Pull Request Labeler workflow (tabler/tabler-icons)
The Pull Request Labeler workflow from tabler/tabler-icons, explained and optimized by Latchkey.
A
CI health: A - excellent
Point runs-on at Latchkey and get job timeouts, self-healing for flaky steps, and up to 58% lower cost, applied automatically.
What it does
This is the Pull Request Labeler workflow from the tabler/tabler-icons repository, a real project running GitHub Actions. It is shown here with attribution under its MIT license.
Below, Latchkey shows a faster, safer version produced by its optimization engine.
The workflow
workflow (.yml)
name: 'Pull Request Labeler'
on:
- pull_request_target
jobs:
triage:
permissions:
contents: read
pull-requests: write
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/labeler@v6
The same workflow, on Latchkey
Removes redundant runs and caps runaway jobs. Added and changed lines are highlighted.
name: 'Pull Request Labeler' on: - pull_request_target jobs: triage: timeout-minutes: 30 permissions: contents: read pull-requests: write runs-on: latchkey-small steps: - uses: actions/labeler@v6
What changed
- Run on Latchkey managed runners with one line (
runs-on), which apply the fixes below automatically and self-heal transient failures. This example useslatchkey-small; pick the runner size that fits the job. - Add a job timeout so a hung step cannot burn hours of runner time.
This workflow runs 1 job per trigger. On Latchkey the same minutes cost up to 58% less than GitHub-hosted, with zero queue time.