Skip to content

FredrikNoren/grunt-release

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

52 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

grunt-release

Grunt plugin for automating all the release steps of your node lib or bower component, with optional publishing to npm.

Repetition Killed the Cat

Releasing a new version of your killer Node/Bower/Component/JS lib looks something like this:

  1. bump the version in your package.json file.
  2. stage the package.json file's change.
  3. commit that change with a message like "release 0.6.22".
  4. create a new git tag for the release.
  5. push the changes out to github.
  6. also push the new tag out to github.
  7. publish the new version to npm.

Cool, right? No! What's wrong with you? Automate all that:

grunt release

Done. No more github issues reminding you how often you forget to do one or more of the steps.

Setup

If you haven't used Grunt before, be sure to check out the Getting Started guide, as it explains how to create a Gruntfile as well as install and use Grunt plugins. Once you're familiar with that process, you may install this plugin with this command:

npm install grunt-release --save-dev

Once the plugin has been installed, it may be enabled inside your Gruntfile with this line of JavaScript:

grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-release');

Using grunt-release

Patch Release:

grunt release

or

grunt release:patch

Minor Release:

grunt release:minor

Major Release:

grunt release:major

Pre-release

grunt release:prerelease

prerelease will just update the number after MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH (eg: 1.0.0-1) If you want to add an alphanumeric identifier, you will need to add it by hand. Example: add -alpha.0 to get something like 1.0.0-alpha.0. Calling grunt release:prerelease will just update the last number to 1.0.0-alpha.1.

Releasing Unstable/Beta Versions Sometimes it is useful to publish an 'unstable' or 'beta' version to npm, while leaving your last stable release as the default that gets installed on an npm install. npm accomplishes this using the --tag myUnstableVersion flag. You can enable this flag in grunt-release either by setting the npmtag option:

  release: {
    options: {
      npmtag: 'canary',
    }
  }

or by passing the CLI arg:

grunt release --npmtag canary

NOTE: If the tag you pass is true, then the tag will be the new version number after the bump. Otherwise it will be the string you provided.

Dry Run: To see what grunt-release does, without really changing anything, use --no-write option.

grunt --no-write -v release

You'll see something like:

Parsing package.json...OK
Not actually writing package.json...OK
>> Version bumped to 0.2.6
Not actually running: git add package.json
Not actually running: git commit package.json -m "release 0.2.6"
>> package.json committed
Not actually running: git tag 0.2.6 -m "version 0.2.6"
>> New git tag created: 0.2.6

Done, without errors.

Options

You can disable any of the steps if you want, by adding this to your Gruntfile:

  release: {
    options: {
      bump: false, //default: true
      file: 'component.json', //default: package.json
      add: false, //default: true
      commit: false, //default: true
      tag: false, //default: true
      push: false, //default: true
      pushTags: false, //default: true
      npm: false, //default: true
      npmtag: true, //default: no tag
      folder: 'folder/to/publish/to/npm' //default project root
      tagName: 'some-tag-<%= version %>', //default: '<%= version %>'
      commitMessage: 'check out my release <%= version %>', //default: 'release <%= version %>'
      tagMessage: 'tagging version <%= version %>' //default: 'Version <%= version %>'
    }
  }

For node libs, leave file option blank. For bower components, set it to component.json or whatever you've set your bower config file to be.

Credits

Inspired by Vojta Jina's grunt-bump.

License

MIT

About

Release a new version of your Node-based project

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 100.0%