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chore: set pr limit for dependabot #106

Merged
merged 2 commits into from
Sep 11, 2023
Merged

chore: set pr limit for dependabot #106

merged 2 commits into from
Sep 11, 2023

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xtreem88
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Summary

This PR modifies our Dependabot configuration to combine updates into a single pull request(hopefully).
By setting the open-pull-requests-limit to 1, we hope that Dependabot will batch multiple updates together, helping to reduce the number of PRs we need to review and merge.

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github-actions bot commented Sep 11, 2023

Pull request title looks good 👍!

If this pull request gets merged, it will not cause a new release of the software. Example: If this project's latest release version is 1.0.0. If this pull request gets merged in, the next release of this project will be 1.0.0. This pull request is not a breaking change.

All merged pull requests will eventually get deployed. But some types of pull requests will trigger a deployment (such as features and bug fixes) while some pull requests will wait to get deployed until a later time.

This project uses a special format for pull requests titles. Expand this section to learn more (expand by clicking the ᐅ symbol on the left side of this sentence)...

This project uses a special format for pull requests titles. Don't worry, it's easy!

This pull request title should be in this format:

<type>: short description of change being made

If your pull request introduces breaking changes to the code, use this format:

<type>!: short description of breaking change

where <type> is one of the following:

  • feat: - A feature is being added or modified by this pull request. Use this if you made any changes to any of the features of the project.

  • fix: - A bug is being fixed by this pull request. Use this if you made any fixes to bugs in the project.

  • docs: - This pull request is making documentation changes, only.

  • refactor: - A change was made that doesn't fix a bug or add a feature.

  • test: - Adds missing tests or fixes broken tests.

  • style: - Changes that do not effect the code (whitespace, linting, formatting, semi-colons, etc)

  • perf: - Changes improve performance of the code.

  • build: - Changes to the build system (maven, npm, gulp, etc)

  • ci: - Changes to the CI build system (Travis, GitHub Actions, Circle, etc)

  • chore: - Other changes to project that don't modify source code or test files.

  • revert: - Reverts a previous commit that was made.

Examples:

feat: edit profile photo
refactor!: remove deprecated v1 endpoints
build: update npm dependencies
style: run formatter 

Need more examples? Want to learn more about this format? Check out the official docs.

Note: If your pull request does multiple things such as adding a feature and makes changes to the CI server and fixes some bugs then you might want to consider splitting this pull request up into multiple smaller pull requests.

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github-actions bot commented Sep 11, 2023

Hey, there @xtreem88 👋🤖. I'm a bot here to help you.

⚠️ Pull requests into the branch beta typically only allows changes with the types: fix. From the pull request title, the type of change this pull request is trying to complete is: chore. ⚠️

This pull request might still be allowed to be merged. However, you might want to consider make this pull request merge into a different branch other then beta.

This project uses a special format for pull requests titles. Expand this section to learn more (expand by clicking the ᐅ symbol on the left side of this sentence)...

This project uses a special format for pull requests titles. Don't worry, it's easy!

This pull request title should be in this format:

<type>: short description of change being made

If your pull request introduces breaking changes to the code, use this format:

<type>!: short description of breaking change

where <type> is one of the following:

  • feat: - A feature is being added or modified by this pull request. Use this if you made any changes to any of the features of the project.

  • fix: - A bug is being fixed by this pull request. Use this if you made any fixes to bugs in the project.

  • docs: - This pull request is making documentation changes, only.

  • refactor: - A change was made that doesn't fix a bug or add a feature.

  • test: - Adds missing tests or fixes broken tests.

  • style: - Changes that do not effect the code (whitespace, linting, formatting, semi-colons, etc)

  • perf: - Changes improve performance of the code.

  • build: - Changes to the build system (maven, npm, gulp, etc)

  • ci: - Changes to the CI build system (Travis, GitHub Actions, Circle, etc)

  • chore: - Other changes to project that don't modify source code or test files.

  • revert: - Reverts a previous commit that was made.

Examples:

feat: edit profile photo
refactor!: remove deprecated v1 endpoints
build: update npm dependencies
style: run formatter 

Need more examples? Want to learn more about this format? Check out the official docs.

Note: If your pull request does multiple things such as adding a feature and makes changes to the CI server and fixes some bugs then you might want to consider splitting this pull request up into multiple smaller pull requests.

@xtreem88 xtreem88 merged commit f41ecfd into beta Sep 11, 2023
4 checks passed
@xtreem88 xtreem88 deleted the set-dependabot-pr-limit branch September 11, 2023 19:57
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2 participants