GitHub dashboards, live
Pull pull requests, issues, releases, and workflow runs from any repo you own — onto a personal dashboard, a team wallboard, or an embedded view in your internal wiki.
Last updated June 2026 · By Widgets PRO Team
One-click OAuth
Sign in with GitHub once. Read access to repos and orgs you choose — nothing more.
Presets for common queries
Open PRs, stale PRs, recent issues, latest releases, failing workflows — drop on a dashboard, no API call to write.
Per-repo and per-org
Track a single repo, a list of repos, or every repo in an organisation — same widget, parameterised.
Webhook push
Subscribe to `push`, `pull_request`, `issues`, `release`, and `workflow_run` events — dashboards update the instant something changes.
Deploy frequency & lead time
DORA-style metrics out of the box — deploy frequency, change failure rate, MTTR. No data engineering required.
TV-ready widgets
High-contrast widget variants for the engineering wallboard — open PRs glow, failing builds flash.
A dashboard for every team that ships code
Sprint demos, on-call rooms, leadership reviews — same data, different layouts. Pair a TV with a 6-digit code, rotate dashboards, project the engineering pulse onto the wall.
- PRs ready for review, by author or repo
- Failing workflows surfaced in real time
- Releases per week with deploy duration
- Issue close rate over the last 30 days
Combine GitHub with everything else
Layer GitHub on top of Sentry errors, Linear cycles, Datadog metrics, or a custom PostgreSQL query. One dashboard, the full picture.
- Sentry — errors by GitHub release
- Linear — issues by GitHub PR
- Stripe — revenue by feature flag rollout
- PostgreSQL — your own data joined to GitHub
Frequently asked questions
Read-only access to the repos and orgs you explicitly grant. We never request write access. You can revoke at any time from your GitHub settings — the dashboards keep the last data and show a reconnect prompt.
For polled data — every 1–5 minutes depending on the widget. For real-time signal (failing build, new release, PR opened) — instant via GitHub webhooks subscribed to `push`, `pull_request`, `issues`, `release`, and `workflow_run`.
Yes. The OAuth scopes you grant determine which repos are visible. Private and public work the same way — same widgets, same refresh, same TV display.
GitHub Enterprise Cloud — yes, with the same OAuth flow. GitHub Enterprise Server (self-hosted) — supported via personal access token or the declarative integrations DSL pointed at your internal API host. Enterprise plan customers can self-host Widgets PRO too if data residency requires it.