6.6 KiB
title | date | tags | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
gitea-release Tool Announcement | 2020-05-31 |
|
gitea-release Tool Announcement
I'm a big fan of automating things that can possibly be automated. One of the
biggest pains that I've consistently had is creating/tagging releases of
software. This has been a very manual process for me. I have to write up
changelogs, bump versions and then replicate the changelog/versions in the web
UI of whatever git forge the project in question is using. This works great at
smaller scales, but can quickly become a huge pain in the butt when this needs
to be done more often. Today I've written a small tool to help me automate this
going forward, it is named
gitea-release
. This is one of my
largest Rust projects to date and something I am incredibly happy with. I will
be using it going forward for all of my repos on my gitea instance
tulpa.dev.
gitea-release
is a spiritual clone of the tool github-release
,
but optimized for my workflow. The biggest changes are that it works on
gitea repos instead of github repos, is written in Rust instead of Go
and it automatically scrapes release notes from CHANGELOG.md
as well as
reading the version of the software from VERSION
.
CHANGELOG.md and VERSION files
The CHANGELOG.md
file is based on the Keep a Changelog format, but
modified slightly to make it easier for this tool. Here is an example changelog
that this tool accepts:
# Changelog
All notable changes to this project will be documented in this file.
The format is based on [Keep a Changelog](https://keepachangelog.com/en/1.0.0/),
and this project adheres to [Semantic Versioning](https://semver.org/spec/v2.0.0.html).
## 0.1.0
### FIXED
- Refrobnicate the spurious rilkefs
## 0.0.1
First release, proof of concept.
When a release is created for version 0.1.0, this tool will make the description of the release about as follows:
### FIXED
- Refrobnicate the spurious rilkefs
This allows the changelog file to be the ultimate source of truth for release notes with this tool.
The VERSION
file plays into this as well. The VERSION
file MUST be a single
line containing a semantic version string. This allows the VERSION
file to be the ultimate source of truth for software version data with this
tool.
Release Process
When this tool is run with the release
subcommand, the following actions take place:
- The
VERSION
file is read and loaded as the desired tag for the repo - The
CHANGELOG.md
file is read and the changes for theVERSION
are cherry-picked out of the file - The git repo is checked to see if that tag already exists
- If the tag exists, the tool exits and does nothing
- If the tag does not exist, it is created (with the changelog fragment as the body of the tag) and pushed to the gitea server using the supplied gitea token
- A gitea release is created using the changelog fragment and the release name
is generated from the
VERSION
string
Automation of the Automation
This tool works perfectly well locally, but this doesn't make it fully automated from the gitea repo. I use drone as a CI/CD tool for my gitea repos. Drone has a very convenient and simple to use plugin system that was easy to integrate with structopt.
I created a drone plugin at xena/gitea-release
that can be configured as a
pipeline step in your .drone.yml
like this:
kind: pipeline
name: ci/release
steps:
- name: whatever unit testing step
# ...
- name: auto-release
image: xena/gitea-release:0.2.5
settings:
auth_username: cadey
changelog_path: ./CHANGELOG.md
gitea_server: https://tulpa.dev
gitea_token:
from_secret: GITEA_TOKEN
when:
event:
- push
branch:
- master
This allows me to bump the VERSION
and CHANGELOG.md
, then push that commit
to git and a new release will automatically be created. You can see an example
of this in action with the drone build history of the gitea-release
repo. You can also how the
CHANGELOG.md
file grows with the CHANGELOG of
gitea-release.
Once the release is pushed to gitea, you can then use drone to trigger deployment commands. For example here is the deployment pipeline used to automatically update the docker image for the gitea-release tool:
kind: pipeline
name: docker
steps:
- name: build docker image
image: "monacoremo/nix:2020-04-05-05f09348-circleci"
environment:
USER: root
commands:
- cachix use xe
- nix-build docker.nix
- cp $(readlink result) /result/docker.tgz
volumes:
- name: image
path: /result
when:
event:
- tag
- name: push docker image
image: docker:dind
volumes:
- name: image
path: /result
- name: dockersock
path: /var/run/docker.sock
commands:
- docker load -i /result/docker.tgz
- echo $DOCKER_PASSWORD | docker login -u $DOCKER_USERNAME --password-stdin
- docker push xena/gitea-release
environment:
DOCKER_USERNAME:
from_secret: DOCKER_USERNAME
DOCKER_PASSWORD:
from_secret: DOCKER_PASSWORD
when:
event:
- tag
volumes:
- name: image
temp: {}
- name: dockersock
host:
path: /var/run/docker.sock
This pipeline will use Nix to build the docker image, load it into a Docker daemon and then log into the Docker Hub and push it. This can then be used to do whatever you want. It may also be a good idea to push a docker image for every commit and then re-label the tagged commits, but this wasn't implemented in this repo.
I hope this tool will be useful. I will accept feedback over any contact method. If you want to contribute directly to the project, please feel free to create issues or pull requests. If you don't want to create an account on my git server, get me the issue details or code diffs somehow and I will do everything I can to fix issues and integrate code. I just want to make this tool better however I can.
Be well.