These notes reflect the current process. There's a lot more we could do, in terms of automation and expanding the number of platforms to which we formally release (see #103).
Create a new entry at the top of docs/CHANGELOG.md
that enumerates the
significant updates to the new version.
Bump the version numbers in the following files:
- contrib/rpm/bats.spec
- libexec/bats-core/bats
- package.json
Commit these changes (including the docs/CHANGELOG.md
changes) in a commit
with the message Bats <VERSION>
, where <VERSION>
is the new version number.
Create a new signed, annotated tag with:
$ git tag -a -s <VERSION>
Include the docs/CHANGELOG.md
notes corresponding to the new version as the
tag annotation, except the first line should be: Bats <VERSION> - YYYY-MM-DD
and any Markdown headings should become plain text, e.g.:
### Added
should become:
Added:
Push the new version commit and tag to GitHub via the following:
$ git push --follow-tags
Then visit https://github.com/bats-core/bats-core/releases, and:
- Click Draft a new release.
- Select the new version tag.
- Name the release:
Bats <VERSION>
. - Paste the same notes from the version tag annotation as the description,
except change the first line to read:
Released: YYYY-MM-DD
. - Click Publish release.
For more on git push --follow-tags
, see:
- git push --follow-tags in the online manual
- Stack Overflow: How to push a tag to a remote repository using Git?
npm publish
. Pretty easy!
For the paranoid, use npm pack
and install the resulting tarball locally with
npm install
before publishing.
The basic instructions are in the Submit a new version of an existing formula section of the Homebrew docs.
An example using v1.1.0 (notice that this uses the sha256 sum of the tarball):
$ curl -LOv https://github.com/bats-core/bats-core/archive/v1.1.0.tar.gz
$ openssl sha256 v1.1.0.tar.gz
SHA256(v1.1.0.tar.gz)=855d8b8bed466bc505e61123d12885500ef6fcdb317ace1b668087364717ea82
# Add the --dry-run flag to see the individual steps without executing.
$ brew bump-formula-pr \
--url=https://github.com/bats-core/bats-core/archive/v1.1.0.tar.gz \
--sha256=855d8b8bed466bc505e61123d12885500ef6fcdb317ace1b668087364717ea82
This resulted in Homebrew/homebrew-core#29864, which was automatically merged once the build passed.
An example using v1.1.0 (notice that this uses the sha512 sum of the Zip file):
$ curl -LOv https://github.com/bats-core/bats-core/archive/v1.1.0.zip
$ openssl sha512 v1.1.0.zip
SHA512(v1.1.0.zip)=accd83cfec0025a2be40982b3f9a314c2bbf72f5c85daffa9e9419611904a8d34e376919a5d53e378382e0f3794d2bd781046d810225e2a77812474e427bed9e
After cloning alpinelinux/aports, I used the above information to create: alpinelinux/aports#4696
Note: Currently users must enable the edge
branch of the community
repo
by adding/uncommenting the corresponding entry in /etc/apk/repositories
.
It's worth making a brief announcement like the v1.1.0 announcement via Gitter:
v1.1.0 is now available via Homebrew and npm:
https://github.com/bats-core/bats-core/releases/tag/v1.1.0
It'll eventually be available in Alpine via the edge branch of the community
repo once alpinelinux/aports#4696 gets merged. (Check /etc/apk/repositories to
ensure this repo is enabled.)