Crates.io | changesets |
lib.rs | changesets |
version | 0.3.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2023-06-13 00:14:49.339669 |
updated_at | 2024-06-19 18:46:25.814613 |
description | A library for parsing and creating changeset files |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/knope-dev/changesets |
max_upload_size | |
id | 888566 |
size | 53,403 |
A Rust crate implementing Changesets. If you want a CLI which supports this format, check out Knope.
This crate programmatically works with changesets, and only concerns itself with the changeset formats and conventions. It specifically does not parse Markdown, bodies of changes are considered plain text.
Examples are not copy/pasted here, because it's hard to test them. So instead, here are links to common tasks:
Releasing a project requires two things at a minimum:
The manual way to do this is to review all the changes since the last release, write a changelog, and decide on a new version. However, the longer you go between making the change (e.g., merging a pull request) and releasing the change, the more likely you are to forget something. This is especially true if you have a lot of changes, or if you have a lot of projects.
Changesets are a way of tracking changes as they happen, then bundling them up into a release. For each change you create a Markdown file containing which packages the change effects, how it effects them (in semver terms, and a Markdown summary of that change. For example, you might merge a PR which has these two change files:
.changeset/new_feature_to_fix_bug.md
---
changesets: minor
knope: patch
---
Added a feature to `changesets` to fix a bug in `knope`.
.changeset/new_feature_for_knope.md
---
knope: minor
---
This is a feature for Knope in the same PR
When you release, the knope
package would contain both summaries in its changelog (and bump the version based on the highest change type), and the changesets
package would contain only the first summary in its changelog.
This works very similarly to conventional commits, but does not rely on Git. You can use this together with conventional commits using a tool like Knope.
A single Markdown file (usually in the .changeset
directory) describing a change to one or more packages. Note that this matches the original definition of changesets. A change contains a summary (in Markdown), a list of packages affected, and the "change type" for each package. The file must be in a very strict format.
The Markdown description of a change. This is the body of the change file. It should be included in the generated changelog.
A string describing which type of change this is. If it is one of patch
, minor
, or major
, the version will be bumped accordingly. All other types of changes are equivalent to patch
for versioning, but may have a different effect in the generation of the changelog.
A releasable unit of code. Examples include a Rust crate, a JavaScript package, a Go module. A change can affect multiple packages.
A set of changes which will be released together. Notably, this differs from the original definition of changesets, which is does not have a term for the bundle of multiple changes. A changeset may affect any number of packages.
The part of a changeset that applies to a single package and determines how that package is released.
Change files are Markdown files whose names must end with .md
. The content of the file must be as follows:
---
(three dashes) on its own line.package: change type
pairs where package
defines a package that this change impacts and change type
is a change type. One pair per line. The first :
is used to determine the separation between package and change type, so the package name may not contain a :
.---
(three dashes) on its own line.major
, minor
, patch
, and none
). This has only the first three, and allows for custom change types (for more flexibility when building changelogs). There is no way to specify that a change does not impact the version, since releasing a package without increasing the version is typically not supported..changeset
folder). This crate defines a "changeset" as the collection of change files in a directory (e.g., .changeset
is a changeset). A single change file is called a "change".If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions, please create a discussion (after checking for an existing one).