- Add only the most recent release to a channel (rather than adding all the one not added yet)
- Avoid attempting to ad the version twice in case that version is already present in multiple upper branches
- Allow to configure multiple branches to release from
- Allow to define a distribution channel associated with each branch
- Manage the availability on distribution channels based on git merges
- Support regular releases, maintenance releases and pre-releases
- Add the `addChannel` plugin step to make an existing release available on a different distribution channel
BREAKING CHANGE: the `branch` option has been removed in favor of `branches`
The new `branches` option expect either an Array or a single branch definition. To migrate your configuration:
- If you want to publish package from multiple branches, please the configuration documentation
- If you use the default configuration and want to publish only from `master`: nothing to change
- If you use the `branch` configuration and want to publish only from one branch: replace `branch` by `branches` (`"branch": "my-release-branch"` => `"branches": "my-release-branch"`)
- Allow to run semantic-release (via API) from anywhere passing the current working directory.
- Allows to simplify the tests and to run them in parallel in both the core and plugins.
Even the user set Git credentials via environment variable, use the configured URL (with authentication) if it works.
This allow users to push tags and commits via ssh while still using the GitHub/GitLab API.
- Replace `commander.js` with `yargs`
- Add CLI unit tests
- Add a `--version` option
- Improve `--help` output
- Remove `commander.js` related workaround
- Allow to set list option with arg repetition or space separated list
- Maintain the list options defined as comma separated list
- Allow `publish` plugins to return an `Object` with information related to the releases
- Add the `success` plugin hook, called when all `publish` are successful, receiving a list of release
- Add the `fail` plugin hook, called when an error happens at any point, receiving a list of errors
- Add detailed message for each error
- Remove the `getLastRelease` plugin type
- Retrieve the last release based on Git tags
- Create the next release Git tag before calling the `publish` plugins
BREAKING CHANGE: Remove the `getLastRelease` plugin type
The `getLastRelease` plugins will not be called anymore.
BREAKING CHANGE: Git repository authentication is now mandatory
The Git authentication is now mandatory and must be set via `GH_TOKEN`, `GITHUB_TOKEN`, `GL_TOKEN`, `GITLAB_TOKEN` or `GIT_CREDENTIALS` as described in [CI configuration](https://github.com/semantic-release/semantic-release/blob/caribou/docs/usage/ci-configuration.md#authentication).
- Remove `@semantic-release/condition-travis` from the default plugins
- Verify the current branch in the core
- Verify the build is not triggered by a PR in the core
- Run in dry-run mode if not triggered on CI
- Dry-run mode runs the `verifyConditions` plugins, allowing to detect configuration error locally
- Return without error when no version has to be released due to no changes
- Return without error if the build is triggered from a PR
- Return without error if the current branch is not the configured branch
- CLI return with exit code 1 if there is a `semanticReleaseError`, allowing to fail builds in case of config error, missing token etc...
BREAKING CHANGE: `semantic-release` doesn't make sure it runs only on one Travis job anymore.
The CI configuration has to be done such that `semantic-release`
- runs only once per build
- runs only after all tests are successful on every jobs of the build
- runs on Node >=8
This can easily be done with [travis-deploy-once](https://github.com/semantic-release/travis-deploy-once).
Migration Guide
Modify your `.travis.yml` to use `travis-deploy-once`.
Replace:
```yaml
after_success:
- npm run semantic-release
```
by:
Replace
```yaml
after_success:
- npm install -g travis-deploy-once@4
- travis-deploy-once "npm run semantic-release"
```
Adds the options `extends`, which can be defined via configuration file or CLI arguments to a single path or an array of paths of shareable configuration.
A shareable configuration is a file or a module that can be loaded with `require`.
Options is defined by merging in the following order of priority:
- CLI/API
- Configuration file
- Shareable configuration (from right to left)
Options set in a shareable configuration can be unset by setting it to `null` or `undefined` in the main configuration file. If a default value applies to this property it will be used.
`npm` is called through `semantic-release` and in the integration test to make some assertion.
By isolating the the environment variables passed to `semantic-release` it's easier to avoid a mistake that would pass the test environment that contains is own auth variables.
When the test are run npm read the ~/.npmrc and ./.npmrc files and set some environment variables starting with `npm_`.
When the test create temporary folders and created a `.npmrc` the values there are ignored as the environment variables take precedence.
This commit remove this environment variable (from the local `process.env`) before starting the integrations test and restore them after. This way the `./.npmrc` files created in temp directory for the test are correctly used.
- Do not rely on `package.json` anymore
- Use `cosmiconfig` to load the configation. `semantic-release` can be configured:
- via CLI options (including plugin names but not plugin options)
- in the `release` property of `package.json` (as before)
- in a `.releaserc.yml` or `.releaserc.js` or `.releaserc.js` or `release.config.js` file
- in a `.releaserc` file containing `json`, `yaml` or `javascript` module
- Add the `repositoryUrl` options (used across `semantic-release` and plugins). The value is determined from CLi option, or option configuration, or package.json or the git remote url
- Verifies that `semantic-release` runs from a git repository
- `pkg` and `env` are not passed to plugin anymore
- `semantic-release` can be run both locally and globally. If ran globally with non default plugins, the plugins can be installed both globally or locally.
BREAKING CHANGE: `pkg` and `env` are not passed to plugin anymore.
Plugins relying on a `package.json` must verify the presence of a valid `package.json` and load it.
Plugins can use `process.env` instead of `env`.
- Add a new plugin type: `publish`
- Add support for multi-plugin. A plugin module can now return an object with a property for each plugin type
- Uses by default [npm](https://github.com/semantic-release/npm) and [github](https://github.com/semantic-release/github) in addition of Travis for the verify condition plugin
- Uses by default [npm](https://github.com/semantic-release/npm) and [github](https://github.com/semantic-release/github) for the publish plugin
- `gitTag` if one can be found is passed to `generateNotes` for both `lastRelease` and `nextRelease`
- `semantic-release` now verifies the plugin configuration (in the `release` property of `package.json`) and throws an error if it's invalid
- `semantic-release` now verifies each plugin output and will throw an error if a plugin returns an unexpected value.
BREAKING CHANGE: `githubToken`, `githubUrl` and `githubApiPathPrefix` have to be set at the [github](https://github.com/semantic-release/github) plugin level. They can be set via `GH_TOKEN`, `GH_URL` and `GH_PREFIX` environment variables.
BREAKING CHANGE: the `npm` parameter is not passed to any plugin anymore. Each plugin have to read `.npmrc` if they needs to (with https://github.com/kevva/npm-conf for example).
- Run with one command and do not rely on error exit codes to stop the process when a release is not necessary
- Break `index.js` in smaller modules in order to improve testability and simplify the code
- Add several missing unit and integration tests to reach 100% coverage
- Integration tests now test end to end, including publishing to Github (with http://www.mock-server.com on Docker)
- Use `tj/commander.js` to print an help message, verify and parse CLI arguments
- Semantic-release can now be called via Javascript API: `require('semantic-release')(options)`
- Remove npmlog dependency and add more log messages
- Logger is now passed to plugins
- Add debug logs with `visionmedia/debug`. `debug` is enabled for both semantic-release and plugins with `--debug`
- Use `kevva/npm-conf` in place of the deprecated `npm/npmconf`
- Pass lastRelease, nextRelease and commits to generate-notes plugin
- In dry-run mode, print the release note instead of publishing it to Github as draft, and skip the CI verifications
- The dry-run mode does not require npm and Github TOKEN to be set anymore and can be run locally
BREAKING CHANGE: Semantic-Release must now be executed with `semantic-release` instead of `semantic-release pre && npm publish && semantic-release post`.
BREAKING CHANGE: The `semantic-release` command now returns with exit code 0 on expected exception (no release has to be done, running on a PR, gitHead not found, other CI job failed etc...). It only returns with 1 when there is an unexpected error (code error in a plugin, plugin not found, git command cannot be run etc..).
BREAKING CHANGE: Calling the `semantic-release` command with unexpected argument(s) now exit with 1 and print an help message.
BREAKING CHANGE: Semantic-Release does not rely on `npmlog` anymore and the log level cannot be configured. Debug logs can be activated with CLI option `--debug` or with environment variable `DEBUG=semantic-release:*`
BREAKING CHANGE: The CLI options `--debug` doesn't enable the dry-run mode anymore but activate the debugs. The dry run mode is now set with the CLI command `--dry-run` or `-d`.
- Tag sha will now be used also if there is a gitHead in last release and it's not in the history
- Use `git merge-base` to determine if a commit is in history, allowing to use CI creating detached head repo
- Mention recovery solution by creating a version tag in `ENOTINHISTORY` and `ENOGITHEAD` error messages
- Do not mention branches containing missing commit in `ENOTINHISTORY` and `ENOGITHEAD` error messages as it's not available by default on most CI
Add several fixes and improvements in the identification of the last release gitHead:
- If there is no last release, unshallow the repo in order to retrieve all existing commits
- If git head is not present in last release, try to retrieve it from git tag with format ‘v\<version\>’ or ‘\<version\>’
- If the last release git head cannot be determined and found in commit history, unshallow the repo and try again
- Throw a ENOGITHEAD error if the gitHead for the last release cannot be found in the npm metadata nor in the git tags, preventing to make release based on the all the commits in the repo as before
- Add integration test for the scenario with a packed repo from which `npm republish` fails to read the git head
Fix#447, Fix#393, Fix#280, Fix#276
- Use async/await instead of callbacks
- Use execa to run command line
- Use AVA for tests
- Add several assertions in the unit tests
- Add documentation (comments) in the tests
- Run tests with a real git repo instead of mocking child_process and add test helpers to create repos, commits and checkout
- Simplify test directory structure
- Simplify code readability (mostly with async/await)
- Use eslint for for linting, prettier for formatting