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Connect Asana to GitHub

Automate Asana and GitHub with AI

On Operator.io, an OpenClaw agent ties Asana and GitHub so shipping work stays visible to the people planning in tasks. A merged pull request can move the linked Asana task to done, and a new bug report in chat can open both an issue with labels and a task assigned to the right section. Ask for status on a feature and it reads open PRs against the task list in one answer.

It reaches both apps directly or through connectors like Composio MCP and Pipedream MCP, which handle the sign in and token refresh, so there is no Zap to build and no API keys to paste.

What your agent can do with Asana and GitHub

What your agent does in Asana

  • Add Followers to Project

    Tool to add followers to a project in Asana. Use this tool when you need to add one or more users as followers to a specific project. Followers will receive notifications when tasks are added to the project.

  • Add Followers to Task

    Tool to add followers to a task in Asana. Use this tool when you need to add one or more users as followers to a specific task. This will notify them of updates to the task.

  • Add item to portfolio

    Add a project (or other supported item) to an Asana portfolio using the native addItem endpoint. Use when a workflow needs to attach a newly created project to a portfolio without using ASANA_SUBMIT_PARALLEL_REQUESTS.

  • Add Members to Project

    Tool to add users to a project in Asana. Use this tool when you need to add one or more users as members to a specific project. Members can view and contribute to the project.

  • Add Project to Task

    Tool to add a project to a task in Asana. Use when you need to associate a task with a project. Optionally position the task within the project using insert_before, insert_after, or section parameters.

  • Add Supporting Relationship to Goal

    Tool to add a supporting goal relationship to a goal. Use when you want to link a project, task, portfolio, or another goal as a supporting resource to a specific goal in Asana.

All 153 Asana actions →

What your agent does in GitHub

  • Abort Repository Migration

    Tool to abort a repository migration that is queued or in progress. Use when you need to cancel an ongoing migration operation.

  • Accept a repository invitation

    Accepts a PENDING repository invitation that has been issued to the authenticated user.

  • Add app access restrictions

    Adds GitHub Apps to the list of apps allowed to push to a protected branch. The branch must already have protection rules with restrictions enabled. This endpoint only works for organization repositories, not personal repositories. Apps...

  • Add a repository collaborator

    Adds a GitHub user as a repository collaborator, or updates their permission if already a collaborator; `permission` applies to organization-owned repositories (personal ones default to 'push' and ignore this field), and an invitation ma...

  • Add assignees to an issue

    Adds assignees to a GitHub issue. This action only adds users - it does not remove existing assignees. Changes are silently ignored if the authenticated user lacks push access to the repository.

  • Add email for auth user

    Adds one or more email addresses (which will be initially unverified) to the authenticated user's GitHub account; use this to associate new emails, noting an email verified for another account will error, while an existing email for the...

All 846 GitHub actions →

How it works

Tell the agent what you want to happen between Asana and GitHub, for example to watch one and act in the other, or to keep the two in step. It reads what it needs from Asana, works out what to do, and runs the matching action in GitHub without you mapping a single field.

You can have it run once, on a schedule, or whenever something changes. Ask it for a status any time and it reads the latest from both apps back to you in the same chat.

Common questions about Asana and GitHub

How do I connect Asana and GitHub to Operator?
You authorize Asana and GitHub once each from your Operator dashboard. Operator holds both connections and refreshes the access tokens for you, so your agent keeps working across them without you signing in again.
What can my agent do across Asana and GitHub?
Tell it the job and it moves between Asana and GitHub as one task, choosing which actions to run on each side. There is nothing to map and no trigger to configure; you give instructions the way you would to a person.
Can my agent keep Asana and GitHub in sync?
Yes. It can watch Asana and act in GitHub, or keep both in step, reading from one and running the matching update in the other. This runs on demand when you ask or on a schedule you set.
Do I need to build a workflow or write code?
No. There is no workflow to build, no fields to map, and no API keys to paste. Operator manages both connections, and you give the agent instructions in plain language.

Asana and GitHub integrations

Put your agent on Asana and GitHub

Sign in, connect both apps, and hand your agent the work. The same setup reaches every app in the catalog. Your first week is free.

Try for free