Seamlessly shadows the behaviour of npm version
.
$ npm install react-native-version --save-dev
# or
$ yarn add react-native-version --dev
Hook into the "version" or "postversion" npm script in your app's package.json:
{
"name": "AwesomeProject",
"version": "0.0.1",
"scripts": {
"start": "node node_modules/react-native/local-cli/cli.js start",
+ "postversion": "react-native-version"
}
}
Before you publish a new build of your app, run npm version <newversion>
.
react-native-version will then update your android/
and ios/
code. Depending on the script and options you choose, it can also automatically amend the version bump commit and update the Git tag created by npm version
. This method should be useful in most cases. If you need more control, take a look at the CLI and options below.
$ npm install -g react-native-version
# or
$ yarn global add react-native-version
$ cd AwesomeProject/
$ npm version patch
$ react-native-version
-V, --version output the version number
-a, --amend Amend the previous commit. This is done automatically when react-native-version is run from the "version" or "postversion" npm script. Use "--never-amend" if you never want to amend. Also, if the previous commit is a valid npm-version commit, react-native-version will update the Git tag pointing to this commit.
--skip-tag For use with "--amend", if you don't want to update Git tags. Use this option if you have git-tag-version set to false in your npm config or you use "--no-git-tag-version" during npm-version.
-A, --never-amend Never amend the previous commit.
-b, --increment-build Only increment build number.
-B, --never-increment-build Never increment build number.
-d, --android [path] Path to your "android/app/build.gradle" file. (default: "android/app/build.gradle")
-i, --ios [path] Path to your "ios/" folder. (default: "ios")
-L, --legacy Version iOS using agvtool (macOS only). Requires Xcode Command Line Tools.
-q, --quiet Be quiet, only report errors.
-r, --reset-build Reset build number back to "1" (iOS only). Unlike Android's "versionCode", iOS doesn't require you to bump the "CFBundleVersion", as long as "CFBundleShortVersionString" changes. To make it consistent across platforms, react-native-version bumps both by default. You can use this option if you prefer to keep the build number value at "1" after every version change. If you then need to push another build under the same version, you can use "-bt ios" to increment.
-s, --set-build <number> Set a build number. WARNING: Watch out when setting high values. This option follows Android's app versioning specifics - the value has to be an integer and cannot be greater than 2100000000. You cannot decrement this value after publishing to Google Play! More info at: https://developer.android.com/studio/publish/versioning.html#appversioning
--generate-build Generate build number from the package version number. (e.g. build number for version 1.22.3 will be 1022003)
-t, --target <platforms> Only version specified platforms, e.g. "--target android,ios".
-h, --help output usage information
You can apply these options to the "version" or "postversion" script too. If for example you want to commit the changes made by RNV yourself, add the "--never-amend" option:
{
"scripts": {
- "postversion": "react-native-version"
+ "postversion": "react-native-version --never-amend"
}
}
The default behaviour is to version all React Native platforms. You can target specific platforms by passing a comma-separated list to the "--target" option, or by using the RNV
environment variable:
$ RNV=android,ios npm version patch
# or
$ RNV=android,ios react-native-version
When using the CLI, you can even combine both methods and make your teammates rage 😈
$ RNV=android react-native-version --target ios
🙊
When updating Git tags, RNV uses the version commit message to find the correct Git tag. If you're running npm version
with the -m
or --message
option, make sure your message includes %s
, which will be replaced with the resulting version number. For example:
$ npm version patch -m "Upgrade to %s for reasons"
If you're using yarn, you can configure the commit message generated by yarn version
though yarn config set version-git-message
- see the docs.
The behavior can be also adjusted by .npmrc
and .yarnrc
config files.
import { version } from "react-native-version";
async function doSomething() {
const versionResult = await version({
amend: true,
// ...
});
}
// or
version({
amend: true,
// ...
})
.then((commitHash) => {
console.log(commitHash);
})
.catch((err) => {
console.error(err);
});
- version(program, projectPath) ⇒
Promise.<(string|Error)>
Versions your app
- Promise
Custom type definition for Promises
Versions your app
Kind: global function
Returns: Promise.<(string|Error)>
- A promise which resolves with the last commit hash
Param | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
program | Object |
commander/CLI-style options, camelCased |
projectPath | string |
Path to your React Native project |
Custom type definition for Promises
Kind: global typedef
Properties
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
result | * |
See the implementing function for the resolve type and description |
result | Error |
Rejection error object |
When running react-native link
on Windows, native modules will be linked in your Xcode project with paths that include backslashes (\
) instead of forward slashes (/
). This will break pbxproj-dom
, which we rely on to parse Xcode projects. To fix this issue, convert any LIBRARY_SEARCH_PATHS
and HEADER_SEARCH_PATHS
as shown in this comment. This step could be automated with a library like normalize-path or unixify.