Cleans up outdated comments in the shared dev-infra Git
utilities. We also export the Graphql client for consistency
as we expose the `GithubClient` and `GitClient` too.
PR Close#38656
Instead of maintaining multiple interface for grouping
owner name and repo name, we expose a shared interface
describing a Github repository.
One unfortunate downside is that the GraphQL Github
and Rest API diverge slightly with the key for the
repository name. i.e. rest uses `repo` for the name
of a repository, while GraphQL uses `name` for the name.
If that would be consistent, we could use the rest operator
to pass a repository to the Octokit REST or GraphQL API. This
does not work, so we have a small manual overhead as seen
in the `branches.ts` file.
PR Close#38656
Instead of repeating the logic for adding the github token to
a repository git url, we add a shared function for automatically
computing the URls with token.
Additionally, URLs for updating/generating tokens have been moved
to a dedicated file in the `utils` folder. Also while being at it,
the yargs github token helper is also moved into the dedicated
Git/Github related util folder.
PR Close#38656
Creates a tool within ng-dev to checkout a pending PR from the upstream repository. This automates
an action that many developers on the Angular team need to do periodically in the process of testing
and reviewing incoming PRs.
Example usage:
ng-dev pr checkout <pr-number>
PR Close#38474
The merge script currently accepts a configuration function that will
be invoked _only_ when the `ng-dev merge` command is executed. This
has been done that way because the merge tooling usually relies on
external requests to Git or NPM for constructing the branch configurations.
We do not want to perform these slow external queries on any `ng-dev` command
though, so this became a lazily invoked function.
This commit adds support for these configuration functions to run
asynchronously (by returning a Promise that will be awaited), so that
requests could also be made to the Github API. This is benefical as it
could avoid dependence on the local Git state and the HTTP requests
are more powerful/faster.
Additionally, in order to be able to perform Github API requests
with an authenticated instance, the merge tool will pass through
a `GithubClient` instance that uses the specified `--github-token`
(or from the environment). This ensures that all API requests use
the same `GithubClient` instance and can be authenticated (mitigating
potential rate limits).
PR Close#38223