This change allows detecting that the releaser-pleaser PR is well merged.
As of today, it fails with "ERR failed to create pending releases: pull request is missing the merge commit".
Each run of releaser-pleaser acts on the same global state in the
forge. Therefore, parallel runs are unnecessary.
This commit also communicates to the GitHub and GitLab CI pipelines that
the releaser-pleaser jobs can be cancelled as early as possible.
- On GitHub Actions this can be guaranteed through the workflow
settings. These settings are copied into each repository that uses
releaser-pleaser, so users need to update this manually. I will add a
note to the release notes for this.
- On GitLab CI/CD this requires the user to configure a project level setting to
"auto-cancel redundant pipelines". We will not recommend user to set
this, as it is quite invasive and can break their regular CI pipelines.
If the release PR description was changed by a human after
releaser-pleaser fetched the PR for the first time, releaser-pleaser
would revert the users changes accidentally.
This commit introduces an additional check right before updating the
pull request description, to make sure we do not accidentally loose user
changes. There is still the potential for a conflict in between us
checking the description is the same, and updating the description. The
time window for this should be reduced from multiple seconds-minutes to
a few hundred milliseconds at most.
In case a conflict is detected, we retry the whole process up to 2
times, to make sure that the users changes are reflected as soon as
possible. This is especially important on GitLab CI/CD because a changed
pull (merge) request description does not cause another job to run.
With this change, the branch is still pushed, as the user is not
expected to make any changes to it.
Fixes#151
By listening on SIGINT and SIGTERM signals we can stop executing as soon
as reasonably possible. This helps to avoid uncessary work and stop the
job earlier.
Right now we have no manual checks for cancelled contexts, and rely on
the http client to check for it while making requests.
The whole check to avoid pushes when they were only rebases was broken
and compared the wrong things. Unfortunately this worked for nearly all
unit tests, except for one were I used the wrong assertion.
This fixed the check by comparing the right things and inverting the
assertion in the unit test to make sure things do not break again in the
future.
Bug was introduced in #114.
Recent changes in v0.5.1 introduced a bug that caused releaser-pleaser
to crash when running in a repository that contained no tags at all.
This fixes the issue by checking if there is a tag before using it in
the logger.
Bug was introduced in #174.
Right now releaser-pleaser pushes the branch even if it is only for a "rebase",
this wastes CI resources. Instead, it should only push when there are changes
to the files it owns.
- **Old**: Push when there is a diff origin/release-pr..release-pr
- **New**: Push when the these two diffs are not the same:
origin/main..release-pr
$(git merge-base origin/main origin/release-pr)..release-pr
Closes#92
Previously all commits were authored and committed by
releaser-pleaser <>
This looked weird when looking at the commit. We now check with the
Forge API for details on the currently authenticated user, and use that
name and email as the commit author. The commit committer stays the same
for now.
In GitHub, the default `$GITHUB_TOKEN` does not allow access to the
required endpoint, so for github the user `github-actions[bot]
<41898282+github-actions[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>` is hardcoded
when the request fails.
If two pre-releases were cut in a row, the second pre-release version
would only consider the semantic changes since the previous pre-release,
but base its new version of the latest tag.
Example:
- stable tag: `1.2.0`
- latest tag: `1.3.0-rc.1`
- 1 commit since with `fix:` tag
The resulting releaser-pleaser tag would be: `1.2.1-rc.2`. It should be
`1.3.0-rc.2` instead.
This is now fixed by considering different commit ranges for versioning
and changelog.
For a stable version we want the list of changes since the stable tag.
For a prerelease version we want the list of changes since the latest
tag. To avoid repeating the same features over and over in a series of
multiple pre-releases.
This behaviour already existed and worked.
For a stable version, we want to consider all changes since the stable
tag.
For a prerelease version, we also want to consider all changes since the
stable tag. This was broken and only used the changes since the latest
tag.