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feat(cicd): remove mergeable and edit semantic-pr #10

feat(cicd): remove mergeable and edit semantic-pr

feat(cicd): remove mergeable and edit semantic-pr #10

Workflow file for this run

name: "Lint PR"
on:
pull_request_target:
types:
- opened
- edited
- synchronize
permissions:
pull-requests: read
jobs:
main:
name: Validate PR title
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: amannn/action-semantic-pull-request@v5
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
with:
# Configure which types are allowed (newline-delimited).
# Default: https://github.com/commitizen/conventional-commit-types
types: |
fix
feat
# Configure which scopes are allowed (newline-delimited).
# These are regex patterns auto-wrapped in `^ $`.
scopes: |
core
ui
cicd
fix #\d+
# Configure that a scope must always be provided.
requireScope: true
# Configure which scopes are disallowed in PR titles (newline-delimited).
# For instance by setting the value below, `chore(release): ...` (lowercase)
# and `ci(e2e,release): ...` (unknown scope) will be rejected.
# These are regex patterns auto-wrapped in `^ $`.
disallowScopes: |
release
[A-Z]+
# Configure additional validation for the subject based on a regex.
# This example ensures the subject doesn't start with an uppercase character.
subjectPattern: ^(?![A-Z]).+$
# If `subjectPattern` is configured, you can use this property to override
# the default error message that is shown when the pattern doesn't match.
# The variables `subject` and `title` can be used within the message.
subjectPatternError: |
The subject "{subject}" found in the pull request title "{title}"
didn't match the configured pattern. Please ensure that the subject
doesn't start with an uppercase character.
# If the PR contains one of these newline-delimited labels, the
# validation is skipped. If you want to rerun the validation when
# labels change, you might want to use the `labeled` and `unlabeled`
# event triggers in your workflow.
ignoreLabels: |
bot
ignore-semantic-pull-request
# If you're using a format for the PR title that differs from the traditional Conventional
# Commits spec, you can use these options to customize the parsing of the type, scope and
# subject. The `headerPattern` should contain a regex where the capturing groups in parentheses
# correspond to the parts listed in `headerPatternCorrespondence`.
# See: https://github.com/conventional-changelog/conventional-changelog/tree/master/packages/conventional-commits-parser#headerpattern
headerPattern: '^(\w*)(?:\(([\w$.\-*/ ]*)\))?: (.*)$'
headerPatternCorrespondence: type, scope, subject