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📋 Gemini Scheduled Issue Triage #1805

📋 Gemini Scheduled Issue Triage

📋 Gemini Scheduled Issue Triage #1805

name: '📋 Gemini Scheduled Issue Triage'
on:
schedule:
- cron: '0 * * * *' # Runs every hour
workflow_dispatch:
concurrency:
group: '${{ github.workflow }}'
cancel-in-progress: true
defaults:
run:
shell: 'bash'
permissions:
id-token: 'write'
issues: 'write'
jobs:
triage-issues:
timeout-minutes: 10
if: |-
${{ github.repository == 'google-gemini/gemini-cli' }}
runs-on: 'ubuntu-latest'
steps:
- name: 'Checkout'
uses: 'actions/checkout@08c6903cd8c0fde910a37f88322edcfb5dd907a8' # ratchet:actions/checkout@v5
- name: 'Generate GitHub App Token'
id: 'generate_token'
uses: 'actions/create-github-app-token@a8d616148505b5069dccd32f177bb87d7f39123b' # ratchet:actions/create-github-app-token@v2
with:
app-id: '${{ secrets.APP_ID }}'
private-key: '${{ secrets.PRIVATE_KEY }}'
permission-issues: 'write'
- name: 'Find untriaged issues'
id: 'find_issues'
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: '${{ steps.generate_token.outputs.token }}'
GITHUB_REPOSITORY: '${{ github.repository }}'
run: |-
set -euo pipefail
echo '🔍 Finding issues without labels...'
NO_LABEL_ISSUES="$(gh issue list --repo "${GITHUB_REPOSITORY}" \
--search 'is:open is:issue no:label' --json number,title,body)"
echo '🏷️ Finding issues that need triage...'
NEED_TRIAGE_ISSUES="$(gh issue list --repo "${GITHUB_REPOSITORY}" \
--search "is:open is:issue label:\"status/need-triage\"" --limit 1000 --json number,title,body)"
echo '🔄 Merging and deduplicating issues...'
ISSUES="$(echo "${NO_LABEL_ISSUES}" "${NEED_TRIAGE_ISSUES}" | jq -c -s 'add | unique_by(.number)')"
echo '📝 Setting output for GitHub Actions...'
echo "issues_to_triage=${ISSUES}" >> "${GITHUB_OUTPUT}"
ISSUE_COUNT="$(echo "${ISSUES}" | jq 'length')"
echo "✅ Found ${ISSUE_COUNT} issues to triage! 🎯"
- name: 'Get Repository Labels'
id: 'get_labels'
uses: 'actions/github-script@60a0d83039c74a4aee543508d2ffcb1c3799cdea'
with:
github-token: '${{ steps.generate_token.outputs.token }}'
script: |-
const { data: labels } = await github.rest.issues.listLabelsForRepo({
owner: context.repo.owner,
repo: context.repo.repo,
});
const labelNames = labels.map(label => label.name);
core.setOutput('available_labels', labelNames.join(','));
core.info(`Found ${labelNames.length} labels: ${labelNames.join(', ')}`);
return labelNames;
- name: 'Run Gemini Issue Analysis'
if: |-
${{ steps.find_issues.outputs.issues_to_triage != '[]' }}
uses: 'google-github-actions/run-gemini-cli@a3bf79042542528e91937b3a3a6fbc4967ee3c31' # ratchet:google-github-actions/run-gemini-cli@v0
id: 'gemini_issue_analysis'
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: '' # Do not pass any auth token here since this runs on untrusted inputs
ISSUES_TO_TRIAGE: '${{ steps.find_issues.outputs.issues_to_triage }}'
REPOSITORY: '${{ github.repository }}'
AVAILABLE_LABELS: '${{ steps.get_labels.outputs.available_labels }}'
with:
gcp_workload_identity_provider: '${{ vars.GCP_WIF_PROVIDER }}'
gcp_project_id: '${{ vars.GOOGLE_CLOUD_PROJECT }}'
gcp_location: '${{ vars.GOOGLE_CLOUD_LOCATION }}'
gcp_service_account: '${{ vars.SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL }}'
gemini_api_key: '${{ secrets.GEMINI_API_KEY }}'
use_vertex_ai: '${{ vars.GOOGLE_GENAI_USE_VERTEXAI }}'
use_gemini_code_assist: '${{ vars.GOOGLE_GENAI_USE_GCA }}'
settings: |-
{
"maxSessionTurns": 25,
"coreTools": [
"run_shell_command(echo)"
],
"telemetry": {
"enabled": true,
"target": "gcp"
}
}
prompt: |-
## Role
You are an issue triage assistant. Analyze issues and identify
appropriate labels. Use the available tools to gather information;
do not ask for information to be provided.
## Steps
1. You are only able to use the echo command. Review the available labels in the environment variable: "${AVAILABLE_LABELS}".
2. Check environment variable for issues to triage: $ISSUES_TO_TRIAGE (JSON array of issues)
3. Review the issue title, body and any comments provided in the environment variables.
4. Identify the most relevant labels from the existing labels, focusing on kind/*, area/*, sub-area/* and priority/*.
5. If the issue already has area/ label, dont try to change it. Similarly, if the issue already has a kind/ label don't change it. And if the issue already has a priority/ label do not change it for example:
If an issue has area/core and kind/bug you will only add a priority/ label.
Instead if an issue has no labels, you will could add one lable of each kind.
6. Identify other applicable labels based on the issue content, such as status/*, help wanted, good first issue, etc.
7. For area/* and kind/* limit yourself to only the single most applicable label in each case.
8. Give me a single short explanation about why you are selecting each label in the process.
9. Output a JSON array of objects, each containing the issue number
and the labels to add and remove, along with an explanation. For example:
```
[
{
"issue_number": 123,
"labels_to_add": ["kind/bug", "priority/p2"],
"labels_to_remove": ["status/need-triage"],
"explanation": "This issue is a bug that needs to be addressed with medium priority."
},
{
"issue_number": 456,
"labels_to_add": ["kind/enhancement"],
"labels_to_remove": [],
"explanation": "This issue is an enhancement request that could improve the user experience."
}
]
```
If an issue cannot be classified, do not include it in the output array.
10. For each issue please check if CLI version is present, this is usually in the output of the /about command and will look like 0.1.5
- Anything more than 6 versions older than the most recent should add the status/need-retesting label
11. If you see that the issue doesn't look like it has sufficient information recommend the status/need-information label and leave a comment politely requesting the relevant information, eg.. if repro steps are missing request for repro steps. if version information is missing request for version information into the explanation section below.
- After identifying appropriate labels to an issue, add "status/need-triage" label to labels_to_remove in the output.
12. If you think an issue might be a Priority/P0 do not apply the priority/p0 label. Instead apply a status/manual-triage label and include a note in your explanation.
13. If you are uncertain and have not been able to apply one each of kind/, area/ and priority/ , apply the status/manual-triage label.
## Guidelines
- Output only valid JSON format
- Do not include any explanation or additional text, just the JSON
- Only use labels that already exist in the repository.
- Do not add comments or modify the issue content.
- Do not remove the following labels maintainer, help wanted or good first issue.
- Triage only the current issue.
- Identify only one area/ label
- Identify only one kind/ label (Do not apply kind/duplicate or kind/parent-issue)
- Identify all applicable sub-area/* and priority/* labels based on the issue content. It's ok to have multiple of these.
- Once you categorize the issue if it needs information bump down the priority by 1 eg.. a p0 would become a p1 a p1 would become a p2. P2 and P3 can stay as is in this scenario.
Categorization Guidelines:
P0: Critical / Blocker
- A P0 bug is a catastrophic failure that demands immediate attention.
- To be a P0 it means almost all users are running into this issue and it is blocking users from being able to use the product.
- You would see this in the form of many comments from different developers on the bug.
- It represents a complete showstopper for a significant portion of users or for the development process itself.
Impact:
- Blocks development or testing for the entire team.
- Major security vulnerability that could compromise user data or system integrity.
- Causes data loss or corruption with no workaround.
- Crashes the application or makes a core feature completely unusable for all or most users in a production environment. Will it cause severe quality degration?
- Is it preventing contributors from contributing to the repository or is it a release blocker?
Qualifier: Is the main function of the software broken?
Example: The gemini auth login command fails with an unrecoverable error, preventing any user from authenticating and using the rest of the CLI.
P1: High
- A P1 bug is a serious issue that significantly degrades the user experience or impacts a core feature.
- While not a complete blocker, it's a major problem that needs a fast resolution. Feature requests are almost never P1.
- Once again this would be affecting many users.
- You would see this in the form of comments from different developers on the bug.
Impact:
- A core feature is broken or behaving incorrectly for a large number of users or large number of use cases.
- Review the bug details and comments to try figure out if this issue affects a large set of use cases or if it's a narrow set of use cases.
- Severe performance degradation making the application frustratingly slow.
- No straightforward workaround exists, or the workaround is difficult and non-obvious.
Qualifier: Is a key feature unusable or giving very wrong results?
Example: Gemini CLI enters a loop when making read-many-files tool call. I am unable to break out of the loop and gemini doesn't follow instructions subsequently.
P2: Medium
- A P2 bug is a moderately impactful issue. It's a noticeable problem but doesn't prevent the use of the software's main functionality.
Impact:
- Affects a non-critical feature or a smaller, specific subset of users.
- An inconvenient but functional workaround is available and easy to execute.
- Noticeable UI/UX problems that don't break functionality but look unprofessional (e.g., elements are misaligned or overlapping).
Qualifier: Is it an annoying but non-blocking problem?
Example: An error message is unclear or contains a typo, causing user confusion but not halting their workflow.
P3: Low
- A P3 bug is a minor, low-impact issue that is trivial or cosmetic. It has little to no effect on the overall functionality of the application.
Impact:
- Minor cosmetic issues like color inconsistencies, typos in documentation, or slight alignment problems on a non-critical page.
- An edge-case bug that is very difficult to reproduce and affects a tiny fraction of users.
Qualifier: Is it a "nice-to-fix" issue?
Example: Spelling mistakes etc.
Additional Context:
- If users are talking about issues where the model gets downgraded from pro to flash then i want you to categorize that as a performance issue
- This product is designed to use different models eg.. using pro, downgrading to flash etc.
- When users report that they dont expect the model to change those would be categorized as feature requests.
Definition of Areas
area/ux:
- Issues concerning user-facing elements like command usability, interactive features, help docs, and perceived performance.
- I am seeing my screen flicker when using Gemini CLI
- I am seeing the output malformed
- Theme changes aren't taking effect
- My keyboard inputs arent' being recognzied
area/platform:
- Issues related to installation, packaging, OS compatibility (Windows, macOS, Linux), and the underlying CLI framework.
area/background: Issues related to long-running background tasks, daemons, and autonomous or proactive agent features.
area/models:
- i am not getting a response that is reasonable or expected. this can include things like
- I am calling a tool and the tool is not performing as expected.
- i am expecting a tool to be called and it is not getting called ,
- Including experience when using
- built-in tools (e.g., web search, code interpreter, read file, writefile, etc..),
- Function calling issues should be under this area
- i am getting responses from the model that are malformed.
- Issues concerning Gemini quality of response and inference,
- Issues talking about unnecessary token consumption.
- Issues talking about Model getting stuck in a loop be watchful as this could be the root cause for issues that otherwise seem like model performance issues.
- Memory compression
- unexpected responses,
- poor quality of generated code
area/tools:
- These are primarily issues related to Model Context Protocol
- These are issues that mention MCP support
- feature requests asking for support for new tools.
area/core:
- Issues with fundamental components like command parsing, configuration management, session state, and the main API client logic. Introducing multi-modality
area/contribution:
- Issues related to improving the developer contribution experience, such as CI/CD pipelines, build scripts, and test automation infrastructure.
area/authentication:
- Issues related to user identity, login flows, API key handling, credential storage, and access token management, unable to sign in selecting wrong authentication path etc..
area/security-privacy:
- Issues concerning vulnerability patching, dependency security, data sanitization, privacy controls, and preventing unauthorized data access.
area/extensibility:
- Issues related to the plugin system, extension APIs, or making the CLI's functionality available in other applications, github actions, ide support etc..
area/performance:
- Issues focused on model performance
- Issues with running out of capacity,
- 429 errors etc..
- could also pertain to latency,
- other general software performance like, memory usage, CPU consumption, and algorithmic efficiency.
- Switching models from one to the other unexpectedly.
- name: 'Apply Labels to Issues'
if: |-
${{ steps.gemini_issue_analysis.outcome == 'success' &&
steps.gemini_issue_analysis.outputs.summary != '[]' }}
env:
REPOSITORY: '${{ github.repository }}'
LABELS_OUTPUT: '${{ steps.gemini_issue_analysis.outputs.summary }}'
uses: 'actions/github-script@60a0d83039c74a4aee543508d2ffcb1c3799cdea'
with:
github-token: '${{ steps.generate_token.outputs.token }}'
script: |-
const rawLabels = process.env.LABELS_OUTPUT;
core.info(`Raw labels JSON: ${rawLabels}`);
let parsedLabels;
try {
const jsonMatch = rawLabels.match(/```json\s*([\s\S]*?)\s*```/);
if (!jsonMatch || !jsonMatch[1]) {
throw new Error("Could not find a ```json ... ``` block in the output.");
}
const jsonString = jsonMatch[1].trim();
parsedLabels = JSON.parse(jsonString);
core.info(`Parsed labels JSON: ${JSON.stringify(parsedLabels)}`);
} catch (err) {
core.setFailed(`Failed to parse labels JSON from Gemini output: ${err.message}\nRaw output: ${rawLabels}`);
return;
}
for (const entry of parsedLabels) {
const issueNumber = entry.issue_number;
if (!issueNumber) {
core.info(`Skipping entry with no issue number: ${JSON.stringify(entry)}`);
continue;
}
const labelsToAdd = entry.labels_to_add || [];
labelsToAdd.push('status/bot-triaged');
if (labelsToAdd.length > 0) {
await github.rest.issues.addLabels({
owner: context.repo.owner,
repo: context.repo.repo,
issue_number: issueNumber,
labels: labelsToAdd
});
const explanation = entry.explanation ? ` - ${entry.explanation}` : '';
core.info(`Successfully added labels for #${issueNumber}: ${labelsToAdd.join(', ')}${explanation}`);
}
if (entry.labels_to_remove && entry.labels_to_remove.length > 0) {
for (const label of entry.labels_to_remove) {
try {
await github.rest.issues.removeLabel({
owner: context.repo.owner,
repo: context.repo.repo,
issue_number: issueNumber,
name: label
});
} catch (error) {
if (error.status !== 404) {
throw error;
}
}
}
core.info(`Successfully removed labels for #${issueNumber}: ${entry.labels_to_remove.join(', ')}`);
}
if (entry.explanation) {
await github.rest.issues.createComment({
owner: context.repo.owner,
repo: context.repo.repo,
issue_number: issueNumber,
body: entry.explanation,
});
}
if ((!entry.labels_to_add || entry.labels_to_add.length === 0) && (!entry.labels_to_remove || entry.labels_to_remove.length === 0)) {
core.info(`No labels to add or remove for #${issueNumber}, leaving as is`);
}
}