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sbt-release's Introduction

SBT-RELEASE

This sbt plugin provides a customizable release process that you can add to your project.

Notice: This README contains information for the latest release. Please refer to the documents for a specific version by looking up the respective tag.

Requirements

  • sbt >= 0.11.1 for sbt-release 0.4; sbt 0.11.3 or 0.12.0-Beta2 for sbt-release 0.5-SNAPSHOT
  • The version of the project should follow the semantic versioning scheme on semver.org with the following additions:
    • The minor and bugfix part of the version are optional.
    • The appendix after the bugfix part must be alphanumeric ([0-9a-zA-Z]) but may also contain dash characters -.
    • These are all valid version numbers:
      • 1.2.3
      • 1.2.3-SNAPSHOT
      • 1.2beta1
      • 1.2
      • 1
      • 1-BETA17
  • A publish repository configured. (Required only for the default release process. See further below for release process customizations.)
  • git [optional]

Usage

Adding the plugin dependency

Add the following lines to ./project/build.sbt. See the section Using Plugins in the xsbt wiki for more information.

resolvers += Resolver.url("artifactory", url("http://scalasbt.artifactoryonline.com/scalasbt/sbt-plugin-snapshots"))(Resolver.ivyStylePatterns)

addSbtPlugin("com.github.gseitz" % "sbt-release" % "0.5-SNAPSHOT")

Including sbt-release settings

Important: The settings releaseSettings need to be mixed into every sub-projects settings. This is usually achieved by extracting common settings into a val standardSettings: Seq[Setting[_]] which is then included in all sub-projects.

Setting/task keys are defined in sbtrelease.ReleasePlugin.ReleaseKeys.

build.sbt (simple build definition)

seq(releaseSettings: _*)

build.scala (full build definition)

import sbtrelease.ReleasePlugin._

object MyBuild extends Build {
  lazy val MyProject(
    id = "myproject",
    base = file("."),
    settings = Defaults.defaultSettings ++ releaseSettings ++ Seq( /* custom settings here */ )
  )
}

version.sbt

Since the build definition is actual Scala code, it's not as straight forward to change something in the middle of it as it is with an XML definition.

For this reason, sbt-release won't ever touch your build definition files, but instead writes the new release or development version to a file called version.sbt in the root directory of the project.

Release Process

The default release process consists of the following tasks:

  1. Check that the working directory is a git repository and the repository has no outstanding changes. Also prints the hash of the last commit to the console.
  2. If there are any snapshot dependencies, ask the user whether to continue or not (default: no).
  3. Ask the user for the release version and the next development version. Sensible defaults are provided.
  4. Run test:test, if any test fails, the release process is aborted.
  5. Write version in ThisBuild := "$releaseVersion" to the file version.sbt and also apply this setting to the current build state.
  6. Commit the changes in version.sbt.
  7. Tag the previous commit with v$version (eg. v1.2, v1.2.3).
  8. Run publish.
  9. Write version in ThisBuild := "nextVersion" to the file version.sbt and also apply this setting to the current build state.
  10. Commit the changes in version.sbt.

In case of a failure of a task, the release process is aborted.

Non-interactive release

You can run a non-interactive release by providing the argument with-defaults (tab completion works) to the release command. For all interactions, the following default value will be chosen:

  • Continue with snapshots dependencies: no
  • Release Version: current version without the qualifier (eg. 1.2-SNAPSHOT -> 1.2)
  • Next Version: increase the minor version segment of the current version and set the qualifier to '-SNAPSHOT' (eg. 1.2.1-SNAPSHOT -> 1.3.0-SNAPSHOT)

Skipping tests

For that emergency release at 2am on a Sunday, you can optionally avoid running any tests by providing the skip-tests argument to the release command.

Custom versioning

sbt-release comes with two settings for deriving the release version and the next development version from a given version. These derived versions are used for the suggestions/defaults in the prompt and for non-interactive releases.

Let's take a look at the types:

val releaseVersion : SettingKey[String => String]
val nextVersion    : SettingKey[String => String]

The default settings make use of the helper class Version that ships with sbt-release.

// strip the qualifier off the input version, eg. 1.2.1-SNAPSHOT -> 1.2.1
releaseVersion := { ver => Version(ver).map(_.withoutQualifier.string).getOrElse(versionFormatError) }

// bump the minor version and append '-SNAPSHOT', eg. 1.2.1 -> 1.3.0-SNAPSHOT
nextVersion    := { ver => Version(ver).map(_.bumpMinor.asSnapshot.string).getOrElse(versionFormatError) }

If you want to customize the versioning, keep the following in mind:

  • releaseVersion

    • input: the current development version
    • output: the release version
  • nextVersion

    • input: the release version (either automatically 'chosen' in a non-interactive build or from user input)
    • output: the next development version

Not all releases are created equal - Customizing the release process

The release process can be customized to the project's needs.

  • Not using Git? Then strip it out.
  • Want to check for the existance of release notes at the start and then publish it with posterous-sbt at the end? Just add it.

The release process is defined by State transformation functions (State => State), for which sbt-release defines the this case class:

case class ReleaseStep(action: State => State, check: State => State = identity)

The function action is used to perform the actual release step. Additionally, each release step can provide a check function that is run at the beginning of the release and can be used to prevent the release from running because of an unsatisified invariant (i.e. the release step for publishing artifacts checks that publishTo is properly set up).

The sequence of ReleaseSteps that make up the release process is stored in the setting releaseProcess: SettingKey[Seq[ReleaseStep]].

The state transformations functions used in sbt-release are the same as the action/body part of a no-argument command. You can read more about building commands in the sbt wiki.

Release Steps

There are basically 2 ways to creating a new ReleaseStep:

Defining your own release steps

You can define your own state tansformation functions, just like sbt-release does, for example:

val checkOrganization: ReleaseStep(action = st => {
  // extract the build state
  val extracted = Project.extract(st)
  // retrieve the value of the organization SettingKey
  val org = extracted.get(Keys.organization)
  
  if (org.startsWith("com.acme")
    sys.error("Hey, no need to release a toy project!")
  
  st
})

We will later see how to let this release step participate in the release process.

Reusing already defined tasks

Sometimes you just want to run an already existing task. This is especially useful if the task raises an error in case something went wrong and therefore interrupts the release process.

sbt-release comes with a convenience function

releaseTask[T](task: TaskKey[T]): ReleaseStep

that takes any scoped task and wraps it in a state transformation function, executing the task when an instance of State is applied to the function.

I highly recommend to make yourself familiar with the State API before you continue your journey to a fully customized release process.

Can we finally customize that release process, please?

Yes, and as a start, let's take a look at the default definition of releaseProcess:

The default release process

import sbtrelease._
import ReleaseStateTransformations._

// ...

releaseProcess := Seq[ReleaseStep](
  checkSnapshotDependencies,              // : ReleaseStep
  inquireVersions,                        // : ReleaseStep
  runTest,                                // : ReleaseStep
  setReleaseVersion,                      // : ReleaseStep
  commitReleaseVersion,                   // : ReleaseStep, performs the initial git checks
  tagRelease,                             // : ReleaseStep
  publishArtifacts,                       // : ReleaseStep, checks whether `publishTo` is properly set up
  setNextVersion,                         // : ReleaseStep
  commitNextVersion,                      // : ReleaseStep
  pushChanges                             // : ReleaseStep, also checks that an upstream branch is properly configured
)

The names of the individual steps of the release process are pretty much self-describing. Notice how we can just reuse the publish task by utilizing the releaseTask helper function, but keep in mind that it needs to be properly scoped (more info on scoping and settings).

No Git, and no toy projects!

Let's modify the previous release process and remove the Git related steps, who uses that anyway.

import sbtrelease._
import ReleaseStateTransformations._

// ...

releaseProcess := Seq[ReleaseStep](
  checkOrganization,                // Look Ma', my own release step!
  checkSnapshotDependencies,
  inquireVersions,
  runTest,
  setReleaseVersion,
  publishArtifacts,
  setNextVersion,
  )
}

Overall, the process stayed pretty much the same:

  • The Git related steps were left out.
  • Our checkOrganization task was added in the beginning, just to be sure this is a serious project.

Release notes anyone?

Now let's also add steps for posterous-sbt:

import posterous.Publish._
import sbtrelease._

// ...

val publishReleaseNotes = (ref: ProjectRef) => ReleaseStep(
  check  = releaseTask(check in Posterous in ref,   // upfront check
  action = releaseTask(publish in Posterous in ref) // publish release notes
)

// ...

releaseProcess <<= thisProjectRef apply { ref =>
  import ReleaseStateTransformations._
  Seq[ReleaseStep](
    checkOrganization,
    checkSnapshotDependencies,
    inquireVersions,
    runTest,
    setReleaseVersion,
    publishArtifacts,
    publishReleaseNotes(ref) // we need to forward `thisProjectRef` for proper scoping of the underlying tasks
    setNextVersion,
  )
}

The check part of the release step is run at the start, to make sure we have everything set up to post the release notes later on. After publishing the actual build artifacts, we also publish the release notes.

Credits

Thank you, Jason and Mark, for your feedback and ideas.

sbt-release's People

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