Release It! π
CLI release tool for Git repos and npm packages.
Release It! automates the tedious tasks of software releases:
Updating from v2 to v3 should be painless. See v3.0.0 release notes!
Table of Contents (click to expand)
πΎ Installation
npm install -g release-it
βΆοΈ Usage
Release a new patch (increments from e.g. 1.0.4
to 1.0.5
):
release-it
Release a patch, minor, major, or specific version:
release-it minor
release-it 0.8.3
See manage pre-releases for versions like 1.0.0-beta.2
and npm install my-package@next
.
You can also do a "dry run", which won't write/touch anything, but does output the commands it would execute, and show the interactivity:
release-it --dry-run
βοΈ Configuration
Out of the box, release-it has sane defaults, and plenty of options to configure it.
All default settings can be overridden with a config file. Put the options to override in .release-it.json
in the project root. You can use --config
if you want to use another path for this file. Example:
{
"src": {
"tagName": "v%s"
},
"github": {
"release": true
}
}
Any option can also be set on the command-line, and will have highest priority. Example:
release-it minor --src.tagName='v%s' --github.release
Boolean arguments can be negated by using the no-
prefix:
release-it --no-npm.publish
π€ Interactive vs. non-interactive mode
By default, release-it is interactive and allows you to confirm each task before execution.
Once you are confident release-it does the right thing, you can fully automate it by using the --non-interactive
(or -n
) option (as demonstrated in the animated image above). An overview of the tasks that will be executed:
Task | Option | Default | Prompt | Default |
---|
Ready (confirm version) | N/A | N/A | - | Y |
Show staged files | N/A | N/A | prompt.src.status | N |
Git commit | src.commit | true | prompt.src.commit | Y |
Git push | src.push | true | prompt.src.push | Y |
Git tag | src.tag | true | prompt.src.tag | Y |
GitHub release | github.release | true | prompt.src.release | Y |
npm publish | npm.publish | true | prompt.src.publish | Y |
Note that the prompt.*
options are used for the default answers in interactive mode. You can still change the answer to either Y
or N
as the questions show up.
π Command Hooks
The command hooks are executed from the root directory of the src
or dist
repository, respectively:
src.beforeStartCommand
buildCommand
- before files are staged for commitsrc.afterReleaseCommand
dist.beforeStageCommand
- before files are staged in dist repodist.afterReleaseCommand
All commands can use configuration variables (like template strings):
"buildCommand": "tar -czvf foo-${src.tagName}.tar.gz ",
"afterReleaseCommand": "echo Successfully released ${version} to ${dist.repo}."
π‘ SSH keys & git remotes
The tool assumes you've configured your SSH key and Git remotes correctly. In short: you're fine if you can git push
. Otherwise, the following GitHub help pages might be useful: SSH and Managing Remotes.
βοΈ GitHub Release
See this project's releases page for an example.
To create GitHub releases:
- The
github.release
option must be true
. - Obtain a GitHub access token.
- Make this available as the environment variable defined with
github.tokenRef
. Example:
export GITHUB_TOKEN="f941e0..."
π¦ Release Assets
To upload binary release assets with a GitHub release (such as compiled executables,
minified scripts, documentation), provide one or more glob patterns for the github.assets
option. After the release, the assets are available to download from the GitHub release page. Example:
"github": {
"release": true,
"assets": "dist/*.zip"
}
π£ Manage Pre-releases
With release-it, it's easy to create pre-releases: a version of your software that you want to make available, while it's not in the stable semver range yet. Often "alpha", "beta", and "rc" (release candidate) are used as identifier for pre-releases.
For example, if you're working on a new major update for awesome-pkg
(while the latest release was v1.4.1), and you want others to try a beta version of it:
release-it major --preRelease=beta
This will tag and release version 2.0.0-beta.0
. This is actually a shortcut for:
release-it premajor --preReleaseId=beta --npm.tag=beta --github.preRelease
Consecutive beta releases (v2.0.0-beta.1
and so on) are now easy:
release-it --preRelease=beta
Installing the package with npm:
npm install awesome-pkg # Installs v1.4.1
npm install awesome-pkg@beta # Installs v2.0.0-beta.1
You can still override e.g. the npm tag being used:
release-it --preRelease=rc --npm.tag=next
See semver.org for more details.
π Distribution Repository
Some projects use a distribution repository. Reasons to do this include:
Overall, it comes down to a need to release generated files (such as compiled bundles, documentation) into a separate repository. Some examples include:
To use this feature, set the dist.repo
option to a git endpoint. This can be a branch (also of the same source repository), like "git@github.com:webpro/release-it.git#gh-pages"
. Example:
"dist": {
"repo": "git@github.com:components/ember.git"
}
The repository will be cloned to dist.stageDir
, and the dist.files
(relative to dist.baseDir
) will be copied from the source repository. The files will then be staged, commited and pushed back to the remote distribution repository.
Make sure to set dist.github.release
and dist.npm.publish
to true
as needed. The dist.github.*
options will use the github.*
values as defaults. Idem dito for dist.npm.*
options, using npm.*
for default values.
During the release of a source and distribution repository, some "dist" tasks are executed before something is committed to the source repo. This is to make sure you find out about errors (e.g. while cloning or copying files) as soon as possible, and not after a release for the source repository first.
π Notes
- The
"private": true
setting in package.json will be respected and the package won't be published to npm. - You can use
src.pushRepo
option to set an alternative url or name of a remote as in git push <src.pushRepo>
. By default this is null
and git push
is used when pushing to the remote.
π Resources
π Contributing
Please see CONTRIBUTING.md.
β€οΈ Credits
Major dependencies:
The following Grunt plugins have been a source of inspiration:
π License
MIT