release-flow is a command line tool that simplifies the developer side of software release process taking over tedious and error prone tasks.
release-flow mixes git flow releases with conventional commits to make release process safe and painless.
- Based on commit conventions
- Complements perfectly with CI tools
- Flexible branching model
- Pluggable design
- Completely configurable and customizable
- Stand-alone (gulp/grunt integration is possible)
- Suitable for any kind of project and language (small apps, opensource projects, libs, enterprise applications)
- Built in plugins for Changelog generation and NPM bumps
Globally (use from console)
npm i -g release-flowAs project dependency (use through npm script or programmatically)
npm i --save-dev release-flowIn your package.json
"scripts": {
"release": "release-flow"
}release-flow startEffect:
- Fetches remote changes
- Compute the next version bump from commits (ie.
feat commit === minor) - Validates the operation (no uncommitted/untracked changes, no existing tag for the version)
- Creates and checks out a new release branch
- Commits (without pushing) any eventual changes made to start the release (ie. changelog, bump package.json)
release-flow publishrelease-flow finishEffect:
- Fetches remote changes
- Validates the operation (no uncommitted/untracked changes)
- Merges release branch on master
- Tags master after the release version
- Merges back to development (if different from master)
release-flow fullEffect:
Same then issuing release-flow start, release-flow publish and release-flow finish in sequence.
NOTE: This approach is especially suitable for libraries and small projects that does not require a QA phase on the release branch.
release-flow supports both the canonical git-flow branching model with develop/master and a
simplified branching with just master.
// releaseflowrc
module.exports = {
developmentBranch: "develop",
productionBranch: "master",
};// releaseflowrc
module.exports = {
developmentBranch: "master",
productionBranch: "master",
};Release flow uses conventional commits to simplify the release process (computing next version, generating changelogs).
Conventional commits are commits with a specific message format:
type([scope]): message [BREAKING]
ie.
- fix(homepage): fixed title alignment
- feat: implemented user login
- feat(api): BREAKING changed endpoint to list users
- Has one commit whose message contains
BREAKING→major - Has one commit whose type is feat →
minor - Otherwise →
patch
release-flow loads a releaseflowrc javascript file to allow configuration.
The following is an extract of the default configuration file:
export default {
developmentBranch: "develop",
productionBranch: "master",
releaseBranchPrefix: "release/",
tagPrefix: "v",
remoteName: "origin",
logLevel: "info",
initialVersion: "1.0.0",
repoHttpUrl: null,
ErrorFactory: DefaultErrorFactory,
Logger: DefaultLogger,
repoHttpProtocol: "https",
getBump: getBump,
plugins: [],
};Bumps package json version on start.
// releaseflowrc
module.exports = {
plugins: ["bump-package-json"],
};Generates a changelog for the release and prepend it CHANGELOG.md or the choosen path on start.
// releaseflowrc
module.exports = {
changelogPath: 'CHANGELOG.md'
changelogTemplate: release => 'changelog contents'
plugins: [
'generate-changelog'
]
};A plugin is just a function of the form install(release) => null. To register it is enough to pass it in releaseflowrc
// releaseflowrc
module.exports = {
plugins: [
(release) => {
// ... do something
},
],
};Tiplcally a plugin adds some step to a release phase (one of start, publish or finish).
A step is an object with a name and a run() function.
To attach a step to a phase is possible to use array methods like push or splice on the release.phases.[start/publish/finish].steps array or use the release.phases.[start/publish/finish].before method to insert the step before another specific step:
// releaseflowrc
module.exports = {
plugins: [
(release) => {
let logVersion = {
name: "logVersion",
run(release) {
console.log(release.version);
},
};
release.phases.start.before("commit", logVersion);
},
],
};
