* docs(Plugin Developer Guide): More detailed lifecycle list and context descriptions
This commit will improve the following in the Plugin developer guide:
* Lifecyle list more complete (previous was missing some lifecycles)
* Context object has been now described in more detail per lifecycle
* Some readability/maintainability fixes to the markdown file itself
to make it easier to edit and read in an editor.
* docs(Plugin Developer Guide): Added missing context field to analyzeCommits lifecycle documentation
analyzeCommits lifecycle context was missing documentation for "commits" list.
* docs(developer-guide): remove line breaks added in an earlier commit
As per requested in the code review, the line breaks that were added in an earlier commit are now
removed. While this does make reading the text just slightly more difficult (to see the whole
picture), the benefit of making code reviews easier does outweight the admittedly small benefit.
7.1 KiB
Plugin Developer Guide
To create a plugin for semantic-release, you need to decide which parts of the release lifecycle are important to that plugin. For example, it is best to always have a verifyConditions step because you may be receiving inputs from a user and want to make sure they exist. A plugin can abide by any of the following lifecycles:
verifyConditionsanalyzeCommitsverifyReleasegenerateNotesaddChannelpreparepublishsuccessfail
semantic-release will require the plugin via node and look through the required object for methods named like the lifecyles stated above. For example, if your plugin only had a verifyConditions and success step, the main file for your object would need to export an object with verifyConditions and success functions.
In addition to the lifecycle methods, each lifecyle is passed two objects:
pluginConfig- an object containing the options that a user may pass in via theirrelease.config.jsfile (or similar)context- provided bysemantic-releasefor access to things likeenvvariables set on the running process.
For each lifecycle you create, you will want to ensure it can accept pluginConfig and context as parameters.
Creating a Plugin Project
It is recommended that you generate a new project with yarn init. This will provide you with a basic node project to get started with. From there, create an index.js file, and make sure it is specified as the main in the package.json. We will use this file to orchestrate the lifecycle methods later on.
Next, create a src or lib folder in the root of the project. This is where we will store our logic and code for how our lifecycle methods work. Finally, create a test folder so you can write tests related to your logic.
We recommend you setup a linting system to ensure good javascript practices are enforced. ESLint is usually the system of choice, and the configuration can be whatever you or your team fancies.
Exposing Lifecycle Methods
In your index.js file, you can start by writing the following code
const verifyConditions = require('./src/verify');
let verified;
/**
* Called by semantic-release during the verification step
* @param {*} pluginConfig The semantic-release plugin config
* @param {*} context The context provided by semantic-release
*/
async function verify(pluginConfig, context) {
await verifyConditions(pluginConfig, context);
verified = true;
}
module.exports = { verify };
Then, in your src folder, create a file called verify.js and add the following
const AggregateError = require('aggregate-error');
/**
* A method to verify that the user has given us a slack webhook url to post to
*/
module.exports = async (pluginConfig, context) => {
const { logger } = context;
const errors = [];
// Throw any errors we accumulated during the validation
if (errors.length > 0) {
throw new AggregateError(errors);
}
};
As of right now, this code won't do anything. However, if you were to run this plugin via semantic-release, it would run when the verify step occurred.
Following this structure, you can create different steps and checks to run through out the release process.
Supporting Options
Let's say we want to verify that an option is passed. An option is a configuration object that is specific to your plugin. For example, the user may set an option in their release config like:
{
prepare: {
path: "@semantic-release/my-special-plugin"
message: "My cool release message"
}
}
This message option will be passed to the pluginConfig object mentioned earlier. We can use the validation method we created to verify this option exists so we can perform logic based on that knowledge. In our verify file, we can add the following:
const { message } = pluginConfig;
if (message.length) {
//...
}
Context
Common context keys
stdoutstderrlogger
Context object keys by lifecycle
verifyConditions
Initially the context object contains the following keys (verifyConditions lifecycle):
cwd- Current working directory
env- Environment variables
envCi- Information about CI environment
- Contains (at least) the following keys:
isCi- Boolean, true if the environment is a CI environment
commit- Commit hash
branch- Current branch
options- Options passed to
semantic-releasevia CLI, configuration files etc.
- Options passed to
branch- Information on the current branch
- Object keys:
channeltagstypenamerangeacceptmain
branches- Information on branches
- List of branch objects (see above)
analyzeCommits
Compared to the verifyConditions, analyzeCommits lifecycle context has keys
commits(List)- List of commits taken into account when determining the new version.
- Keys:
commit(Object)- Keys:
long(String, Commit hash)short(String, Commit hash)
- Keys:
tree(Object)- Keys:
long(String, Commit hash)short(String, Commit hash)
- Keys:
author(Object)- Keys:
name(String)email(String)date(String, ISO 8601 timestamp)
- Keys:
committer(Object)- Keys:
name(String)email(String)date(String, ISO 8601 timestamp)
- Keys:
subject(String, Commit message subject)body(String, Commit message body)hash(String, Commit hash)committerDate(String, ISO 8601 timestamp)message(String)gitTags(String, List of git tags)
releases(List)lastRelease(Object)- Keys
version(String)gitTag(String)channels(List)gitHead(String, Commit hash)name(String)
- Keys
verifyRelease
Additional keys:
nextRelease- Similar object as
lastRelease(see above)
- Similar object as
generateNotes
No new content in the context.
addChannel
This is run only if there are releases that have been merged from a higher branch but not added on the channel of the current branch.
Context content is similar to lifecycle verifyRelease.
prepare
Only change is that generateNotes has populated nextRelease.notes.
publish
No new content in the context.
success
Lifecycles success and fail are mutually exclusive, only one of them will be run.
Additional keys:
releases- Populated by
publishlifecycle
- Populated by
fail
Lifecycles success and fail are mutually exclusive, only one of them will be run.
Additional keys:
errors
Supporting Environment Variables
Similar to options, environment variables exist to allow users to pass tokens and set special URLs. These are set on the context object instead of the pluginConfig object. Let's say we wanted to check for GITHUB_TOKEN in the environment because we want to post to GitHub on the user's behalf. To do this, we can add the following to our verify command:
const { env } = context;
if (env.GITHUB_TOKEN) {
//...
}