# git-sv Semantic versioning tool for git based on conventional commits. [![Build Status](https://ci.thegeeklab.de/api/badges/thegeeklab/git-sv/status.svg)](https://ci.thegeeklab.de/repos/thegeeklab/git-sv) [![Go Report Card](https://goreportcard.com/badge/github.com/thegeeklab/git-sv)](https://goreportcard.com/report/github.com/thegeeklab/git-sv) [![GitHub contributors](https://img.shields.io/github/contributors/thegeeklab/git-sv)](https://github.com/thegeeklab/git-sv/graphs/contributors) [![License: MIT](https://img.shields.io/github/license/thegeeklab/git-sv)](https://github.com/thegeeklab/git-sv/blob/main/LICENSE) ## Requirements - Git 2.17+ ## Installation Prebuilt multi-arch binaries are available for Linux only. ```Shell curl -SsfL https://github.com/thegeeklab/git-sv/releases/latest/download/git-sv-linux-amd64 -o /usr/local/bin/git-sv chmod +x /usr/local/bin/git-sv ``` ## Build Build the binary from source with the following command: ```Shell make build ``` ## Configuration The configuration is loaded from a YAML file in the following order (last wins): - built-in default - `.gitsv/config.yml` in repository root To check the default configuration, run: ```Shell git sv cfg default ``` ```Yaml version: "1.1" # Configuration version. versioning: update-major: [] # Commit types used to bump major. update-minor: [feat] # Commit types used to bump minor. update-patch: [build, ci, chore, fix, perf, refactor, test] # Commit types used to bump patch. # When type is not present on update rules and is unknown (not mapped on commit message types); # if ignore-unknown=false bump patch, if ignore-unknown=true do not bump version. ignore-unknown: false tag: pattern: "%d.%d.%d" # Pattern used to create git tag. filter: "" # Enables you to filter for considerable tags using git pattern syntax. release-notes: sections: # Array with each section of release note. Check template section for more information. - name: Features # Name used on section. section-type: commits # Type of the section, supported types: commits, breaking-changes. commit-types: [feat] # Commit types for commit section-type, one commit type cannot be in more than one section. - name: Bug Fixes section-type: commits commit-types: [fix] - name: Breaking Changes section-type: breaking-changes branches: # Git branches config. prefix: ([a-z]+\/)? # Prefix used on branch name, it should be a regex group. suffix: (-.*)? # Suffix used on branch name, it should be a regex group. disable-issue: false # Set true if there is no need to recover issue id from branch name. skip: [master, main, developer] # List of branch names ignored on commit message validation. skip-detached: false # Set true if a detached branch should be ignored on commit message validation. commit-message: # Supported commit types. types: [ build, ci, chore, docs, feat, fix, perf, refactor, revert, style, test, ] header-selector: "" # You can put in a regex here to select only a certain part of the commit message. Please define a regex group 'header'. scope: # Define supported scopes, if blank, scope will not be validated, if not, only scope listed will be valid. # Don't forget to add "" on your list if you need to define scopes and keep it optional. values: [] footer: issue: # Use "issue: {}" if you wish to disable issue footer. key: jira # Name used to define an issue on footer metadata. key-synonyms: [Jira, JIRA] # Supported variations for footer metadata. use-hash: false # If false, use : separator. If true, use # separator. add-value-prefix: "" # Add a prefix to issue value. issue: regex: "[A-Z]+-[0-9]+" # Regex for issue id. ``` ### Templates **git-sv** uses _go templates_ to format the output for `release-notes` and `changelog`, to see how the default template is configured check [template directory](https://github.com/thegeeklab/git-sv/tree/main/templates/assets). It's possible to overwrite the default configuration by adding `.gitsv/templates` on your repository. ```Shell .gitsv └── templates ├── changelog-md.tpl └── releasenotes-md.tpl ``` Everything inside `.gitsv/templates` will be loaded, so it's possible to add more files to be used as needed. #### Variables To execute the template the `releasenotes-md.tpl` will receive a single `ReleaseNote` and `changelog-md.tpl` will receive a list of `ReleaseNote` as variables. Each `ReleaseNoteSection` will be configured according with `release-notes.section` from configuration file. The order for each section will be maintained and the `SectionType` is defined according with `section-type` attribute as described on the table below. | section-type | ReleaseNoteSection | | ---------------- | -------------------------------- | | commits | ReleaseNoteCommitsSection | | breaking-changes | ReleaseNoteBreakingChangeSection | > :warning: currently only `commits` and `breaking-changes` are supported as `section-types`, using a different value for this field will make the section to be removed from the template variables. ## Usage Use `--help` or `-h` to get usage information, don't forget that some commands have unique options too: ```Shell $ git-sv --help NAME: git-sv - Semantic version for git. USAGE: git-sv [global options] command [command options] [arguments...] VERSION: 20e64f8 COMMANDS: config, cfg cli configuration current-version, cv get last released version from git next-version, nv generate the next version based on git commit messages commit-log, cl list all commit logs according to range as json commit-notes, cn generate a commit notes according to range release-notes, rn generate release notes changelog, cgl generate changelog tag, tg generate tag with version based on git commit messages commit, cmt execute git commit with conventional commit message helper validate-commit-message, vcm use as prepare-commit-message hook to validate and enhance commit message help, h Shows a list of commands or help for one command GLOBAL OPTIONS: --help, -h show help --version, -v print the version ``` If `git-sv` is configured on your path, you can also use it like a git command. ```Shell git sv git sv current-version git sv next-version ``` ### Ranges Commands like `commit-log` and `commit-notes` has a range option. Supported range types are: `tag`, `date` and `hash`. By default, it's used [--date=short](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-log#Documentation/git-log.txt---dateltformatgt) at `git log`, all dates returned from it will be in `YYYY-MM-DD` format. Range `tag` will use `git for-each-ref refs/tags` to get the last tag available if `start` is empty, the others types won't use the existing tags. It's recommended to always use a start limit in an old repository with a lot of commits. Range `date` use git log `--since` and `--until`. It's possible to use all supported formats from [git log](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-log#Documentation/git-log.txt---sinceltdategt). If `end` is in `YYYY-MM-DD` format, `sv` will add a day on git log command to make the end date inclusive. Range `tag` and `hash` are used on git log [revision range](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-log#Documentation/git-log.txt-ltrevisionrangegt). If `end` is empty, `HEAD` will be used instead. ```Shell # get commit log as json using a inclusive range git-sv commit-log --range hash --start 7ea9306~1 --end c444318 # return all commits after last tag git-sv commit-log --range tag ``` ## Contributors Special thanks to all [contributors](https://github.com/thegeeklab/git-sv/graphs/contributors). If you would like to contribute, please see the [instructions](https://github.com/thegeeklab/git-sv/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md). This project is a fork of [sv4git](https://github.com/bvieira/sv4git) from Beatriz Vieira. Thanks for your work. ## License This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the [LICENSE](https://github.com/thegeeklab/git-sv/blob/main/LICENSE) file for details.