Pull Request Generator
The Pull Request generator uses the API of an SCMaaS provider (GitHub, Gitea, or Bitbucket Server) to automatically discover open pull requests within a repository. This fits well with the style of building a test environment when you create a pull request.
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
metadata:
name: myapps
spec:
generators:
- pullRequest:
# When using a Pull Request generator, the ApplicationSet controller polls every `requeueAfterSeconds` interval (defaulting to every 30 minutes) to detect changes.
requeueAfterSeconds: 1800
# See below for provider specific options.
github:
# ...
Note
Know the security implications of PR generators in ApplicationSets. Only admins may create ApplicationSets to avoid leaking Secrets, and only admins may create PRs if the project
field of an ApplicationSet with a PR generator is templated, to avoid granting management of out-of-bounds resources.
GitHub
Specify the repository from which to fetch the GitHub Pull requests.
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
metadata:
name: myapps
spec:
generators:
- pullRequest:
github:
# The GitHub organization or user.
owner: myorg
# The Github repository
repo: myrepository
# For GitHub Enterprise (optional)
api: https://git.example.com/
# Reference to a Secret containing an access token. (optional)
tokenRef:
secretName: github-token
key: token
# (optional) use a GitHub App to access the API instead of a PAT.
appSecretName: github-app-repo-creds
# Labels is used to filter the PRs that you want to target. (optional)
labels:
- preview
requeueAfterSeconds: 1800
template:
# ...
owner
: Required name of the GitHub organization or user.repo
: Required name of the GitHub repository.api
: If using GitHub Enterprise, the URL to access it. (Optional)tokenRef
: ASecret
name and key containing the GitHub access token to use for requests. If not specified, will make anonymous requests which have a lower rate limit and can only see public repositories. (Optional)labels
: Filter the PRs to those containing all of the labels listed. (Optional)appSecretName
: ASecret
name containing a GitHub App secret in repo-creds format.
GitLab
Specify the project from which to fetch the GitLab merge requests.
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
metadata:
name: myapps
spec:
generators:
- pullRequest:
gitlab:
# The GitLab project.
project: myproject
# For self-hosted GitLab (optional)
api: https://git.example.com/
# Reference to a Secret containing an access token. (optional)
tokenRef:
secretName: gitlab-token
key: token
# Labels is used to filter the MRs that you want to target. (optional)
labels:
- preview
# MR state is used to filter MRs only with a certain state. (optional)
pullRequestState: opened
# If true, skips validating the SCM provider's TLS certificate - useful for self-signed certificates.
insecure: false
requeueAfterSeconds: 1800
template:
# ...
project
: Required name of the GitLab project.api
: If using self-hosted GitLab, the URL to access it. (Optional)tokenRef
: ASecret
name and key containing the GitLab access token to use for requests. If not specified, will make anonymous requests which have a lower rate limit and can only see public repositories. (Optional)labels
: Labels is used to filter the MRs that you want to target. (Optional)pullRequestState
: PullRequestState is an additional MRs filter to get only those with a certain state. Default: “” (all states)insecure
: By default (false) - Skip checking the validity of the SCM’s certificate - useful for self-signed TLS certificates.
As a preferable alternative to setting insecure
to true, you can configure self-signed TLS certificates for Gitlab by mounting self-signed certificate to the applicationset controller.
Gitea
Specify the repository from which to fetch the Gitea Pull requests.
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
metadata:
name: myapps
spec:
generators:
- pullRequest:
gitea:
# The Gitea organization or user.
owner: myorg
# The Gitea repository
repo: myrepository
# The Gitea url to use
api: https://gitea.mydomain.com/
# Reference to a Secret containing an access token. (optional)
tokenRef:
secretName: gitea-token
key: token
# many gitea deployments use TLS, but many are self-hosted and self-signed certificates
insecure: true
requeueAfterSeconds: 1800
template:
# ...
owner
: Required name of the Gitea organization or user.repo
: Required name of the Gitea repository.api
: The url of the Gitea instance.tokenRef
: ASecret
name and key containing the Gitea access token to use for requests. If not specified, will make anonymous requests which have a lower rate limit and can only see public repositories. (Optional)insecure
:Allow for self-signed certificates, primarily for testing.
Bitbucket Server
Fetch pull requests from a repo hosted on a Bitbucket Server (not the same as Bitbucket Cloud).
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
metadata:
name: myapps
spec:
generators:
- pullRequest:
bitbucketServer:
project: myproject
repo: myrepository
# URL of the Bitbucket Server. Required.
api: https://mycompany.bitbucket.org
# Credentials for Basic authentication. Required for private repositories.
basicAuth:
# The username to authenticate with
username: myuser
# Reference to a Secret containing the password or personal access token.
passwordRef:
secretName: mypassword
key: password
# Labels are not supported by Bitbucket Server, so filtering by label is not possible.
# Filter PRs using the source branch name. (optional)
filters:
- branchMatch: ".*-argocd"
template:
# ...
project
: Required name of the Bitbucket projectrepo
: Required name of the Bitbucket repository.api
: Required URL to access the Bitbucket REST API. For the example above, an API request would be made tohttps://mycompany.bitbucket.org/rest/api/1.0/projects/myproject/repos/myrepository/pull-requests
branchMatch
: Optional regexp filter which should match the source branch name. This is an alternative to labels which are not supported by Bitbucket server.
If you want to access a private repository, you must also provide the credentials for Basic auth (this is the only auth supported currently): * username
: The username to authenticate with. It only needs read access to the relevant repo. * passwordRef
: A Secret
name and key containing the password or personal access token to use for requests.
Bitbucket Cloud
Fetch pull requests from a repo hosted on a Bitbucket Cloud.
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
metadata:
name: myapps
spec:
generators:
- pullRequest:
bitbucket:
# Workspace name where the repoistory is stored under. Required.
owner: myproject
# Repository slug. Required.
repo: myrepository
# URL of the Bitbucket Server. (optional) Will default to 'https://api.bitbucket.org/2.0'.
api: https://api.bitbucket.org/2.0
# Credentials for Basic authentication (App Password). Either basicAuth or bearerToken
# authentication is required to access private repositories
basicAuth:
# The username to authenticate with
username: myuser
# Reference to a Secret containing the password or personal access token.
passwordRef:
secretName: mypassword
key: password
# Credentials for Bearer Token (App Token) authentication. Either basicAuth or bearerToken
# authentication is required to access private repositories
bearerToken:
tokenRef:
secretName: repotoken
key: token
# Labels are not supported by Bitbucket Cloud, so filtering by label is not possible.
# Filter PRs using the source branch name. (optional)
filters:
- branchMatch: ".*-argocd"
template:
# ...
owner
: Required name of the Bitbucket workspacerepo
: Required name of the Bitbucket repository.api
: Optional URL to access the Bitbucket REST API. For the example above, an API request would be made tohttps://api.bitbucket.org/2.0/repositories/{workspace}/{repo_slug}/pullrequests
. If not set, defaults tohttps://api.bitbucket.org/2.0
branchMatch
: Optional regexp filter which should match the source branch name. This is an alternative to labels which are not supported by Bitbucket server.
If you want to access a private repository, ArgoCD will need credentials to access repository in Bitbucket Cloud. You can use Bitbucket App Password (generated per user, with access to whole workspace), or Bitbucket App Token (generated per repository, with access limited to repository scope only). If both App Password and App Token are defined, App Token will be used.
To use Bitbucket App Password, use basicAuth
section. - username
: The username to authenticate with. It only needs read access to the relevant repo. - passwordRef
: A Secret
name and key containing the password or personal access token to use for requests.
In case of Bitbucket App Token, go with bearerToken
section. - tokenRef
: A Secret
name and key containing the app token to use for requests.
Azure DevOps
Specify the organization, project and repository from which you want to fetch pull requests.
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
metadata:
name: myapps
spec:
generators:
- pullRequest:
azuredevops:
# Azure DevOps org to scan. Required.
organization: myorg
# Azure DevOps project name to scan. Required.
project: myproject
# Azure DevOps repo name to scan. Required.
repo: myrepository
# The Azure DevOps API URL to talk to. If blank, use https://dev.azure.com/.
api: https://dev.azure.com/
# Reference to a Secret containing an access token. (optional)
tokenRef:
secretName: azure-devops-token
key: token
# Labels is used to filter the PRs that you want to target. (optional)
labels:
- preview
requeueAfterSeconds: 1800
template:
# ...
organization
: Required name of the Azure DevOps organization.project
: Required name of the Azure DevOps project.repo
: Required name of the Azure DevOps repository.api
: If using self-hosted Azure DevOps Repos, the URL to access it. (Optional)tokenRef
: ASecret
name and key containing the Azure DevOps access token to use for requests. If not specified, will make anonymous requests which have a lower rate limit and can only see public repositories. (Optional)labels
: Filter the PRs to those containing all of the labels listed. (Optional)
Filters
Filters allow selecting which pull requests to generate for. Each filter can declare one or more conditions, all of which must pass. If multiple filters are present, any can match for a repository to be included. If no filters are specified, all pull requests will be processed. Currently, only a subset of filters is available when comparing with SCM provider filters.
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
metadata:
name: myapps
spec:
generators:
- pullRequest:
# ...
# Include any pull request ending with "argocd". (optional)
filters:
- branchMatch: ".*-argocd"
template:
# ...
branchMatch
: A regexp matched against source branch names.targetBranchMatch
: A regexp matched against target branch names.
GitHub and GitLab also support a labels
filter.
Template
As with all generators, several keys are available for replacement in the generated application.
The following is a comprehensive Helm Application example;
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
metadata:
name: myapps
spec:
generators:
- pullRequest:
# ...
template:
metadata:
name: 'myapp-{{branch}}-{{number}}'
spec:
source:
repoURL: 'https://github.com/myorg/myrepo.git'
targetRevision: '{{head_sha}}'
path: kubernetes/
helm:
parameters:
- name: "image.tag"
value: "pull-{{head_sha}}"
project: "my-project"
destination:
server: https://kubernetes.default.svc
namespace: default
And, here is a robust Kustomize example;
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
metadata:
name: myapps
spec:
generators:
- pullRequest:
# ...
template:
metadata:
name: 'myapp-{{branch}}-{{number}}'
spec:
source:
repoURL: 'https://github.com/myorg/myrepo.git'
targetRevision: '{{head_sha}}'
path: kubernetes/
kustomize:
nameSuffix: {{branch}}
commonLabels:
app.kubernetes.io/instance: {{branch}}-{{number}}
images:
- ghcr.io/myorg/myrepo:{{head_sha}}
project: "my-project"
destination:
server: https://kubernetes.default.svc
namespace: default
number
: The ID number of the pull request.branch
: The name of the branch of the pull request head.branch_slug
: The branch name will be cleaned to be conform to the DNS label standard as defined in RFC 1123, and truncated to 50 characters to give room to append/suffix-ing it with 13 more characters.target_branch
: The name of the target branch of the pull request.target_branch_slug
: The target branch name will be cleaned to be conform to the DNS label standard as defined in RFC 1123, and truncated to 50 characters to give room to append/suffix-ing it with 13 more characters.head_sha
: This is the SHA of the head of the pull request.head_short_sha
: This is the short SHA of the head of the pull request (8 characters long or the length of the head SHA if it’s shorter).head_short_sha_7
: This is the short SHA of the head of the pull request (7 characters long or the length of the head SHA if it’s shorter).labels
: The array of pull request labels. (Supported only for Go Template ApplicationSet manifests.)
Webhook Configuration
When using a Pull Request generator, the ApplicationSet controller polls every requeueAfterSeconds
interval (defaulting to every 30 minutes) to detect changes. To eliminate this delay from polling, the ApplicationSet webhook server can be configured to receive webhook events, which will trigger Application generation by the Pull Request generator.
The configuration is almost the same as the one described in the Git generator, but there is one difference: if you want to use the Pull Request Generator as well, additionally configure the following settings.
Github webhook configuration
In section 1, “Create the webhook in the Git provider”, add an event so that a webhook request will be sent when a pull request is created, closed, or label changed.
Add Webhook URL with uri /api/webhook
and select content-type as json
Select Let me select individual events
and enable the checkbox for Pull requests
.
The Pull Request Generator will requeue when the next action occurs.
opened
closed
reopened
labeled
unlabeled
synchronized
For more information about each event, please refer to the official documentation.
Gitlab webhook configuration
Enable checkbox for “Merge request events” in triggers list.
The Pull Request Generator will requeue when the next action occurs.
open
close
reopen
update
merge
For more information about each event, please refer to the official documentation.
Lifecycle
An Application will be generated when a Pull Request is discovered when the configured criteria is met - i.e. for GitHub when a Pull Request matches the specified labels
and/or pullRequestState
. Application will be removed when a Pull Request no longer meets the specified criteria.