Colin McDonnell b0274e3265 local proxy-key testing via x-dev-repo bypass (#629)
* local proxy-key testing via x-dev-repo bypass

`pnpm play` previously couldn't exercise the proxy/router/oss code path
— `resolveProxyModel` early-exits without OIDC credentials, and
`mintProxyKey` always sends an OIDC bearer to `/api/proxy-token`. since
GitHub Actions OIDC only exists in real workflow runs, billing flows
(auto-reload, balance gates, key rotation, OSS subsidy) had no local
feedback loop.

a server-side dev bypass already exists at `app/api/proxy-token/route.ts`
that accepts an `x-dev-repo: owner/repo` header instead of an OIDC bearer
when `NODE_ENV === "development"`. wire the action side so it sends that
header when there are no OIDC credentials AND `API_URL` resolves to
localhost (i.e. the developer is talking to their own `pnpm dev`
server). production is unreachable through this path because vercel
never sets `NODE_ENV=development`.

document the affordance in `wiki/action-tests.md` so the next person
doesn't have to re-discover it (the server bypass had been sitting
there undocumented since the WIP billing rewrite).

verified end-to-end: `PLAY_LOCAL=1 GITHUB_REPOSITORY=pullfrog/app
API_URL=http://localhost:3100 pnpm play …` now logs `» proxy: dev
bypass (x-dev-repo) for pullfrog/app` → `» proxy: router → openrouter/
anthropic/claude-opus-4.7` → `» model: …(proxy)`, mints a real
OpenRouter key against the dev DB, and the agent runs through the
proxy.

* wiki: cross-reference dev proxy-key affordance from main/e2e/stripe

action-tests.md already documents the localhost+x-dev-repo path; mention
it from the natural discovery points so the next person finds it without
spelunking through git history again:

- main.md: resolveProxyModel row in the dependencies table notes the
  two auth paths (OIDC bearer in prod, x-dev-repo in dev).
- e2e-testing.md: "When to use this" calls out the lighter-weight
  alternative for proxy-only changes.
- stripe.md: new "Loop including the action" subsection in the Dev
  workflow section, alongside the existing dev-script and cron-endpoint
  loops.
2026-05-08 23:35:58 +00:00
2026-01-16 08:00:16 +00:00
2026-03-12 05:22:51 +00:00
2025-08-27 16:53:48 -07:00
2026-01-19 08:41:56 +00:00
2026-05-08 21:32:06 +00:00
2026-03-12 05:22:51 +00:00

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Pullfrog is a GitHub bot that brings the full power of your favorite coding agents into GitHub. It's open source and powered by GitHub Actions.

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Standalone Usage

You can also use pullfrog/pullfrog as a step in your own workflows. The action exposes a result output that can be consumed by subsequent steps.

Example: Auto-generate release notes on new tags

name: Release
on:
  push:
    tags: ['v*']

permissions:
  contents: write

jobs:
  release:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - name: Checkout
        uses: actions/checkout@v4
        with:
          fetch-depth: 0

      - name: Generate release notes
        id: notes
        uses: pullfrog/pullfrog@v0
        with:
          prompt: |
            Generate release notes for ${{ github.ref_name }}.
            Compare commits between this tag and the previous tag.
            Format as markdown: summary paragraph, then ### Features, ### Fixes, ### Breaking Changes sections.
            Omit empty sections. Be concise.
        env:
          ANTHROPIC_API_KEY: ${{ secrets.ANTHROPIC_API_KEY }}

      # write to file to avoid shell escaping issues with special characters
      - name: Create GitHub release
        run: |
          notesfile="$RUNNER_TEMP/release-notes-$GITHUB_RUN_ID.md"
          printf '%s' "$NOTES" > "$notesfile"
          gh release create ${{ github.ref_name }} --title "${{ github.ref_name }}" --notes-file "$notesfile"
        env:
          GH_TOKEN: ${{ github.token }}
          NOTES: ${{ steps.notes.outputs.result }}

Example: Structured Output with Zod Schema

You can force the agent to return structured JSON output by providing a JSON schema. This allows you to reliably parse and use the agent's response in subsequent workflow steps.

You can define your JSON schema directly or uou can use any validation library that converts to JSON Schema. Here's an example using Zod:

name: Release Check
on:
  pull_request:
    types: [closed]

jobs:
  check-release:
    if: github.event.pull_request.merged == true
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@v4

      - name: Install dependencies
        run: npm install --no-save --no-package-lock zod @actions/core

      - name: Generate Schema
        id: schema
        run: |
          node -e '
            import { z } from "zod";
            import { setOutput } from "@actions/core";
            const schema = z.object({
              version: z.string().describe("Semantic version number (e.g. 1.0.0)"),
              isBreaking: z.boolean().describe("Whether this release contains breaking changes"),
              changelog: z.array(z.string()).describe("List of changes in this release"),
            });
            setOutput("schema", JSON.stringify(z.toJSONSchema(schema)));
          '

      - name: Analyze PR
        id: analysis
        uses: pullfrog/pullfrog@v0
        with:
          prompt: |
            Analyze this PR and determine semantic versioning impact.
            Return a JSON object matching the provided schema.
          output_schema: ${{ steps.schema.outputs.schema }}
        env:
          ANTHROPIC_API_KEY: ${{ secrets.ANTHROPIC_API_KEY }}

      - name: Process Result
        run: |
          # Parse the JSON result using fromJSON()
          echo "Version: ${{ fromJSON(steps.analysis.outputs.result).version }}"
          echo "Breaking: ${{ fromJSON(steps.analysis.outputs.result).isBreaking }}"
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