semantic-release-monorepo
Apply semantic-release
's automatic publishing to a monorepo.
Why
The default configuration of semantic-release
assumes a one-to-one relationship between a GitHub repository and an npm
package.
This set of plugins allows using semantic-release
with a single GitHub repository containing many npm
packages.
How
Instead of attributing all commits to a single package, commits are assigned to packages based on the files that a commit touched.
If a commit touched a file in or below a package's root, it will be considered for that package's next release. A single commit can belong to multiple packages and a merge may release multiple package versions.
In order to avoid version collisions, release git tags are namespaced using the given package's name: <package-name>-<version>
.
Install
npm install -D semantic-release semantic-release-monorepo
Usage
Run semantic-release-monorepo
for the package in the current working directory:
npx semantic-release -e semantic-release-monorepo
It helps to think about semantic-release-monorepo
as a variation on semantic-release
's default behavior, using the latter's plugin system to adapt it to work with a monorepo.
With Lerna
The monorepo management tool lerna
can be used to run semantic-release-monorepo
across all packages in a monorepo:
lerna exec --concurrency 1 -- npx --no-install semantic-release -e semantic-release-monorepo
Note that this requires installing semantic-release
and semantic-release-monorepo
for each package.
Alternatively, thanks to how npx's package resolution works
, if the repository root is in $PATH
(typically true on CI), semantic-release
and semantic-release-monorepo
can be installed once in the repo root instead of in each individual package, likely saving both time and disk space.
Performance
Naturally, the more packages in a monorepo, the longer it takes semantic-release
to run against all of them. If total runtime becomes a problem, consider the following optimization:
Reduce expensive network calls (50%+ runtime reduction)
By default, semantic-release
's verifyConditions
plugin configuration contains @semantic-release/npm
and @semantic-release/github
. These two plugins each make a network call to verify that credentials for the respective services are properly configured. When running in a monorepo, these verifications will be redundantly repeated for each and every package, greatly contributing to overall runtime. Optimally, we'd only want make these verification calls one time.
By moving these plugins to the verifyRelease
configuration, they will only run if semantic-release
determines a release is to be made for a given package (at a time when the given verifications are actually relevant). Likely, most times semantic-release
is run over a monorepo, only a small subset of all packages trigger releases.
NOTE: To allow for dynamic code, this example defines the release configuration in .releaserc.js
instead of inside of package.json
.
module.exports = {
verifyConditions: [],
verifyRelease: ['@semantic-release/npm', '@semantic-release/github']
.map(require)
.map(x => x.verifyConditions),
};
Advanced
The set of semantic-release-monorepo
plugins wrap the default semantic-release
workflow, augmenting it to work with a monorepo.
analyzeCommits
- Filters the repo commits to only include those that touched files in the given monorepo package.
generateNotes
-
Filters the repo commits to only include those that touched files in the given monorepo package.
-
Maps the version
field of nextRelease
to use the monorepo git tag format. The wrapped (default) generateNotes
implementation uses version
as the header for the release notes. Since all release notes end up in the same Github repository, using just the version as a header introduces ambiguity.
tagFormat
Pre-configures the tagFormat
option to use the monorepo git tag format.
If you are using Lerna, you can customize the format using the following command:
"semantic-release": "lerna exec --concurrency 1 -- semantic-release -e semantic-release-monorepo --tag-format='${LERNA_PACKAGE_NAME}-v\\${version}'"
Where '${LERNA_PACKAGE_NAME}-v\\${version}'
is the string you want to customize.
By default it will be <PACKAGE_NAME>-v<VERSION>
(e.g. foobar-v1.2.3
).