@mapbox/missed-issues v1.2.0
Missed Issues
A CLI tool for finding issues that mention a team and no one from the team has responded to the issue.
This will list all issues in the mapbox org that mention @mapbox/teamname where no member of that team has replied to the issue since the mention. To help cut down on commenting for commenting's sake, it also accepts 👍 on the original post as acknowledgement of the issue if no comments below mention the team.
> missed-issues --org mapbox --team teamname --token github_tokenPossible output
## check-file-dependencies
- [ ] [#1123 - Consider evaluating expressions](https://github.com/mapbox/check-file-dependencies/issues/new)
## missed-issues
- [ ] [#42 - Document the node module interface](https://github.com/mapbox/missed-issues/issues/new)Usage
npm install @mapbox/missed-issues -g
Go to Personal access tokens in GitHub and create a token with read:org and repo access and than run the follow command. This will store your token in a config file so that you don't have to type --token [redacted] every time you run missed-issues.
missed-issues config token [redacted]`Command Options
Required
--org: the name of the org you want to search.--team: the name of the team you are checking into. This MUST not contain the name of the org.--token: a GitHub token withread:org, repoaccess
Optional
--from: the start date of your search range. All issues returned will have been edited on or after this date. Defaults to one week ago.frommust either be aYYYY-MM-DDstring such as2017-11-16or a###dstring suck as21d. The###dformat allows for "days from now".--ignore-reposa comma-separated list with no spaces of repos that you wish to exclude from your search results. These are excluding via filtering and will thus still affect your max-issues number. (eg:missed-issues,mapbox-gl-draw).--max-issues: the max number of issues to get before filtering to help avoid long requests. Defaults to 100. That said, hitting this max is bad for your results.--nonmembers: a comma-separated list of user logins who should not be used to count a ticket as replied too.
Configuration
missed-issues allows you to configure defaults for unprovided flags. This is very helpful if you are running this for a single team or a single org and it lets you not paste your GitHub token into your terminal over and over again.
Configuration is powered by environment variables and can thus be set via your .profile or simular shell setup tool.
Below is a list of env vars missed-issues supports. The value of the env var is the flag the key will set.
GITHUB_TOKEN=token
MISSED_ISSUES_ORG=org
MISSED_ISSUES_TEAM=team
MISSED_ISSUES_IGNORE_REPOS=ignore-repos
MISSED_ISSUES_NON_MEMBERS=nonmembersViewing Configuration via the CLI
missed-issues config
This will print out of flags as set via environment variables and config.
Current configuration
token: fake-token
team: just-a-team
org: just-an-org
ignore-repos: <NOT SET>
nonmembers: <NOT SET><NOT SET> indicates that the value will not be set via the config or current environment variables.
Setting Configuration via the CLI
missed-issues config <flag> <value>
This commands sets the value of a flag perminitly in your missed-issues config file.
flags
The below flags can be stored
- token
- org
- team
- ignore-repos
- nonmembers
values
All values should match that desribed in the flags section but validation is not provided at this step. The value must be set. To unset a flag try missed-issues config <flag> "".