npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

@anolilab/multi-semantic-release

v1.1.6

Published

A multi semantic release tool for a monorepo.

Downloads

10,544

Readme

hacky semantic-release for monorepos based on qiwi/multi-semantic-release

npm-image license-image



This fork of dhoub/multi-semantic-release replaces setImmediate loops and execa.sync hooks with event-driven flow and finally makes possible to run the most release operations in parallel. 🎉 🎉 🎉

This package should work well, but may not be fundamentally stable enough for important production use as it's pretty dependent on how semantic-release works (so it may break or get out-of-date in future versions of semantic-release).

One of the best things about semantic-release is forgetting about version numbers. In a monorepo though there's still a lot of version number management required for local deps (packages in the same monorepo referenced in dependencies or devDependencies or peerDependencies). However in multi-semantic-release the version numbers of local deps are written into package.json at release time. This means there's no need to hard-code versions any more (we recommend just using * asterisk instead in your repo code).

Key features

  • CLI & JS API
  • Automated & configurable cross-pkg version bumping
  • Provides alpha & beta-branched release flow
  • Supports npm (v7+), yarn, pnpm, bolt-based monorepos
  • Optional packages ignoring
  • Linux/MacOs/Windows support

Install

npm install --save-dev @anolilab/multi-semantic-release@latest semantic-release@latest
pnpm add -D @anolilab/multi-semantic-release@latest semantic-release@latest
yarn add -D @anolilab/multi-semantic-release@latest semantic-release@latest

Usage

multi-semantic-release

Requirements

yarn / npm (v7+)

Make sure to have a workspaces attribute inside your package.json project file. In there, you can set a list of packages that you might want to process in the msr process, as well as ignore others. For example, let's say your project has 4 packages (i.e. a, b, c and d) and you want to process only a and d (ignore b and c). You can set the following structure in your package.json file:

{
    "name": "msr-test-yarn",
    "author": "Dave Houlbrooke <[email protected]",
    "version": "0.0.0-semantically-released",
    "private": true,
    "license": "0BSD",
    "engines": {
        "node": ">=8.3"
    },
    "workspaces": ["packages/*", "!packages/b/**", "!packages/c/**"],
    "release": {
        "plugins": ["@semantic-release/commit-analyzer", "@semantic-release/release-notes-generator"],
        "noCi": true
    }
}

pnpm

Make sure to have a packages attribute inside your pnpm-workspace.yaml in the root of your project.

Note: You need to have the "workspaces": ["packages/*"] attribute inside your package.json project file as well, need from semantic-release.

In there, you can set a list of packages that you might want to process in the msr process, as well as ignore others. For example, let's say your project has 4 packages (i.e. a, b, c and d) and you want to process only a and d (ignore b and c). You can set the following structure in your pnpm-workspace.yaml file:

packages:
    - "packages/**"
    - "!packages/b/**"
    - "!packages/c/**"

bolt

Make sure to have a bolt.workspaces attribute inside your package.json project file. In there, you can set a list of packages that you might want to process in the msr process, as well as ignore others. For example, let's say your project has 4 packages (i.e. a, b, c and d) and you want to process only a and d (ignore b and c). You can set the following structure in your package.json file:

{
    "name": "msr-test-bolt",
    "author": "Dave Houlbrooke <[email protected]",
    "version": "0.0.0-semantically-released",
    "private": true,
    "license": "0BSD",
    "engines": {
        "node": ">=8.3"
    },
    "bolt": {
        "workspaces": ["packages/*", "!packages/b/**", "!packages/c/**"]
    },
    "release": {
        "plugins": ["@semantic-release/commit-analyzer", "@semantic-release/release-notes-generator"],
        "noCi": true
    }
}

Configuring Multi-Semantic-Release

multi-semantic-release can be configured a number of ways:

  • A .multi-releaserc file, written in YAML or JSON, with optional extensions: .yaml/ .yml/ .json/ .js
  • A multi-release.config.js file that exports an object
  • A multi-release key in the workspace root package.json

Alternatively some options may be set via CLI flags.

Note: CLI arguments take precedence over options configured in the configuration file.

Options

| Option | Type | CLI Flag | Description | | ----------------- | ----------------- | ---------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | dryRun | boolean | --dry-run | Dry run mode. | | logLevel | String | --log-level | Sets the internal logger verbosity level: error, warn, info, debug, trace. Defaults to info. | | debug | boolean | --debug | Output debugging information. Shortcut for --logLevel=debug. | | silent | boolean | --silent | Turns off any log outputs. | | extends | String \| Array | N/A | List of modules or file paths containing a shareable configuration. If multiple shareable configurations are set, they will be imported in the order defined with each configuration option taking precedence over the options defined in the previous. | | sequentialInit | boolean | --sequential-init | Avoid hypothetical concurrent initialization collisions. | | sequentialPrepare | boolean | --sequential-prepare | Avoid hypothetical concurrent preparation collisions. True by default. | | firstParent | boolean | --first-parent | Apply commit filtering to current branch only. | | ignorePrivate | boolean | --ignore-private | Exclude private packages. True by default. | | ignorePackages | String \| Array | --ignore-packages | Packages list to be ignored on bumping process (appended to the ones that already exist at package.json workspaces). If using the CLI flag, supply a comma seperated list of strings. | | tagFormat | String | --tag-format | Format to use when creating tag names. Should include "name" and "version" vars. Default: "${name}@${version}" which generates "[email protected]" | | deps | Object | N/A | Dependency handling, see below for possible values. |

deps Options

| Option | Type | CLI Flag | Description | | ------- | ------------------------------------ | ---------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | | bump | override \| satisfy \| inherit | --deps.bump | Define deps version update rule. override — replace any prev version with the next onesatisfy — check the next pkg version against its current references. If it matches (* matches to any, 1.1.0 matches 1.1.x, 1.5.0 matches to ^1.0.0 and so on) release will not be triggered, if not override strategy will be applied instead; inherit will try to follow the current declaration version/range. ~1.0.0 + minor turns into ~1.1.0, 1.x + major gives 2.x, but 1.x + minor gives 1.x so there will be no release, etc. +;ignore prevent dependencies from being bumped by MSR | | release | patch \| minor \| major \| inherit | --deps.release | Define release type for dependent package if any of its deps changes. patch, minor, major — strictly declare the release type that occurs when any dependency is updated; inherit — applies the "highest" release of updated deps to the package. For example, if any dep has a breaking change, major release will be applied to the all dependants up the chain. | | prefix | '^' \| '~' \| '' | --deps.prefix | Optional prefix to be attached to the next version if bump is set to override. Supported values: ^ | ~ | '' (empty string) ; '' by default. |

Examples

  • Via multi-release key in the project's package.json file:
{
    "multi-release": {
        "ignorePackages": ["!packages/b/**", "!packages/c/**"],
        "deps": {
            "bump": "inherit"
        }
    }
}
  • Via .multi-releaserc file:
{
    "ignorePackages": ["!packages/b/**", "!packages/c/**"],
    "deps": {
        "bump": "inherit"
    }
}
  • Via CLI:
$ multi-semantic-release --ignore-packages=packages/a/**,packages/b/** --deps.bump=inherit

Configuring Semantic-Release

MSR requires semrel config to be added in any supported format for each package or/and declared in repo root (globalConfig is extremely useful if all the modules have the same strategy of release). NOTE config resolver joins globalConfig and packageConfig during execution.

// Load the package-specific options.
const { options: pkgOptions } = await getConfig(dir);

// The 'final options' are the global options merged with package-specific options.
// We merge this ourselves because package-specific options can override global options.
const finalOptions = Object.assign({}, globalOptions, pkgOptions);

Make sure to have a workspaces attribute inside your package.json project file. In there, you can set a list of packages that you might want to process in the msr process, as well as ignore others. For example, let's say your project has 4 packages (i.e. a, b, c and d) and you want to process only a and d (ignore b and c). You can set the following structure in your package.json file:

{
    "name": "msr-__tests__-yarn",
    "author": "Dave Houlbrooke <[email protected]",
    "version": "0.0.0-semantically-released",
    "private": true,
    "license": "0BSD",
    "engines": {
        "node": ">=8.3"
    },
    "workspaces": ["packages/*", "!packages/b/**", "!packages/c/**"],
    "release": {
        "plugins": ["@semantic-release/commit-analyzer", "@semantic-release/release-notes-generator"],
        "noCi": true
    }
}

You can also ignore it with the CLI:

$ multi-semantic-release --ignore-packages=packages/b/**,packages/c/**

You can also combine the CLI ignore options with the ! operator at each package inside workspaces attribute. Even though you can use the CLI to ignore options, you can't use it to set which packages to be released – i.e. you still need to set the workspaces attribute inside the package.json.

Verified usage examples

We use this tool to release our JS platform code inhouse (GitHub Enterprise + JB TeamCity) and for our OSS (GitHub + Travis CI). Guaranteed working configurations available in projects.

Troubleshooting

npm v8.5+: npm ERR! notarget No matching version found for...

When releasing a monorepo you may get a npm ERR! code ETARGET error. This is caused by npm version creating a reify update on packages with future dependency versions MSR has not updated yet.

The simplest work around is to set workspaces-update to false either in your .npmrc or manually by running npm config set workspaces-update false

npm: invalid npm token

When releasing a monorepos you may get EINVALIDNPMTOKEN error. The more packages, the more chance of error, unfortunately.

INVALIDNPMTOKEN Invalid npm token.
The npm token (https://github.com/semantic-release/npm/blob/master/README.md#npm-registry-authentication) configured in the NPM_TOKEN environment variable must be a valid token (https://docs.npmjs.com/getting-started/working_with_tokens) allowing to publish to the registry https://registry.npmjs.org/.

Do not rush to change your token. Perhaps this is related to npm whoami request throttling on your registry (just a hypothesis: https://github.com/semantic-release/npm/pull/416). At this point you can:

  • Rerun your build as many times as necessary. You may get lucky in a new attempt.
  • Use semrel-extra/npm plugin for npm publishing (recommended).

git: connection reset by peer

This error seems to be related to concurrent git invocations (issues/24). Or maybe not. Anyway we've added a special --sequental-init flag to queue up these calls.

Implementation notes (and other thoughts)

Support for monorepos

Automatically finds packages as long as workspaces are configured as-per the workspace-feature of one of the support package managers.

I'm aware Lerna is the best-known tool right now, but in future it seems clear it will be replaced by functionality in Yarn and NPM directly. If you use Yarn workspaces today (January 2019), then publishing is the only remaining feature Lerna is really required for (though it'd be lovely if Yarn added parallel script execution). Thus using multi-semantic-release means you can probably remove Lerna entirely from your project.

Iteration vs coordination

Other packages that enable semantic-release for monorepos work by iterating into each package and running the semantic-release command. This is conceptually simple but unfortunately not viable because:

  • If a package is published that depends on minor changes that have been made in a sibling package it could cause extremely subtle errors (the worst kind!) — if the project follows semver religiously this should never happen, but it's better to eliminate the potential for errors
  • Dependency version numbers need to reflect the next release at time of publishing, so a package needs to know the state of all other packages before it can publish correctly — this central state needs to be coordinated by something

Local dependencies and version numbers

A key requirement is handling local dep version numbers elegantly. multi-semantic-release does the following:

  • The next version number of all packages is established first
  • If a release has not changed but has local deps that have changed... do a patch bump on that package too
  • Before packages are released (in semantic-release's prepare step), the correct current/next version number of all local dependencies is written into the package.json file (overwriting any existing value)
  • This ensures the package at the time of publishing will be atomically correct with all other packages in the monorepo.

The above means that, possibly, if someone upgrades dependencies and pulls down a package from NPM during the multirelease (before all its deps have been published at their next versions), then their npm install will fail (it will work if they try again in a few minutes). On balance I thought it was more important to be atomically correct (this situation should be fairly rare assuming projects commit their lockfiles).

Integration with semantic-release

This is the jankiest part of multi-semantic-release and most likely part to break relies. I expect this to cause maintenance issues down the line. In an ideal world semantic-release will bake-in support for monorepos (making this package unnecessary).

The way I ended up integrating is to create a custom "inline plugin" for semantic-release, and passing that in to semanticRelease() as the only plugin. This then calls any other configured plugins to retrieve and potentially modify the response.

The plugin starts all release at once, then pauses them (using Promises) at various points to allow other packages in the multirelease to catch up. This is mainly needed so the version number of all packages can be established before any package is released. This allows us to do a patch bump on releases whose local deps have bumped, and to accurately write in the version of local deps in each package.json

The inline plugin does the following:

  • verifyConditions: not used
  • analyzeCommits:
    • Replaces context.commits with a list of commits filtered to the folder only
    • Calls plugins.analyzeCommits() to get the next release type (e.g. from @semantic-release/commit-analyzer)
    • Waits for all packages to catch up to this point.
    • For packages that haven't bumped, checks if it has local deps (or deps of deps) that have bumped and returns patch if that's true
  • verifyRelease: not used
  • generateNotes:
    • Calls plugins.generateNotes() to get the notes (e.g. from @semantic-release/release-notes-generator)
    • Appends a section listing any local deps bumps (e.g. "my-pkg-2: upgraded to 1.2.1")
  • prepare:
    • Writes in the correct version for local deps in dependencies, devDependencies, peerDependencies in package.json
    • Serialize the releases so they happen one-at-a-time (because semantic-release calls git push asynchronously, multiple releases at once fail because Git refs aren't locked — semantic-release should use execa.sync() so Git operations are atomic)
  • publish: not used
  • success: not used
  • fail: not used

Jank

The integration with semantic release is pretty janky — this is a quick summary of the reasons this package will be hard to maintain:

  1. Had to filter context.commits object before it was used by @semantic-release/commit-analyzer (so it only lists commits for the corresponding directory).
  • The actual Git filtering is easy peasy: see getCommitsFiltered.js
  • But overriding context.commits was very difficult! I did it eventually creating an inline plugin and passing it into semanticRelease() via options.plugins
  • The inline plugin proxies between semantic release and other configured plugins. It does what it needs to then calls e.g. plugins.analyzeCommits() with an overridden context.commits — see createInlinePluginCreator.js
  • I think this is messy — inline plugins aren't even documented :(
  1. Need to run the analyze commit step on all plugins before any proceed to the publish step
  • The inline plugin returns a Promise for every package then waits for all packages to analyze their commits before resolving them one at a time
  • If packages have local deps (e.g. dependencies in package.json points to an internal package) this step also does a patch bump if any of them did a bump.
  • This has to work recursively! See hasChangedDeep.js
  1. The configuration can be layered (i.e. global .releaserc and then per-directory overrides for individual packages).
  • Had to duplicate the internal cosmiconfig setup from semantic release to get this working :(
  1. I found Git getting itself into weird states because e.g. git tag is done asynchronously
  • To get around this I had to stagger package publishing so they were done one at a time (which slows things down)
  • I think calls to execa() in semantic release should be replaced with execa.sync() to ensure Git's internal state is atomic.
  • Fortunately, another workaround has been implemented. Synchronizer is the neat part. It is critical to make the tag and commit publishing phases strictly sequential. Event emitter allows:
    • To synchronize release stages for all packages.
    • To ensure the completeness of checks and the sufficiency of conditions for a conflict-free process.

Git tags

Releases always use a tagFormat of [email protected] for Git tags, and always overrides any gitTag set in semantic-release configuration.

I can personally see the potential for this option in coordinating a semantic-release (e.g. so two packages with the same tag always bump and release simultaneously). Unfortunately with the points of integration available in semantic-release, it was effectively impossible when releasing to stop a second package creating a duplicate tag (causing an error).

To make the tagFormat option work as intended the following would need to happen:

  • semantic-release needs to check if a given tag already exists at a given commit, and not create it / push it if that's true
  • Release notes for multiple package releases need to be merged BUT the Github release only done once (by having the notes merged at the semantic-release level but only published once, or having the Github plugin merge them)
  • Make it clear in documentation that the default tag v1.0.0 will have the same effect as Lerna's fixed mode (all changed monorepo packages released at same time)

Supported Node.js Versions

Libraries in this ecosystem make the best effort to track Node.js’ release schedule. Here’s a post on why we think this is important.

Contributing

If you would like to help take a look at the list of issues and check our Contributing guild.

Note: please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms.

Credits

License

0BSD