semantic-release-cli
v5.4.6
Published
setup automated semver compliant package publishing
Downloads
20,223
Readme
semantic-release-cli
Install
npm install -g semantic-release-cli
cd your-module
semantic-release-cli setup
Options
Usage:
semantic-release-cli setup [options]
Options:
-h --help Show this screen.
-v --version Show version.
--[no-]keychain Use keychain to get passwords [default: true].
--ask-for-passwords Ask for the passwords even if passwords are stored [default: false].
--tag=<String> npm tag to install [default: 'latest'].
--gh-token=<String> GitHub auth token
--npm-token=<String> npm auth token
--circle-token=<String> CircleCI auth token
--npm-username=<String> npm username
Aliases:
init setup
What it Does
semantic-release-cli performs the following steps:
- Asks for the information it needs. You will need to provide it with:
- Whether your GitHub repository is public or private
- Which npm registry you want to use (Default: https://registry.npmjs.org/)
- Your npm username (unless passwords were previously saved to keychain)
- Your npm email
- Your npm password
- Which continuous integration system you want to use. (Options: Travis CI / Pro / Enterprise / CircleCI, or Other)
- [Travis only] Whether you want to test a single node.js version (e.g. - 8) or multiple node.js versions (e.g. - 4, 6, 8, etc.)
- npm Add User
- Runs
npm adduser
with the npm information provided to generate a.npmrc
- Parses the npm token from the
.npmrc
for future use
- Runs
- Uses user supplied GitHub Personal Access Token (with the following permissions:
repo
,read:org
,repo:status
,repo_deployment
,user:email
,write:repo_hook
)- Sets GitHub Personal Access Token in user choosen CI/CD environment variable
- Update your
package.json
- Set
version
field to0.0.0-development
(semantic-release
will set the version for you automatically) - Add a
semantic-release
script:"semantic-release": "semantic-release"
- Add
semantic-release
as adevDependency
- Add or overwrite the
repository
field
- Set
Travis CI
Versions 4.1.0+
semantic-release-cli
does not perform any additional Travis-specific steps, but the cli output will provide a link for assistance integrating Travis and semantic-release-cli
.
Prior to version 4.1.0
semantic-release-cli
performs the following additional steps:
- Overwrite your
.travis.yml
fileafter_success
:npm install -g travis-deploy-once
andtravis-deploy-once "npm run semantic-release"
: runsemantic-release
exactly once after all builds pass- Set other sane defaults:
cache: directories: ~/.npm
,notifications: email: false
- Login to Travis CI to configure the package. This step requires your module to define a valid, case-sensitive
repository
field.- Enable builds of your repo
- Add
GH_TOKEN
andNPM_TOKEN
environment variables in the settings
CircleCI
For CircleCI, semantic-release-cli
performs the following additional steps:
- Create minimal
config.yml
file (if CircleCI was selected)
version: 2
jobs:
build:
docker:
- image: 'circleci/node:latest'
steps:
- checkout
- run:
name: install
command: npm install
- run:
name: release
command: npm run semantic-release || true
- Login to CircleCI to configure the package
- Enable builds of your repo
- Add
GH_TOKEN
andNPM_TOKEN
environment variables in the settings
Github Actions
For Github Actions, semantic-release-cli
performs the following additional step:
- Login to Github to configure the package
- Add
NPM_TOKEN
environment variables as a secret in the settings
For now you will have to manually modify your existing workflow to add a release step. Here is an example of a small complete workflow .github/workflows/workflow.yml
:
name: CI
on: push
jobs:
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-16.04
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- uses: actions/setup-node@v1
with:
node-version: '12'
- run: npm ci
- run: npm test
- name: Release
env:
NPM_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.NPM_TOKEN }}
run: npx semantic-release
Other CI Servers
By default, semantic-release-cli
supports the popular Travis CI and CircleCI servers. If you select Other
as your server during configuration, semantic-release-cli
will print out the environment variables you need to set on your CI server. You will be responsible for adding these environment variables as well as configuring your CI server to run npm run semantic-release
after all the builds pass.
Note that your CI server will also need to set the environment variable CI=true
so that semantic-release
will not perform a dry run. (Most CI services do this by default.) See the semantic-release
documentation for more details.
Setting defaults
This package reads your npm username from your global .npmrc
. In order to autosuggest a username in the future, make sure to set your username there: npm config set username <username>
.
Contribute
Please contribute! We welcome issues and pull requests.
When committing, please conform to the semantic-release commit standards.
License
MIT License 2015 © Christoph Witzko and contributors