node-publisher v3.1.0
This is a configurable release automation tool for node packages inspired by create-react-app and Travis CI. It has a default configuration, which can be overriden in case of need. As a convention, this release tool defines a set of hooks that represent the release lifecycle. The default configuration can be overriden by redefining what commands should run under which hook in a .release.yml file. The hooks are listed under the Lifecycle section.
Getting started
1. Install the package:
npm install node-publisher --save-devor
yarn add --dev node-publisher2. Setup
Run the setup script:
npx node-publisher setupThe script searches for unmet requirements in your package and attempts to address them. In general, it performs the following actions:
- Checks whether the package root is a git directory.
- Generates a release script in you
package.jsonwith a release branch of your choice. - Generates a
.nvmrcfile if missing. - Checks whether a
buildscript is defined inpackage.json. - Checks whether a CI script is defined in
package.json.
For more info, read the Prerequisites section.
Usage
npm run release -- <version>or
yarn release <version>Since v1.2.0, node-publisher supports the version options supported by the detected npm client. In earlier versions, only major, minor and patch options were accepted. When using yarn, the pre-release identifier (--preid) is ignored.
npm run release -- <version> --preid alphaCustomize the release process
npx node-publisher ejectAfter ejecting, a .release.yml file will appear in the root directory of your package. You can override the default behaviour by modifying this file.
Custom branch
Using the --branch release param, it is possible to specify which branch should be checked out during the prepare lifecycle step. When no branch is specified, the master branch will be checked out by default.
Multiple configuration files
Using the --config release param, it is possible to specify which file to load the release steps from. This way, one can have different release procedures for different purposes.
Example:
// package.json
{
"scripts": {
"release": "node-publisher release",
"pre-release": "node-publisher release --config path/to/.pre-release.yml"
}
}Prerequisites
The default release process assumes the following:
- The master branch is called
master. - A
.nvmrcfile is present in the root of your package. In case it is missing, the release fails in its preparation phase. - The tool expects the Node version to match the one in
.nvmrcduring the release process. If the expectation is not met, the release fails in its preparation phase. - The tool expects the build generation script to be called
build. Otherwise, the build step is skipped. - The tool expects the test triggering script to be called
travisorci. The reason is that many times the standardtestscripts are implemented to watch the files for changes to re-trigger the tests. This tool relies on the test script to return eventually, hence the choice of the commonly used CI-friendly script names. The list of accepted script names may be extended in the future. If bothtravisandciscripts are present,traviswill be preferred.
Notice: the test triggering script (travis or ci) has to return a value, eventually. Otherwise, the release would stall and not run correctly. Interrupting a stalling release process would also interrupt the rollback feature's execution.
Lifecycle
prepare: The process that prepares the workspace for releasing a new version of your package. It might checkout to master, check whether the working tree is clean, check the current node version, etc. Between this step andtest, a rollback point is created for your git repo.test: Runs the tests and/or linting. You might want to configure the tool to run the same command as your CI tool does.build: Runs your build process. By default it runs eitheryarn buildornpm run builddepending on your npm client. This step is only run ifbuildis defined underssriptsin yourpackage.jsonfile.publish: Publishes a new version of your package. By default, the tool detects your npm/publishing client and calls the publish command. Currently supported clients are:npm,yarn,lerna.after_publish: Runs the declared commands immediately after publishing. By default, it pushes the changes to the remote along with the tags. In case the publishing fails, this hook will not execute.after_failure: Runs the specified commands in case the release process failed at any point. Before running the configured commands, a rollback to the state afterpreparemight happen - in case therollbackoption is set totruewhich is the default behaviour.changelog: In case the package was successfully published, a changelog will be generated. This tool uses the offline-github-changelog package for this purpuse.after_success: Runs the specified commands after generating the changelog, in case the release process was successful. It might be used to clean up any byproduct of the previous hooks.
Configuration
The lifecycle hooks can be redefined in the form of a configurable YAML file. Additionally to the hooks, the configuration also accepts the following options:
rollback [Boolean]- rolls back to the latest commit fetched after thepreparestep. The rollback itself happens in theafter_failurestep and only if this flag is set totrue.
Default configuration
The exact configuration depends on the npm client being used and the contents of your package.json file. In case you use yarn, the default configuration will look like this:
rollback: true
prepare:
- git diff-index --quiet HEAD --
- git checkout master
- git pull --rebase
- '[[ -f .nvmrc ]] && ./node_modules/.bin/check-node-version --node $(cat .nvmrc)'
- yarn install
test:
- yarn travis
build: # only if "build" is defined as a script in your `package.json`
- yarn build
- git diff --staged --quiet || git commit -am "Update build file"
after_publish:
- git push --follow-tags origin master:master
changelog:
- ./node_modules/.bin/offline-github-changelog > CHANGELOG.md
- git add CHANGELOG.md
- git commit --allow-empty -m "Update changelog"
- git push origin master:masterSupported publishing clients
node-publisher supports the main npm clients and Lerna as an underlying publishing tool. It automatically detects them based on the different lock files or config files they produce or require. If multiple of these files are detected, the following precedence will take place regarding the publishing tool to be used:
lerna > yarn > npm
Development
Install packages
yarnRelease a new version
yarn release <version>Contributing
Contributing to node-publisher is fairly easy, as long as the following steps are followed:
- Fork the project
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature') - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature) - Create a new Pull Request
- Mention one or more of the maintainers to get the Pull Request approved and merged
Maintainers
- Attila Večerek (@vecerek)
- Sune Simonsen (@sunesimonsen)
Copyright and License
Copyright (c) 2018 Zendesk Inc.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.