David Blass d3b5340583 fix: audit batch — MCP timeouts, entryPost, vip_audit 404s, and 6 more (#824)
* fix: 9 unaddressed log-audit / run-audit findings

Co-authored-by: Cursor <cursoragent@cursor.com>

#815 entryPost stdlib-only imports; #823 MCP timeoutMs on checkout_pr/shell;
#816 FREE_FALLBACK → opencode/big-pickle; #822 chunk GraphQL nodes ≤100;
#817/#821 vip_audit 404 skip paths; #813 longer serializable retries;
#818 run-context handler-entered log; #805 audit severity template.

* fix: update footer test for big-pickle fallback slug

Co-authored-by: Cursor <cursoragent@cursor.com>

* fix: anneal round 1 — ghaCore getState casing, post-hook timeout

Match @actions/core STATE_ key semantics (no uppercasing), cap
postApiFetch at 30s, trim serializable retries to stay under GitHub's
10s webhook window, log Clerk failures in getUserTokenByGithubLogin.

Co-authored-by: Cursor <cursoragent@cursor.com>

* revert: drop run-context handler log (#818 deferred)

The #692 client-side fix is already on main; residual SyntaxError hits
are old action pins. Per-request log added noise without fixing anything.

Co-authored-by: Cursor <cursoragent@cursor.com>

* document per-issue Closes syntax for audit PRs

GitHub only auto-closes the first issue when numbers are comma-separated;
/audits and AGENTS.md now require Closes before each issue number.

Co-authored-by: Cursor <cursoragent@cursor.com>

* fix: anneal round 2 — outreach privacy, alert resilience, vertex cleanup

Filter private repos from VIP authority output, harden console alert
lines against DB failures, drop spoofable changesets body check, and
unset GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS after vertex credential cleanup.

Co-authored-by: Cursor <cursoragent@cursor.com>

* refactor: drop codexHome re-export of detectCodexRefresh

Import detectCodexRefresh directly from codexRefreshDetect.ts everywhere;
rename the unit test file to match. codexHome.ts stays install-only.

Co-authored-by: Cursor <cursoragent@cursor.com>

* fix: drop deprecated minimax-m2.5-free; add paid minimax-m2.5

Remove the deprecated free MiniMax promo from the catalog, docs, and
tests. BYOK fallback and picker copy stay on opencode/big-pickle. Add
opencode/minimax-m2.5 and openrouter/minimax-m2.5 for Zen BYOK and
Router. Pin #816 regressions with freeFallbackCatalog and runErrorRenderer
unit tests.

Co-authored-by: Cursor <cursoragent@cursor.com>

* fix: hidden minimax-m2.5-free fallback for stored slugs

Re-add opencode/minimax-m2.5-free as a hidden fallback alias to big-pickle
so repos with the legacy slug still resolve as free. Drop live Zen API
experiment tests in freeFallbackCatalog.test.ts.

Co-authored-by: Cursor <cursoragent@cursor.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Cursor <cursoragent@cursor.com>
2026-05-22 16:48:25 +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
2026-05-20 16:49:08 +00:00
2026-05-20 16:49:37 +00:00
2026-03-12 05:22:51 +00:00

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Pullfrog

Bring your favorite coding agent into GitHub


🚀 Pullfrog is in beta! We're onboarding users in waves. Get on the waitlist →


What is Pullfrog?

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.

  • Tag @pullfrog — Tag @pullfrog in a comment anywhere in your repo. It will pull in any relevant context using the action's internal MCP server and perform the appropriate task.
  • Prompt from the web — Trigger arbitrary tasks from the Pullfrog dashboard
  • Automated triggers — Configure Pullfrog to trigger agent runs in response to specific events. Each of these triggers can be associated with custom prompt instructions.
    • issue created
    • issue labeled
    • PR created
    • PR review created
    • PR review requested
    • and more...

Pullfrog is the bridge between your preferred coding agents and GitHub. Use it for:

  • 🤖 Coding tasks — Tell @pullfrog to implement something and it'll spin up a PR. If CI fails, it'll read the logs and attempt a fix automatically. It'll automatically address any PR reviews too.
  • 🔍 PR review — Coding agents are great at reviewing PRs. Using the "PR created" trigger, you can configure Pullfrog to auto-review new PRs.
  • 🤙 Issue management — Via the "issue created" trigger, Pullfrog can automatically respond to common questions, create implementation plans, and link to related issues/PRs. Or (if you're feeling lucky) you can prompt it to immediately attempt a PR addressing new issues.
  • Literally whatever — Want to have the agent automatically add docs to all new PRs? Cut a new release with agent-written notes on every commit to main? Pullfrog lets you do it.

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 }}"
S
Description
Self-hosted Ollama-powered code review bot for Gitea Actions based on pullfrog
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