NovaRagnarok/RepoGarden
GITHUB Ba little local habitat / where your repos live
Activity & Vitality
BWhat is this?
Number of days since the most recent commit to the default branch.
Why it matters: Fresher commits indicate active maintenance and faster bug-fix turnaround.
How to improve:
- Set up automated dependency updates to maintain regular commit activity.
- Use CI/CD pipelines to enforce consistent integration cycles.
- Adopt trunk-based development to keep the main branch moving.
What is this?
Average number of commits pushed per month over the project's lifetime.
Why it matters: Higher commit frequency correlates with steady progress and responsiveness.
How to improve:
- Encourage small, focused commits rather than large batch changes.
- Use feature flags to merge work-in-progress safely.
- Set team commit cadence goals and track progress in dashboards.
What is this?
Number of days since the most recent versioned release was published.
Why it matters: Regular releases give users access to fixes and features, signalling a healthy delivery cycle.
How to improve:
- Automate releases via CI with semantic versioning tools.
- Adopt a time-based release schedule (e.g., every 2 weeks).
- Publish pre-releases to gather feedback before stable releases.
What is this?
Whether commit activity is growing, stable, or declining over recent months.
Why it matters: A growing or stable trend indicates sustained project momentum.
How to improve:
- Recruit new contributors through good-first-issue labels.
- Publish roadmap and contribution guides to attract participation.
- Schedule regular community events like hack sessions.
What is this?
Average number of days between consecutive releases.
Why it matters: Predictable release cadence builds user trust and simplifies upgrade planning.
How to improve:
- Automate the release pipeline to reduce manual overhead.
- Use semantic versioning to communicate change impact clearly.
- Maintain a changelog to make releases transparent and discoverable.
Community & Signals
CWhat is this?
Presence and length of the repository's README file.
Why it matters: A substantial README is the first impression for potential users and contributors.
How to improve:
- Include installation, usage, and contribution sections.
- Add badges for build status, coverage, and license.
- Keep language clear and provide code examples.
What is this?
Score from 0 to 4 measuring how many key README signals are present.
Why it matters: Quality READMEs reduce onboarding friction and improve discoverability.
How to improve:
- Ensure the README includes a project description and usage examples.
- Link to documentation, API references, and contribution guides.
- Add a table of contents for longer documents.
What is this?
Whether the repository includes an open-source license file.
Why it matters: A license determines how others can use, modify, and distribute the code.
How to improve:
- Choose an OSI-approved license that matches your project goals.
- Place the LICENSE file at the repository root.
- Use SPDX identifiers in package metadata.
What is this?
Whether the repository has a CONTRIBUTING.md or equivalent guide.
Why it matters: Clear contribution guidelines lower barriers for new contributors.
How to improve:
- Document the PR submission and review process.
- List coding standards and required tests.
- Provide templates for issues and pull requests.
What is this?
Whether the repository has a SECURITY.md or security policy.
Why it matters: A security policy gives researchers a responsible disclosure path.
How to improve:
- Create a SECURITY.md with contact and disclosure procedures.
- Set up automated dependency vulnerability scanning.
- Define SLAs for acknowledging and patching reported issues.
What is this?
Whether the repository has continuous integration configured.
Why it matters: CI catches regressions early and enforces code quality automatically.
How to improve:
- Configure a CI pipeline that runs tests on every push.
- Add linting and static analysis to the pipeline.
- Require CI pass before merging pull requests.
Issue Health
BWhat is this?
Ratio of closed issues to total issues.
Why it matters: A high closure rate indicates active issue management.
How to improve:
- Regularly triage and close duplicate or stale issues.
- Use automated staleness bots to flag inactive issues.
- Track issue age and set resolution targets.
What is this?
Ratio of issues that received at least one substantive response.
Why it matters: Unanswered issues frustrate users and signal neglect.
How to improve:
- Respond to new issues within one week, even with a brief acknowledgment.
- Use labels like 'needs-info' to prompt follow-ups.
- Create FAQ documentation for common questions.
What is this?
Ratio of issues with no activity for over 90 days.
Why it matters: Stale issues clutter the tracker and obscure genuinely important work.
How to improve:
- Implement a stale-bot to auto-label and close dormant issues.
- Review stale issues monthly and close or reprioritize them.
- Add clear resolution or wont-fix labels to closed issues.
What is this?
Median number of days until a new issue receives its first maintainer comment.
Why it matters: Quick initial responses set expectations and maintain community engagement.
How to improve:
- Configure automated acknowledgments for new issues.
- Assign triage owners on a rotating schedule.
- Use issue templates to make triage faster.
PR Health
FContributors
CWhat is this?
Total number of unique contributors to the repository.
Why it matters: A larger contributor base reduces bus factor and brings diverse perspectives.
How to improve:
- Label good-first-issues to attract new contributors.
- Mentor first-time contributors through the review process.
- Celebrate contributions in release notes and community updates.
What is this?
Minimum number of contributors whose departure would stall the project.
Why it matters: Higher bus factor means the project can withstand key-person departures.
How to improve:
- Distribute code ownership across multiple maintainers.
- Document architectural decisions and onboarding guides.
- Rotate responsibilities so knowledge is shared broadly.
What is this?
Whether the contributor base is growing, stable, or declining.
Why it matters: Growing contributor communities indicate a healthy, attractive project.
How to improve:
- Run contributor sprints or hackathons.
- Maintain a welcoming code of conduct.
- Offer mentorship programs for new contributors.
What is this?
Ratio of contributors active in the last 90 days to total contributors.
Why it matters: Sustained engagement shows the project retains contributors over time.
How to improve:
- Recognize active contributors with maintainer or committer roles.
- Publish regular project updates to keep the community engaged.
- Create recurring community events to maintain momentum.
Grade History
| Date | Overall | Activity & Vitality | Community & Signals | Issue Health | PR Health | Contributors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026-06-12 | B | B | C | B | F | C |
| 2026-05-24 | B | A | C | B | F | C |
| 2026-05-21 | B | A | B | B | D | C |
Without a license, others cannot legally use or contribute to your project.
Go to Community & SignalsUnanswered issues frustrate users. Set up triage rotation.
Go to Issue HealthCommit activity is declining. Recruit contributors and publish a roadmap.
Go to Activity & VitalityLabel good-first-issues and participate in outreach programs.
Go to ContributorsDocument critical subsystems and encourage code review to spread knowledge.
Go to Contributors