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🔖 Cut 1.3.9 and add changelog #83

🔖 Cut 1.3.9 and add changelog

🔖 Cut 1.3.9 and add changelog #83

Workflow file for this run

name: CI
# Controls when the action will run. Triggers the workflow on push or pull request
# events but only for the master branch
on: [push, pull_request]
# A workflow run is made up of one or more jobs that can run sequentially or in parallel
jobs:
test:
# The type of runner that the job will run on
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
# Steps represent a sequence of tasks that will be executed as part of the job
steps:
# Checks-out your repository under $GITHUB_WORKSPACE, so your job can access it
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Setup Node.js environment
uses: actions/setup-node@v3
with:
node-version: lts/*
# Re-use node_modules between runs until package-lock.json changes.
- name: Cache node_modules
id: internal-cache-node_modules
uses: actions/cache@v3
with:
path: node_modules
key: internal-node_modules-ubuntu-latest.x-${{ hashFiles('package-lock.json') }}
# Re-use ~/.elm between runs until elm.json, elm-tooling.json or
# review/elm.json changes. The Elm compiler saves downloaded Elm packages
# to ~/.elm, and elm-tooling saves downloaded tool executables there.
- name: Cache ~/.elm
uses: actions/cache@v3
with:
path: ~/.elm
key: elm-${{ hashFiles('elm.json', 'elm-tooling.json', 'review/elm.json') }}
- name: Install npm dependencies
if: steps.cache-node_modules.outputs.cache-hit != 'true'
env:
# If you have a `"postinstall": "elm-tooling install"` script in your
# package.json, this turns it into a no-op. We’ll run it in the next
# step because of the caching. If elm-tooling.json changes but
# package-lock.json does not, the postinstall script needs running
# but this step won’t.
NO_ELM_TOOLING_INSTALL: 1
run: npm ci
# Install tools from elm-tooling.json, unless we restored them from
# cache. package-lock.json and elm-tooling.json can change independently,
# so we need to install separately based on what was restored from cache.
# This is run even if we restored ~/.elm from cache to be 100% sure
# node_modules/.bin/ contains links to all your tools. `elm-tooling
# install` runs very fast when there’s nothing new to download so
# skipping the step doesn’t save much time.
- name: elm-tooling install
run: npx --no-install elm-tooling install
- name: Run tests
run: npm test
publish:
needs: [test] # make sure all your other jobs succeed before trying to publish
# The type of runner that the job will run on
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
# Steps represent a sequence of tasks that will be executed as part of the job
steps:
# Checks-out your repository under $GITHUB_WORKSPACE, so your job can access it
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Setup Node.js environment
uses: actions/setup-node@v3
with:
node-version: lts/*
# Re-use node_modules between runs until package-lock.json changes.
- name: Cache node_modules
id: internal-cache-node_modules
uses: actions/cache@v3
with:
path: node_modules
key: internal-node_modules-ubuntu-latest.x-${{ hashFiles('package-lock.json') }}
# Re-use ~/.elm between runs until elm.json, elm-tooling.json or
# review/elm.json changes. The Elm compiler saves downloaded Elm packages
# to ~/.elm, and elm-tooling saves downloaded tool executables there.
- name: Cache ~/.elm
uses: actions/cache@v3
with:
path: ~/.elm
key: elm-${{ hashFiles('elm.json', 'elm-tooling.json', 'review/elm.json') }}
- name: Install npm dependencies
if: steps.cache-node_modules.outputs.cache-hit != 'true'
env:
# If you have a `"postinstall": "elm-tooling install"` script in your
# package.json, this turns it into a no-op. We’ll run it in the next
# step because of the caching. If elm-tooling.json changes but
# package-lock.json does not, the postinstall script needs running
# but this step won’t.
NO_ELM_TOOLING_INSTALL: 1
run: npm ci
# Install tools from elm-tooling.json, unless we restored them from
# cache. package-lock.json and elm-tooling.json can change independently,
# so we need to install separately based on what was restored from cache.
# This is run even if we restored ~/.elm from cache to be 100% sure
# node_modules/.bin/ contains links to all your tools. `elm-tooling
# install` runs very fast when there’s nothing new to download so
# skipping the step doesn’t save much time.
- name: elm-tooling install
run: npx --no-install elm-tooling install
- name: Check if package needs to be published
uses: dillonkearns/elm-publish-action@v1
id: publish
with:
dry-run: true
path-to-elm: ./node_modules/.bin/elm
- name: Check that examples are up to date
if: steps.publish.outputs.is-publishable == 'true'
run: node elm-review-package-tests/check-examples-were-updated.js
# Runs a single command using the runners shell
- name: Elm Publish
if: steps.publish.outputs.is-publishable == 'true'
uses: dillonkearns/elm-publish-action@v1
with:
# Token provided by GitHub
github-token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
path-to-elm: ./node_modules/.bin/elm