# Plugin Developer Guide To create a plugin for `semantic-release`, you need to decide which parts of the release lifecycle are important to that plugin. For example, it is best to always have a `verify` step because you may be receiving inputs from a user and want to make sure they exist. A plugin can abide by any of the following lifecycles: - `verify` - `prepare` - `publish` - `success` - `fail` `semantic-release` will require the plugin via `node` and look through the required object for methods named like the lifecyles stated above. For example, if your plugin only had a `verify` and `success` step, the `main` file for your object would need to `export` an object with `verify` and `success` functions. In addition to the lifecycle methods, each lifecyle is passed two objects: 1. `pluginConfig` - an object containing the options that a user may pass in via their `release.config.js` file (or similar) 2. `context` - provided by `semantic-release` for access to things like `env` variables set on the running process. For each lifecycle you create, you will want to ensure it can accept `pluginConfig` and `context` as parameters. ## Creating a Plugin Project It is recommended that you generate a new project with `yarn init`. This will provide you with a basic node project to get started with. From there, create an `index.js` file, and make sure it is specified as the `main` in the `package.json`. We will use this file to orchestrate the lifecycle methods later on. Next, create a `src` or `lib` folder in the root of the project. This is where we will store our logic and code for how our lifecycle methods work. Finally, create a `test` folder so you can write tests related to your logic. We recommend you setup a linting system to ensure good javascript practices are enforced. ESLint is usually the system of choice, and the configuration can be whatever you or your team fancies. ## Exposing Lifecycle Methods In your `index.js` file, you can start by writing the following code ```javascript const verifyConditions = require('./src/verify'); let verified; /** * Called by semantic-release during the verification step * @param {*} pluginConfig The semantic-release plugin config * @param {*} context The context provided by semantic-release */ async function verify(pluginConfig, context) { await verifyConditions(pluginConfig, context); verified = true; } module.exports = { verify }; ``` Then, in your `src` folder, create a file called `verify.js` and add the following ```javascript const AggregateError = require('aggregate-error'); /** * A method to verify that the user has given us a slack webhook url to post to */ module.exports = async (pluginConfig, context) => { const { logger } = context; const errors = []; // Throw any errors we accumulated during the validation if (errors.length > 0) { throw new AggregateError(errors); } }; ``` As of right now, this code won't do anything. However, if you were to run this plugin via `semantic-release`, it would run when the `verify` step occurred. Following this structure, you can create different steps and checks to run through out the release process. ## Supporting Options Let's say we want to verify that an `option` is passed. An `option` is a configuration object that is specific to your plugin. For example, the user may set an `option` in their release config like: ```js { prepare: { path: "@semantic-release/my-special-plugin" message: "My cool release message" } } ``` This `message` option will be passed to the `pluginConfig` object mentioned earlier. We can use the validation method we created to verify this option exists so we can perform logic based on that knowledge. In our `verify` file, we can add the following: ```js const { message } = pluginConfig; if (message.length) { //... } ``` ## Supporting Environment Variables Similar to `options`, environment variables exist to allow users to pass tokens and set special URLs. These are set on the `context` object instead of the `pluginConfig` object. Let's say we wanted to check for `GITHUB_TOKEN` in the environment because we want to post to GitHub on the user's behalf. To do this, we can add the following to our `verify` command: ```js const { env } = context; if (env.GITHUB_TOKEN) { //... } ```