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GitHub Action

Homebrew Releaser

v2.0.0 Latest version

Homebrew Releaser

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Homebrew Releaser

Release scripts, binaries, and executables directly to Homebrew via GitHub Actions

Installation

Copy and paste the following snippet into your .yml file.

              

- name: Homebrew Releaser

uses: Justintime50/[email protected]

Learn more about this action in Justintime50/homebrew-releaser

Choose a version

Homebrew Releaser

Release scripts, binaries, and executables directly to Homebrew via GitHub Actions.

Build Coverage Status Version Licence

Showcase

Homebrew Releaser allows you to release scripts, binaries, and executables directly to a personal Homebrew tap via a GitHub Action. I love what the team at GoReleaser did and wanted to replicate that on a smaller and simpler scale for items like shell scripts or other non-go binaries I wanted to distribute.

When you cut a new release when using this GitHub Action, it will clone your repo and clone your Homebrew tap on CI, build the new formula Ruby file, create a checksum.txt file and upload it to your release containing the checksum(s) of your scripts/binaries, and then push the new formula to your Homebrew Tap. If you do not specify a target to use, the workflow will use the autogenerated tar archive from GitHub when you created a release, otherwise you can tell Homebrew Releaser which OS and arch pairs you have binaries for. See the accompanying target details below for the URL patterns to follow.

Usage

Notes:

  • Shell scripts distributed via Homebrew Releaser must be executable and contain a proper shebang to work.
  • Homebrew Releaser will always use the latest release of a GitHub project. Git release tags must follow semantic versioning for Homebrew to properly infer the installation instructions (eg: v1.2.0 or 0.3.0, etc).
  • The Homebrew formula filename will match the github repo name.
  • It is highly recommended to enable debug mode and skip the commit on the first run through to ensure you have configured your workflow correctly and that the generated formula looks the way you want.
  • Homebrew Releaser is not compatible with monorepos.
  • Every precaution will be made to ensure that major releases of this action remain compatible (every 0.x release of this action rebuilds and packages the v1 action as a convenience to users). If you value stability over "getting new features for free", it's highly recommended to pin a specific version or commit hash of this action when using it (eg: v0.16.0)

GitHub Actions YAML

After you release a project on GitHub, Homebrew Releaser can publish that release to a personal Homebrew tap by updating the project description, version, tar archive url, license, checksum, installation and testing command, and any other required info so you don't have to. You can check the Homebrew documentation on taps and the formula cookbook for more details on setting up a Homebrew formula or tap.

# .github/workflows/release.yml
# Start Homebrew Releaser when a new GitHub release is created
on:
  release:
    types: [published]

jobs:
  homebrew-releaser:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    name: homebrew-releaser
    steps:
      - name: Release project to Homebrew tap
        uses: Justintime50/homebrew-releaser@v2
        with:
          # The name of the homebrew tap to publish your formula to as it appears on GitHub.
          # Required - strings
          homebrew_owner: Justintime50
          homebrew_tap: homebrew-formulas

          # The name of the folder in your homebrew tap where formula will be committed to.
          # Default is shown - string
          formula_folder: Formula

          # The Personal Access Token (saved as a repo secret) that has `repo` permissions for the repo running the action AND Homebrew tap you want to release to.
          # Required - string
          github_token: ${{ secrets.PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN }}

          # Git author info used to commit to the homebrew tap.
          # Defaults are shown - strings
          commit_owner: homebrew-releaser
          commit_email: [email protected]

          # Install command for your formula.
          # Required - string
          install: 'bin.install "src/my-script.sh" => "my-script"'

          # Test command for your formula, used for `brew test`.
          # Optional - string
          test: 'assert_match("my script output", shell_output("my-script-command"))'

          # Custom dependencies in case other formulas are needed to build the current one.
          # Optional - multiline string
          depends_on: |
            "bash" => :build
            "gcc"

          # Allows you to set a custom download strategy.
          # NOTE: You'll need to implement the strategy and add it to your tap repository.
          # Example: https://docs.brew.sh/Formula-Cookbook#specifying-the-download-strategy-explicitly
          # Optional - string
          download_strategy: CurlDownloadStrategy

          # Allows you to add a custom `require_relative` at the top of the formula template.
          # Optional - string
          custom_require: custom_download_strategy

          # Allows you to add custom includes inside the formula class, before dependencies and install blocks.
          # Optional - string
          formula_includes: 'include Language::Python::Virtualenv'

          # Override the automatically detected version of a formula with an explicit value.
          # NOTE: This option should only be used if Homebrew cannot automatically detect the version when generating
          # the Homebrew formula. Including this when not necessary could lead to uninstallable formula that may 
          # not pass `brew audit` due to mismatched or redundant version strings.
          # Optional - string
          version: '1.2.0'

          # Adds URL and checksum targets for different OS and architecture pairs. Using this option assumes 
          # a tar archive exists on your GitHub repo with the following URL pattern (this cannot be customized):
          # https://github.com/{GITHUB_OWNER}/{REPO_NAME}/releases/download/{TAG}/{REPO_NAME}-{VERSION}-{OPERATING_SYSTEM}-{ARCHITECTURE}.tar.gz'
          # Darwin AMD pre-existing path example: https://github.com/justintime50/myrepo/releases/download/v1.2.0/myrepo-1.2.0-darwin-amd64.tar.gz
          # Linux ARM pre-existing path example: https://github.com/justintime50/myrepo/releases/download/v1.2.0/myrepo-1.2.0-linux-arm64.tar.gz
          # Optional - booleans
          target_darwin_amd64: true
          target_darwin_arm64: false
          target_linux_amd64: true
          target_linux_arm64: false

          # Update your homebrew tap's README with a table of all projects in the tap.
          # This is done by pulling the information from all your formula.rb files - eg:
          #
          # | Project                                    | Description  | Install                  |
          # | ------------------------------------------ | ------------ | ------------------------ |
          # | [formula_1](https://github.com/user/repo1) | helpful text | `brew install formula_1` |
          # | [formula_2](https://github.com/user/repo2) | helpful text | `brew install formula_2` |
          # | [formula_3](https://github.com/user/repo3) | helpful text | `brew install formula_3` |
          #
          # Place the following in your README or wrap your project's table in these comment tags:
          # <!-- project_table_start -->
          # TABLE HERE
          # <!-- project_table_end -->
          #
          # Finally, mark `update_readme_table` as `true` in your GitHub Action config and we'll do the work of building a custom table for you.
          # Default is shown - boolean
          update_readme_table: false

          # Skips committing the generated formula to a homebrew tap (useful to verify results on a first run).
          # Default is shown - boolean
          skip_commit: false

          # Logs debugging info to console.
          # Default is shown - boolean
          debug: false

Development

# Get a comprehensive list of development tools
just --list

Run Manually via Docker

Homebrew Releaser does not clean up artifacts after completing since the temporary Docker image on GitHub Actions will be discarded anyway.

Note: All environment variables from above must be prepended with INPUT_ for the local Docker image (eg: INPUT_SKIP_COMMIT=true).

docker compose up -d --build