stop using weird build scripts to increment your nuget's version, use
versionize!
Automatic versioning and CHANGELOG generation, using conventional commit messages.
how it works:
- when you land commits on your
mainbranch, select the Squash and Merge option (not required). - add a title and body that follows the Conventional Commits Specification.
- when you're ready to release a nuget package:
git checkout main; git pull origin main- run
versionize git push --follow-tags origin maindotnet packdotnet nuget push
versionize does the following:
- bumps the version in your
.csprojfile (based on your commit history) - uses conventional-changelog to update CHANGELOG.md
- commits
.csprojfile and CHANGELOG.md - tags a new release
dotnet tool install --global VersionizeUsage: versionize [command] [options]
Options:
-?|-h|--help Show help information.
-v|--version Show version information.
-w|--workingDir <WORKING_DIRECTORY> Directory containing projects to version
--configDir <CONFIG_DIRECTORY> Directory containing the .versionize configuration file
-d|--dry-run Skip changing versions in projects, changelog generation and git commit
--skip-dirty Skip git dirty check
-r|--release-as <VERSION> Specify the release version manually
--silent Suppress output to console
--skip-commit Don't commit changes to the git repository
--skip-tag Don't tag the release commit
--skip-changelog Don't update the changelog
-i|--ignore-insignificant-commits Don't bump the version if no significant commits (fix, feat or BREAKING)
are found
--exit-insignificant-commits Exits with a non zero exit code if no significant commits (fix, feat or
BREAKING) are found
--commit-suffix Suffix to be added to the end of the release commit message (e.g. [skip ci])
-p|--pre-release Release as pre-release version with given pre release label.
-a|--aggregate-pre-releases Include all pre-release commits in the changelog since the last full version.
Only applies when new version is stable (non pre-release).
--find-release-commit-via-message Use commit message instead of tag to find last release commit.
--tag-only Don't read/write the version from/to project files. Depend on version tags only.
--proj-name Name of a project defined in the configuration file (for monorepos)
--first-parent-only-commits Ignore commits beyond the first parent
-s|--sign Sign the git commit and tag
Commands:
inspect Prints the current version to stdoutEvery commit should be in the form
<type>[optional scope]: <description>
for example
fix(parser): remove colon from type and scope
- fix - will trigger a patch version increment in the next release
- feat - will trigger a minor version increment in the next release
- all other types - you can use any commit type but that commit type will not trigger a version increment in the next release
Breaking changes must contain a line prefixed with BREAKING CHANGE: to allow versionize recognizing a breaking change. Breaking changes can use any commit type.
Example
git commit -m "chore: update dependencies" -m "BREAKING CHANGE: this will likely break the interface"Create a new project with the dotnet cli
mkdir SomeProject
dotnet new classlibEnsure that a <Version> element is contained in file SomeProject.csproj
<Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk">
<PropertyGroup>
<Version>1.0.0</Version>
</PropertyGroup>
</Project>Now let's start committing and releasing
git init
...make some changes to "Class1.cs"
git add *
git commit -a -m "chore: initial commit"
versionizeWill add a CHANGELOG.md, add git tags and commit everything. Note that the version in SomeProject.csproj will not change since this is your first release with versionize.
...make some changes to "Class1.cs"
git commit -a -m "fix: something went wrong we need a bugfix release"
versionizeWill update CHANGELOG.md, add git tags and commit everything. Note that the version in SomeProject.csproj is now 1.0.1.
...make some changes to "Class1.cs"
git commit -a -m "feat: something really awesome coming in the next release"
versionizeWill update CHANGELOG.md, add git tags and commit everything. Note that the version in SomeProject.csproj is now 1.1.0.
...make some changes to "Class1.cs"
git commit -a -m "feat: a really cool new feature" -m "BREAKING CHANGE: the API will break. sorry"
versionizeWill update CHANGELOG.md, add git tags and commit everything. Note that the version in SomeProject.csproj is now 2.0.0 since
versionize detected a breaking change since the commit note BREAKING CHANGE was used above.
Versionize supports creating pre-release versions by using the --pre-release flag with a pre-release label, for example alpha.
The following workflow illustrates how pre-release workflows with versionize work.
> git commit -a -m "chore: initial commit"
> versionize
// Generates version v1.0.0
> git commit -a -m "feat: some feature"
> versionize --pre-release alpha
// Generates version v1.1.0-alpha.0
> git commit -a -m "feat: some additional feature"
> versionize --pre-release alpha
// Generates version v1.1.0-alpha.1
> git commit -a -m "feat: some breaking feature" -m "BREAKING CHANGE: This is a breaking change"
> versionize --pre-release alpha
// Generates version v2.0.0-alpha.0
> versionize
// Generates version v2.0.0By default, each commit message only appears in the release it was introduced. When using the pre-release feature this can result in a fragmented changelog. For example, when promoting to a full release the user has to browse through all the pre-release sections to see what's included.
v1.0.0-alpha.0
- featA
v1.0.0-alpha.1
- featB
v1.0.0
So to get around that you can pass the --aggregate-pre-releases flag
versionize --pre-release alpha
versionize --pre-release alpha
versionize --aggregate-pre-releases
to get output like the following
v1.0.0-alpha.0
- featA
v1.0.0-alpha.1
- featB
v1.0.0
- featA
- featB
This also works together with the pre-release option
versionize --pre-release alpha --aggregate-pre-releases
Some developers may prefer not to tag pre-releases. Here's an example of how to achieve that:
versionize --pre-release alpha --skip-tag
versionize --pre-release alpha --skip-tag --find-release-commit-via-message
...
find-release-commit-via-message is necessary because Versionize uses git tags by default to determine the current version. Without a git tag, the way we determine which commits get included in the changelog is by searching for the last commit message that starts with "chore(release):".
You can configure versionize either by creating a .versionize JSON file the working directory.
Any of the command line parameters accepted by versionize can be provided via configuration file leaving out any -. For example skip-dirty can be provided as skipDirty in the configuration file.
The .versionize configuration file is deserialized into a FileConfig.cs object behind the scenes.
Changelog customization can only be done via a .versionize file. The following is an example configuration:
{
"changelog": {
"header": "My Changelog",
"includeAllCommits": true,
"sections": [
{
"type": "feat",
"section": "✨ Features",
"hidden": false
},
{
"type": "fix",
"section": "🐛 Bug Fixes",
"hidden": true
},
{
"type": "perf",
"section": "🚀 Performance",
"hidden": false
}
]
}
}Because IncludeAllCommits is true and the fix section is hidden, fix commits will appear in the a section titled "Other".
Want to do a PR and not care about setting up your development environment?
To get prettier test outputs run dotnet test with prettier test logger
dotnet test --logger prettier- [] Signed release commits
- [] Command to print out changelog entry since last release (as opposed to writing to a file)
- [] Tag prefix config (for non mono-repos)
- [] Add support for bumping a Unity project version
- [] Improve documentation