1
0
Fork 0
Semantic versioning tool for git based on conventional commits
Find a file
2023-10-12 16:18:25 +02:00
.github initial commit after fork 2023-10-12 16:18:25 +02:00
.gitsv initial commit after fork 2023-10-12 16:18:25 +02:00
.woodpecker initial commit after fork 2023-10-12 16:18:25 +02:00
cmd/git-sv initial commit after fork 2023-10-12 16:18:25 +02:00
sv initial commit after fork 2023-10-12 16:18:25 +02:00
.gitignore initial commit after fork 2023-10-12 16:18:25 +02:00
.golangci.yml initial commit after fork 2023-10-12 16:18:25 +02:00
.markdownlint.yml initial commit after fork 2023-10-12 16:18:25 +02:00
.prettierignore initial commit after fork 2023-10-12 16:18:25 +02:00
Containerfile.multiarch initial commit after fork 2023-10-12 16:18:25 +02:00
go.mod initial commit after fork 2023-10-12 16:18:25 +02:00
go.sum initial commit after fork 2023-10-12 16:18:25 +02:00
LICENSE initial commit after fork 2023-10-12 16:18:25 +02:00
Makefile initial commit after fork 2023-10-12 16:18:25 +02:00
README.md initial commit after fork 2023-10-12 16:18:25 +02:00
renovate.json initial commit after fork 2023-10-12 16:18:25 +02:00

git-sv

A command line tool (CLI) to validate commit messages, bump version, create tags and generate changelogs.

Getting Started

Pre Requirements

  • Git 2.17+

Installing

  • Download the latest release and add the binary to your path.
  • Optional: Set GITSV_HOME to define user configs. Check the Config topic for more information.

If you want to install from source using go install, just run:

# keep in mind that with this, it will compile from source and won't show the version on cli -h.
go install github.com/thegeeklab/git-sv/v2/cmd/git-sv@latest

# if you want to add the version on the binary, run this command instead.
GITSV_VERSION=$(go list -f '{{ .Version }}' -m github.com/thegeeklab/git-sv/v2@latest | sed 's/v//') && go install --ldflags "-X main.Version=$SGITSV_VERSION" github.com/thegeeklab/git-sv/v2/cmd/git-sv@v$GITSV_VERSION

Config

YAML

There are 3 config levels when using git-sv: default, user, repository. All of them are merged considering the follow priority: repository > user > default.

To see the current config, run:

git sv cfg show
Configuration Types
Default

To check the default configuration, run:

git sv cfg default
User

For user config, it is necessary to define the GITSV_HOME environment variable, eg.:

GITSV_HOME=/home/myuser/.gitsv # myuser is just an example.

And create a config.yml file inside it, eg.:

.gitsv
└── config.yml
Repository

Create a .gitsv/config.yml file on the root of your repository, eg. .gitsv/config.yml.

Configuration format
version: "1.1" #config version

versioning: # versioning bump
  update-major: [] # Commit types used to bump major.
  update-minor: [feat] # Commit types used to bump minor.
  update-patch: [build, ci, chore, fix, perf, refactor, test] # Commit types used to bump patch.
  # When type is not present on update rules and is unknown (not mapped on commit message types);
  # if ignore-unknown=false bump patch, if ignore-unknown=true do not bump version
  ignore-unknown: false

tag:
  pattern: "%d.%d.%d" # Pattern used to create git tag.
  filter: "" # Enables you to filter for considerable tags using git pattern syntax

release-notes:
  # Deprecated!!! please use 'sections' instead!
  # Headers names for release notes markdown. To disable a section just remove the header
  # line. It's possible to add other commit types, the release note will be created
  # respecting the following order: feat, fix, refactor, perf, test, build, ci, chore, docs, style, breaking-change.
  headers:
    breaking-change: Breaking Changes
    feat: Features
    fix: Bug Fixes

  sections: # Array with each section of release note. Check template section for more information.
    - name: Features # Name used on section.
      section-type: commits # Type of the section, supported types: commits, breaking-changes.
      commit-types: [feat] # Commit types for commit section-type, one commit type cannot be in more than one section.
    - name: Bug Fixes
      section-type: commits
      commit-types: [fix]
    - name: Breaking Changes
      section-type: breaking-changes

branches: # Git branches config.
  prefix: ([a-z]+\/)? # Prefix used on branch name, it should be a regex group.
  suffix: (-.*)? # Suffix used on branch name, it should be a regex group.
  disable-issue: false # Set true if there is no need to recover issue id from branch name.
  skip: [master, main, developer] # List of branch names ignored on commit message validation.
  skip-detached: false # Set true if a detached branch should be ignored on commit message validation.

commit-message:
  types: [
      build,
      ci,
      chore,
      docs,
      feat,
      fix,
      perf,
      refactor,
      revert,
      style,
      test,
    ] # Supported commit types.
  header-selector: "" # You can put in a regex here to select only a certain part of the commit message. Please define a regex group 'header'.
  scope:
    # Define supported scopes, if blank, scope will not be validated, if not, only scope listed will be valid.
    # Don't forget to add "" on your list if you need to define scopes and keep it optional.
    values: []
  footer:
    issue: # Use "issue: {}" if you wish to disable issue footer.
      key: jira # Name used to define an issue on footer metadata.
      key-synonyms: [Jira, JIRA] # Supported variations for footer metadata.
      use-hash: false # If false, use :<space> separator. If true, use <space># separator.
      add-value-prefix: "" # Add a prefix to issue value.
  issue:
    regex: "[A-Z]+-[0-9]+" # Regex for issue id.

Templates

git-sv uses go templates to format the output for release-notes and changelog, to see how the default template is configured check template directory. It's possible to overwrite the default configuration by adding .gitsv/templates on your repository. The cli expects that at least 2 files exists on your directory: changelog-md.tpl and releasenotes-md.tpl.

.gitsv
└── templates
    ├── changelog-md.tpl
    └── releasenotes-md.tpl

Everything inside .gitsv/templates will be loaded, so it's possible to add more files to be used as needed.

Variables

To execute the template the releasenotes-md.tpl will receive a single ReleaseNote and changelog-md.tpl will receive a list of ReleaseNote as variables.

Each ReleaseNoteSection will be configured according with release-notes.section from config file. The order for each section will be maintained and the SectionType is defined according with section-type attribute as described on the table below.

section-type ReleaseNoteSection
commits ReleaseNoteCommitsSection
breaking-changes ReleaseNoteBreakingChangeSection

⚠️ currently only commits and breaking-changes are supported as section-types, using a different value for this field will make the section to be removed from the template variables.

Check below the variables available:

ReleaseNote
  Release     string // 'v' followed by version if present, if not tag will be used instead.
  Tag         string // Current tag, if available.
  Version     *Version // Version from tag or next version according with semver.
  Date        time.Time
  Sections    []ReleaseNoteSection // ReleaseNoteCommitsSection or ReleaseNoteBreakingChangeSection
  AuthorNames []string // Author names recovered from commit message (user.name from git)

Version
  Major      int
  Minor      int
  Patch      int
  Prerelease string
  Metadata   string
  Original   string

ReleaseNoteCommitsSection // SectionType == commits
  SectionType      string
  SectionName      string
  Types            []string
  Items            []GitCommitLog
  HasMultipleTypes bool

ReleaseNoteBreakingChangeSection // SectionType == breaking-changes
  SectionType string
  SectionName string
  Messages    []string

GitCommitLog
  Date       string
  Timestamp  int
  AuthorName string
  Hash       string
  Message    CommitMessage

CommitMessage
  Type             string
  Scope            string
  Description      string
  Body             string
  IsBreakingChange bool
  Metadata         map[string]string
Functions

Beside the go template functions, the folowing functions are availiable to use in the templates. Check formatter_functions.go to see the functions implementation.

timefmt

Usage: timefmt time "2006-01-02"

Receive a time.Time and a layout string and returns a textual representation of the time according with the layout provided. Check https://pkg.go.dev/time#Time.Format for more information.

getsection

Usage: getsection sections "Features"

Receive a list of ReleaseNoteSection and a Section name and returns a section with the provided name. If no section is found, it will return nil.

Running

Run git-sv to get the list of available parameters:

git-sv

Run as git command

If git-sv is configured on your path, you can use it like a git command:

git sv
git sv current-version
git sv next-version

Usage

Use --help or -h to get usage information, don't forget that some commands have unique options too:

# sv help
git-sv -h

# sv release-notes command help
git-sv rn -h
Available commands
Variable description has options or subcommands
config, cfg Show config information. ✔️
current-version, cv Get last released version from git.
next-version, nv Generate the next version based on git commit messages.
commit-log, cl List all commit logs according to range as jsons. ✔️
commit-notes, cn Generate a commit notes according to range. ✔️
release-notes, rn Generate release notes. ✔️
changelog, cgl Generate changelog. ✔️
tag, tg Generate tag with version based on git commit messages.
commit, cmt Execute git commit with convetional commit message helper. ✔️
validate-commit-message, vcm Use as prepare-commit-message hook to validate commit message. ✔️
help, h Shows a list of commands or help for one command.
Use range

Commands like commit-log and commit-notes has a range option. Supported range types are: tag, date and hash.

By default, it's used --date=short at git log, all dates returned from it will be in YYYY-MM-DD format.

Range tag will use git for-each-ref refs/tags to get the last tag available if start is empty, the others types won't use the existing tags. It's recommended to always use a start limit in a old repository with a lot of commits. This behavior was maintained to not break the retrocompatibility.

Range date use git log --since and --until. It's possible to use all supported formats from git log. If end is in YYYY-MM-DD format, sv will add a day on git log command to make the end date inclusive.

Range tag and hash are used on git log revision range. If end is empty, HEAD will be used instead.

# get commit log as json using a inclusive range
git-sv commit-log --range hash --start 7ea9306~1 --end c444318

# return all commits after last tag
git-sv commit-log --range tag
Use validate-commit-message as prepare-commit-msg hook

Configure your .git/hooks/prepare-commit-msg:

#!/bin/sh

COMMIT_MSG_FILE=$1
COMMIT_SOURCE=$2
SHA1=$3

git sv vcm --path "$(pwd)" --file "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE" --source "$COMMIT_SOURCE"

Tip: you can configure a directory as your global git templates using the command below:

git config --global init.templatedir '<YOUR TEMPLATE DIR>'

Check git config docs for more information!

Development

Makefile

Run make to get the list of available actions:

make

Make configs

Variable description
BUILDOS Build OS.
BUILDARCH Build arch.
ECHOFLAGS Flags used on echo.
BUILDENVS Var envs used on build.
BUILDFLAGS Flags used on build.
Parameters description
args Parameters that will be used on run.
#variables
BUILDOS="linux" BUILDARCH="amd64" make build

#parameters
make run args="-h"

Build

make build

The binary will be created on bin/$BUILDOS_$BUILDARCH/git-sv.

Tests

make test

Run

#without args
make run

#with args
make run args="-h"