Skip to content

Move Manual Validation Pipeline files to sub-directory within Tools #278260

New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Merged
merged 1 commit into from
Jul 28, 2025

Conversation

Trenly
Copy link
Contributor

@Trenly Trenly commented Jul 28, 2025

Checklist for Pull Requests

Having the new tools merged was causing several more matches for Tab-Completion, and it wasn't entirely clear that all of these files were specific to manual validation.

Grouping them into a sub-directory should ensure that it is clear they are all related to one specific purpose, as well as ensure that they are only selected by tab-completion if a user intentionally wants them, since it's expected a lower number of users will be using these tools.

cc @denelon @stephengillie

Microsoft Reviewers: Open in CodeFlow

@wingetbot
Copy link
Collaborator

Service Badge  Service Badge  

@microsoft-github-policy-service microsoft-github-policy-service bot added the Needs-Attention This work item needs to be reviewed by a member of the core team. label Jul 28, 2025
@denelon denelon merged commit 56f5b2d into microsoft:master Jul 28, 2025
2 checks passed
@microsoft-github-policy-service microsoft-github-policy-service bot added Moderator-Approved One of the Moderators has reviewed and approved this PR and removed Needs-Attention This work item needs to be reviewed by a member of the core team. labels Jul 28, 2025
@Trenly Trenly deleted the ToolsFolder branch July 28, 2025 15:20
Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
Moderator-Approved One of the Moderators has reviewed and approved this PR Project-File
Projects
None yet
Development

Successfully merging this pull request may close these issues.

4 participants