semantic-release plugin to analyze commits with conventional-changelog
| Step | Description |
|---|---|
analyzeCommits |
Determine the type of release by analyzing commits with conventional-changelog. |
Tip
You do not need to directly depend on this package if you are using semantic-release.
semantic-release already depends on this package, and defining your own direct dependency can result in conflicts when you update semantic-release.
$ npm install @semantic-release/commit-analyzer -DThe plugin can be configured in the semantic-release configuration file:
{
"plugins": [
[
"@semantic-release/commit-analyzer",
{
"preset": "angular",
"releaseRules": [
{ "type": "docs", "scope": "README", "release": "patch" },
{ "type": "refactor", "release": "patch" },
{ "type": "style", "release": "patch" }
],
"parserOpts": {
"noteKeywords": ["BREAKING CHANGE", "BREAKING CHANGES"]
}
}
],
"@semantic-release/release-notes-generator"
]
}With this example:
- the commits that contains
BREAKING CHANGEorBREAKING CHANGESin their body will be considered breaking changes. - the commits with a 'docs'
type, a 'README'scopewill be associated with apatchrelease - the commits with a 'refactor'
typewill be associated with apatchrelease - the commits with a 'style'
typewill be associated with apatchrelease
Note: Your commits must be formatted exactly as specified by the chosen convention. For example the Angular Commit Message Conventions require the BREAKING CHANGE keyword to be followed by a colon (:) and to be in the footer of the commit message.
| Option | Description | Default |
|---|---|---|
preset |
conventional-changelog preset (possible values: angular, atom, codemirror, ember, eslint, express, jquery, jshint, conventionalcommits). |
angular |
config |
npm package name of a custom conventional-changelog preset. | - |
parserOpts |
Additional conventional-commits-parser options that will extends the ones loaded by preset or config. This is convenient to use a conventional-changelog preset with some customizations without having to create a new module. |
- |
releaseRules |
An external module, a path to a module or an Array of rules. See releaseRules. |
See releaseRules |
presetConfig |
Additional configuration passed to the conventional-changelog preset. Used for example with conventional-changelog-conventionalcommits. | - |
Notes: in order to use a preset it must be installed (for example to use the eslint preset you must install it with npm install conventional-changelog-eslint -D)
Note: config will be overwritten by the values of preset. You should use either preset or config, but not both.
Note: Individual properties of parserOpts will override ones loaded with an explicitly set preset or config. If preset or config are not set, only the properties set in parserOpts will be used.
Note: For presets that expects a configuration object, such as conventionalcommits, the presetConfig option must be set.
Release rules are used when deciding if the commits since the last release warrant a new release. If you define custom release rules the default rules will be used if nothing matched. Those rules will be matched against the commit objects resulting of conventional-commits-parser parsing. Each rule property can be defined as a glob.
This is an Array of rule objects. A rule object has a release property and 1 or more criteria.
{
"plugins": [
[
"@semantic-release/commit-analyzer",
{
"preset": "angular",
"releaseRules": [
{ "type": "docs", "scope": "README", "release": "patch" },
{ "type": "refactor", "scope": "core-*", "release": "minor" },
{ "type": "refactor", "release": "patch" },
{ "scope": "no-release", "release": false }
]
}
],
"@semantic-release/release-notes-generator"
]
}Each commit will be compared with each rule and when it matches, the commit will be associated with the release type in the rule's release property. If a commit match multiple rules, the highest release type (major > minor > patch) is associated with the commit.
See release types for the release types hierarchy.
With the previous example:
- Commits with
type'docs' andscope'README' will be associated with apatchrelease. - Commits with
type'refactor' andscopestarting with 'core-' (i.e. 'core-ui', 'core-rules', ...) will be associated with aminorrelease. - Other commits with
type'refactor' (withoutscopeor with ascopenot matching the globcore-*) will be associated with apatchrelease. - Commits with scope
no-releasewill not be associated with a release type.
If a commit doesn't match any rule in releaseRules it will be evaluated against the default release rules.
With the previous example:
- Commits with a breaking change will be associated with a
majorrelease. - Commits with
type'feat' will be associated with aminorrelease. - Commits with
type'fix' will be associated with apatchrelease. - Commits with
type'perf' will be associated with apatchrelease. - Commits with scope
no-releasewill not be associated with a release type even if they have a breaking change or thetype'feat', 'fix' or 'perf'.
If a commit doesn't match any rules in releaseRules or in default release rules then no release type will be associated with the commit.
With the previous example:
- Commits with
type'style' will not be associated with a release type. - Commits with
type'test' will not be associated with a release type. - Commits with
type'chore' will not be associated with a release type.
If there is multiple commits that match one or more rules, the one with the highest release type will determine the global release type.
Considering the following commits:
docs(README): Add more details to the API docsfeat(API): Add a new method to the public API
With the previous example the release type determined by the plugin will be minor.
The properties to set in the rules will depends on the commit style chosen. For example conventional-changelog-angular use the commit properties type, scope and subject but conventional-changelog-eslint uses tag and message.
For example with eslint preset:
{
"plugins": [
[
"@semantic-release/commit-analyzer",
{
"preset": "eslint",
"releaseRules": [
{ "tag": "Docs", "message": "*README*", "release": "patch" },
{ "tag": "New", "release": "patch" }
]
}
],
"@semantic-release/release-notes-generator"
]
}With this configuration:
- Commits with
tag'Docs', that contains 'README' in their header message will be associated with apatchrelease. - Commits with
tag'New' will be associated with apatchrelease. - Commits with
tag'Breaking' will be associated with amajorrelease (per default release rules). - Commits with
tag'Fix' will be associated with apatchrelease (per default release rules). - Commits with
tag'Update' will be associated with aminorrelease (per default release rules). - All other commits will not be associated with a release type.
releaseRules can also reference a module, either by it's npm name or path:
{
"plugins": [
[
"@semantic-release/commit-analyzer",
{
"preset": "angular",
"releaseRules": "./config/release-rules.cjs"
}
],
"@semantic-release/release-notes-generator"
]
}// File: config/release-rules.cjs
module.exports = [
{ type: "docs", scope: "README", release: "patch" },
{ type: "refactor", scope: "core-*", release: "minor" },
{ type: "refactor", release: "patch" },
];