The ineptly named tool which may one day supercede the older build tools.
Enable DEV_MODE by adding DEV_MODE=1 to a .env file. This will prevent pushing to github.
Do not perform a release on a directory if you previously used DEV_MODE on that directory because the steps will be out of order. Instead, delete the directory that had DEV_MODE run on it and start the entire release again with DEV_MODE disabled.
The .env file needs to be in the /cow directory, not the releases directory. E.g. if your cow directory is in ~/Releases/cow, then create the .env file as ~/Releases/cow/.env
Requires Docker.
You do not need to know how Docker works, but you need to have it installed and running.
For production purposes Cow should be run via the Docker-based scripts included in the ./docker/bin
folder, rather than via direct invocation on your machine. That ensures use of consistent versions of all 3rd party libraries and tools and is the only supported installation option.
Tested on Linux
and macOS
, but should work on Windows too (with either Cygwin
or WSL
).
When it's installed, to run Cow launch ./docker/bin/run
script.
That will automatically download the latest released version of Cow docker image and launch it
transparently in your terminal.
When publishing a release, use the ./docker/bin/release
script. This is similar to run
, but runs an SSH-Agent and performs some extra checks.
At the time of writing this readme (2020-02-03) you will need a GITHUB_TOKEN (scopes: repo
and read:packages
).
Then you need to configure composer
of your Cow distribution by running
./docker/bin/composer config -g github-oauth.github.com TOKEN
For more details on these and other available scripts, see docker/README.md.
If you want to run Cow globally, you can create a symlink to docker/bin/release
in a folder that is included in your $PATH
.
Here's an example (feel free to reuse any of your existing folders from yor $PATH)
mkdir -p ~/.local/bin; # ensure existing ~/.local/bin
ln -s ./docker/bin/release ~/.local/bin/cow # create symlink to the launcher and name it cow
echo 'export PATH=$PATH:~/.local/bin' >> ~/.bashrc # add ~/.local/bin to the $PATH
After you reload your session (e.g. reopen the terminal) you may launch cow
from anywhere on your system:
cd ./my-project;
cow moo
To run Cow without Docker, reference the Dockerfile
for system requirements.
- When publishing to GitHub make sure you have
ssh-agent
running and your SSH keys loaded (runssh-add
)
Cow is a collection of different tools (steps) grouped by top level commands. It is helpful to think about not only the commands available but each of the steps each command contains.
It is normally recommended that you run with -vvv
verbose flag so that errors can be viewed during release.
For example, this is what I would run to release 3.1.14-rc1
.
cow release 3.1.14-rc1 -vvv
And once I've checked that all is fine, and am 100% sure that this code is ready to go.
cow release:publish 3.1.14-rc1 -vvv
cow release <version> <recipe>
will perform the first part of the release tasks.
<version>
is mandatory and must be the exact tag name to release.<recipe>
will allow you to release a recipe other than 'silverstripe/installer'
This command has these options:
-vvv
to ensure all underlying commands are echoed--directory <directory>
to specify the folder to create or look for this project in. If you don't specify this, it will install to the path specified by./release-<version>
in the current directory.--repository <repository>
will allow a custom composer package url to be specified. E.g.http://packages.cwp.govt.nz
Note: If you specify the repository during setup it will be re-used for subsquent commands unless the.cow.repository
file is deleted.--branching <type>
will specify a branching strategy. This allows these options:auto
- Default option, will branch to the minor version (e.g. 1.1) unless doing a non-stable tag (e.g. rc1)major
- Branch all repos to the major version (e.g. 1) unless already on a more-specific minor version.minor
- Branch all repos to the minor semver branch (e.g. 1.1)none
- Release from the current branch and do no branching.
--skip-tests
to skip tests--skip-i18n
to skip updating localisations
release
actually has several sub-commands which can be run independently. These are as below:
release:create
creates the project folderrelease:plan
Initiates release planning tool to preview release dependency versionsrelease:branch
Will (if needed) branch all modulesrelease:translate
Updates translations and commits this to source controlrelease:test
Run unit testsrelease:changelog
Just generates the changelog and commits this to source control.
cow release
will only build the release itself. Once all of the above steps are complete, it is necessary
to take the finished release and push it out to the open source community. A second major command cow release:publish
is necessary to perform the final steps. The format for this command is:
cow release:publish <version>
This command has these options:
-vvv
to ensure all underlying commands are echoed--directory <directory>
to specify the folder to look for the project created in the prior step. As with above, it will be guessed if omitted. You can run this command in the./release-<version>
directory and omit this option.
The release process, as with the initial cow release
command, will actually be composed of several sub-commands,
each of which could be run separately.
release:tag
Add annotated tags to each module and pushes
After the push step, release:publish
will automatically wait for this version to be available in packagist.org
before continuing.
cow release:changelog
will create a changelog which is categorised into various sets of change types, e.g.
enhancements, bug fixes, API changes and security fixes.
The changelog command takes the follow arguments and options:
version
The version you're releasing the project asrecipe
The recipe you're releasing--include-other-changes
If provided, uncategorised commits will also be included in an "Other changes" section. Note that commits which matchChangelogItem::isIgnored()
will still be excluded, e.g. merge commits.--changelog--use-legacy-format
If provided, falls back to the old changelog format (used before Oct 2020)--changelog--audit-mode
swaps changelog format to Audit Mode, which turns oninclude-upgrade-only
flag and uses audit template for changelog logs generation (including every single change).
Pro-tip: Part of this command involves plan generation and/or confirmation, and you can provide the
--skip-fetch-tags
option to prevent Cow from re-fetching all tags from origin if you have already done this
and only want to make a quick change.
You can specify a file to use as the template for generating fresh changelogs via the changelog-template
configuration
in .cow.json
. This template can use Twig syntax to inject relevant
information:
{{ version }}
will inject the version that the changelog is being generated for (e.g.1.2.3
){{ logs }}
will inject the commit logs with before/after delimiters, so they can be updated later without destroying any other changes to the contents.
Run cow github:ratelimit
to check your current GitHub API rate limiting status
Note: All GitHub API commands require a GITHUB_ACCESS_TOKEN
environment variable to be set before they can be
used. It can be in the .env file (see dev mode).
The cow schema file is in the root of this project.
You can run cow schema:validate
to check the .cow.json
configuration file in your project or module to
ensure it matches against the Cow schema.