Generate visualizations of GitHub user and repository statistics using GitHub Actions.
This project is currently a work-in-progress; there will always be more interesting stats to display.
When someone views a profile on GitHub, it is often because they are curious about a user's open source projects and contributions. Unfortunately, that user's stars, forks, and pinned repositories do not necessarily reflect the contributions they make to private repositories. The data likewise does not present a complete picture of the user's total contributions beyond the current year.
This project aims to collect a variety of profile and repository statistics using the GitHub API. It then generates images that can be displayed in repository READMEs, or in a user's Profile README.
Since the project runs on GitHub Actions, no server is required to regularly regenerate the images with updated statistics. Likewise, since the user runs the analysis code themselves via GitHub Actions, they can use their GitHub access token to collect statistics on private repositories that an external service would be unable to access.
If the project is used with an access token that has sufficient permissions to
read private repositories, it may leak details about those repositories in
error messages. For example, the aiohttp
library—used for asynchronous API
requests—may include the requested URL in exceptions, which can leak the name
of private repositories. If there is an exception caused by aiohttp
, this
exception will be viewable in the Actions tab of the repository fork, and
anyone may be able to see the name of one or more private repositories.
Due to some issues with the GitHub statistics API, there are some situations where it returns inaccurate results. Specifically, the repository view count statistics and total lines of code modified are probably somewhat inaccurate. Unexpectedly, these values will become more accurate over time as GitHub caches statistics for your repositories. Additionally, repositories that were last contributed to more than a year ago may not be included in the statistics due to limitations in the results returned by the API.
For more information on inaccuracies, see issue #2, #3, and #13.
- Create a personal access token (not the default GitHub Actions token) using
the instructions
here.
Personal access token must have permissions:
read:user
andrepo
. Copy the access token when it is generated – if you lose it, you will have to regenerate the token. - Click here to create a fork of this repository
- If this is the README of your fork, click this link to go to the "Secrets" page. Otherwise, go to the "Settings" tab of the newly-created repository and go to the "Secrets" page (bottom left).
- Create a new secret with the name
ACCESS_TOKEN
and paste the copied personal access token as the value. - It is possible to change the type of statistics reported.
- To ignore certain repos, add them (separated by commas) to a new
secret—created as before—called
EXCLUDED
. - To ignore certain languages, add them (separated by commas) to a new
secret called
EXCLUDED_LANGS
. - To show statistics only for "owned" repositories and not forks with
contributions, add an environment variable (under the
env
header in the main workflow) calledEXCLUDE_FORKED_REPOS
with a value oftrue
.
- To ignore certain repos, add them (separated by commas) to a new
secret—created as before—called
- Go to the Actions Page and press "Run Workflow" on the right side of the screen to generate images for the first time. The images will be periodically generated every hour, but they can be manually regenerated by manually running the workflow.
- Check out the images that have been created in the
generated
folder. - Link back to this repository so that others can generate their own statistics images.
- Star this repo if you like it!
- Inspired by a desire to improve upon anuraghazra/github-readme-stats
- Makes use of GitHub Octicons to precisely match the GitHub UI
DIFFERENT REPO - from github-readme-stats (https://github.com/anuraghazra/github-readme-stats) (using this as a sandbox to test it)