How to make new xcdl releases
This page is designed for maintainers of the xPack Component Manager project and provides documentation on how to create new releases.
Prerequisites
The xPack Component Manager is a portable Node.js project, and development can be performed on macOS, GNU/Linux and even Windows (although some npm scripts require bash).
The prerequisites are:
- node >= 18.0.0
- npm
To ensure compatibility with older node, preferably revert to an older one:
nvm use --lts 18
code
Get project sources
The project is hosted on GitHub:
The project uses two branches:
master
, with the latest stable version (default)development
, with the current development version
To clone the stable branch (master
), run the following commands in a
terminal (on Windows use the Git Bash console):
mkdir ~/Work/npm-packages && cd ~/Work/npm-packages
git clone https://github.com/xpack/xcdl-cli-ts.git xcdl-cli-ts.git
For development purposes, clone the development
branch:
mkdir ~/Work/npm-packages && cd ~/Work/npm-packages
git clone \
--branch development \
https://github.com/xpack/xcdl-cli-ts.git xcdl-cli-ts.git
Or, if the repo was already cloned:
git -C ~/Work/npm-packages/xcdl-cli-ts.git pull
Release schedule
There are no fixed releases.
Prepare the new releases
Check Git
In the xpack/xcdl-cli-ts
Git repo:
- switch to the
development
branch - pull new changes
- if necessary, merge the
master
branch - if necessary, merge the
website
branch
This is really important, otherwise the next steps will build again the previous release!
The master
branch should be unchanged since the previous release
and will be updated when the new release is out.
Update npm packages
This package is also used by the VS Code extension and, until VS Code will accept ESM dependencies, it must be kept as a legacy CommonJS dependency.
npm outdated
npm update
or edit andnpm install
- repeat and possibly manually edit
package.json
until everything is up to date - commit the changes
Keep:
@types/node
locked to latest that still matches the oldest supported node (18).
Increase the version and update it in the top package.json
As required by npm modules, this one also uses SemVer.
- determine the next version (like
2.0.0
) - update the version in the top
package.json
file - use the new version, suffixed by
-pre
, like2.0.0-pre
.
Update the websiteConfig
in top package.json
(if necessary)
Check and possibly update the websiteConfig
.
Start the local web server
Execute the npm script clean
then start
in the website sub-project,
or run the following in a terminal:
npm --prefix ~/Work/npm-packages/xcdl-cli-ts.git/website run clean
npm --prefix ~/Work/npm-packages/xcdl-cli-ts.git/website run start
Navigate to the Maintainer Info page, the Fix possible open issues section.
Fix possible open issues
Check GitHub Issues and Pull Requests:
and fix them; assign them to a milestone
(like 2.0.0
).
Update CHANGELOG.md
-
open the
CHANGELOG.md
file -
check if all previous fixed issues are in
-
check the latest commits
xpm run git-log
; if necessary, copy/paste lines, group by dates and edit them using the below regular expressions -
to turn the dates into headings, change from:
([0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]-[0-9][0-9]-[0-9][0-9]) [*]
to:
## $1
*
- to remove the rest of the dates, change from:
^[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]-[0-9][0-9]-[0-9][0-9] [*]
to:
*
- add a new entry like * v2.0.0 prepared
- commit with a message like prepare v2.0.0
Prepare the release
- terminate all running tasks (Terminal → Terminate Task...)
- switch to the
development
branch - commit everything
npm run fix
- if there are changes, commit all changes into the
development
branch npm run test
npm run pack
; check the list of packaged files, possibly update.npmignore
npm version 2.0.0
- push all changes to GitHub
CI tests
- the
postversion
npm script should also update tags viagit push origin --tags
; this should trigger CI - wait for CI tests to complete
- check https://github.com/xpack/xcdl-cli-ts/actions
Prepare a new blog post
- check and possibly update the
website/blog/_templates/blog-post-release-liquid.mdx
- run the
generate-website-blog-post
npm script; this will add a file in thewebsite/blog
folder:
npm --prefix ~/Work/npm-packages/xcdl-cli-ts.git/website run generate-website-blog-post
- edit the front matter properties
- select the correct summary
- commit with website: blog post release 2.0.0 published
- push the
development
branch
Publish the release to npmjs.com
npm publish --tag next
- when publishing for the first time, use:
npm publish --access public
After a few moments the version will be visible at xcdl Versions.
Manual install test
Test if the package can be installed globally:
npm install ----location=global xcdl@next
Validate the web site content in a local build via the npm build
script:
npm --prefix ~/Work/npm-packages/xcdl-cli-ts.git/website run build
Publish the website
The documentation site is built with Docusaurus and published in the project GitHub Pages.
The Web site deployment is performed automatically when pushing to the master branch, by a dedicated workflow in GitHub Actions.
- switch to the
development
branch - run the
website-generate-commons
script in the toppackage.json
- commit all changes
- run the
build
script inwebsite/package.json
- merge the
development
branch into thewebsite
branch - push the
website
branch to GitHub
At this moment an automated GitHub Action will generate and publish the website.
- the new release blog post is in https://xpack.github.io/xcdl-cli-ts/blog/
- remember the post URL, since it must be used to update the release page and the X/Twitter announcement
The website
branch may be subsequently updated, as long as the
version in package.json
is not changed.
Final updates
Update the master
branch
In this Git repo:
- select the
master
branch - merge the
development
branch into themaster
branch - push the
master
branch to GitHub
Close milestone
In https://github.com/xpack/xpm-liquid-ts/milestones:
- close the current milestone.
Tag the npm package as latest
When the release is considered stable, promote it as latest
:
npm dist-tag ls xcdl
-
npm dist-tag add xcdl@2.0.0 latest
npm dist-tag ls xcdl
Share on X/Twitter
- in a separate browser windows, open X/Twitter
- using the
@xpack_project
account - paste the release name like xPack xpm v0.19.4 released
- paste the link to the Web page release
- click the Tweet button
Analytics
- npmjs.com
xcdl
package
Credit to Shields IO for the badges.