Set `permissions: {}` at the top level of all workflow files to deny all
permissions by default, then grant only the minimum required permissions at
the job level. This fixes the Docker push failure caused by missing
`packages: write` permission being scoped incorrectly.
Changes per workflow:
- build-testing-image.yml: add contents: read + packages: write to job
- action-security.yml: consolidate contents: read, actions: read,
pull-requests: read into the analyze job
- codeql-new.yml: add actions: read to the analyze job
- dependency-review.yml: add contents: read to the dependency-review job
- issue-stats.yml: top-level only (no checkout, existing job perms sufficient)
- new-release.yml: was read-all; job already has contents: write
- pr-lint.yml: was contents: read + packages: read; job already has full perms
- release.yml: job already has contents: write
- security-suite.yml: move all perms to job level
- stale.yml: top-level only (no checkout, existing job perms sufficient)
- sync-labels.yml: was read-all; add contents: read to job for checkout
- version-maintenance.yml: move all perms to job level
Co-authored-by: ivuorinen <11024+ivuorinen@users.noreply.github.com>
* fix: add tag existence check to version-maintenance workflow
Prevents workflow failure when major version tag doesn't exist by
checking for and creating the tag before running action-versioning.
* fix: add git config for tag creation in version-maintenance workflow
GitHub Actions runners don't have default git user configuration,
which causes annotated tag creation to fail. Add user.name and
user.email config before creating tags.