this post was submitted on 20 Jul 2025
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The real problem is merging before waiting for that one slow CI pipeline to complete
gitlab has a feature where you can set it to auto-merge when and if the CI completes successfully
One problem is GHs auto-merge when ready button. It will merge when there are still tests running unless they are required. It would be much better if the auto merges took into account all checks and not just required ones.
It tests passing is a requirement of merging, then you should set the tests as required.
Exactly; the OP image is saying that there's no point to doing that.
If you have
folderA
andfolderB
each with their own set of tests. You don't needfolderA
s tests to run with a change tofolderB
. Most CI/CD systems can do this easily enough with two different reports. But you cannot mark them both as required as they both wont always run. Instead you need a complicated fan out pipelines in your CICD system so you can only have one report back to GH or you need to always spawn a job for both folders and have the ones that dont need to run return successful. Neither of these is very good and becomes very complex when you are working with large monorepos.It would be much better if the CICD system that knows which pipelines it needs to run for a given PR could tell GH about which tests are required for a particular PR and if you could configure GH to wait for that report from the CICD system. Or at the very least if the auto-merge was blocked for any failed checks and the manual merge button was only blocked on required checks.
You can have certain jobs run based on what directories or files were modified. If projectA was the only one modified, it can run just projectA's tests.
Yes. They can. But they do not mix well with required checks. From githubs own documentation:
So even with github actions you cannot mix a required check and path/branch or any filtering on a workflow as the jobs will hang forever and you will never be able to merge the branch in. You can do either or, but not both at once and for larger complex projects you tend to want to do both. But instead you need complex complex workflows or workflows that always start and instead do internal checks to detect if they need to actually run or not. And this is with github actions - it is worst for external CICD tooling.
Both GitHub Actions and GitLab CI let you specify filepath rules for triggering jobs.