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I've been using Google Code and basically everything has an individual RSS feed there. Now I'm trying to migrate over to Github and find the equivalent. I've found the URL for all commits https://github.com/ORG/PROJECT/commits/master.atom but now I'd like to get some other RSS feeds, most importantly the recent updates to issues - does any such feed exist?

Are there other RSS feeds for projects that can be accessed (Ex: Changes to the wiki)?

Is there a way to make the private feeds public?

1
  • For a project specific "feed", it might worth using GitHub's webhooks for realtime updates.
    – Jon
    Feb 20, 2016 at 22:04

4 Answers 4

25

I just solved this issue for one of my repos and imported GitHub feed items into my drupal site.

I had originally created a feed of only commits using the URL convention:

https://github.com/ORG/PROJECT/commits/master.atom 

but I also wanted a feed of GitHub-Issues and updates to Issues.

GitHub appears to now support an "everything" feed with the following convention:

https://github.com/username.private.actor.atom?token=somehextoken

Where somehextoken is replaced with a token relevant to your account.

You can get his feed+token URL automatically from GitHub using the following steps:

  1. Login to your GitHub account

  2. Go to the following page:

    https://github.com/dashboard/ (updated 2013-09)

  3. Click on the News Feed button with feed-icon in the top right of the page.

  4. This will take you to a feed XML page. Copy the URL form your browser and paste where needed.

  5. Filter the feed to your needs. The feed itself appears to include Issues updates and other details from all of the repos connected to your account. In my case, I just used a standard text filter to grab just the feed elements with MyAcct/MyRepo1 in their title.

Note that this question is related to a similar question in the web-apps stack exchange site

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  • 4
    The feed from github.com/dashboard is misleading. While the dashboard displays activity for repos you are watching, the linked feed is for your activity. If you want to get the feed for the repos you are watching, grab it from github.com (after logging in) or remove ".actor" part from the feed in the instructions above.
    – Aurimas
    Oct 10, 2013 at 19:46
  • 2
    @cept0 it is better practice to provide an update or clarification about what has changed, rather than downvote an answer that was clearly useful prior to an API change. Maybe someone else wants to help you solve this, but I'm not feeling so motivated after receiving your "-2". Jun 10, 2014 at 6:50
  • @PaulMcMurdie Does it still work? I tried with the given url & access-token generated from settings page but url shows an empty page.(?) I can access my own activity from http:/github.com/username.atom but how to access the feed of all watching repos (news feed)? Aug 4, 2014 at 14:50
  • 2
    I've made an app called Pull Feed for keeping track of repositories via an atom feed: pullfeed.co. It might suit your needs! Jul 21, 2015 at 18:40
  • @EdwardLoveall could Pull Feed work with organization-owned repositories?
    – alxndr
    Jul 30, 2015 at 16:32
4

In order to get the RSS feeds for a repository, you first have to watch the repository you're interested in. After watching it, head over to https://github.com and you should see news items for all your repositories start flowing in, as and when they happen.

Now if you need to use an external RSS reader (or similar), you should find a News Feed link on the main GitHub page that will take you to an aggregated RSS feed of any and all interesting things happening in your watched repositories. This will include information like pull requests, new issues, wiki changes, and so on.

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  • 1
    I don't think this is quite upto it. I'm having the same issue, and while I can get a feed of my aggregated repositories, I'm struggling to get a feed of the one repo I'm interested in building a widget for. Apr 17, 2012 at 23:35
  • 1
    How does this allow the user to filter only 'Issues' and not every single commit?
    – earthmeLon
    Jun 11, 2012 at 15:53
0

Look at the page source, you'll see a link like:

   <link href="https://github.com/org/repo/releases.atom?token=TOKEN" rel="alternate" title="repo Release Notes" type="application/atom+xml" />

Unless I'm mistaken, that (including the token) is your public URL.

-4

Take a look at https://github.com/YannBenigot/GHTrendingRSS

GitHub trending RSS feeds

Small Google AppEngine application to provide RSS feeds for the GitHub trending page.

The application is available and deployed here: http://ghtrendingrss.appspot.com/

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  • 1
    Links are broken.
    – q9f
    Mar 16, 2017 at 10:51

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