos/*
, it will selectively load the specific repo file based on whichrepo
settings has changed, or a subset of the repo files associated withsuborg
settings that has changed. The only time all the repo files will be loaded is if there is aglobal
settings file change. - The PR check will only provide a summary of errors and changes. (Providing the details of changes for 1000s of repos will error out.)
- To ensure it handles updates to GitHub intelligently, it will compare the changes with the settings in GitHub, and will call the API only if there are
real
changes.
To determine if there are real
changes, the code will generate a detailed list of additions
, modifications
, and deletions
compared to the settings in GitHub:
For e.g:
If the settings is:
{
"branches": [
{
"name": "master",
"protection": {
"required_pull_request_reviews": {
"required_approving_review_count": 2,
"dismiss_stale_reviews": false,
"require_code_owner_reviews": true,
"dismissal_restrictions": {}
},
"required_status_checks": {
"strict": true,
"contexts": []
},
"enforce_admins": false
}
}
]
}
and the settings in GitHub is:
{
"branches": [
{
"name": "master",
"protection": {
"url": "https://api.github.com/repos/decyjphr-org/test/branches/develop/protection",
"required_status_checks": {
"url": "https://api.github.com/repos/decyjphr-org/test/branches/develop/protection/required_status_checks",
"strict": true,
"contexts": [],
"contexts_url": "https://api.github.com/repos/decyjphr-org/test/branches/develop/protection/required_status_checks/contexts",
"checks": []
},
"restrictions": {
"url": "https://api.github.com/repos/decyjphr-org/test/branches/develop/protection/restrictions",
"users_url": "https://api.github.com/repos/decyjphr-org/test/branches/develop/protection/restrictions/users",
"teams_url": "https://api.github.com/repos/decyjphr-org/test/branches/develop/protection/restrictions/teams",
"apps_url": "https://api.github.com/repos/decyjphr-org/test/branches/develop/protection/restrictions/apps",
"users": [],
"teams": [],
"apps": []
},
"required_pull_request_reviews": {
"url": "https://api.github.com/repos/decyjphr-org/test/branches/develop/protection/required_pull_request_reviews",
"dismiss_stale_reviews": true,
"require_code_owner_reviews": true,
"required_approving_review_count": 2,
"dismissal_restrictions": {
"url": "https://api.github.com/repos/decyjphr-org/test/branches/develop/protection/dismissal_restrictions",
"users_url": "https://api.github.com/repos/decyjphr-org/test/branches/develop/protection/dismissal_restrictions/users",
"teams_url": "https://api.github.com/repos/decyjphr-org/test/branches/develop/protection/dismissal_restrictions/teams",
"users": [],
"teams": []
}
},
"required_signatures": false,
"enforce_admins": false,
"required_linear_history": false,
"allow_force_pushes": {
"enabled": false
},
"allow_deletions": false,
"required_conversation_resolution": false
}
}
]
}
the results of comparison would be:
{
"additions": {},
"modifications": {
"branches": [
{
"protection": {
"required_pull_request_reviews": {
"dismiss_stale_reviews": false
}
},
"name": "master"
}
]
},
"deletions": {},
"hasChanges": true
}
The App can be configured to apply the settings on a schedule. This could be a way to address configuration drift since webhooks are not always guaranteed to be delivered.
To periodically converge the settings to the configuration, set the CRON
environment variable. This is based on node-cron and details on the possible values can be found here.
It is
Safe-settings
explicitly looks in the admin
repo in the organization for the settings files. The admin
repo could be a restricted repository with branch protections
and codeowners
In that set up, when changes happen to the settings files and there is a PR for merging the changes back to the default
branch in the admin
repo, safe-settings
will run checks
– which will run in nop mode and produce a report of the changes that would happen, including the API calls and the payload.
For e.g. If we have override
validators that will fail if org-level
branch protections are overridden at the repo or suborg level with a lesser number of required approvers, here is an screenshot of what users will see in the PR.
NOTE If you don't want the PR message to have these details, it can be turned off by
env
settingCREATE_PR_COMMENT
=false
Here is a screenshot of what the users will see in the checkrun
page:
The app creates a Check
at the end of its processing to indicate if there were any errors. The Check
is called safe-settings
and corrosponds to the latest commit on the default
branch of the admin
repo.
Here is an example of a checkrun
result:
And the checkrun
page will look like this:
The settings file can be used to set the policies at the Org
, suborg
or repo
level.
Using the settings, the following things could be configured:
Repository settings
- home page, url, visibility, has_issues, has_projects, wikis, etc.default branch
- naming and renamingRepository Topics
Teams and permissions
Collaborators and permissions
Issue labels
Branch protections
- if the name of the branch isdefault
in the settings, it is applied to thedefault
branch of the repo.Autolinks
repository name validation
using regex pattern
It is possible to provide an include
or exclude
settings to restrict the collaborators
, teams
, labels
to a list of repos or exclude a set of repos for a collaborator.
Here is an example settings file:
# These settings are synced to GitHub by https://github.com/github/safe-settings
repository:
# This is the settings that need to be applied to all repositories in the org
# See https://docs.github.com/en/rest/reference/repos#create-an-organization-repository for all available settings for a repository
# A short description of the repository that will show up on GitHub
description: description of the repo
# A URL with more information about the repository
homepage: https://example.github.io/
# Keep this as true for most cases
# A lot of the policies below cannot be implemented on bare repos
# Pass true to create an initial commit with empty README.
auto_init: true
# A list of topics to set on the repository - can alternatively set like this: [github, probot, new-topic, another-topic, topic-12]
topics:
- github
- probot
- new-topic
- another-topic
- topic-12
# Settings for Code security and analysis
# Dependabot Alerts
security:
enableVulnerabilityAlerts: true
enableAutomatedSecurityFixes: true
# Either `true` to make the repository private, or `false` to make it public.
# If this value is changed and if Org members cannot change the visibility of repos
# it would result in an error when updating a repo
private: true
# Can be public or private. If your organization is associated with an enterprise account using
# GitHub Enterprise Cloud or GitHub Enterprise Server 2.20+, visibility can also be internal.
visibility: private
# Either `true` to enable issues for this repository, `false` to disable them.
has_issues: true
# Either `true` to enable projects for this repository, or `false` to disable them.
# If projects are disabled for the organization, passing `true` will cause an API error.
has_projects: true
# Either `true` to enable the wiki for this repository, `false` to disable it.
has_wiki: true
# The default branch for this repository.
default_branch: main-enterprise
# Desired language or platform [.gitignore template](https://github.com/github/gitignore)
# to apply. Use the name of the template without the extension.
# For example, "Haskell".
gitignore_template: node
# Choose an [open source license template](https://choosealicense.com/)
# that best suits your needs, and then use the
# [license keyword](https://help.github.com/articles/licensing-a-repository/#searching-github-by-license-type)
# as the `license_template` string. For example, "mit" or "mpl-2.0".
license_template: mit
# Either `true` to allow squash-merging pull requests, or `false` to prevent
# squash-merging.
allow_squash_merge: true
# Either `true` to allow merging pull requests with a merge commit, or `false`
# to prevent merging pull requests with merge commits.
allow_merge_commit: true
# Either `true` to allow rebase-merging pull requests, or `false` to prevent
# rebase-merging.
allow_rebase_merge: true
# Either `true` to allow auto-merge on pull requests,
# or `false` to disallow auto-merge.
# Default: `false`
allow_auto_merge: true
# Either `true` to allow automatically deleting head branches
# when pull requests are merged, or `false` to prevent automatic deletion.
# Default: `false`
delete_branch_on_merge: true
# Either `true` to allow update branch on pull requests,
# or `false` to disallow update branch.
# Default: `false`
allow_update_branch: true
# Whether to archive this repository. false will unarchive a previously archived repository.
archived: false
# The following attributes are applied to any repo within the org
# So if a repo is not listed above is created or edited
# The app will apply the following settings to it
labels:
# Labels: define labels for Issues and Pull Requests
include:
- name: bug
color: CC0000
description: An issue with the system
- name: feature
# If including a `#`, make sure to wrap it with quotes!
color: '#336699'
description: New functionality.
- name: first-timers-only
# include the old name to rename an existing label
oldname: Help Wanted
color: '#326699'
- name: new-label
# include the old name to rename an existing label
oldname: Help Wanted
color: '#326699'
exclude:
# don't delete any labels created on GitHub that starts with "release"
- name: ^release
milestones:
# Milestones: define milestones for Issues and Pull Requests
- title: milestone-title
description: milestone-description
# The state of the milestone. Either `open` or `closed`
state: open
collaborators:
# Collaborators: give specific users access to any repository.
# See https://docs.github.com/en/rest/reference/collaborators#add-a-repository-collaborator for available options
- username: regpaco
permission: push
# The permission to grant the collaborator. Can be one of:
# * `pull` - can pull, but not push to or administer this repository.
# * `push` - can pull and push, but not administer this repository.
# * `admin` - can pull, push and administer this repository.
- username: beetlejuice
permission: pull
# You can exclude a list of repos for this collaborator and all repos except these repos would have this collaborator
exclude:
- actions-demo
- username: thor
permission: push
# You can include a list of repos for this collaborator and only those repos would have this collaborator
include:
- actions-demo
- another-repo
teams:
# Teams See https://docs.github.com/en/rest/reference/teams#create-a-team for available options
- name: core
# The permission to grant the team. Can be one of:
# * `pull` - can pull, but not push to or administer this repository.
# * `push` - can pull and push, but not administer this repository.
# * `admin` - can pull, push and administer this repository.
permission: admin
- name: docss
permission: push
- name: docs
permission: pull
# Visibility is only honored when the team is created not for existing teams.
# It can be either secret (default) or closed (visible to all members of the org)
- name: globalteam
permission: push
visibility: closed
branches:
# If the name of the branch value is specified as `default`, then the app will create a branch protection rule to apply against the default branch in the repo
- name: default
# https://docs.github.com/en/rest/reference/branches#update-branch-protection
# Branch Protection settings. Set to null to disable
protection:
# Required. Require at least one approving review on a pull request, before merging. Set to null to disable.
required_pull_request_reviews:
# The number of approvals required. (1-6)
required_approving_review_count: 1
# Dismiss approved reviews automatically when a new commit is pushed.
dismiss_stale_reviews: true
# Blocks merge until code owners have reviewed.
require_code_owner_reviews: true
# Whether the most recent reviewable push must be approved by someone other than the person who pushed it.
require_last_push_approval: true
# Allow specific users, teams, or apps to bypass pull request requirements. Set to null to disable.
bypass_pull_request_allowances:
apps: []
users: []
teams: []
# Specify which users and teams can dismiss pull request reviews. Pass an empty dismissal_restrictions object to disable. User and team dismissal_restrictions are only available for organization-owned repositories. Omit this parameter for personal repositories.
dismissal_restrictions:
users: []
teams: []
# Required. Require status checks to pass before merging. Set to null to disable
required_status_checks:
# Required. Require branches to be up to date before merging.
strict: true
# Required. The list of status checks to require in order to merge into this branch
contexts: []
# Required. Enforce all configured restrictions for administrators. Set to true to enforce required status checks for repository administrators. Set to null to disable.
enforce_admins: true
# Required. Restrict who can push to this branch. Team and user restrictions are only available for organization-owned repositories. Set to null to disable.
restrictions:
apps: []
users: []
teams: []
# See the docs (https://docs.github.com/en/repositories/managing-your-repositorys-settings-and-features/managing-repository-settings/configuring-autolinks-to-reference-external-resources) for a description of autolinks and replacement values.
autolinks:
- key_prefix: 'JIRA-'
url_template: 'https://jira.github.com/browse/JIRA-<num>'
- key_prefix: 'MYLINK-'
url_template: 'https://mywebsite.com/<num>'
validator:
#pattern: '[a-zA-Z0-9_-]+_[a-zA-Z0-9_-]+.*'
pattern: '[a-zA-Z0-9_-]+'
In addition to these values above, the settings file can have some additional values:
force_create
: This is set in the repo-level settings to force create the repo if the repo does not exist.template
: This is set in the repo-level settings, and is used with theforce_create
flag to use a specific repo template when creating the reposuborgrepos
: This is set in the suborg-level settings to define an array of repos. This field can also take aglob
pattern to allow wild-card expression to specify repos in a suborg. For e.g.test*
would includetest
,test1
,testing
, etc.- The
suborgteams
section contains a list of teams, and all the repos belonging to the teams would be part of thesuborg
You can pass environment variables; easiest way to do it is in a .env
file.
- CRON you can pass a cron input to run
safe-settings
at a regular schedule. This is based on node-cron. For eg.
# ┌────────────── second (optional)
# │ ┌──────────── minute
# │ │ ┌────────── hour
# │ │ │ ┌──────── day of month
# │ │ │ │ ┌────── month
# │ │ │ │ │ ┌──── day of week
# │ │ │ │ │ │
# │ │ │ │ │ │
# * * * * * *
CRON=* * * * * # Run every minute
- Logging level could be set using LOG_LEVEL. For e.g.
LOG_LEVEL=trace
- Enable Pull Request comment using ENABLE_PR_COMMENT. For e.g.
ENABLE_PR_COMMENT=true
- Besides the above settings files, the application can be bootstrapped with
runtime
settings. - The
runtime
settings are configured indeployment-settings.yml
that is in the directory from where the GitHub app is running. - Currently the only setting that is possible are
restrictedRepos: [... ]
which allows you to configure a list of repos within yourorg
that are excluded from the settings. If thedeployment-settings.yml
is not present, the following repos are added by default to therestricted
repos list:'admin', '.github', 'safe-settings'
- Label color can also start with
#
, e.g.color: '#F341B2'
. Make sure to wrap it with quotes! - Each top-level element under branch protection must be filled (eg:
required_pull_request_reviews
,required_status_checks
,enforce_admins
andrestrictions
). If you don't want to use one of them you must set it tonull
(see comments in the example above). Otherwise, none of the settings will be applied. - The precedence order is repository > suborg > org (.github/repos/.yml > .github/suborgs/.yml > .github/settings.yml
-
Create an
admin
repo within your organization (the repository must be calledadmin
). -
Add the settings for the
org
,suborgs
, andrepos
. List of sample files could be found here.
See docs/deploy.md if you would like to run your own instance of this plugin.
safe-settings
is licensed under the ISC license
safe-settings
uses 3rd party libraries, each with their own license. These are found here.