This release tool has been extracted from the ESLint project so that it can be shared among projects. While it's intended for use in ESLint organization projects, it is shared freely so others might use it as well.
Please note that while this project is shared freely, it is not intended to be a general-purpose utility. The functionality is highly specific to how ESLint projects handle releases and the project will remain very focused on this use case.
Warning: There are minimal tests for this project and the API is rapidly changing. Use at your own risk.
You can install the ESLint release tool using npm:
$ npm install eslint-release --save-dev
To start, you'll need to define two environment variables:
NPM_TOKEN
- a token to use fornpm publish
. The token must be from a user that has permission to publish the package.ESLINT_GITHUB_TOKEN
- a token for a GitHub user that hasrepo
permission (used for posting release notes).
The ESLint release tool is designed to be used on the command line and is divided into two phases: package generation and package publishing.
To generate a regular release:
$ eslint-generate-release
To generate a prerelease, you need to include the prerelease identifier:
$ eslint-generate-prerelease alpha
Both eslint-generate-release
and eslint-generate-prerelease
generate a new version and update the changelog but will not push back to GitHub or publish to npm. It will generate an npm package and a .eslint-release-info.json
file.
For both releases and prereleases, you can then publish the release:
$ eslint-publish-release
This command publishes the generate npm package and pushes the changes to GitHub. The .eslint-release-info.json
file is required for this step to work correctly.
You can optionally include the release tool in another Node.js script:
var ReleaseOps = require("eslint-release");
When you run the release tool for a regular release, the following steps take place:
- Updates your npm packages to ensure you're running everything with the version that would be installed with a fresh install (only outside of CI release)
- Runs
npm test
to validate the release - Gathers the commit message for each commit since the last release
- Calculates the next release version based on the commit message format of the changes since the last release
- Updates
CHANGELOG.md
and commits the changes - Runs
npm version
to update the version - Pushes the current branch to origin, with tags
- Creates GitHub release marked as Latest
- Converts all line endings to Unix style
- Publishes the package to npm
- Reverts any file changes
When you do a prerelease, the same steps are taken except that package is published to npm under the next
tag instead of latest
, and the GitHub release is marked as Pre-release.
This package exports two functions:
generateRelease(prereleaseId, packageTag)
- This corresponds to the CLI commandeslint-generate-release
whenprereleaseId
isundefined
, and the CLI commandeslint-generate-prerelease prereleaseId
whenprereleaseId
is a string value.publishRelease()
- This corresponds to the CLI commandeslint-publish-release
.
packageTag
is used as the --tag
value in the npm publish
command. It's also used to determine whether a regular release will be marked as Latest on GitHub: it will be marked as Latest only if packageTag
is "latest"
. This parameter is optional and defaults to "latest"
when prereleaseId
is undefined
, "next"
otherwise.
Publish a regular latest release:
const ReleaseOps = require("eslint-release");
ReleaseOps.generateRelease();
ReleaseOps.publishRelease();
Publish a regular release with maintenance
tag:
const ReleaseOps = require("eslint-release");
ReleaseOps.generateRelease(undefined, "maintenance");
ReleaseOps.publishRelease();
Publish an alpha
prerelease:
const ReleaseOps = require("eslint-release");
ReleaseOps.generateRelease("alpha");
ReleaseOps.publishRelease();
Issues and pull requests will be triaged and responded to as quickly as possible. We operate under the ESLint Contributor Guidelines, so please be sure to read them before contributing. If you're not sure where to dig in, check out the issues.
MIT License
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