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⚠️ Burndown for GitHub Projects is archived. Visualization features now provide built-in functionality for GitHub projects.

Burndown for GitHub Projects

Sample burndown graph

Burndown for GitHub Projects provides a burndown chart for point-based agile sprints tracked using Github Projects. It simplifies identifying velocity, improves mid-sprint awareness, and allows a team to visualize how their workload evolves throughout a sprint.

Table of Contents

Usage

The application comes ready-to-go with a docker image. Create a file of environment entries (reference the .env.sample file or Configuring the Service for more details), build the docker image, and run it.

ℹ️ Don't have npm installed? See the Docker-Only Implementation guide.

# Create environment file
cp .env.sample .env

# Edit environment file
code .env --wait # Or your editor of choice

# Build docker image
# If using a different port than 8080, see the Docker-Only Implementation guide below
npm run docker:build

# Run docker image - Skip directly here after first run
npm run docker:run

Docker-Only Implementation

Click to Expand
# Create environment file
cp .env.sample .env

# Edit environment file
code .env --wait # Or your editor of choice

# Build docker image
docker build . -t burndown-for-github-projects

# Run docker image - Skip directly here after first run
# Arguments:
# --env-file: apply environment to container
# -v: Give the docker image access to the ./data directory
# -it: run interactively (not in background)
# -p: give docker container access to a network port
# burndown-for-github-projects: run image created by `docker build` above
docker run \
  --env-file .env \
  -v $PWD/data:/app/data \
  -it \
  -p 8080:8080 \
  burndown-for-github-projects

Configuring the Service

Persistence Modes

Aggregate sprint data needs to be persisted across a time series in order to render the burndown chart. burndown-for-github-projects supports two modes to accomplish this today:

  • Filesystem
  • MongoDB

Filesystem

By default, burndown-for-github-projects runs with local filesystem persistence. Data gathering will write JSON files specific for each project to a /data directory at the root of the project.

Define a volume at $PWD/data in order to write from docker. For example:

Command Line:

docker run --env-file .env -v $PWD/data:/app/data -it -p 8080:8080 <image_name>

MongoDB

A .burndownrc.js file can be supplied at the root of the project. As of right now, it's primary use case is to configure a MongoDB configuration.

Here's an example, which is further informed via MongoDB Environment Variables or suggested defaults:

const env = require('dotenv')

env.config({
  override: true,
})

const {
  DB_AUTH_DB,
  DB_COLLECTION,
  DB_HOST,
  DB_NAME,
  DB_PASSWORD,
  DB_PORT,
  DB_USER,
  DB_REPLICASET,
} = process.env

module.exports = {
  dataPlugin: {
    type: 'MongoDB',
    config: {
      authenticationDatabase: DB_AUTH_DB,
      collection: DB_COLLECTION || 'sprints',
      host: DB_HOST,
      databaseName: DB_NAME || 'burndown',
      password: DB_PASSWORD,
      port: DB_PORT || 27017,
      user: DB_USER || 'burndown',
      replicaSet: DB_REPLICASET,
      // Alt - Pass connectionString directly:
      // connectionString: 'mongodb://.....',
    },
  },
}

Using burndown-for-github-projects with this configuration will persist to and retrieve sprint data from a mongo database instead of using the filesystem.

Environment Variables

Environment Variable Required Default Value Description
GITHUB_DEFAULT_ORGANIZATION_NAME true This organization's first project be polled according to the CRON_SCHEDULE to populate burndown data.
GITHUB_TOKEN true Generate a new GITHUB_TOKEN with these permissions: repo, read:org.

⚠️ This token should at all times be kept secret. Avoid committing, sharing, or leaking this wherever possible.
PORT false 8080 Port the service will be served from.
GITHUB_API_URL false https://api.github.com API endpoint for Github or your company's Github Enterprise instance.
GITHUB_PROJECT_REGEX false Sprint \d+ - (?<end_date>\d+/\d+/\d+) The service will only aggregate points from projects with names matching this pattern. The pattern MUST contain an end_date named capture group.
CHART_DEFAULT_DIMENSIONS false 500x200 Default height and width of the emitted SVG.
CRON_SCHEDULE false 0 6-18/2 * * 1-5
Every 2 hours, 6a-6p, Monday-Friday
Cron string for when burndown data is collected.
CRON_TIMEZONE false America/Chicago
US Central Time
Timezone the CRON_SCHEDULE is based on. Reference the TZ Database Name column of Wikipedia's List of tz database time zones for exact syntax.

DataPlugin.Type MongoDB Variables

Environment Variable Required Suggested Default Value (from config) Description
DB_AUTH_DB false admin The place to store the user information for the burndown database.
DB_COLLECTION false sprints Where to store the sprint data records.
DB_HOST true The server address of the database.
DB_NAME false burndown The name of the database.
DB_PASSWORD true The password to authenticate to the database.
DB_PORT false 27017 The port to access the database on.
DB_USER false burndown The user to authenticate to the database with.
DB_REPLICASET false rs0 The replica set group processes maintaining the dataset.

Using the Burndown Chart

Before you can use the burndown chart, you'll need to populate data for the chart by creating a Github project populated with issues that use story point labels.

Story Point Labeling

Story points are aggregated from labels applied to issues which have been added to the sprint project. The only requirement is that the label be only digits; the description and color can be anything you want. That said, here is our recommended label set:

Label Description Color
1 Story Point #00ff00
2 Story Point #55ff00
3 Story Point #aaff00
5 Story Point #ffff00
8 Story Point #ffaa00
13 Story Point #ff5500
21 Story Point #ff0000

Project Setup

Sprints must be tracked as an organization-level project in Github (as opposed to a project within a specific repository). By default, data is only read from projects with a name matching Sprint # - #/#/#. This can be modified with configuration.

/burndown

Fetch the burndown chart by navigating to http://localhost:8080/burndown (or your deployed server/port) in your browser. If it's running there, it might show up here:

If you're running the service, there'll be a burndown chart here.

This chart can be added to markdown or HTML documents:

![Burndown Chart](http://localhost:8080/burndown)
<img alt="Burndown Chart" src="http://localhost:8080/burndown" />

The burndown chart works by aggregating story points across the different stages (columns) of a Github project. Story points are applied to work items via an issue label. All points for a given column are added up and applied to an area on the graph. These areas are stacked, with the farthest left column at the bottom and the farthest right at the top. This data is re-retrieved periodically over the course of a sprint. ⚠️ Burndown data can NOT currently be applied retroactively. While this service is offline, no data is collected.

/sprint

Additionally, aggregate point data can be accessed at the /sprint endpoint:

GET http://localhost:8080/sprint HTTP/1.1

By default, the lowest-numbered currently open project which satisfies the project name regex will be returned. To return a specific sprint instead, append the project number. The project must still be open and satisfy the regex in order to be returned.

GET http://localhost:8080/sprint/123 HTTP/1.1

This data can be captured for sprints outside of the default organization by adding the organization_name query parameter:

GET http://localhost:8080/sprint?organization-name=My-Other-Team HTTP/1.1

GET http://localhost:8080/sprint/123?organization-name=My-Other-Team HTTP/1.1

Contributing

Local Filesystem Development

After cloning the repository, install dependencies:

npm ci

During dependency installation, placeholder configurations are written to .env. Fill in any blank values, referencing Configuring the Service.

Lose your .env file? You can copy the .env.sample file to generate a new one.

Once the environment values are entered, the app is ready to run:

npm start

This application is built in TypeScript. Starting the app will...

  1. Clear out any build/ files from a previous run
  2. Build the TypeScript files into plain JavaScript, re-building when any files are updated
  3. Start the application server, re-starting each time new build files are emitted

Local Docker Development

You can run the entire stack with a provided docker-compose.yml file. It comes pre-configured for the Mongo persistence mode.

Run npm run start:db to start the database and the app. It will inline the .burndownrc-sample.js file during startup.

Validation

This app ships with a local suite of jest tests, eslint + prettier configurations for code consistency and formatting, and TypeScript type validation.

These checks run within a GitHub action. npm run lint runs during precommit.