β¨ππ₯ A semantic-release plugin for gitmojis.
Different from conventional changelog, Gitmoji commits are used to determine a release type and generate release notes.
Step | Description |
---|---|
analyzeCommits |
Determine the type of release by analyzing commits with Gitmoji. |
generateNotes |
Generate release notes for the commits added since the last release with Gitmoji. |
- Categorize commits according to Gitmojis
- Progressive commits composed of a final commit and several WIP (π§) commits
npm install semantic-release-gitmoji -D
The plugin can be configured in the semantic-release configuration file:
// in ".releaserc.js" or "release.config.js"
const { promisify } = require('util')
const dateFormat = require('dateformat')
const readFileAsync = promisify(require('fs').readFile)
// Given a `const` variable `TEMPLATE_DIR` which points to "<semantic-release-gitmoji>/lib/assets/templates"
// the *.hbs template and partials should be passed as strings of contents
const template = readFileAsync(path.join(TEMPLATE_DIR, 'default-template.hbs'))
const commitTemplate = readFileAsync(path.join(TEMPLATE_DIR, 'commit-template.hbs'))
module.exports = {
plugins: [
[
'semantic-release-gitmoji', {
releaseRules: {
major: [ ':boom:' ],
minor: [ ':sparkles:' ],
patch: [
':bug:',
':ambulance:',
':lock:'
]
},
releaseNotes: {
template,
partials: { commitTemplate },
helpers: {
datetime: function (format = 'UTC:yyyy-mm-dd') {
return dateFormat(new Date(), format)
}
},
issueResolution: {
template: '{baseUrl}/{owner}/{repo}/issues/{ref}',
baseUrl: 'https://github.com',
source: 'github.com',
removeFromCommit: false,
regex: /#\d+/g
}
}
}
],
'@semantic-release/github',
'@semantic-release/npm'
]
}
This configuration is the same semantic as the default configuration of semantic-release-gitmoji
.
semantic-release-gitmoji
should be used in place of both @semantic-release/commit-analyzer
and @semantic-release/release-notes-generator
since the both plugins parse commits following the conventional changelog while this plugin requires Gitmoji commits.
It is recommended to write the configuration in a javascript file since templates are required to be string
s of their contents.
interface SemanticReleaseGitmojiOptions {
releaseRules?: ReleaseRules
releaseNotes?: ReleaseNotesOptions
}
The ReleaseRules
is a map from a release type to a set of emojis.
interface ReleaseRules {
major?: Array<Emoji> | EmojiArrayModifier
premajor?: Array<Emoji> | EmojiArrayModifier
minor?: Array<Emoji> | EmojiArrayModifier
preminor?: Array<Emoji> | EmojiArrayModifier
patch?: Array<Emoji> | EmojiArrayModifier
prepatch?: Array<Emoji> | EmojiArrayModifier
prerelease?: Array<Emoji> | EmojiArrayModifier
}
Emoji
is a string of valid GitHub emoji markup (e.g. ":boom:"
, ":collision:"
) or raw emoji characters (e.g. "π₯"
).
No need to worry about which format to use since this plugin handles it for you!
See https://github.com/omnidan/node-emoji for more information about emojis.
type Emoji = string
interface EmojiArrayModifier {
include?: Array<Emoji>
exclude?: Array<Emoji>
}
ReleaseNotesOptions
defines how to render the release notes from a given set of Gitmoji commits.
All templates file are compiled and renderered by handlebars
, therefore you may need to get familiar with the .hbs
format before starting to customize your own templates.
semver
is a boolean to define if releaseNotes should be based on Gitmoji only or on key semver associated to gitmoji used in commit to determine the next release tag.
partials
is a map from the partial name to the content of the partial template.
helpers
is a map from the helper name to the helper function. There is already a default helper datetime
which takes a format string as the first argument and return a formatted current timestamp. See npm/dateformat for more information about how to format a timestamp and see the default template as an example.
Besides, You are allowed to provide helpers with the same names to override default helpers.
issueResolution
defines how issues are resolved to. The default and the only supported source currently is github.com
, or you can provide your own issueResolution.template
to override the default resolution to GitHub.
There are five variables that can be used in issueResolution.template
:
baseUrl
owner
repo
ref
, which is the numeric ID of issueissue
, which is the full issue
interface ReleaseNotesOptions {
template?: TemplateContent
semver?: Boolean
partials?: Record<string, TemplateContent>
helpers?: Record<string, Function>
issueResolution?: {
template?: string
baseUrl?: string
source?: 'github.com' | null // currently only GitHub is supported, PR welcome :)
regex?: RegExp, // regex to match the issue(s). If not provided, will find issues thanks to [issue-regex](https://www.npmjs.com/package/issue-regex)
removeFromCommit?: boolean // if true, will remove found issue(s) from commit name
}
}
type TemplateContent = string | Buffer | Promise<string> | Promise<Buffer>
The context for templates is inherited from semantic-release
context with some modifications such as owner
, repo
and compareUrl
.
commits
is a map from Emoji
(don't worry about the format) to a list of extended commits.
Values of commits
are extended to contain more information related to Gitmoji. See CommitContext
interface TemplateContext {
owner: string
repo: string
source: string
commits: Record<string, Array<CommitContext>>
lastRelease: {
gitHead: string
version: string
gitTag: string
}
nextRelease: {
type: string
gitHead: string
version: string
gitTag: string
}
compareUrl: string
}
CommitContext
is extended from SemanticReleaseCommitObj
.
Note that emojis at the beginning of message
and subject
are trimmed, which are the same emoji in gitmoji
.
gitmoji
is a raw emoji since an emoji may have more than one GitHub emoji markup representation, e.g. ":boom:"
and ":collision:"
both represent for th emoji, "π₯"
.
interface CommitContext extends SemanticReleaseCommitObj {
message: string
subject: string
owner: string
repo: string
source: string
gitmoji: string
issues: Array<IssueLink>
wip: Array<CommitContext>
}
interface IssueLink {
text: string
link: string
}
Assume you file an issue (e.g. #1
) to implement a new feature, then you make 3 commits as belows (the toppest is the latest).
β¨ Add a new feature.\n\n#1
π§ Implement part B.\n\n#1
π§ Implement part A.\n\n#1
The β¨ commit will be the final commit composed of two π§ commits. They are linked together via #1
in the commit message.
Therefore the commits
of the template context will be as follows.
{
"commits": {
"sparkles": [
{
"message": "Add a new feature.\n\n#1",
"subject": "Add a new feature.",
"body": "#1",
"gitmoji": "β¨",
"// repo": "",
"// owner": "",
"source": "github.com",
"issues": [{
"text": "#1",
"// link": ""
}],
"wip": [
{
"message": "Implement part B.\n\n#1",
"subject": "Implement part B.",
"body": "#1",
"gitmoji": "π§",
"// repo": "",
"// owner": "",
"source": "github.com",
"issues": [{
"text": "#1",
"// link": ""
}]
},
{
"message": "Implement part A.\n\n#1",
"subject": "Implement part A.",
"body": "#1",
"gitmoji": "π§",
"// repo": "",
"// owner": "",
"source": "github.com",
"issues": [{
"text": "#1",
"// link": ""
}]
}
]
}
],
"// other gitmojis": ""
}
}
Beside using issue number to link commits, the following syntax is also available to link commits together.
wip#{target_name}
While target_name
is an identifier for those progressive commits, for example, wip#feature-A
.
target_name
can contain numbers, letters (both cases),_
or-
.target_name
should not start with_
or-
.
PRs are welcome.
Before sending PRs, please follow the steps below.
- Fork the branch
dev
. - Make commits.
- Run
npm run lint
and ensure you pass the linter. - Run
npm test
and ensure nothing broken.- If you introduce new features in the PR, ensure tests have been written for each feature.
- Send your PR to branch
dev
and wait for reviews.
Thanks for all lovers and contributers of this project!