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lightspeed / palisade

Licence: MIT License
A release automation tool for GitHub repos

Programming Languages

rust
11053 projects
Nix
1067 projects

palisade

built with nix written in rust

A simple release automation tool for GitHub repos

Palisade (IPA: /pæl əˈseɪd/) is a tool that reads from changelog and version files then uses them to cut releases of software. This tool is intended to be run by CI tools on every commit to master.

Build Instructions

With Nix

If you have Nix installed, you can run the following command to build this software:

$ nix-build

This will automatically create a release build linked to ./result. The binary will be ./result/bin/palisade.

With Cargo

$ cargo build --release

Hacking

If you are using Nix, direnv and Lorri, you can get an exact replica of the required development environment by running direnv allow in the checkout of this project. See this blogpost for more information on how to install Nix if you want to try this workflow out.

If you are not using Nix, you need at least the following dependencies:

  • Rust 1.43 or newer
  • libgit2 (newest if possible)
  • libiconv (should be part of glibc on linux)
  • openssl and its development headers
  • pkg-config

Details on how to do this will be distribution specific. Please consult the documentation of your package manager and operating system to figure out the list of packages you will need.

Tests can be run with cargo test:

$ cargo test

Please be sure any tests relevant to the changes pass and that all changes are tested (when possible).

Raison d'Être

Existing automated release scripts for our GitHub repos have been flaky and have not been able to populate the release notes from the changelog. Palisade aims to automate the process of cutting releases down to pull requesting two files in the repo: A changelog and a version file. Once these files are updated on the master branch, then CI will use this tool to bump the version if it needs to.

The changelog file will need to list version information in a second level header. This will be used as the delimiters to scrape out the matching version information. For example, with a changelog that looks like this:

# 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. Changes to the release notes can then be reviewed alongside the source code of your project.

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. It also allows the software version to be reviewed alongside the source code of your project, exposing something normally hidden in git to your team.

How It Works

When this tool is run with the cut subcommand, the following actions take place:

  • The VERSION file is read and loaded as the desired tag for the repo
  • The CHANGELOG.md file (or the changelog path specified as a flag) is read and the changes for the VERSION 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
  • A GitHub release is created using the changelog fragment and the release name is generated from the VERSION string, which creates a matching git tag

See here for instructions on how to integrate this tool into your CI workflows.

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