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Tool for managing changelogs.

Project description

JMESLog - Changelog Management

JMESLog is a script for managing changelogs. It helps you associate changelog entries for new features and bug fixes and also helps you generate a CHANGELOG file or any other type of release notes page. It enforces semver by automatically determining the next version number based on the pending changes for your next release.

Quickstart

Initialize a repo to use JMESLog:

$ jmeslog init

Before you send a PR, create a changelog entry for your change:

$ jmeslog new-change

A change file was created at .changes/next-release/foo-bar.json

Commit that file:

$ git add .changes/next-release/foo-bar.json
$ git commit -m "Add changelog entry"

That’s it. When it comes time to release, you run these commands:

$ jmeslog new-release
$ jmeslog render > CHANGELOG.rst

The new-release command consolidates all the files in .changes/next-release into a single JSON file representing the new release. The render command regenerates your CHANGELOG file.

The rest of this doc explains this workflow in more detail.

Concepts

All changes for a repo are stored as structured data in a .changes/ directory.

The changes for the next release are stored in .changes/next-release/. All of the changes from previous releases are stored in .changes/X.Y.Z.json where X.Y.Z represent the version associated a given release. These files are generated by running the jmeslog new-change command.

When you’re ready to release a new version, all of the change files from .changes/next-release/ are gathered and a new .changes/X.Y.Z.json file is created that contain those changes. The content from .changes/next-release/ is then removed. This is done with the jmeslog new-release command.

You can then generate a CHANGELOG (or any other file) using the data from .changes/. To do this you run the jmeslog generate command.

Usage

The typical workflow when using jmeslog:

  • Use the jmeslog new-change command to generate a new changelog file when you’re working on a new feature. This file is included as part of the PR you send.

  • When you’re ready to release, you can run the jmespath generate command to generate the CHANGELOG file based on all your change files. You also run the jmeslog new-release command to consolidate files from the next .changes/next-release/ directory into a new single .changes/X.Y.Z.json file.

Backwards Compatibility

The API for JMESLog, including the CLI commands and parameters, the files generated and the functionality provided by JMESLog may change in a backwards incompatible manner until its 1.0.0 GA release.

FAQ

What problem is this trying to solve?

JMESLog helps you automate releases. It’s the result of iterating on an automated release process that started from a completely manual process to eventually releasing every single day. When you think about what’s involved in releasing a new version of your library/tool, you have to:

  • Figure out the next version number you want for your release. If you’re following semver, this will depend on what types of changes will be in the next release. New features should require a minor version bump, and bug fixes should result in a new patch version.

  • Update your CHANGELOG with all the new changes that will be part of this next release under a new section corresponding to the next version number.

This tool helps with manage both of these problems so you can completely automate your release process. It also solves several other problems that come up:

  • You can have changelog entries tracked with each pull request, and you don’t have to worry about merge conflicts to your CHANGELOG file.

  • You can generate more than just a CHANGELOG file if needed. For example, you can create a “History” page in your docs that’s rendered differently than your CHANGELOG.

  • You can programatically query for a projects changes.

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