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title, shortTitle, intro, versions, topics, allowTitleToDifferFromFilename, autogenerated
| title | shortTitle | intro | versions | topics | allowTitleToDifferFromFilename | autogenerated | |||||||
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| REST API endpoints for commit statuses | Commit statuses | Use the REST API to interact with commit statuses. |
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true | rest |
About commit statuses
You can use the REST API to allow external services to mark commits with an error, failure, pending, or success state, which is then reflected in pull requests involving those commits. Statuses can also include an optional description and target_url, and we highly recommend providing them as they make statuses much more useful in the GitHub UI.
As an example, one common use is for continuous integration services to mark commits as passing or failing builds using status. The target_url would be the full URL to the build output, and the description would be the high level summary of what happened with the build.
Statuses can include a context to indicate what service is providing that status. For example, you may have your continuous integration service push statuses with a context of ci, and a security audit tool push statuses with a context of security. You can then use the REST API to Get the combined status for a specific reference to retrieve the whole status for a commit.
Note that the repo:status OAuth scope grants targeted access to statuses without also granting access to repository code, while the repo scope grants permission to code as well as statuses.
If you are developing a {% data variables.product.prodname_github_app %} and want to provide more detailed information about an external service, you may want to use the REST API to manage checks. For more information, see AUTOTITLE.