GitHub Action for running
semantic-release
. Respects any semantic-release configuration file in your repo or therelease
prop in yourpackage.json
. Exports environment variables for you to use in subsequent actions containing version numbers.
See action.yml.
Referencing the major version is (recommended by GitHub).
steps:
# Reference the major version of a release
- uses: codfish/semantic-release-action@v2
# Reference a specific commit
- uses: codfish/semantic-release-action@c4074285a1651e4fecab9c14974d5e01b4625edf
# Reference a minor version of a release
- uses: codfish/[email protected]
# Reference a branch
- uses: codfish/semantic-release-action@main
Note: Whenever you use a custom docker-based GitHub Action like this one, you may notice in your run logs, one of the first steps you'll see will be GA building the image for you. You can speed up runs by pulling pre-built docker images instead of making GitHub Actions build them on every run.
steps:
# Reference a docker image from GitHub Container Registry
- uses: docker://ghcr.io/codfish/semantic-release-action:v2
# Reference a docker image from Dockerhub
- uses: docker://codfish/semantic-release-action:v2
If you're security conscious, you can pin the docker image down to a specific digest instead of using an image tag, which is a mutable reference.
steps:
# Reference a docker image from GitHub Container Registry (example for v2.0.0)
- uses: docker://ghcr.io/codfish/semantic-release-action@sha256:91ea452696d93a34a30aff20b34614b75e8fddc82b598fc8fa57c3ac07e6d6da
Inspect the image version you want here to find the digest. If you prefer pulling from Docker Hub, check here.
Note: Until this semantic-release pr gets merged,
main
is not a supported branch by default. If your repository is usingmain
as the default branch which is extremely common, you need to pass the branches input into the action, or define it in your semantic-release config explicitly. See: semantic-release/semantic-release#1737
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- uses: codfish/semantic-release-action@v2
with:
# specify default branches to add support for the `main` branch
# which semantic-release doesn't have as a default yet.
branches: |
[
'+([0-9])?(.{+([0-9]),x}).x',
'main',
'next',
'next-major',
{
name: 'beta',
prerelease: true
},
{
name: 'alpha',
prerelease: true
}
]
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
NPM_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.NPM_TOKEN }}
Using output variables set by semantic-release-action
:
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
# you'll need to add an `id` in order to access output variables
- uses: codfish/semantic-release-action@v2
id: semantic
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
NPM_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.NPM_TOKEN }}
- run: echo ${{ steps.semantic.outputs.release-version }}
- run: echo "$OUTPUTS"
env:
OUTPUTS: ${{ toJson(steps.semantic.outputs) }}
- uses: codfish/some-other-action@v1
with:
release-version: ${{ steps.semantic.outputs.release-version }}
Example: Only run an action if a new version was created.
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
# you'll need to add an `id` in order to access output variables
- uses: codfish/semantic-release-action@v2
id: semantic
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
NPM_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.NPM_TOKEN }}
- name: docker push version
if: steps.semantic.outputs.new-release-published == 'true'
run: |
docker tag some-image some-image:$TAG
docker push some-image:$TAG
env:
TAG: v$RELEASE_VERSION
Using environment variables set by semantic-release-action
:
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- uses: codfish/semantic-release-action@v2
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
NPM_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.NPM_TOKEN }}
- run: |
echo $RELEASE_VERSION
echo $RELEASE_MAJOR
echo $RELEASE_MINOR
echo $RELEASE_PATCH
If you're not publishing to npm and only want to use this action for GitHub releases, the easiest
approach would simply be to add "private": true,
to your package.json
.
It's fairly easy to run semantic-release
as a "host action," aka something that runs directly on
the VM.
steps:
- run: npx semantic-release
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
NPM_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.NPM_TOKEN }}
If you're just publishing a node package, then this could still work well for you. The problem I found with this is when I was in projects where I had subsequent steps/actions in which I wanted to know whether a new version was cut.
Use Case: For instance, in an application where I'm using
semantic-release
to manage GitHub releases, but also building and pushing docker images. Dockerhub has a nice GitHub integration to handle this for us, but some other registries do not. If I need to cut a new release, then update a docker registry by adding a new tagged build, I'll want to runsemantic-release
and then build a docker image, tag it with a version and push it up. In my case I like to push up tags forlatest
, the semver (i.e.v1.8.3
), and just the major the version (i.e.v1
).
I want to know 1) if semantic-release cut a new version and 2) what the version is.
There's a number of ways to handle this, but the most elegant way I found to do it was to abstract it into it's own custom action. It abstracts away whatever logic you need to figure out what that new release number is.
This also scales well, just in case I want to add some flexibility and functionality to this action, I can easily leverage it across any project.
You can pass in semantic-release
configuration options via GitHub Action inputs using with
.
It's important to note, NONE of these inputs are required. Semantic release has a default configuration that it will use if you don't provide any.
Also of note, if you'd like to override the default configuration and you'd rather not use the inputs here, the action will automatically use any
semantic-release
configuration
defined in your repo (.releaserc
, release.config.js
, release
prop in package.json
)
Note: Each input will take precedence over options configured in the configuration file and shareable configurations.
Input Variable | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
branches | Array , String , Object |
The branches on which releases should happen. |
plugins | Array |
Define the list of plugins to use. Plugins will run in series, in the order defined, for each steps if they implement it |
extends | Array , String |
List of modules or file paths containing a shareable configuration. |
additional_packages | Array , String |
Define a list of additional plugins/configurations (official or community) to install. Use this if you 1) use any plugins other than the defaults, which are already installed along with semantic-release or 2) want to extend from a shareable configuration. |
dry_run | Boolean |
The objective of the dry-run mode is to get a preview of the pending release. Dry-run mode skips the following steps: prepare, publish, success and fail. |
repository_url | String |
The git repository URL |
tag_format | String |
The Git tag format used by semantic-release to identify releases. |
Note: Any package specified in
extends
oradditional_packages
will be installed automatically for you as a convenience, allowing you to use this action without adding new dependencies to your application or install deps in a separate action step.
Note:
additional_packages
won't get used automatically, setting this variable will just install them so you can use them. You'll need to actually list them in yourplugins
and/orextends
configuration for semantic-release to use them.
Note: The
branch
input is DEPRECATED. Will continue to be supported for v1. Usebranches
instead. Previously used in semantic-release v15 to set a single branch on which releases should happen.
- GitHub Actions Inputs: https://help.github.com/en/articles/metadata-syntax-for-github-actions#inputs
- Semantic Release Configuration: https://github.com/semantic-release/semantic-release/blob/master/docs/usage/configuration.md
steps:
- run: codfish/semantic-release-action@v2
with:
dry_run: true
branches: |
[
'+([0-9])?(.{+([0-9]),x}).x',
'main',
'next',
'next-major',
{
name: 'beta',
prerelease: true
},
{
name: 'alpha',
prerelease: true
}
]
repository_url: https://github.com/codfish/semantic-release-action.git
tag_format: 'v${version}'
extends: '@semantic-release/apm-config'
additional_packages: |
['@semantic-release/[email protected]', '@semantic-release/git']
plugins: |
['@semantic-release/commit-analyzer', '@semantic-release/release-notes-generator', '@semantic-release/github', '@semantic-release/apm', '@semantic-release/git']
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
NPM_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.NPM_TOKEN }}
semantic-release-action
sets both output variables and environment variables because why not?
Allows users the ability to use whichever they want. I don't know or understand every use case there
might be so this is a way to cover more cases.
Docs: https://help.github.com/en/articles/metadata-syntax-for-github-actions#outputs
Output Variables:
Output Variable | Description |
---|---|
new-release-published | Either 'true' when a new release was published or 'false' when no release was published. Allows other actions to run or not-run based on this |
release-version | The new releases' semantic version, i.e. 1.8.3 |
release-major | The new releases' major version number, i.e. 1 |
release-minor | The new releases' minor version number, i.e. 8 |
release-patch | The new releases' patch version number, i.e. 3 |
release-notes | The release notes of the next release. |
Environment Variables:
Environment Variable | Description |
---|---|
NEW_RELEASE_PUBLISHED | Either 'true' when a new release was published or 'false' when no release was published. Allows other actions to run or not-run based on this |
RELEASE_VERSION | The new releases' semantic version, i.e. 1.8.3 |
RELEASE_MAJOR | The new releases' major version number, i.e. 1 |
RELEASE_MINOR | The new releases' minor version number, i.e. 8 |
RELEASE_PATCH | The new releases' patch version number, i.e. 3 |
RELEASE_NOTES | The release notes of the next release in markdown. |
Make the new release available to those binding to the major version tag: Move the major version tag (v1, v2, etc.) to point to the ref of the current release. This will act as the stable release for that major version. You should keep this tag updated to the most recent stable minor/patch release.
git tag -fa v2 -m "Update v2 tag" && git push origin v2 --force
Reference: https://github.com/actions/toolkit/blob/main/docs/action-versioning.md#recommendations