title | description |
---|---|
Configuration Options |
Configuration Options usable in renovate.json or package.json |
This document describes all the configuration options you may use in a Renovate configuration file. Any config you define applies to the whole repository (e.g. if you have a monorepo).
You can store your Renovate configuration file in one of these locations:
renovate.json
renovate.json5
.github/renovate.json
.github/renovate.json5
.gitlab/renovate.json
.gitlab/renovate.json5
.renovaterc
.renovaterc.json
.renovaterc.json5
package.json
(within a"renovate"
section)
!!! warning
Storing the Renovate configuration in a package.json
file is deprecated and support may be removed in the future.
When renovating a repository, Renovate tries to detect the configuration files in the order listed above, and stops after the first one is found.
Renovate always uses the config from the repository's default branch, even if that configuration specifies multiple baseBranches
.
Renovate does not read/override the config from within each base branch if present.
Also, be sure to check out Renovate's shareable config presets to save yourself from reinventing any wheels. Shareable config presets only work with the JSON format.
If you have any questions about the config options, or want to get help/feedback about a config, go to the discussions tab in the Renovate repository and start a new "config help" discussion. We will do our best to answer your question(s).
A subtype
in the configuration table specifies what type you're allowed to use within the main element.
If a config option has a parent
defined, it means it's only allowed to configure it within an object with the parent name, such as packageRules
or hostRules
.
When an array or object configuration option is mergeable
, it means that values inside it will be added to any existing object or array that existed with the same name.
!!! note
Config options with type=string
are always non-mergeable, so mergeable=false
.
The labels
field is non-mergeable, meaning that any config setting a list of PR labels will replace any existing list.
If you want to append labels for matched rules, then define an addLabels
array with one (or more) label strings.
All matched addLabels
strings will be attached to the PR.
Consider this example:
{
"labels": ["dependencies"],
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackagePatterns": ["eslint"],
"labels": ["linting"]
},
{
"matchDepTypes": ["optionalDependencies"],
"addLabels": ["optional"]
}
]
}
With the above config:
- Optional dependencies will have the labels
dependencies
andoptional
- ESLint dependencies will have the label
linting
- All other dependencies will have the label
dependencies
By default, the value for this config option is an empty string. Normally you don't need to set this config option.
Here's an example where additionalBranchPrefix
can help you.
Say you're using a monorepo and want to split pull requests based on the location of the package definition, so that individual teams can manage their own Renovate pull requests.
This can be done with this configuration:
{
"additionalBranchPrefix": "{{parentDir}}-"
}
This option adds to the existing reviewer list, rather than replacing it like reviewers
.
Use additionalReviewers
when you want to add to a preset or base list, without replacing the original.
For example, when adding focused reviewers for a specific package group.
By default, Renovate will not assign reviewers and assignees to an automerge-enabled PR unless it fails status checks.
By configuring this setting to true
, Renovate will instead always assign reviewers and assignees for automerging PRs at time of creation.
Must be valid usernames on the platform in use.
If enabled Renovate tries to determine PR assignees by matching rules defined in a CODEOWNERS file against the changes in the PR.
See GitHub or GitLab documentation for details on syntax and possible file locations.
If configured, Renovate will take a random sample of given size from assignees and assign them only, instead of assigning the entire list of assignees
you have configured.
Setting this to true
will automatically approve the PRs.
You can also configure this using packageRules
if you want to use it selectively (e.g. per-package).
Setting this to false
will replace only the first match during replacements updates.
Disabling this is useful for situations where values are repeated within the dependency string, such as when the currentVersion
is also featured somewhere within the currentDigest
, but you only want to replace the first instance.
Consider this example:
FROM java:8@sha256:0e8b2a860
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackageNames": ["java"],
"replacementName": "eclipse-temurin",
"replacementVersion": "11"
}
]
}
With the above replacement scenario, the current dependency has a version of 8
, which also features several times within the digest section.
When using the default autoReplaceGlobalMatch
configuration, Renovate will attempt to replace all instances of 8
within the dependency string with the replacementVersion
value of 11
.
This will replace more than is intended and will be caught during replacement validation steps, resulting in the replacement PR to not be created.
When setting autoReplaceGlobalMatch
configuration to false
, Renovate will only replace the first occurrence of 8
and will successfully create a replacement PR.
By default, Renovate raises PRs but leaves them to someone or something else to merge them. By configuring this setting, you allow Renovate to automerge PRs or even branches. Using automerge reduces the amount of human intervention required.
Usually you won't want to automerge all PRs, for example most people would want to leave major dependency updates to a human to review first. You could configure Renovate to automerge all but major this way:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchUpdateTypes": ["minor", "patch", "pin", "digest"],
"automerge": true
}
]
}
Also note that this option can be combined with other nested settings, such as dependency type.
So for example you could choose to automerge all (passing) devDependencies
only this way:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchDepTypes": ["devDependencies"],
"automerge": true
}
]
}
!!! note
Branches creation follows schedule
and the automerge follows automergeSchedule
.
!!! warning "Negative reviews on GitHub block Renovate automerge" Renovate won't automerge on GitHub if a PR has a negative review.
!!! note On Azure there can be a delay between a PR being set as completed by Renovate, and Azure merging the PR / finishing its tasks. Renovate tries to delay until Azure is in the expected state, but it will continue if it takes too long. In some cases this can result in a dependency not being merged, and a fresh PR being created for the dependency.
Use this only if you configure automergeType="pr-comment"
.
Example use:
{
"automerge": true,
"automergeType": "pr-comment",
"automergeComment": "bors: r+"
}
Use the automergeSchedule
option to define times of week or month during which Renovate may automerge its PRs.
The default value for automergeSchedule
is "at any time", which functions the same as setting a null
schedule.
To configure this option refer to schedule
as the syntax is the same.
The automerge strategy defaults to auto
, so Renovate decides how to merge pull requests as best it can.
If possible, Renovate follows the merge strategy set on the platform itself for the repository.
If you've set automerge=true
and automergeType=pr
for any of your dependencies, then you may choose what automerge strategy Renovate uses by setting the automergeStrategy
config option.
If you're happy with the default behavior, you don't need to do anything.
You may choose from these values:
auto
, Renovate decides how to mergefast-forward
, "fast-forwarding" the main branch reference, no new commits in the resultant treemerge-commit
, create a new merge commitrebase
, rewrite history as part of the merge, but usually keep the individual commitssquash
, flatten the commits that are being merged into a single new commit
Platforms may only support some of these merge strategies.
If the chosen automerge strategy is not supported on your platform then Renovate stops automerging. In that case you'll have to set a supported automerge strategy.
This setting is only applicable if you opt in to configure automerge
to true
for any of your dependencies.
Automerging defaults to using Pull Requests (automergeType="pr"
).
In that case Renovate first creates a branch and associated Pull Request, and then automerges the PR on a subsequent run once it detects the PR's status checks are "green".
If by the next run the PR is already behind the base branch it will be automatically rebased, because Renovate only automerges branches which are up-to-date and green.
If Renovate is scheduled for hourly runs on the repository but commits are made every 15 minutes to the main branch, then an automerge like this will keep getting deferred with every rebase.
!!! tip
If you have no tests but still want Renovate to automerge, you need to add "ignoreTests": true
to your configuration.
If you prefer that Renovate more silently automerge without Pull Requests at all, you can configure "automergeType": "branch"
. In this case Renovate will:
- Create the branch, wait for test results
- Rebase it any time it gets out of date with the base branch
- Automerge the branch commit if it's: (a) up-to-date with the base branch, and (b) passing all tests
- As a backup, raise a PR only if either: (a) tests fail, or (b) tests remain pending for too long (default: 24 hours)
The final value for automergeType
is "pr-comment"
, intended only for users who already have a "merge bot" such as bors-ng and want Renovate to not actually automerge by itself and instead tell bors-ng
to merge for it, by using a comment in the PR.
If you're not already using bors-ng
or similar, don't worry about this option.
When creating a PR in Azure DevOps, some branches can be protected with branch policies to check for linked work items. Creating a work item in Azure DevOps is beyond the scope of Renovate, but Renovate can link an already existing work item when creating PRs.
By default, Renovate will detect and process only the repository's default branch.
For most projects, this is the expected approach.
Renovate also allows users to explicitly configure baseBranches
, e.g. for use cases such as:
- You wish Renovate to process only a non-default branch, e.g.
dev
:"baseBranches": ["dev"]
- You have multiple release streams you need Renovate to keep up to date, e.g. in branches
main
andnext
:"baseBranches": ["main", "next"]
- You want to update your main branch and consistently named release branches, e.g.
main
andrelease/<version>
:"baseBranches": ["main", "/^release\\/.*/"]
It's possible to add this setting into the renovate.json
file as part of the "Configure Renovate" onboarding PR.
If so then Renovate will reflect this setting in its description and use package file contents from the custom base branch(es) instead of default.
baseBranches
supports Regular Expressions that must begin and end with /
, e.g.:
{
"baseBranches": ["main", "/^release\\/.*/"]
}
You can negate the regex by prefixing it with !
.
Only use a single negation and do not mix it with other branch names, since all branches are combined with or
.
With a negation, all branches except those matching the regex will be added to the result:
{
"baseBranches": ["!/^pre-release\\/.*/"]
}
You can also use the special "$default"
string to denote the repository's default branch, which is useful if you have it in an org preset, e.g.:
{
"baseBranches": ["$default", "/^release\\/.*/"]
}
!!! note
Do not use the baseBranches
config option when you've set a forkToken
.
You may need a forkToken
when you're using the Forking Renovate app.
Configuring this to true
means that Renovate will detect and apply the default reviewers rules to PRs (Bitbucket only).
By default, Renovate won't enforce any concurrent branch limits.
The config:recommended
preset that many extend from limits the number of concurrent branches to 10, but in many cases a limit as low as 3 or 5 can be most efficient for a repository.
If you want the same limit for both concurrent branches and concurrent PRs, then set a value for prConcurrentLimit
and it will be re-used for branch calculations too.
But if you want to allow more concurrent branches than concurrent PRs, you can configure both values (e.g. branchConcurrentLimit=5
and prConcurrentLimit=3
).
This limit is enforced on a per-repository basis.
Example config:
{
"branchConcurrentLimit": 3
}
!!! warning
Leaving PRs/branches as unlimited or as a high number increases the time it takes for Renovate to process a repository.
If you find that Renovate is too slow when rebasing out-of-date branches, decrease the branchConcurrentLimit
.
If you have too many concurrent branches which rebase themselves each run, Renovate can take a lot of time to rebase. Solutions:
- Decrease the concurrent branch limit (note: this won't go and delete any existing, so won't have an effect until you either merge or close existing ones manually)
- Remove automerge and/or automatic rebasing (set
rebaseWhen
toconflicted
). However if you have branch protection saying PRs must be up to date then it's not ideal to remove automatic rebasing
!!! warning We strongly recommended that you avoid configuring this field directly. Use at your own risk.
If you truly need to configure this then it probably means either:
- You are hopefully mistaken, and there's a better approach you should use, so open a new "config help" discussion at the Renovate discussions tab or
- You have a use case we didn't expect, please open a discussion to see if we want to get a feature request from you
If true
, Renovate removes special characters when slugifying the branch name:
- all special characters are removed
- only alphabetic characters are allowed
- hyphens
-
are used to separate sections
The default false
behavior will mean that special characters like .
may end up in the branch name.
You can modify this field if you want to change the prefix used.
For example if you want branches to be like deps/eslint-4.x
instead of renovate/eslint-4.x
then you configure branchPrefix
= deps/
.
Or if you wish to avoid forward slashes in branch names then you could use renovate_
instead, for example.
branchPrefix
must be configured at the root of the configuration (e.g. not within any package rule) and is not allowed to use template values.
e.g. instead of renovate/{{parentDir}}-
, configure the template part in additionalBranchPrefix
, like "additionalBranchPrefix": "{{parentDir}}-"
.
!!! note
This setting does not change the default onboarding branch name, i.e. renovate/configure
.
If you wish to change that too, you need to also configure the field onboardingBranch
in your global bot config.
Renovate uses branch names as part of its checks to see if an update PR was created previously, and already merged or ignored.
If you change branchPrefix
, then no previously closed PRs will match, which could lead to Renovate recreating PRs in such cases.
Instead, set the old branchPrefix
value as branchPrefixOld
to allow Renovate to look for those branches too, and avoid this happening.
This field is combined with branchPrefix
and additionalBranchPrefix
to form the full branchName
. branchName
uniqueness is important for dependency update grouping or non-grouping so be cautious about ever editing this field manually.
This is an advance field and it's recommend you seek a config review before applying it.
Currently this setting supports helmv3
, npm
, nuget
, maven
and sbt
only, so raise a feature request if you have a use for it with other package managers.
Its purpose is if you want Renovate to update the version
field within your package file any time it updates dependencies within.
Usually this is for automatic release purposes, so that you don't need to add another step after Renovate before you can release a new version.
Configure this value to "prerelease"
, "patch"
, "minor"
or "major"
to have Renovate update the version in your edited package file.
e.g. if you wish Renovate to always increase the target package.json
version with a patch update, configure this to "patch"
.
For npm
only you can also configure this field to "mirror:x"
where x
is the name of a package in the package.json
.
Doing so means that the package.json
version
field will mirror whatever the version is that x
depended on.
Make sure that version is a pinned version of course, as otherwise it won't be valid.
For sbt
note that Renovate will update the version string only for packages that have the version string in their project's built.sbt
file.
Enabling this option will mean that any detected Git submodules will be cloned at time of repository clone.
Important: private submodules aren't supported by Renovate, unless the underlying ssh
layer already has the correct permissions.
Configure this if you wish Renovate to add a commit body, otherwise Renovate uses a regular single-line commit.
For example, To add [skip ci]
to every commit you could configure:
{
"commitBody": "[skip ci]"
}
Another example would be if you want to configure a DCO signoff to each commit.
If you want Renovate to signoff its commits, add the :gitSignOff
preset to your extends
array:
{
"extends": [":gitSignOff"]
}
!!! warning
We deprecated editing the commitMessage
directly, and we recommend you stop using this config option.
Instead use config options like commitMessageAction
, commitMessageExtra
, and so on, to create the commit message you want.
This is used to alter commitMessage
and prTitle
without needing to copy/paste the whole string.
Actions may be like Update
, Pin
, Roll back
, Refresh
, etc.
Check out the default value for commitMessage
to understand how this field is used.
This is used to alter commitMessage
and prTitle
without needing to copy/paste the whole string.
The "extra" is usually an identifier of the new version, e.g. "to v1.3.2" or "to tag 9.2".
With semanticCommits
pr- and commit-titles will by default ("auto"
) be converted to all-lowercase.
Set this to "never"
to leave the titles untouched, allowing uppercase characters in semantic commit titles.
This is used to alter commitMessage
and prTitle
without needing to copy/paste the whole string.
The "prefix" is usually an automatically applied semantic commit prefix, but it can also be statically configured.
!!! note
Renovate always appends a :
after the commitMessagePrefix
.
For example, if you set commitMessagePrefix
to chore
, Renovate turns it into chore:
.
This is used to add a suffix to commit messages. Usually left empty except for internal use (multiple base branches, and vulnerability alerts).
You can use commitMessageTopic
to change the commitMessage
and prTitle
without copy/pasting the whole string.
The "topic" usually refers to the dependency being updated, for example: "dependency react"
.
We recommend you use matchManagers
and commitMessageTopic
in a packageRules
array to set the commit message topic, like this:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchManagers": ["github-actions"],
"commitMessageTopic": "{{depName}}"
}
]
}
By default, Renovate will ignore Composer platform requirements as the PHP platform used by Renovate most probably won't match the required PHP environment of your project as configured in your composer.json
file.
Composer 2.2
and up will be run with --ignore-platform-req='ext-*' --ignore-platform-req='lib-*'
, which ignores extension and library platform requirements but not the PHP version itself and should work in most cases.
Older Composer versions will be run with --ignore-platform-reqs
, which means that all platform constraints (including the PHP version) will be ignored by default.
This can result in updated dependencies that are not compatible with your platform.
To customize this behaviour, you can explicitly ignore platform requirements (for example ext-zip
) by setting them separately in this array.
Each item will be added to the Composer command with --ignore-platform-req
, resulting in it being ignored during its invocation.
Note that this requires your project to use Composer V2, as V1 doesn't support excluding single platform requirements.
The used PHP version will be guessed automatically from your composer.json
definition, so php
should not be added as explicit dependency.
If an empty array is configured, Renovate uses its default behaviour.
Set to null
(not recommended) to fully omit --ignore-platform-reqs/--ignore-platform-req
during Composer invocation.
This requires the Renovate image to be fully compatible with your Composer platform requirements in order for the Composer invocation to succeed, otherwise Renovate will fail to create the updated lock file.
The Composer output should inform you about the reasons the update failed.
If enabled, all issues created by Renovate are set as confidential, even in a public repository.
!!! note The Dependency Dashboard issue will also be confidential. By default issues created by Renovate are visible to all users.
!!! note This option is applicable to GitLab only.
If enabled, Renovate raises a pull request when it needs to migrate the Renovate config file.
Renovate only performs configMigration
on .json
and .json5
files.
We're adding new features to Renovate bot often.
Often you can keep using your Renovate config and benefit from the new features right away.
But sometimes you need to update your Renovate configuration.
To help you with this, Renovate will create config migration pull requests, when you enable configMigration
.
Example:
After we changed the baseBranches
feature, the Renovate configuration migration pull request would make this change:
{
- "baseBranch": "main"
+ "baseBranches": ["main"]
}
!!! warning
The configMigration
feature writes plain JSON for .json
files, and JSON5 for .json5
files.
Renovate may downgrade JSON5 content to plain JSON.
When downgrading JSON5 to JSON Renovate may also remove the JSON5 comments.
This can happen because Renovate wrongly converts JSON5 to JSON, thus removing the comments.
!!! note When you close a config migration PR, Renovate ignores it forever. This also means that Renovate won't create a config migration PR in future. If you closed the PR by accident, find the closed PR and re-name the PR title to get a new PR.
Renovate's default behavior is to reuse/reopen a single Config Warning issue in each repository so as to keep the "noise" down.
However for some people this has the downside that the config warning won't be sorted near the top if you view issues by creation date.
Configure this option to false
if you prefer Renovate to open a new issue whenever there is a config warning.
Constraints are used in package managers which use third-party tools to update "artifacts" like lock files or checksum files. Typically, the constraint is detected automatically by Renovate from files within the repository and there is no need to manually configure it.
Constraints are also used to manually restrict which datasource versions are possible to upgrade to based on their language support.
For now this datasource constraint feature only supports python
, other compatibility restrictions will be added in the future.
{
"constraints": {
"python": "2.7"
}
}
If you need to override constraints that Renovate detects from the repository, wrap it in the force
object like so:
{
"force": {
"constraints": {
"node": "< 15.0.0"
}
}
}
!!! note
Make sure not to mix this up with the term compatibility
, which Renovate uses in the context of version releases, e.g. if a Docker image is node:12.16.0-alpine
then the -alpine
suffix represents compatibility
.
This option controls whether Renovate filters new releases based on configured or detected constraints
.
Renovate supports two options:
none
: No release filtering (all releases allowed)strict
: If the release's constraints match the package file constraints, then it's included
More advanced filtering options may come in future.
There must be a constraints
object in your Renovate config, or constraints detected from package files, for this to work.
This feature is limited to packagist
, npm
, and pypi
datasources.
!!! warning Enabling this feature may result in many package updates being filtered out silently. See below for a description of how it works.
When constraintsFiltering=strict
, the following logic applies:
- Are there
constraints
for this repository, either detected from source or from config? - Does this package's release declare constraints of its own (e.g.
engines
in Node.js)? - If so, filter out this release unless the repository constraint is a subset of the release constraint
Here are some examples:
Your repo engines.node | Dependency release engines.node | Result |
---|---|---|
18 |
16 || 18 |
allowed |
^18.10.0 |
>=18 |
allowed |
^16.10.0 || >=18.0.0 |
>= 16.0.0 |
allowed |
>=16 |
16 || 18 |
filtered |
16 |
^16.10.0 |
filtered |
When using with npm
, we recommend you:
- Use
constraintsFiltering
ondependencies
, notdevDependencies
(usually you do not need to be strict about development dependencies) - Do not enable
rollbackPrs
at the same time (otherwise your current version may be rolled back if it's incompatible)
Use customDatasources
to fetch releases from APIs or statically hosted sites and Renovate has no own datasource.
These datasources can be referred by RegexManagers or can be used to overwrite default datasources.
For more details see the custom
datasource documentation.
You can use the customizeDashboard
object to customize dependency dashboard.
Supported fields:
repoProblemsHeader
: This field will replace the header of the Repository Problems in dependency dashboard issue.
registryUrl
which is used, if none is return by extraction.
As this is a template it can be dynamically set. E.g. add the packageName
as part of the URL:
{
customDatasources: {
foo: {
defaultRegistryUrlTemplate: 'https://exmaple.foo.bar/v1/{{ packageName }}',
},
},
}
Defines which format the API is returning.
Currently json
or plain
are supported, see the custom
datasource documentation for more information.
transformTemplates
is a list of jsonata rules which get applied serially.
Use this if the API does not return a Renovate compatible schema.
Override a datasource's default registries with this config option.
The datasources's customRegistrySupport
value must be true
for the config option to work.
Default registries are only used when both:
- The manager did not extract any
registryUrls
values, and - No
registryUrls
values have been applied via config, such aspackageRules
Think of defaultRegistryUrls
as a way to specify the "fallback" registries for a datasource, for use when no registryUrls
are extracted or configured.
Compare that to registryUrls
, which are a way to override registries.
Starting from version v26.0.0
the "Dependency Dashboard" is enabled by default as part of the commonly-used config:recommended
preset.
To disable the Dependency Dashboard, add the preset :disableDependencyDashboard
or set dependencyDashboard
to false
.
{
"extends": ["config:recommended", ":disableDependencyDashboard"]
}
Configuring dependencyDashboard
to true
will lead to the creation of a "Dependency Dashboard" issue within the repository.
This issue has a list of all PRs pending, open, closed (unmerged) or in error.
The goal of this issue is to give visibility into all updates that Renovate is managing.
Examples of what having a Dependency Dashboard will allow you to do:
- View all PRs in one place, rather than having to filter PRs by author
- Rebase/retry multiple PRs without having to open each individually
- Override any rate limiting (e.g. concurrent PRs) or scheduling to force Renovate to create a PR that would otherwise be suppressed
- Recreate an unmerged PR (e.g. for a major update that you postponed by closing the original PR)
!!! tip Enabling the Dependency Dashboard by itself does not change the "control flow" of Renovate. Renovate still creates and manages PRs, and still follows your schedules and rate limits. The Dependency Dashboard gives you extra visibility and control over your updates.
This feature allows you to use Renovate's Dependency Dashboard to force approval of updates before they are created.
By setting dependencyDashboardApproval
to true
in config (including within packageRules
), you can tell Renovate to wait for your approval from the Dependency Dashboard before creating a branch/PR.
You can approve a pending PR by selecting the checkbox in the Dependency Dashboard issue.
!!! tip
When you set dependencyDashboardApproval
to true
the Dependency Dashboard issue will be created automatically, you do not need to turn on dependencyDashboard
explicitly.
You can configure Renovate to wait for approval for:
- all package upgrades
- major, minor, patch level upgrades
- specific package upgrades
- upgrades coming from specific package managers
If you want to approve all upgrades, set dependencyDashboardApproval
to true
:
{
"dependencyDashboardApproval": true
}
If you want to require approval for major updates, set dependencyDashboardApproval
to true
within a major
object:
{
"major": {
"dependencyDashboardApproval": true
}
}
If you want to approve specific packages, set dependencyDashboardApproval
to true
within a packageRules
entry where you have defined a specific package or pattern.
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackagePatterns": ["^@package-name"],
"dependencyDashboardApproval": true
}
]
}
You can configure this to true
if you prefer Renovate to close an existing Dependency Dashboard whenever there are no outstanding PRs left.
The labels only get updated when the Dependency Dashboard issue updates its content and/or title. It is pointless to edit the labels, as Renovate bot restores the labels on each run.
Use this option to control if the Dependency Dashboard lists the OSV-sourced CVEs for your repository. You can choose from:
none
(default) do not list any CVEsunresolved
list CVEs that have no fixesall
list all CVEs
This feature is independent of the osvVulnerabilityAlerts
option.
The source of these CVEs is OSV.dev.
Configure this option if you prefer a different title for the Dependency Dashboard.
The description field can be used inside any configuration object to add a human-readable description of the object's config purpose. Descriptions fields embedded within presets are also collated as part of the onboarding description.
Add to this object if you wish to define rules that apply only to PRs that update digests.
If you want the PRs created by Renovate to be considered as drafts rather than normal PRs, you could add this property to your renovate.json
:
{
"draftPR": true
}
This option is evaluated at PR/MR creation time.
!!! note
Forgejo, Gitea and GitLab implement draft status by checking if the PR's title starts with certain strings.
This means that draftPR
on Forgejo, Gitea and GitLab are incompatible with the legacy method of triggering Renovate to rebase a PR by renaming the PR to start with rebase!
.
The most common use of enabled
is if you want to turn Renovate's functionality off, for some reason.
For example, if you wanted to disable Renovate completely on a repository, you could make this your renovate.json
:
{
"enabled": false
}
To disable Renovate for all eslint
packages, you can configure a package rule like:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackagePatterns": ["^eslint"],
"enabled": false
}
]
}
To disable Renovate for npm devDependencies
but keep it for dependencies
you could configure:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchManagers": ["npm"],
"matchDepTypes": ["devDependencies"],
"enabled": false
}
]
}
This is a way to allow only certain package managers and implicitly disable all others.
Example:
{
"enabledManagers": ["dockerfile", "npm"]
}
For the full list of available managers, see the Supported Managers documentation.
Before you put any secrets in your repository configuration, encrypt the secrets. You can encrypt secrets using either a HTML page, or the CLI.
To encrypt secrets for the Mend Renovate App for github.com with a HTML page, go to app.renovatebot.com/encrypt and complete the form. If you're self-hosting Renovate, you may download and edit the form, to use your own PGP public key.
You can also encrypt secrets from the CLI, using the curl
, echo
, jq
, gpg
, grep
and tr
CLI programs.
Here is an example:
curl https://app.renovatebot.com/renovate.pgp --output renovate.pgp
echo -n '{"o":"your-organization", "r":"your-repository (optional)", "v":"your-secret-value"}' | jq . -c | gpg --encrypt -a --recipient-file renovate.pgp | grep -v '^----' | tr -d '\n'
The above script uses:
curl
to download the Mend Renovate hosted app's public keyecho
to echo a JSON object intojq
jq
to validate the JSON and then compact itgpg
to encrypt the contentsgrep
andtr
to extract the encrypted payload which we will use
The jq
step is optional, you can leave it out if you wish.
Its primary value is validating that the string you echo to gpg
is valid JSON, and compact.
!!! note Encrypted secrets must have at least an org/group scope, and optionally a repository scope. This means that Renovate will check if a secret's scope matches the current repository before applying it, and warn/discard if there is a mismatch.
Encrypted secrets usually have a single organization.
But you may encrypt a secret with more than one organization, for example: org1,org2
.
This way the secret can be used in both the org1
and org2
organizations.
For more information on how to use secrets for private packages, read Private package support.
Be careful you know what you're doing with this option. The initial intended use is to allow the user to exclude certain dependencies from being added/removed/modified when "vendoring" dependencies. Example:
{
"excludeCommitPaths": ["vendor/golang.org/x/text/**"]
}
The above would mean Renovate would not include files matching the above glob pattern in the commit, even if it thinks they should be updated.
See shareable config presets for details. Learn how to use presets by reading the Key concepts, Presets page.
Only use this config option when the raw version strings from the datasource do not match the expected format that you need in your package file.
You must define a "named capture group" called version
like in the examples below.
For example, to extract only the major.minor precision from a GitHub release, the following would work:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackageNames": ["foo"],
"extractVersion": "^(?<version>v\\d+\\.\\d+)"
}
]
}
The above will change a raw version of v1.31.5
to v1.31
, for example.
Alternatively, to strip a release-
prefix:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackageNames": ["bar"],
"extractVersion": "^release-(?<version>.*)$"
}
]
}
The above will change a raw version of release-2.0.0
to 2.0.0
, for example.
A similar one could strip leading v
prefixes:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackageNames": ["baz"],
"extractVersion": "^v(?<version>.*)$"
}
]
}
Use this config option to configure release notes fetching. The available options are:
off
- disable release notes fetchingbranch
- fetch release notes while creating/updating branchpr
(default) - fetches release notes while creating/updating pull-request
It is not recommended to set fetchReleaseNotes=branch unless you are embedding release notes in commit information, because it results in a performance decrease.
Renovate can fetch release notes when they are hosted on one of these platforms:
- Bitbucket Cloud
- GitHub (.com and Enterprise Server)
- GitLab (.com and CE/EE)
If you are running on any platform except github.com
, you need to configure a Personal Access Token to allow Renovate to fetch release notes from github.com
.
!!! note Renovate can only show release notes from some platforms and some package managers. We're planning improvements so that Renovate can show more release notes. Read issue 14138 on GitHub to get an overview of the planned work.
fileMatch
is used by Renovate to know which files in a repository to parse and extract.
fileMatch
patterns in the user config are added to the default values and do not replace them.
The default fileMatch
patterns cannot be removed, so if you need to include or exclude specific paths then use the ignorePaths
or includePaths
configuration options.
Some fileMatch
patterns are short, like Renovate's default Go Modules fileMatch
for example.
Here Renovate looks for any go.mod
file.
In this case you can probably keep using that default fileMatch
.
At other times, the possible files is too vague for Renovate to have any default.
For default, Kubernetes manifests can exist in any *.yaml
file and we don't want Renovate to parse every single YAML file in every repository just in case some of them have a Kubernetes manifest, so Renovate's default fileMatch
for manager kubernetes
is actually empty ([]
) and needs the user to tell Renovate what directories/files to look in.
Finally, there are cases where Renovate's default fileMatch
is good, but you may be using file patterns that a bot couldn't possibly guess about.
For example, Renovate's default fileMatch
for Dockerfile
is ['(^|/|\\.)([Dd]ocker|[Cc]ontainer)file$', '(^|/)([Dd]ocker|[Cc]ontainer)file[^/]*$']
.
This will catch files like backend/Dockerfile
, prefix.Dockerfile
or Dockerfile-suffix
, but it will miss files like ACTUALLY_A_DOCKERFILE.template
.
Because fileMatch
is mergeable, you don't need to duplicate the defaults and could add the missing file like this:
{
"dockerfile": {
"fileMatch": ["^ACTUALLY_A_DOCKERFILE\\.template$"]
}
}
If you configure fileMatch
then it must be within a manager object (e.g. dockerfile
in the above example).
The full list of supported managers can be found here.
When this option is enabled PRs are not assigned to users that are unavailable. This option only works on platforms that support the concept of user availability. For now, you can only use this option on the GitLab platform.
For followTag
to work, the datasource must support distribution streams or tags, like for example npm does.
The main usecase is to follow a pre-release tag of a dependency, say TypeScripts's "insiders"
build:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackageNames": ["typescript"],
"followTag": "insiders"
}
]
}
If you've set a followTag
then Renovate skips its normal major/minor/patch upgrade logic and stable/unstable consistency logic, and instead keeps your dependency version synced strictly to the version in the tag.
Renovate follows tags strictly, this can cause problems when a tagged stream is no longer maintained.
For example: you're following the next
tag, but later the stream you actually want is called stable
instead.
If next
is no longer getting updates, you must switch your followTag
to stable
to get updates again.
Use forkModeDisallowMaintainerEdits
to disallow maintainers from editing Renovate's pull requests when in fork mode.
If GitHub pull requests are created from a fork repository, the PR author can decide to allow upstream repository to modify the PR directly.
Allowing maintainers to edit pull requests directly is helpful when Renovate pull requests require additional changes. The reviewer can simply push to the pull request without having to create a new PR. More details here.
You may decide to disallow edits to Renovate pull requests in order to workaround issues in Renovate where modified fork branches are not deleted properly: See this issue. If this option is enabled, reviewers will need to create a new PR if additional changes are needed.
!!! note
This option is only relevant if you set forkToken
.
By default, Renovate skips any forked repositories when in autodiscover
mode.
It even skips a forked repository that has a Renovate configuration file, because Renovate doesn't know if that file was added by the forked repository.
Process a fork in autodiscover
mode`
If you want Renovate to run on a forked repository when in autodiscover
mode then:
- Ensure a
renovate.json
config exists with"forkProcessing": "enabled"
in your repository, - Or run the CLI command with
--fork-processing=enabled
Process a fork in other modes
If you're running Renovate in some other mode, for example when giving a list of repositories to Renovate, but want to skip forked repositories: set "forkProcessing": "disabled"
in your global config.
When using the Mend Renovate App
The behavior of forkProcessing
depends on how you allow Renovate to run on your account.
Renovate runs on all repositories
If you allow Renovate to run on all your repositories, forkProcessing
will be "disabled"
.
To run Renovate on a fork: add "forkProcessing": "enabled"
to the forked repository's renovate.json
file.
Renovate runs on selected repositories
If you allow Renovate to run on "Selected" repositories, forkProcessing
will be "enabled"
for each "Selected" repository.
Allowed filenames
Only the onboardingConfigFileName
(which defaults to renovate.json
) is supported for forkProcessing
.
You can't use other filenames because Renovate only checks the default filename when using the Git-hosting platform's API.
You can customize the Git author that's used whenever Renovate creates a commit.
The gitAuthor
option accepts a RFC5322-compliant string.
It's recommended to include a name followed by an email address, e.g.
Development Bot <[email protected]>
!!! danger We strongly recommend that the Git author email you use is unique to Renovate. Otherwise, if another bot or human shares the same email and pushes to one of Renovate's branches then Renovate will mistake the branch as unmodified and potentially force push over the changes.
Specify commit authors ignored by Renovate.
By default, Renovate will treat any PR as modified if another Git author has added to the branch.
When a PR is considered modified, Renovate won't perform any further commits such as if it's conflicted or needs a version update.
If you have other bots which commit on top of Renovate PRs, and don't want Renovate to treat these PRs as modified, then add the other Git author(s) to gitIgnoredAuthors
.
Example:
{
"gitIgnoredAuthors": ["[email protected]"]
}
Ignore the default project level approval(s), so that Renovate bot can automerge its merge requests, without needing approval(s).
Under the hood, it creates a MR-level approval rule where approvals_required
is set to 0
.
This option works only when automerge=true
, automergeType=pr
or automergeType=branch
, and platformAutomerge=true
.
Also, approval rules overriding should not be prevented in GitLab settings.
By default, Renovate will run go get -d -t ./...
to update the go.sum
.
If you need to modify this path, for example in order to ignore directories, you can override the default ./...
value using this option:
{
"goGetDirs": ["./some-project/", "./tools/..."]
}
The default configuration for groups are essentially internal to Renovate and you normally shouldn't need to modify them.
But you may add settings to any group by defining your own group
configuration object.
There are multiple cases where it can be useful to group multiple upgrades together.
Internally Renovate uses this for branches such as "Pin Dependencies", "Lock File Maintenance", etc.
Another example used previously is to group together all related eslint
packages, or perhaps angular
or babel
.
To enable grouping, you configure the groupName
field to something non-null.
The groupName
field allows free text and does not have any semantic interpretation by Renovate.
All updates sharing the same groupName
will be placed into the same branch/PR.
For example, to group all non-major devDependencies updates together into a single PR:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchDepTypes": ["devDependencies"],
"matchUpdateTypes": ["patch", "minor"],
"groupName": "devDependencies (non-major)"
}
]
}
By default, Renovate will "slugify" the groupName to determine the branch name.
For example if you named your group "devDependencies (non-major)" then the branchName would be renovate/devdependencies-non-major
.
If you wished to override this then you could configure like this:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchDepTypes": ["devDependencies"],
"matchUpdateTypes": ["patch", "minor"],
"groupName": "devDependencies (non-major)",
"groupSlug": "dev-dependencies"
}
]
}
As a result of the above, the branchName would be renovate/dev-dependencies
instead.
!!! note You shouldn't usually need to configure this unless you really care about your branch names.
Some code hosting systems have restrictions on the branch name lengths, this option lets you get around these restrictions.
You can set the hashedBranchLength
option to a number of characters that works for your system and then Renovate will generate branch names with the correct length by hashing additionalBranchPrefix
and branchTopic
, and then truncating the hash so that the full branch name (including branchPrefix
) has the right number of characters.
Example: If you have set branchPrefix: "deps-"
and hashedBranchLength: 12
it will result in a branch name like deps-5bf36ec
instead of the traditional pretty branch name like deps-react-17.x
.
The primary purpose of hostRules
is to configure credentials for host authentication.
You tell Renovate how to match against the host you need authenticated, and then you also tell it which credentials to use.
The lookup keys for hostRules
are: hostType
and matchHost
, both of which are optional.
Supported credential fields are token
, username
, password
, timeout
, enabled
and insecureRegistry
.
Example for configuring docker
auth:
{
"hostRules": [
{
"matchHost": "docker.io",
"username": "<some-username>",
"password": "<some-password>"
}
]
}
If multiple hostRules
match a request, then they will be applied in the following order/priority:
- rules with only
hostType
specified - rules with only
matchHost
specified (sorted bymatchHost
length if multiple match) - rules with both
matchHost
andhostType
specified (sorted bymatchHost
length if multiple match)
To disable requests to a particular host, you can configure a rule like:
{
"hostRules": [
{
"matchHost": "registry.npmjs.org",
"enabled": false
}
]
}
A preset alternative to the above is:
{
"extends": [":disableHost(registry.npmjs.org)"]
}
To match specific ports you have to add a protocol to matchHost
:
{
"hostRules": [
{
"matchHost": "https://domain.com:9118",
"enabled": false
}
]
}
!!! warning
Using matchHost
without a protocol behaves the same as if you had set no matchHost
configuration.
!!! note
Disabling a host is only 100% effective if added to self-hosted config.
Renovate currently still checks its cache for results first before trying to connect, so if a public host is blocked in your repository config (e.g. renovate.json
) then it's possible you may get cached results from that host if another repository using the same bot has successfully queried for the same dependency recently.
This field can be used to configure status codes that Renovate ignores and passes through when abortOnError
is set to true
.
For example to also skip 404 responses then configure the following:
{
"hostRules": [
{
"abortOnError": true,
"abortIgnoreStatusCodes": [404]
}
]
}
!!! tip This field is not mergeable, so the last-applied host rule takes precedence.
Use this field to configure Renovate to abort runs for custom hosts. By default, Renovate will only abort for known public hosts, which has the downside that transient errors for other hosts can cause autoclosing of PRs.
To abort Renovate runs for http failures from any host:
{
"hostRules": [
{
"abortOnError": true
}
]
}
To abort Renovate runs for any docker
datasource failures:
{
"hostRules": [
{
"hostType": "docker",
"abortOnError": true
}
]
}
To abort Renovate for errors for a specific docker
host:
{
"hostRules": [
{
"matchHost": "docker.company.com",
"abortOnError": true
}
]
}
When this field is enabled, Renovate will abort its run if it encounters either (a) any low-level http error (e.g. ETIMEDOUT
) or (b) gets a response not matching any of the configured abortIgnoreStatusCodes
(e.g. 500 Internal Error
);
You may use the authType
option to create a custom HTTP authorization
header.
For authType
to work, you must also set your own token
.
Do not set authType=Bearer
: it's the default setting for Renovate anyway.
Do not set a username or password when you're using authType
, as authType
doesn't use usernames or passwords.
An example for npm basic auth with token:
{
"hostRules": [
{
"matchHost": "npm.custom.org",
"token": "<some-token>",
"authType": "Basic"
}
]
}
This will generate the following header: authorization: Basic <some-token>
.
To use a bare token in the authorization header (required by e.g. Hex) - use the authType
"Token-Only":
{
"hostRules": [
{
"matchHost": "https://hex.pm/api/repos/private_repo/",
"token": "<some-token>",
"authType": "Token-Only"
}
]
}
This will generate the header authorization: <some-token>
.
Usually the default setting is fine, but you can use concurrentRequestLimit
to limit the number of concurrent outstanding requests.
You only need to adjust this setting if a datasource is rate limiting Renovate or has problems with the load.
The limit will be set for any host it applies to.
Example config:
{
"hostRules": [
{
"matchHost": "api.github.com",
"concurrentRequestLimit": 2
}
]
}
Use an exact host for matchHost
and not a domain (e.g. api.github.com
as shown above and not github.com
).
Do not combine with hostType
in the same rule or it won't work.
In addition to concurrentRequestLimit
, you can limit the maximum number of requests that can be made per one second.
It can be used to set minimal delay between two requests to the same host.
Fractional values are allowed, e.g. 0.25
means 1 request per 4 seconds.
Default value 0
means no limit.
Example config:
{
"hostRules": [
{
"matchHost": "api.github.com",
"maxRequestsPerSecond": 2
}
]
}
Enable got dnsCache support.
It uses QuickLRU
with a maxSize
of 1000
.
Enable got http2 support.
hostType
is another way to filter rules and can be either a platform such as github
and bitbucket-server
, or it can be a datasource such as docker
and rubygems
.
You usually don't need to configure it in a host rule if you have already configured matchHost
and only one host type is in use for those, as is usually the case.
hostType
can help for cases like an enterprise registry that serves multiple package types and has different authentication for each, although it's often the case that multiple matchHost
rules could achieve the same thing.
Enable this option to allow Renovate to connect to an insecure Docker registry that is http only. This is insecure and is not recommended.
Example:
{
"hostRules": [
{
"matchHost": "reg.insecure.com",
"insecureRegistry": true
}
]
}
If enabled, this allows a single TCP connection to remain open for multiple HTTP(S) requests/responses.
You may use this field whenever it is needed to only enable authentication for a specific set of managers.
For example, using this option could be used whenever authentication using Git for private composer packages is already being handled through the use of SSH keys, which results in no need for also setting up authentication using tokens.
{
"hostRules": [
{
"hostType": "gitlab",
"matchHost": "gitlab.myorg.com",
"token": "abc123",
"artifactAuth": ["composer"]
}
]
}
Supported artifactAuth and hostType combinations:
artifactAuth | hostTypes |
---|---|
composer |
gitlab , packagist , github , git-tags |
This can be a base URL (e.g. https://api.github.com
) or a hostname like github.com
or api.github.com
.
If the value starts with http(s)
then it will only match against URLs which start with the full base URL.
Otherwise, it will be matched by checking if the URL's hostname matches the matchHost
directly or ends with it.
When checking the end of the hostname, a single dot is prefixed to the value of matchHost
, if one is not already present, to ensure it can only match against whole domain segments.
The matchHost
URL must be the same as the registryUrl
set in .npmrc
, or you'll get authentication issues when the artifacts are updated when yarn or npm runs.
{
"hostRules": [
{
"matchHost": "https://gitlab.myorg.com/api/v4/packages/npm/",
"token": "abc123"
}
]
}
The above corresponds with an .npmrc
like the following:
registry=https://gitlab.myorg.com/api/v4/packages/npm/
!!! note
Values containing a URL path but missing a scheme will be prepended with 'https://' (e.g. domain.com/path
-> https://domain.com/path
)
Use this figure to adjust the timeout for queries. The default is 60s, which is quite high. To adjust it down to 10s for all queries, do this:
{
"hostRules": [
{
"timeout": 10000
}
]
}
By default, Renovate won't update a dependency version to a deprecated release unless the current version was itself deprecated. The goal of this is to make sure you don't upgrade from a non-deprecated version to a deprecated one, only because it's higher than the current version.
If for some reason you wish to force deprecated updates with Renovate, you can configure ignoreDeprecated
to false
, which we do not recommend for most situations.
The ignoreDeps
configuration field allows you to define a list of dependency names to be ignored by Renovate.
Currently it supports only "exact match" dependency names and not any patterns. e.g. to ignore both eslint
and eslint-config-base
you would add this to your config:
{
"ignoreDeps": ["eslint", "eslint-config-base"]
}
The above is the same as if you wrote this package rule:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackageNames": ["eslint", "eslint-config-base"],
"enabled": false
}
]
}
Renovate will extract dependencies from every file it finds in a repository, unless that file is explicitly ignored. With this setting you can selectively ignore package files that would normally be "autodiscovered" and updated by Renovate.
For instance if you have a project with an "examples/"
directory you wish to ignore:
{
"ignorePaths": ["**/examples/**"]
}
Renovate's default ignore is node_modules
and bower_components
only.
If you are extending from the popular config:recommended
preset then it adds ignore patterns for vendor
, examples
, test(s)
and fixtures
directories too.
Set this to true
if running plugins causes problems.
Applicable for Composer only for now.
This is usually needed if someone needs to migrate bot accounts, including from the Mend Renovate App to self-hosted.
If ignorePrAuthor
is configured to true, it means Renovate will fetch the entire list of repository PRs instead of optimizing to fetch only those PRs which it created itself.
You should only want to enable this if you are changing the bot account (e.g. from @old-bot
to @new-bot
) and want @new-bot
to find and update any existing PRs created by @old-bot
.
It's recommended to revert this setting once that transition period is over and all old PRs are resolved.
Use this if you are extending a complex preset but don't want to use every "sub preset" that it includes. For example, consider this config:
{
"extends": ["config:recommended"],
"ignorePresets": [":prHourlyLimit2"]
}
It would take the entire "config:recommended"
preset - which has a lot of sub-presets - but ignore the ":prHourlyLimit2"
rule.
By default, Renovate does not add assignees or reviewers to PRs which are configured for automerge.
If tests have failed, Renovate then does add them, but only if the assignees and reviewers list is empty.
In the case that a user is automatically added as reviewer (such as Renovate Approve bot) and you want to ignore it for the purpose of this decision, add it to the ignoreReviewers
list.
{
"reviewers": ["foo"],
"ignoreReviewers": ["renovate-approve"]
}
Applicable for npm and Composer only for now. Set this to true
if running scripts causes problems.
Currently Renovate's default behavior is to only automerge if every status check has succeeded.
Setting this option to true
means that Renovate will ignore all status checks.
You can set this if you don't have any status checks but still want Renovate to automerge PRs.
Beware: configuring Renovate to automerge without any tests can lead to broken builds on your base branch, please think again before enabling this!
By default, Renovate won't update any package versions to unstable versions (e.g. 4.0.0-rc3
) unless the current version has the same major.minor.patch
and was already unstable (e.g. it was already on 4.0.0-rc2
).
Renovate will also not "jump" unstable versions automatically, e.g. if you are on 4.0.0-rc2
and newer versions 4.0.0
and 4.1.0-alpha.1
exist then Renovate will update you to 4.0.0
only.
If you need to force permanent unstable updates for a package, you can add a package rule setting ignoreUnstable
to false
.
Also check out the followTag
configuration option above if you wish Renovate to keep you pinned to a particular release tag.
If you wish for Renovate to process only select paths in the repository, use includePaths
.
Alternatively, if you need to exclude certain paths in the repository then consider ignorePaths
instead.
If you are more interested in including only certain package managers (e.g. npm
), then consider enabledManagers
instead.
By default, internal Renovate checks such as renovate/stability-days
are not counted towards a branch being "green" or not.
This is primarily to prevent automerge when the only check is a passing Renovate check.
Internal checks will always be counted/considered if they are in pending or failed states. If there are multiple passing checks for a branch, including non-Renovate ones, then this setting won't make any difference.
Change this setting to true
if you want to use internal Renovate checks towards a passing branch result.
This setting determines whether Renovate controls when and how filtering of internal checks are performed, particularly when multiple versions of the same update type are available.
Currently this applies to the minimumReleaseAge
check only.
none
: No filtering will be performed, and the highest release will be used regardless of whether it's pending or notstrict
: All pending releases will be filtered. PRs will be skipped unless a non-pending version is availableflexible
: Similar to strict, but in the case where all versions are pending then a PR will be created with the highest pending version
The flexible
mode can result in "flapping" of Pull Requests, for example: a pending PR with version 1.0.3
is first released but then downgraded to 1.0.2
once it passes minimumReleaseAge
.
We recommend that you use the strict
mode, and enable the dependencyDashboard
so that you can see suppressed PRs.
By default, Renovate won't add any labels to PRs.
If you want Renovate to add labels to PRs it creates then define a labels
array of one or more label strings.
If you want the same label(s) for every PR then you can configure it at the top level of config.
However you can also fully override them on a per-package basis.
Consider this example:
{
"labels": ["dependencies"],
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackagePatterns": ["eslint"],
"labels": ["linting"]
}
]
}
With the above config, every PR raised by Renovate will have the label dependencies
while PRs containing eslint
-related packages will instead have the label linting
.
Renovate only adds labels when it creates the PR, which means:
- If you remove labels which Renovate added, it won't re-apply them
- If you change your config, the new/changed labels are not applied to any open PRs
The labels
array is non-mergeable, meaning if multiple packageRules
match then Renovate uses the last value for labels
.
If you want to add/combine labels, use the addLabels
config option, which is mergeable.
You can use lockFileMaintenance
to refresh lock files to keep them up-to-date.
When Renovate performs lockFileMaintenance
it deletes the lock file and runs the relevant package manager.
That package manager creates a new lock file, where all dependency versions are updated to the latest version.
Renovate then commits that lock file to the update branch and creates the lock file update PR.
Supported lock files:
.terraform.lock.hcl
Cargo.lock
Chart.lock
composer.lock
flake.lock
Gemfile.lock
gradle.lockfile
jsonnetfile.lock.json
package-lock.json
packages.lock.json
pdm.lock
Pipfile.lock
pnpm-lock.yaml
poetry.lock
pubspec.lock
pyproject.toml
requirements.txt
yarn.lock
Support for new lock files may be added via feature request.
By default, lockFileMaintenance
is disabled.
To enable lockFileMaintenance
add this to your configuration:
{
"lockFileMaintenance": { "enabled": true }
}
To reduce "noise" in the repository, Renovate performs lockFileMaintenance
"before 4am on monday"
, i.e. to achieve once-per-week semantics.
Depending on its running schedule, Renovate may run a few times within that time window - even possibly updating the lock file more than once - but it hopefully leaves enough time for tests to run and automerge to apply, if configured.
Add to this object if you wish to define rules that apply only to major updates.
This feature used to be called stabilityDays
.
If this is set and an update has a release timestamp header, then Renovate will check if the set duration has passed.
Note: Renovate will wait for the set duration to pass for each separate version.
Renovate does not wait until the package has seen no releases for x time-duration(minimumReleaseAge
).
minimumReleaseAge
is not intended to help with slowing down fast releasing project updates.
If you want to slow down PRs for a specific package, setup a custom schedule for that package.
Read our selective-scheduling help to learn how to set the schedule.
If the time since the release is less than the set minimumReleaseAge
a "pending" status check is added to the branch.
If enough days have passed then the "pending" status is removed, and a "passing" status check is added.
Some datasources don't have a release timestamp, in which case this feature is not compatible. Other datasources may have a release timestamp, but Renovate does not support it yet, in which case a feature request needs to be implemented.
Maven users: you cannot use minimumReleaseAge
if a Maven source returns unreliable last-modified
headers.
!!! note
Configuring this option will add a renovate/stability-days
option to the status checks.
There are a couple of uses for minimumReleaseAge
:
If you combine minimumReleaseAge=3 days
and internalChecksFilter="strict"
then Renovate will hold back from creating branches until 3 or more days have elapsed since the version was released.
We recommend that you set dependencyDashboard=true
so you can see these pending PRs.
npm packages less than 72 hours (3 days) old can be unpublished, which could result in a service impact if you have already updated to it.
Set minimumReleaseAge
to 3 days
for npm packages to prevent relying on a package that can be removed from the registry:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchDatasources": ["npm"],
"minimumReleaseAge": "3 days"
}
]
}
If you enabled automerge
and minimumReleaseAge
, it means that PRs will be created immediately but automerging will be delayed until the time-duration has passed.
This works because Renovate will add a "renovate/stability-days" pending status check to each branch/PR and that pending check will prevent the branch going green to automerge.
Add to this object if you wish to define rules that apply only to minor updates.
See Private npm module support for details on how this is used.
Typically you would encrypt it and put it inside the encrypted
object.
See Private npm module support for details on how this is used.
This option exists to provide flexibility about whether npmrc
strings in config should override .npmrc
files in the repo, or be merged with them.
In some situations you need the ability to force override .npmrc
contents in a repo (npmrcMerge=false
) while in others you might want to simply supplement the settings already in the .npmrc
(npmrcMerge=true
).
A use case for the latter is if you are a Renovate bot admin and wish to provide a default token for npmjs.org
without removing any other .npmrc
settings which individual repositories have configured (such as scopes/registries).
If false
(default), it means that defining config.npmrc
will result in any .npmrc
file in the repo being overridden and its values ignored.
If configured to true
, it means that any .npmrc
file in the repo will have config.npmrc
prepended to it before running npm
.
Renovate integrates with OSV, an open-source vulnerability database, to check if extracted dependencies have known vulnerabilities.
Set osvVulnerabilityAlerts
to true
to get pull requests with vulnerability fixes (once they are available).
You will only get OSV-based vulnerability alerts for direct dependencies. Renovate only queries the OSV database for dependencies that use one of these datasources:
packageRules
is a powerful feature that lets you apply rules to individual packages or to groups of packages using regex pattern matching.
Here is an example if you want to group together all packages starting with eslint
into a single branch/PR:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackagePatterns": ["^eslint"],
"groupName": "eslint packages"
}
]
}
Note how the above uses matchPackagePatterns
with a regex value.
Here's an example config to limit the "noisy" aws-sdk
package to weekly updates:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackageNames": ["aws-sdk"],
"schedule": ["after 9pm on sunday"]
}
]
}
For Maven dependencies, the package name is <groupId:artefactId>
, e.g. "matchPackageNames": ["com.thoughtworks.xstream:xstream"]
Note how the above uses matchPackageNames
instead of matchPackagePatterns
because it is an exact match package name.
This is the equivalent of defining "matchPackagePatterns": ["^aws\-sdk$"]
.
However you can mix together both matchPackageNames
and matchPackagePatterns
in the same package rule and the rule will be applied if either match.
Example:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackageNames": ["neutrino"],
"matchPackagePatterns": ["^@neutrino/"],
"groupName": "neutrino monorepo"
}
]
}
The above rule will group together the neutrino
package and any package matching @neutrino/*
.
File name matches are convenient to use if you wish to apply configuration rules to certain package or lock files using patterns.
For example, if you have an examples
directory and you want all updates to those examples to use the chore
prefix instead of fix
, then you could add this configuration:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchFileNames": ["examples/**"],
"extends": [":semanticCommitTypeAll(chore)"]
}
]
}
If you wish to limit Renovate to apply configuration rules to certain files in the root repository directory, you have to use matchFileNames
with a minimatch
pattern (which can include an exact file name match).
For example you have multiple package.json
and want to use dependencyDashboardApproval
only on the root package.json
:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchFileNames": ["package.json"],
"dependencyDashboardApproval": true
}
]
}
!!! tip
Renovate evaluates all packageRules
and does not stop after the first match.
Order your packageRules
so the least important rules are at the top, and the most important rules at the bottom.
This way important rules override settings from earlier rules if needed.
!!! warning
Avoid nesting any object
-type configuration in a packageRules
array, such as a major
or minor
block.
Use this - usually within a packageRule - to limit how far to upgrade a dependency.
For example, if you wish to upgrade to Angular v1.5 but not to angular
v1.6 or higher, you could define this to be <= 1.5
or < 1.6.0
:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackageNames": ["angular"],
"allowedVersions": "<=1.5"
}
]
}
The valid syntax for this will be calculated at runtime because it depends on the versioning scheme, which is itself dynamic.
This field also supports Regular Expressions if they begin and end with /
.
For example, the following will enforce that only 3 or 4-part versions are supported, without any prefixes:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackageNames": ["com.thoughtworks.xstream:xstream"],
"allowedVersions": "/^[0-9]+\\.[0-9]+\\.[0-9]+(\\.[0-9]+)?$/"
}
]
}
This field also supports a special negated regex syntax for ignoring certain versions.
Use the syntax !/ /
like the following:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackageNames": ["chalk"],
"allowedVersions": "!/java$/"
}
]
}
Use this field if you want to limit a packageRule
to certain depType
values.
Invalid if used outside of a packageRule
.
Important: Do not mix this up with the option ignoreDeps
.
Use ignoreDeps
instead if all you want to do is have a list of package names for Renovate to ignore.
Use excludePackageNames
if you want to have one or more exact name matches excluded in your package rule.
See also matchPackageNames
.
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackagePatterns": ["^eslint"],
"excludePackageNames": ["eslint-foo"]
}
]
}
The above will match all package names starting with eslint
but exclude the specific package eslint-foo
.
Use this field if you want to have one or more package name patterns excluded in your package rule.
See also matchPackagePatterns
.
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackagePatterns": ["^eslint"],
"excludePackagePatterns": ["^eslint-foo"]
}
]
}
The above will match all package names starting with eslint
but exclude ones starting with eslint-foo
.
Use this field if you want to have one or more package name prefixes excluded in your package rule, without needing to write a regex.
See also matchPackagePrefixes
.
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackagePrefixes": ["eslint"],
"excludePackagePrefixes": ["eslint-foo"]
}
]
}
The above will match all package names starting with eslint
but exclude ones starting with eslint-foo
.
Use this field to restrict rules to a particular repository. e.g.
{
"packageRules": [
{
"excludeRepositories": ["literal/repo", "/^some/.*$/", "**/*-archived"],
"enabled": false
}
]
}
This field supports Regular Expressions if they begin and end with /
, otherwise it will use minimatch
.
Use matchCategories
to restrict rules to a particular language or group.
Matching is done using "any" logic, i.e. "match any of the following categories".
The categories can be found in the manager documentation.
!!! note
Rules with matchCategories
are only applied after extraction of dependencies.
If you want to configure which managers are being extracted at all, use enabledManagers
instead.
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchCategories": ["python"],
"addLabels": ["py"]
}
]
}
Use this field to restrict rules to a particular repository. e.g.
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchRepositories": ["literal/repo", "/^some/.*$/", "**/*-archived"],
"enabled": false
}
]
}
This field supports Regular Expressions if they begin and end with /
, otherwise it will use minimatch
.
Use this field to restrict rules to a particular branch. e.g.
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchBaseBranches": ["main"],
"excludePackagePatterns": ["^eslint"],
"enabled": false
}
]
}
This field also supports Regular Expressions if they begin and end with /
. e.g.
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchBaseBranches": ["/^release/.*/"],
"excludePackagePatterns": ["^eslint"],
"enabled": false
}
]
}
Use this field to restrict rules to a particular package manager. e.g.
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackageNames": ["node"],
"matchManagers": ["dockerfile"],
"enabled": false
}
]
}
For the full list of available managers, see the Supported Managers documentation.
Use this field to restrict rules to a particular datasource. e.g.
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchDatasources": ["orb"],
"labels": ["circleci-orb!!"]
}
]
}
This option is matched against the currentValue
field of a dependency.
matchCurrentValue
supports Regular Expressions which must begin and end with /
.
For example, the following enforces that only 1.*
versions will be used:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackagePatterns": ["io.github.resilience4j"],
"matchCurrentValue": "/^1\\./"
}
]
}
This field also supports a special negated regex syntax to ignore certain versions.
Use the syntax !/ /
like this:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackagePatterns": ["io.github.resilience4j"],
"matchCurrentValue": "!/^0\\./"
}
]
}
The currentVersion
field will be one of the following (in order of preference):
- locked version if a lock file exists
- resolved version
- current value
Consider using instead matchCurrentValue
if you wish to match against the raw string value of a dependency.
matchCurrentVersion
can be an exact version or a version range:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchCurrentVersion": ">=1.0.0",
"matchPackageNames": ["angular"]
}
]
}
The syntax of the version range must follow the versioning scheme used by the matched package(s).
This is usually defined by the manager which discovered them or by the default versioning for the package's datasource.
For example, a Gradle package would typically need Gradle constraint syntax (e.g. [,7.0)
) and not SemVer syntax (e.g. <7.0
).
This field also supports Regular Expressions which must begin and end with /
.
For example, the following enforces that only 1.*
versions will be used:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackagePatterns": ["io.github.resilience4j"],
"matchCurrentVersion": "/^1\\./"
}
]
}
This field also supports a special negated regex syntax to ignore certain versions.
Use the syntax !/ /
like this:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackagePatterns": ["io.github.resilience4j"],
"matchCurrentVersion": "!/^0\\./"
}
]
}
Renovate will compare matchFileNames
glob matching against the dependency's package file and also lock file if one exists.
The following example matches package.json
but not package/frontend/package.json
:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchFileNames": ["package.json"],
"labels": ["npm"]
}
]
}
The following example matches any package.json
, including files like backend/package.json
:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"description": "Group dependencies from package.json files",
"matchFileNames": ["**/package.json"],
"groupName": "All package.json changes"
}
]
}
The following example matches any file in directories starting with app/
:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"description": "Group all dependencies from the app directory",
"matchFileNames": ["app/**"],
"groupName": "App dependencies"
}
]
}
It is recommended that you avoid using "negative" globs, like **/!(package.json)
, because such patterns might still return true if they match against the lock file name (e.g. package-lock.json
).
Use this field if you want to have one or more exact name matches in your package rule.
See also excludePackageNames
.
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackageNames": ["angular"],
"rangeStrategy": "pin"
}
]
}
The above will configure rangeStrategy
to pin
only for the package angular
.
Use this field if you want to have one or more package names patterns in your package rule.
See also excludePackagePatterns
.
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackagePatterns": ["^angular"],
"rangeStrategy": "replace"
}
]
}
The above will configure rangeStrategy
to replace
for any package starting with angular
.
Use this field to match a package prefix without needing to write a regex expression.
See also excludePackagePrefixes
.
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackagePrefixes": ["angular"],
"rangeStrategy": "replace"
}
]
}
Like the earlier matchPackagePatterns
example, the above will configure rangeStrategy
to replace
for any package starting with angular
.
matchPackagePrefixes
will match against packageName
first, and then depName
, however depName
matching is deprecated and will be removed in a future major release.
If matching against depName
, use matchDepPatterns
instead.
Here's an example of where you use this to group together all packages from the renovatebot
GitHub org:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchSourceUrlPrefixes": ["https://github.com/renovatebot/"],
"groupName": "All renovate packages"
}
]
}
Here's an example of where you use this to group together all packages from the Vue monorepo:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchSourceUrls": ["https://github.com/vuejs/vue"],
"groupName": "Vue monorepo packages"
}
]
}
Use matchUpdateTypes
to match rules against types of updates.
For example to apply a special label to major
updates:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchUpdateTypes": ["major"],
"labels": ["UPDATE-MAJOR"]
}
]
}
!!! warning
Packages that follow SemVer are allowed to make breaking changes in any 0.x
version, even patch
and minor
.
Check if you're using any 0.x
package, and see if you need custom packageRules
for it.
When setting up automerge for dependencies, make sure to stop accidental automerges of 0.x
versions.
Read the automerge non-major updates docs for a config example that blocks 0.x
updates.
!!! warning
This configuration option needs a Mend API key, and is in private beta testing only.
API keys are not available for free or via the renovatebot/renovate
repository.
For example to group high merge confidence updates:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchConfidence": ["high", "very high"],
"groupName": "high merge confidence"
}
]
}
Tokens can be configured via hostRules
using the "merge-confidence"
hostType
:
{
"hostRules": [
{
"hostType": "merge-confidence",
"token": "********"
}
]
}
Use this field to set the source URL for a package, including overriding an existing one. Source URLs are necessary in order to look up release notes.
Using this field we can specify the exact URL to fetch release notes from.
Example setting source URL for package "dummy":
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackageNames": ["dummy"],
"customChangelogUrl": "https://github.com/org/dummy"
}
]
}
!!! note Renovate can fetch changelogs from GitHub and GitLab platforms only, and setting the URL to an unsupported host/platform type won't change that.
This config option only works with some managers. We're working to support more managers, subscribe to issue renovatebot/renovate#14149 to follow our progress.
Managers which do not support replacement:
bazel
git-submodules
gomod
gradle
hermit
homebrew
maven
regex
Use the replacementName
config option to set the name of a replacement package.
Can be used in combination with replacementVersion
.
You can suggest a new community package rule by editing the replacements.ts
file on the Renovate repository and opening a pull request.
!!! note
replacementName
will take precedence if used within the same package rule.
Use the replacementNameTemplate
config option to control the replacement name.
Use the triple brace {{{ }}}
notation to avoid Handlebars escaping any special characters.
For example, the following package rule can be used to replace the registry for docker
images:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchDatasources": ["docker"],
"matchPackagePatterns": ["^docker\\.io/.+"],
"replacementNameTemplate": "{{{replace 'docker\\.io/' 'ghcr.io/' packageName}}}"
}
]
}
Or, to add a registry prefix to any docker
images that do not contain an explicit registry:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"description": "official images",
"matchDatasources": ["docker"],
"matchPackagePatterns": ["^[a-z-]+$"],
"replacementNameTemplate": "some.registry.org/library/{{{packageName}}}"
},
{
"description": "non-official images",
"matchDatasources": ["docker"],
"matchPackagePatterns": ["^[a-z-]+/[a-z-]+$"],
"replacementNameTemplate": "some.registry.org/{{{packageName}}}"
}
]
}
This config option only works with some managers.
We're working to support more managers, subscribe to issue renovatebot/renovate#14149 to follow our progress.
For a list of managers which do not support replacement read the replacementName
config option docs.
Use the replacementVersion
config option to set the version of a replacement package.
Must be used with replacementName
.
For example to replace the npm package jade
with version 2.0.0
of the package pug
:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchDatasources": ["npm"],
"matchPackageNames": ["jade"],
"replacementName": "pug",
"replacementVersion": "2.0.0"
}
]
}
Add to this object if you wish to define rules that apply only to patch updates.
Add to this object if you wish to define rules that apply only to PRs that pin dependencies.
Add to this object if you wish to define rules that apply only to PRs that pin digests.
If enabled Renovate will pin Docker images or GitHub Actions by means of their SHA256 digest and not only by tag so that they are immutable.
!!! note
If you use the default platformAutomerge=true
then you should enable your Git hosting platform's capabilities to enforce test passing before PR merge.
If you don't do this, the platform might merge Renovate PRs even if the repository's tests haven't started, are in still in progress, or possibly even when they have failed.
On GitHub this is called "Require status checks before merging", which you can find in the "Branch protection rules" section of the settings for your repository.
GitHub docs, about protected branches
GitHub docs, require status checks before merging
If you're using another platform, search their documentation for a similar feature.
If you have enabled automerge
and set automergeType=pr
in the Renovate config, then leaving platformAutomerge
as true
speeds up merging via the platform's native automerge functionality.
Renovate tries platform-native automerge only when it initially creates the PR. Any PR that is being updated will be automerged with the Renovate-based automerge.
platformAutomerge
will configure PRs to be merged after all (if any) branch policies have been met.
This option is available for Azure, Gitea, GitHub and GitLab.
It falls back to Renovate-based automerge if the platform-native automerge is not available.
You can also fine-tune the behavior by setting packageRules
if you want to use it selectively (e.g. per-package).
Note that the outcome of rebaseWhen=auto
can differ when platformAutomerge=true
.
Normally when you set rebaseWhen=auto
Renovate rebases any branch that's behind the base branch automatically, and some people rely on that.
This behavior is no longer guaranteed when platformAutomerge
is true
because the platform might automerge a branch which is not up-to-date.
For example, GitHub might automerge a Renovate branch even if it's behind the base branch at the time.
Please check platform specific docs for version requirements.
To learn how to use GitHub's Merge Queue feature with Renovate, read our Key Concepts, Automerge, GitHub Merge Queue docs.
Only use this option if you run Renovate as a GitHub App. It does not apply when you use a Personal Access Token as credential.
When platformCommit
is enabled, Renovate will create commits with GitHub's API instead of using git
directly.
This way Renovate can use GitHub's Commit signing support for bots and other GitHub Apps feature.
Table with options:
Name | Description |
---|---|
bundlerConservative |
Enable conservative mode for bundler (Ruby dependencies). This will only update the immediate dependency in the lockfile instead of all subdependencies. |
gomodMassage |
Enable massaging replace directives before calling go commands. |
gomodTidy |
Run go mod tidy after Go module updates. This is implicitly enabled for major module updates when gomodUpdateImportPaths is enabled. |
gomodTidy1.17 |
Run go mod tidy -compat=1.17 after Go module updates. |
gomodTidyE |
Run go mod tidy -e after Go module updates. |
gomodUpdateImportPaths |
Update source import paths on major module updates, using mod. |
helmUpdateSubChartArchives |
Update subchart archives in the /charts folder. |
npmDedupe |
Run npm dedupe after package-lock.json updates. |
pnpmDedupe |
Run pnpm dedupe after pnpm-lock.yaml updates. |
yarnDedupeFewer |
Run yarn-deduplicate --strategy fewer after yarn.lock updates. |
yarnDedupeHighest |
Run yarn-deduplicate --strategy highest (yarn dedupe --strategy highest for Yarn >=2.2.0) after yarn.lock updates. |
!!! note Post-upgrade tasks can only be used on self-hosted Renovate instances.
Post-upgrade tasks are commands that are executed by Renovate after a dependency has been updated but before the commit is created. The intention is to run any additional command line tools that would modify existing files or generate new files when a dependency changes.
Each command must match at least one of the patterns defined in allowedPostUpgradeCommands
(a global-only configuration option) in order to be executed.
If the list of allowed tasks is empty then no tasks will be executed.
e.g.
{
"postUpgradeTasks": {
"commands": ["tslint --fix"],
"fileFilters": ["yarn.lock", "**/*.js"],
"executionMode": "update"
}
}
The postUpgradeTasks
configuration consists of three fields:
A list of commands that are executed after Renovate has updated a dependency but before the commit is made.
You can use variable templating in your commands as long as allowPostUpgradeCommandTemplating
is enabled.
!!! note
Do not use git add
in your commands to add new files to be tracked, add them by including them in your fileFilters
instead.
A list of glob-style matchers that determine which files will be included in the final commit made by Renovate. Dotfiles are included.
Optional field which defaults to any non-ignored file in the repo (**/*
glob pattern).
Specify a custom value for this if you wish to exclude certain files which are modified by your postUpgradeTasks
and you don't want committed.
Defaults to update
, but can also be set to branch
.
This sets the level the postUpgradeTask runs on, if set to update
the postUpgradeTask will be executed for every dependency on the branch.
If set to branch
the postUpgradeTask is executed for the whole branch.
Use this array to provide a list of column names you wish to include in the PR tables.
For example, if you wish to add the package file name to the table, you would add this to your config:
{
"prBodyColumns": [
"Package",
"Update",
"Type",
"New value",
"Package file",
"References"
]
}
!!! note
"Package file" is predefined in the default prBodyDefinitions
object so does not require a definition before it can be used.
You can configure this object to either (a) modify the template for an existing table column in PR bodies, or (b) you wish to add a definition for a new/additional column.
Here is an example of modifying the default value for the "Package"
column to put it inside a <code></code>
block:
{
"prBodyDefinitions": {
"Package": "`{{{depName}}}`"
}
}
Here is an example of adding a custom "Sourcegraph"
column definition:
{
"prBodyDefinitions": {
"Sourcegraph": "[![code search for \"{{{depName}}}\"](https://sourcegraph.com/search/badge?q=repo:%5Egithub%5C.com/{{{repository}}}%24+case:yes+-file:package%28-lock%29%3F%5C.json+{{{depName}}}&label=matches)](https://sourcegraph.com/search?q=repo:%5Egithub%5C.com/{{{repository}}}%24+case:yes+-file:package%28-lock%29%3F%5C.json+{{{depName}}})"
},
"prBodyColumns": [
"Package",
"Update",
"New value",
"References",
"Sourcegraph"
]
}
!!! tip
Columns must also be included in the prBodyColumns
array in order to be used, so that's why it's included above in the example.
Use this field to add custom content inside PR bodies, including conditionally.
e.g. if you wish to add an extra Warning to major updates:
{
"prBodyNotes": ["{{#if isMajor}}:warning: MAJOR MAJOR MAJOR :warning:{{/if}}"]
}
The available sections are:
header
table
warnings
notes
changelogs
configDescription
controls
footer
This setting - if enabled - limits Renovate to a maximum of x
concurrent PRs open at any time.
This limit is enforced on a per-repository basis.
!!! note
Renovate always creates security PRs, even if the concurrent PR limit is already reached.
Security PRs have [SECURITY]
in their PR title.
This setting tells Renovate when you would like it to raise PRs:
immediate
(default): Renovate will create PRs immediately after creating the corresponding branchnot-pending
: Renovate will wait until status checks have completed (passed or failed) before raising the PRstatus-success
: Renovate won't raise PRs unless tests pass
Renovate defaults to immediate
but you might want to change this to not-pending
instead.
With prCreation set to immediate
, you'll get a Pull Request and possible associated notification right away when a new update is available.
You'll have to wait until the checks have been performed, before you can decide if you want to merge the PR or not.
With prCreation set to not-pending
, Renovate creates the PR only once all tests have passed or failed.
When you get the PR notification, you can take action immediately, as you have the full test results.
If there are no checks associated, Renovate will create the PR once 24 hrs have elapsed since creation of the commit.
With prCreation set to status-success
, Renovate creates the PR only if/ once all tests have passed.
For all cases of non-immediate PR creation, Renovate doesn't run instantly once tests complete. Instead, Renovate can create the PR on its next run after relevant tests have completed, so there will be some delay.
This config option slows down the rate at which Renovate creates PRs.
Slowing Renovate down can be handy when you're onboarding a repository with a lot of dependencies.
What may happen if you don't set a prHourlyLimit
:
- Renovate creates an Onboarding PR
- You merge the onboarding PR to activate Renovate
- Renovate creates a "Pin Dependencies" PR (if needed)
- You merge the "Pin Dependencies" PR
- Renovate creates every single upgrade PR needed, which can be a lot
The above may cause:
- Renovate bot's PRs to overwhelm your CI systems
- a lot of test runs, because branches are rebased each time you merge a PR
To prevent these problems you can set prHourlyLimit
to a value like 1
or 2
.
Renovate will only create that many PRs within each hourly period (:00
through :59
).
You still get all the PRs in a reasonable time, perhaps over a day or so.
Now you can merge the PRs at a do-able rate, once the tests pass.
!!! tip
The prHourlyLimit
setting does not limit the number of concurrently open PRs, only the rate at which PRs are created.
The prHourlyLimit
setting is enforced on a per-repository basis.
If you configure prCreation=not-pending
, then Renovate will wait until tests are non-pending (all pass or at least one fails) before creating PRs.
However there are cases where PRs may remain in pending state forever, e.g. absence of tests or status checks that are configure to pending indefinitely.
This is why we configured an upper limit for how long we wait until creating a PR.
!!! note
If the option minimumReleaseAge
is non-zero then Renovate disables the prNotPendingHours
functionality.
Sometimes Renovate needs to rate limit its creation of PRs, e.g. hourly or concurrent PR limits. By default, Renovate sorts/prioritizes based on the update type, going from smallest update to biggest update. Renovate creates update PRs in this order:
pinDigest
pin
digest
patch
minor
major
If you have dependencies that are more or less important than others then you can use the prPriority
field for PR sorting.
The default value is 0, so setting a negative value will make dependencies sort last, while higher values sort first.
Here's an example of how you would define PR priority so that devDependencies
are raised last and react
is raised first:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchDepTypes": ["devDependencies"],
"prPriority": -1
},
{
"matchPackageNames": ["react"],
"prPriority": 5
}
]
}
The PR title is important for some of Renovate's matching algorithms (e.g. determining whether to recreate a PR or not) so ideally don't modify it much.
There are certain scenarios where the default behavior appends extra context to the PR title.
These scenarios include if a baseBranch
or if there is a grouped update and either separateMajorMinor
or separateMinorPatch
is true.
Using this option allows you to skip these default behaviors and use other templating methods to control the format of the PR title.
This option is useful for troubleshooting, particularly if using presets.
e.g. run renovate foo/bar --print-config > config.log
and the fully-resolved config will be included in the log file.
By default Renovate deletes, or "prunes", the branch after automerging.
Set pruneBranchAfterAutomerge
to false
to keep the branch after automerging.
Configure to false
to disable deleting orphan branches and autoclosing PRs.
Defaults to true
.
Behavior:
auto
= Renovate decides (this will be done on a manager-by-manager basis)pin
= convert ranges to exact versions, e.g.^1.0.0
->1.1.0
bump
= e.g. bump the range even if the new version satisfies the existing range, e.g.^1.0.0
->^1.1.0
replace
= Replace the range with a newer one if the new version falls outside it, and update nothing otherwisewiden
= Widen the range with newer one, e.g.^1.0.0
->^1.0.0 || ^2.0.0
update-lockfile
= Update the lock file when in-range updates are available, otherwisereplace
for updates out of range. Works forbundler
,composer
,npm
,yarn
,terraform
andpoetry
so farin-range-only
= Update the lock file when in-range updates are available, ignore package file updates
Renovate's "auto"
strategy works like this for npm:
- Widen
peerDependencies
- If an existing range already ends with an "or" operator like
"^1.0.0 || ^2.0.0"
, then Renovate widens it into"^1.0.0 || ^2.0.0 || ^3.0.0"
- Otherwise, if the update is outside the existing range, Renovate replaces the range. So
"^2.0.0"
is replaced by"^3.0.0"
- Finally, if the update is in-range, Renovate will update the lockfile with the new exact version.
By default, Renovate assumes that if you are using ranges then it's because you want them to be wide/open. Renovate won't deliberately "narrow" any range by increasing the semver value inside.
For example, if your package.json
specifies a value for left-pad
of ^1.0.0
and the latest version on npmjs is 1.2.0
, then Renovate won't change anything because 1.2.0
satisfies the range.
If instead you'd prefer to be updated to ^1.2.0
in cases like this, then configure rangeStrategy
to bump
in your Renovate config.
This feature supports caret (^
) and tilde (~
) ranges only, like ^1.0.0
and ~1.0.0
.
The in-range-only
strategy may be useful if you want to leave the package file unchanged and only do update-lockfile
within the existing range.
The in-range-only
strategy behaves like update-lockfile
, but discards any updates where the new version of the dependency is not equal to the current version.
We recommend you avoid using the in-range-only
strategy unless you strictly need it.
Using the in-range-only
strategy may result in you being multiple releases behind without knowing it.
On supported platforms it is possible to add a label to a PR to manually request Renovate to recreate/rebase it.
By default this label is "rebase"
but you can configure it to anything you want by changing this rebaseLabel
field.
Possible values and meanings:
auto
: Renovate will autodetect the best setting. It will usebehind-base-branch
if configured to automerge or repository has been set to require PRs to be up to date. Otherwise,conflicted
will be used insteadnever
: Renovate will never rebase the branch or update it unless manually requestedconflicted
: Renovate will rebase only if the branch is conflictedbehind-base-branch
: Renovate will rebase whenever the branch falls 1 or more commit behind its base branch
rebaseWhen=conflicted
is not recommended if you have enabled Renovate automerge, because:
- It could result in a broken base branch if two updates are merged one after another without testing the new versions together
- If you have enforced that PRs must be up-to-date before merging (e.g. using branch protection on GitHub), then automerge won't be possible as soon as a PR gets out-of-date but remains non-conflicted
It is also recommended to avoid rebaseWhen=never
as it can result in conflicted branches with outdated PR descriptions and/or status checks.
Avoid setting rebaseWhen=never
and then also setting prCreation=not-pending
as this can prevent creation of PRs.
This feature used to be called recreateClosed
.
By default, Renovate detects if it proposed an update to a project before, and will not propose the same update again.
For example the Webpack 3.x case described in the separateMajorMinor
documentation.
You can use recreateWhen
to customize this behavior down to a per-package level.
For example we override it to always
in the following cases where branch names and PR titles must be reused:
- Package groups
- When pinning versions
- Lock file maintenance
You can select which behavior you want from Renovate:
always
: Recreates all closed or blocking PRsauto
: The default option. Recreates only immortal PRs (default)never
: No PR is recreated, doesn't matter if it is immortal or not
We recommend that you stick with the default setting for this option. Only change this setting if you really need to.
Use regexManagers
entries to configure the regex
manager in Renovate.
You can define custom managers to handle:
- Proprietary file formats or conventions
- Popular file formats not yet supported as a manager by Renovate
The custom manager concept is based on using Regular Expression named capture groups.
You must have a named capture group matching (e.g. (?<depName>.*)
) or configure its corresponding template (e.g. depNameTemplate
) for these fields:
datasource
depName
currentValue
Use named capture group matching or set a corresponding template. We recommend you use only one of these methods, or you'll get confused.
We recommend that you also tell Renovate what versioning
to use.
If the versioning
field is missing, then Renovate defaults to using semver
versioning.
For more details and examples, see our documentation for the regex
manager.
For template fields, use the triple brace {{{ }}}
notation to avoid Handlebars escaping any special characters.
!!! tip Look at our Regex Manager Presets, they may have what you need.
matchStrings
should each be a valid regular expression, optionally with named capture groups.
Example:
{
"matchStrings": [
"ENV .*?_VERSION=(?<currentValue>.*) # (?<datasource>.*?)/(?<depName>.*?)\\s"
]
}
matchStringsStrategy
controls behavior when multiple matchStrings
values are provided.
Three options are available:
any
(default)recursive
combination
Each provided matchString
will be matched individually to the content of the packageFile
.
If a matchString
has multiple matches in a file each will be interpreted as an independent dependency.
As example the following configuration will update all 3 lines in the Dockerfile. renovate.json:
{
"regexManagers": [
{
"fileMatch": ["^Dockerfile$"],
"matchStringsStrategy": "any",
"matchStrings": [
"ENV [A-Z]+_VERSION=(?<currentValue>.*) # (?<datasource>.*?)/(?<depName>.*?)(\\&versioning=(?<versioning>.*?))?\\s",
"FROM (?<depName>\\S*):(?<currentValue>\\S*)"
],
"datasourceTemplate": "docker"
}
]
}
a Dockerfile:
FROM amd64/ubuntu:18.04
ENV GRADLE_VERSION=6.2 # gradle-version/gradle&versioning=maven
ENV NODE_VERSION=10.19.0 # github-tags/nodejs/node&versioning=node
If using recursive
the matchStrings
will be looped through and the full match of the last will define the range of the next one.
This can be used to narrow down the search area to prevent multiple matches.
But the recursive
strategy still allows the matching of multiple dependencies as described below.
All matches of the first matchStrings
pattern are detected, then each of these matches will used as basis be used as the input for the next matchStrings
pattern, and so on.
If the next matchStrings
pattern has multiple matches then it will split again.
This process will be followed as long there is a match plus a next matchingStrings
pattern is available.
Matched groups will be available in subsequent matching layers.
This is an example how this can work.
The first regex manager will only upgrade grafana/loki
as looks for the backup
key then looks for the test
key and then uses this result for extraction of necessary attributes.
But the second regex manager will upgrade both definitions as its first matchStrings
matches both test
keys.
renovate.json:
{
"regexManagers": [
{
"fileMatch": ["^example.json$"],
"matchStringsStrategy": "recursive",
"matchStrings": [
"\"backup\":\\s*{[^}]*}",
"\"test\":\\s*\\{[^}]*}",
"\"name\":\\s*\"(?<depName>.*)\"[^\"]*\"type\":\\s*\"(?<datasource>.*)\"[^\"]*\"value\":\\s*\"(?<currentValue>.*)\""
],
"datasourceTemplate": "docker"
},
{
"fileMatch": ["^example.json$"],
"matchStringsStrategy": "recursive",
"matchStrings": [
"\"test\":\\s*\\{[^}]*}",
"\"name\":\\s*\"(?<depName>.*)\"[^\"]*\"type\":\\s*\"(?<datasource>.*)\"[^\"]*\"value\":\\s*\"(?<currentValue>.*)\""
],
"datasourceTemplate": "docker"
}
]
}
example.json:
{
"backup": {
"test": {
"name": "grafana/loki",
"type": "docker",
"value": "1.6.1"
}
},
"setup": {
"test": {
"name": "python",
"type": "docker",
"value": "3.9.0"
}
}
}
This option allows the possibility to combine the values of multiple lines inside a file.
While using multiple lines is also possible using both other matchStringStrategy
values, the combination
approach is less susceptible to white space or line breaks stopping a match.
combination
will only match at most one dependency per file, so if you want to update multiple dependencies using combination
you have to define multiple regex managers.
Matched group values will be merged to form a single dependency.
renovate.json:
{
"regexManagers": [
{
"fileMatch": ["^main.yml$"],
"matchStringsStrategy": "combination",
"matchStrings": [
"prometheus_image:\\s*\"(?<depName>.*)\"\\s*//",
"prometheus_version:\\s*\"(?<currentValue>.*)\"\\s*//"
],
"datasourceTemplate": "docker"
},
{
"fileMatch": ["^main.yml$"],
"matchStringsStrategy": "combination",
"matchStrings": [
"thanos_image:\\s*\"(?<depName>.*)\"\\s*//",
"thanos_version:\\s*\"(?<currentValue>.*)\"\\s*//"
],
"datasourceTemplate": "docker"
}
]
}
Ansible variable file ( yaml ):
prometheus_image: "prom/prometheus" // a comment
prometheus_version: "v2.21.0" // a comment
------
thanos_image: "prom/prometheus" // a comment
thanos_version: "0.15.0" // a comment
In the above example, each regex manager will match a single dependency each.
If depName
cannot be captured with a named capture group in matchString
then it can be defined manually using this field.
It will be compiled using Handlebars and the regex groups
result.
If extractVersion
cannot be captured with a named capture group in matchString
then it can be defined manually using this field.
It will be compiled using Handlebars and the regex groups
result.
packageName
is used for looking up dependency versions.
It will be compiled using Handlebars and the regex groups
result.
It will default to the value of depName
if left unconfigured/undefined.
If the currentValue
for a dependency is not captured with a named group then it can be defined in config using this field.
It will be compiled using Handlebars and the regex groups
result.
If the datasource
for a dependency is not captured with a named group then it can be defined in config using this field.
It will be compiled using Handlebars and the regex groups
result.
If depType
cannot be captured with a named capture group in matchString
then it can be defined manually using this field.
It will be compiled using Handlebars and the regex groups
result.
If the versioning
for a dependency is not captured with a named group then it can be defined in config using this field.
It will be compiled using Handlebars and the regex groups
result.
If the registryUrls
for a dependency is not captured with a named group then it can be defined in config using this field.
It will be compiled using Handlebars and the regex groups
result.
Allows overwriting how the matched string is replaced. This allows for some migration strategies. E.g. moving from one Docker image repository to another one.
helm-values.yaml:
# The image of the service <registry>/<repo>/<image>:<tag>
image: my.old.registry/aRepository/andImage:1.18-alpine
regex definition:
{
"regexManagers": [
{
"fileMatch": ["values.yaml$"],
"matchStrings": [
"image:\\s+(?<depName>my\\.old\\.registry/aRepository/andImage):(?<currentValue>[^\\s]+)"
],
"depNameTemplate": "my.new.registry/aRepository/andImage",
"autoReplaceStringTemplate": "image: {{{depName}}}:{{{newValue}}}",
"datasourceTemplate": "docker"
}
]
}
This will lead to following update where 1.21-alpine
is the newest version of my.new.registry/aRepository/andImage
:
# The image of the service <registry>/<repo>/<image>:<tag>
image: my.new.registry/aRepository/andImage:1.21-alpine
You can use the registryAliases
object to set registry aliases.
This feature works with the following managers:
ansible
docker-compose
dockerfile
droneci
gitlabci
helm-requirements
helmfile
helmv3
kubernetes
terraform
woodpecker
Usually Renovate is able to either (a) use the default registries for a datasource, or (b) automatically detect during the manager extract phase which custom registries are in use.
In case there is a need to configure them manually, it can be done using this registryUrls
field, typically using packageRules
like so:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchDatasources": ["docker"],
"registryUrls": ["https://docker.mycompany.domain"]
}
]
}
The field supports multiple URLs but it is datasource-dependent on whether only the first is used or multiple.
Add to this object if you wish to define rules that apply only to PRs that replace dependencies.
Similar to ignoreUnstable
, this option controls whether to update to versions that are greater than the version tagged as latest
in the repository.
By default, renovate
will update to a version greater than latest
only if the current version is itself past latest.
Must be valid usernames.
Required reviewers on GitHub
If you're assigning a team to review on GitHub, you must use the prefix team:
and add the last part of the team name.
Say the full team name on GitHub is @organization/foo
, then you'd set the config option like this:
{
"reviewers": ["team:foo"]
}
Required reviewers on Azure DevOps
To mark a reviewer as required on Azure DevOps, you must use the prefix required:
.
For example: if the username or team name is bar
then you would set the config option like this:
{
"reviewers": ["required:bar"]
}
If enabled Renovate tries to determine PR reviewers by matching rules defined in a CODEOWNERS file against the changes in the PR.
See GitHub or GitLab documentation for details on syntax and possible file locations.
Add to this object if you wish to define rules that apply only to PRs that roll back versions.
There are times when a dependency version in use by a project gets removed from the registry. For some registries, existing releases or even whole packages can be removed or "yanked" at any time, while for some registries only very new or unused releases can be removed. Renovate's "rollback" feature exists to propose a downgrade to the next-highest release if the current release is no longer found in the registry.
Renovate does not create these rollback PRs by default, so this functionality needs to be opted-into.
We recommend you do this selectively with packageRules
and not globally.
The schedule
option allows you to define times of week or month for Renovate updates.
Running Renovate around the clock can be too "noisy" for some projects.
To reduce the noise you can use the schedule
config option to limit the time frame in which Renovate will perform actions on your repository.
You can use the standard Cron syntax and Later syntax to define your schedule.
The default value for schedule
is "at any time", which is functionally the same as declaring a null
schedule.
i.e. Renovate will run on the repository around the clock.
The easiest way to define a schedule is to use a preset if one of them fits your requirements. See Schedule presets for details and feel free to request a new one in the source repository if you think others would benefit from it too.
Otherwise, here are some text schedules that are known to work:
every weekend
before 5:00am
after 10pm and before 5:00am
after 10pm and before 5am every weekday
on friday and saturday
every 3 months on the first day of the month
* 0 2 * *
!!! warning
For Cron schedules, you must use the *
wildcard for the minutes value, as Renovate doesn't support minute granularity.
One example might be that you don't want Renovate to run during your typical business hours, so that your build machines don't get clogged up testing package.json
updates.
You could then configure a schedule like this at the repository level:
{
"schedule": ["after 10pm and before 5am every weekday", "every weekend"]
}
This would mean that Renovate can run for 7 hours each night plus all the time on weekends.
This scheduling feature can also be particularly useful for "noisy" packages that are updated frequently, such as aws-sdk
.
To restrict aws-sdk
to only monthly updates, you could add this package rule:
{
"packageRules": [
{
"matchPackageNames": ["aws-sdk"],
"extends": ["schedule:monthly"]
}
]
}
Technical details: We mostly rely on the text parsing of the library @breejs/later but only its concepts of "days", "time_before", and "time_after". Read the parser documentation at breejs.github.io/later/parsers.html#text. To parse Cron syntax, Renovate uses cron-parser. Renovate does not support scheduled minutes or "at an exact time" granularity.
!!! tip
If you want to disable Renovate, then avoid setting schedule
to "never"
.
Instead, use the enabled
config option to disable Renovate.
Read the enabled
config option docs to learn more.
!!! note Actions triggered via the Dependency Dashboard are not restricted by a configured schedule.
!!! tip
To validate your later
schedule before updating your renovate.json
, you can use this CodePen.
By default you will see Angular-style commit prefixes like "chore(deps):"
.
If you wish to change it to something else like "package"
then it will look like "chore(package):"
.
You can also use parentDir
or baseDir
to namespace your commits for monorepos e.g. "{{parentDir}}"
.
By default you will see Angular-style commit prefixes like "chore(deps):"
.
If you wish to change it to something else like "ci" then it will look like "ci(deps):"
.
If you are using a semantic prefix for your commits, then you will want to enable this setting.
Although it's configurable to a package-level, it makes most sense to configure it at a repository level.
If configured to enabled
, then the semanticCommitScope
and semanticCommitType
fields will be used for each commit message and PR title.
Renovate autodetects if your repository is already using semantic commits or not and follows suit, so you only need to configure this if you wish to override Renovate's autodetected setting.
Renovate's default behavior is to create a separate branch/PR if both minor and major version updates exist (note that your choice of rangeStrategy
value can influence which updates exist in the first place however).
For example, if you were using Webpack 2.0.0 and versions 2.1.0 and 3.0.0 were both available, then Renovate would create two PRs so that you have the choice whether to apply the minor update to 2.x or the major update of 3.x.
If you were to apply the minor update then Renovate would keep updating the 3.x branch for you as well, e.g. if Webpack 3.0.1 or 3.1.0 were released.
If instead you applied the 3.0.0 update then Renovate would clean up the unneeded 2.x branch for you on the next run.
It is recommended that you leave this option to true
, because of the polite way that Renovate handles this.
For example, let's say in the above example that you decided you wouldn't update to Webpack 3 for a long time and don't want to build/test every time a new 3.x version arrives.
In that case, simply close the "Update Webpack to version 3.x" PR and it won't be recreated again even if subsequent Webpack 3.x versions are released.
You can continue with Webpack 2.x for as long as you want and get any updates/patches that are made for it.
Then eventually when you do want to update to Webpack 3.x you can make that update to package.json
yourself and commit it to the base branch once it's tested.
After that, Renovate will resume providing you updates to 3.x again!
i.e. if you close a major upgrade PR then it won't come back again, but once you make the major upgrade yourself then Renovate will resume providing you with minor or patch updates.
This option also has priority over package groups configured by packageRule
.
So Renovate will propose separate PRs for major and minor updates of packages even if they are grouped.
If you want to enforce grouped package updates, you need to set this option to false
within the packageRule
.
By default, Renovate won't distinguish between "patch" (e.g. 1.0.x) and "minor" (e.g. 1.x.0) releases - it groups them together.
E.g., if you are running version 1.0.0 of a package and both versions 1.0.1 and 1.1.0 are available then Renovate will raise a single PR for version 1.1.0.
If you wish to distinguish between patch and minor upgrades, for example if you wish to automerge patch but not minor, then you can configured this option to true
.
Configure this to true
if you wish to get one PR for every separate major version upgrade of a dependency.
e.g. if you are on webpack@v1 currently then default behavior is a PR for upgrading to webpack@v3 and not for webpack@v2.
If this setting is true then you would get one PR for webpack@v2 and one for webpack@v3.
This feature only works on supported platforms, check the table above.
If you want Renovate to stop updating a PR, you can apply a label to the PR.
By default, Renovate listens to the label: "stop-updating"
.
You can set your own label name with the "stopUpdatingLabel"
field:
{
"stopUpdatingLabel": "take-a-break-renovate"
}
Use this field to suppress various types of warnings and other notifications from Renovate. Example:
{
"suppressNotifications": ["prIgnoreNotification"]
}
The above config will suppress the comment which is added to a PR whenever you close a PR unmerged.
It is only recommended to configure this field if you wish to use the schedules
feature and want to write them in your local timezone.
Please see the above link for valid timezone names.
When enabled, Renovate tries to remediate vulnerabilities even if they exist only in transitive dependencies.
Applicable only for GitHub platform (with vulnerability alerts enabled) and npm
manager.
When the lockfileVersion
is higher than 1
in package-lock.json
, remediations are only possible when changes are made to package.json
.
This is considered a feature flag with the aim to remove it and default to this behavior once it has been more widely tested.
Renovate defaults to skipping any internal package dependencies within monorepos. In such case dependency versions won't be updated by Renovate.
To opt in to letting Renovate update internal package versions normally, set this configuration option to true.
When schedules are in use, it generally means "no updates".
However there are cases where updates might be desirable - e.g. if you have configured prCreation=not-pending
, or you have rebaseWhen=behind-base-branch
and the base branch is updated so you want Renovate PRs to be rebased.
This defaults to true
, meaning that Renovate will perform certain "desirable" updates to existing PRs even when outside of schedule.
If you wish to disable all updates outside of scheduled hours then configure this field to false
.
By default, Renovate will try to update all detected dependencies, regardless of whether they are defined using pinned single versions (e.g. 1.2.3
) or constraints/ranges (e.g. (^1.2.3
).
You can set this option to false
if you wish to disable updating for pinned (single version) dependencies specifically.
By default, Renovate will read config file from the default branch only and will ignore any config files in base branches.
You can configure useBaseBranchConfig=merge
to instruct Renovate to merge the config from each base branch over the top of the config in the default branch.
The config file name in the base branch must be the same as in the default branch and cannot be package.json
.
This scenario may be useful for testing the config changes in base branches instantly.
When a PR is closed, Renovate posts a comment to let users know that future updates will be ignored.
If you want, you can change the text in the comment with the userStrings
config option.
You can edit these user-facing strings:
ignoreDigest
: Text of the PR comment for digest upgrades.ignoreMajor
: Text of the PR comment for major upgrades.ignoreOther
: Text of the PR comment for other (neither digest nor major) upgrades.ignoreTopic
: Topic of the PR comment.
Example:
{
"userStrings": {
"ignoreTopic": "Custom topic for PR comment",
"ignoreMajor": "Custom text for major upgrades.",
"ignoreDigest": "Custom text for digest upgrades.",
"ignoreOther": "Custom text for other upgrades."
}
}
Usually, each language or package manager has a specific type of "versioning": JavaScript uses npm's SemVer implementation, Python uses pep440, etc.
Renovate also uses custom versioning, like "docker"
to address the most common way people tag versions using Docker, and "loose"
as a fallback that tries SemVer first.
Otherwise Renovate does its best to sort and compare.
By exposing versioning
to config, you can override the default versioning for a package manager if needed.
We do not recommend overriding the default versioning, but there are some cases such as Docker or Gradle where versioning is not strictly defined and you may need to specify the versioning type per-package.
Renovate supports 4-part versions (1.2.3.4) in full for the NuGet package manager.
Other managers can use the "loose"
versioning fallback: the first 3 parts are used as the version, all trailing parts are used for alphanumeric sorting.
Renovate can read GitHub's Vulnerability Alerts to customize its Pull Requests. For this to work, you must enable the Dependency graph, and Dependabot alerts. Follow these steps:
- While logged in to GitHub, navigate to your repository
- Select the "Settings" tab
- Select "Code security and analysis" in the sidebar
- Enable the "Dependency graph"
- Enable "Dependabot alerts"
- If you're running Renovate in app mode: make sure the app has
read
permissions for "Dependabot alerts". If you're the account administrator, browse to the app (for example the Mend Renovate App), select "Configure", and then scroll down to the "Permissions" section and make sure thatread
access to "Dependabot alerts" is mentioned
Once the above conditions are met, and you got one or more vulnerability alerts from GitHub for this repository, then Renovate tries to raise fix PRs.
You may use the vulnerabilityAlerts
configuration object to customize vulnerability-fix PRs.
For example, to set a custom label and assignee:
{
"vulnerabilityAlerts": {
"labels": ["security"],
"automerge": true,
"assignees": ["@rarkins"]
}
}
!!! warning
There's a small chance that a wrong vulnerability alert results in a flapping/looping vulnerability fix.
If you allow Renovate to automerge
vulnerability fixes, please check if the automerged fix is correct.
!!! note
When Renovate creates a vulnerabilityAlerts
PR, it ignores settings like prConcurrentLimit
, branchConcurrentLimit
, prHourlyLimit
, or schedule
.
This means that Renovate always tries to create a vulnerabilityAlerts
PR.
In short: vulnerability alerts "skip the line".
To disable the vulnerability alerts feature, set enabled=false
in a vulnerabilityAlerts
config object, like this:
{
"vulnerabilityAlerts": {
"enabled": false
}
}