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Build a sphinx changelog from GitHub Releases

Project description

Sphinx Github Changelog: Build a sphinx changelog from GitHub Releases

Deployed to PyPI Deployed to PyPI GitHub Repository Continuous Integration Documentation Coverage MIT License Contributor Covenant

Sphinx-github-changelog is a Sphinx plugin that builds a changelog section based on a repository’s GitHub Releases content.

How ? (the short version)

In your Sphinx documentation conf.py:

extensions = [
    ...,  # your other extensions
    "sphinx_github_changelog",
]

# Provide a GitHub API token:
# Pass the SPHINX_GITHUB_CHANGELOG_TOKEN environment variable to your build
# OR
sphinx_github_changelog_token = "..."

In your documentation:

.. changelog::
    :changelog-url: https://your-project.readthedocs.io/en/stable/#changelog
    :github: https://github.com/you/your-project/releases/
    :pypi: https://pypi.org/project/your-project/

See the end result for this project on ReadTheDocs.

Why ?

On the way to continuous delivery, it’s important to be able to release easily. One of the criteria for easy releases is that the release doesn’t require a commit and a Pull Request. Release Pull Requests usually include 2 parts:

  • Changing the version

  • Updating the changelog (if you keep a changelog, let’s assume you do)

Commitless releases need a way to store the version and the changelog, as close as possible to the code, but actually not in the code.

Setting aside the “version” question, sphinx-github-changelog aims at providing a good way of managing the “changelog” part:

The best solution we’ve found so far for the changelog is to store it in the body of GitHub Releases. That’s very practical for maintainers, but it may not be the first place people will look for it. As far as we’ve seen, people expect the changelog to be:

  • in the repo, in CHANGELOG.rst,

  • in the documentation.

Having the changelog in CHANGELOG.rst causes a few problems:

  • Either each PR adds its single line of changelog, but:

    • you’ll most probably run into countless merge conflicts,

    • the changelog won’t tell you which contribution was part of which release

    This reduces the interest for the whole thing.

  • Or your changelog is edited at release time. Maybe you’re using towncrier for fragment-based changelog, but you’re not doing commitless releases anymore. You could imagine that the release commit is done by your CI, but this can quickly become annoying, especially if you require Pull Requests.

But there is another way. Instead of providing the changelog, the CHANGELOG.rst file can hold a link to the changelog. This makes things much easier. sphinx-github-changelog encourages you to do that.

A complete toolbelt

Alongside sphinx-github-changelog, we suggest a few tools that play nice together:

  • setuptools-scm will compute your version in setup.py based on git tags.

  • release-drafter will keep a “Draft release” updated as you merge Pull Requests to your repository, so you just have to slightly adjust the release body, and create a tag.

  • Any Continuous Integration solution should be able to listen to new tags, and build and upload distributions to PyPI. Don’t forget to use PyPI API tokens!

  • And ReadTheDocs to host your built documentation, of course.

If you’re using all the tools above, then releasing is simple as proof-reading the draft GitHub Release and press “Publish Release”. That’s it.

Reference documentation

Extension options (conf.py)

  • changelog_github_token: GitHub API token, with read access to the repository. Defaults to the value of the environment variable SPHINX_GITHUB_CHANGELOG_TOKEN. If no value is provided, the build will still pass but the changelog will not be built, and a link to the changelog-url will be displayed (if provided).

Directive

.. changelog::
    :changelog-url: https://your-project.readthedocs.io/en/stable/changelog.html
    :github: https://github.com/you/your-project/releases/
    :pypi: https://pypi.org/project/your-project/

Attributes

  • github (required): URL to the releases page of the repository.

  • changelog-url (optional): URL to the built version of your changelog. sphinx-github-changelog will display a link to your built changelog if the GitHub token is not provided (hopefully, this does not happen in your built documentation)

  • pypi (optional): URL to the PyPI page of the repository. This allows the changelog to display links to each PyPI release.

You’ll notice that each parameter here is not requested in the simplest form but as very specific URLs from which the program extracts the needed information. This is done on purpose. If people browse the unbuilt version of your documentation (e.g. on GitHub or PyPI directly), they’ll still be presented with links to the pages that contain the information they will need, instead of unhelping directives.

Check out the built version!

This Readme is also built as a Sphinx documentation, and it includes the changelog. Interested to see how it looks? Check it out on our ReadTheDocs space.

If you encounter a bug, or want to get in touch, you’re always welcome to open a ticket.

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