Configuration

semantic-release configuration consists of:

All of these options can be configured through config file, CLI arguments or by extending a shareable configuration.

Additionally, metadata of Git tags generated by semantic-release can be customized via standard Git environment variables.

Configuration file

semantic-release’s options, mode and plugins can be set via either:

  • A .releaserc file, written in YAML or JSON, with optional extensions: .yaml/.yml/.json/.js

  • A release.config.js file that exports an object

  • A release key in the project's package.json file

Alternatively, some options can be set via CLI arguments.

The following three examples are the same.

  • Via release key in the project's package.json file:

    {
    "release": {
      "branches": ["master", "next"]
    }
    }
  • Via .releaserc file:

    {
    "branches": ["master", "next"]
    }
  • Via CLI argument:

    $ semantic-release --branches next

Note: CLI arguments take precedence over options configured in the configuration file.

Note: Plugin options cannot be defined via CLI arguments and must be defined in the configuration file.

Note: When configuring via package.json, the configuration must be under the release property. However, when using a .releaserc or a release.config.js file, the configuration must be set without a release property.

Options

extends

Type: Array, String CLI arguments: -e, --extends

List of modules or file paths containing a shareable configuration. If multiple shareable configurations are set, they will be imported in the order defined with each configuration option taking precedence over the options defined in a previous shareable configuration.

Note: Options defined via CLI arguments or in the configuration file will take precedence over the ones defined in any shareable configuration.

branches

Type: Array, String, Object Default: ['+([0-9])?(.{+([0-9]),x}).x', 'master', 'next', 'next-major', {name: 'beta', prerelease: true}, {name: 'alpha', prerelease: true}] CLI arguments: --branches

The branches on which releases should happen. By default semantic-release will release:

  • regular releases to the default distribution channel from the branch master

  • regular releases to a distribution channel matching the branch name from any existing branch with a name matching a maintenance release range (N.N.x or N.x.x or N.x with N being a number)

  • regular releases to the next distribution channel from the branch next if it exists

  • regular releases to the next-major distribution channel from the branch next-major if it exists

  • prereleases to the beta distribution channel from the branch beta if it exists

  • prereleases to the alpha distribution channel from the branch alpha if it exists

Note: If your repository does not have a release branch, then semantic-release will fail with an ERELEASEBRANCHES error message. If you are using the default configuration, you can fix this error by pushing a master branch.

Note: Once semantic-release is configured, any user with the permission to push commits on one of those branches will be able to publish a release. It is recommended to protect those branches, for example with GitHub protected branches.

See Workflow configuration for more details.

repositoryUrl

Type: String Default: repository property in package.json or git origin url CLI arguments: -r, --repository-url

The git repository URL.

Any valid git url format is supported (See Git protocols).

tagFormat

Type: String Default: v${version} CLI arguments: -t, --tag-format

The Git tag format used by semantic-release to identify releases. The tag name is generated with Lodash template and will be compiled with the version variable.

Note: The tagFormat must contain the version variable exactly once and compile to a valid Git reference.

plugins

Type: Array Default: ['@semantic-release/commit-analyzer', '@semantic-release/release-notes-generator', '@semantic-release/npm', '@semantic-release/github'] CLI arguments: -p, --plugins

Define the list of plugins to use. Plugins will run in series, in the order defined, for each steps if they implement it.

Plugins configuration can defined by wrapping the name and an options object in an array.

See Plugins configuration for more details.

dryRun

Type: Boolean Default: false if running in a CI environment, true otherwise CLI arguments: -d, --dry-run

The objective of the dry-run mode is to get a preview of the pending release. Dry-run mode skips the following steps: prepare, publish, success and fail. In addition to this it prints the next version and release notes to the console.

Note: The Dry-run mode verifies the repository push permission, even though nothing will be pushed. The verification is done to help user to figure out potential configuration issues.

ci

Type: Boolean Default: true CLI arguments: --ci / --no-ci

Set to false to skip Continuous Integration environment verifications. This allows for making releases from a local machine.

Note: The CLI arguments --no-ci is equivalent to --ci false.

debug

Type: Boolean Default: false CLI argument: --debug

Output debugging information. This can also be enabled by setting the DEBUG environment variable to semantic-release:*.

Note: The debug is used only supported via CLI argument. To enable debug mode from the JS API use require('debug').enable('semantic-release:*').

Git environment variables

Existing version tags

semantic-release uses Git tags to determine the commits added since the last release. If a release has been published before setting up semantic-release you must make sure the most recent commit included in the last published release is in the release branches history and is tagged with the version released, formatted according to the tag format configured (defaults to vx.y.z).

If the previous releases were published with npm publish this should already be the case.

For example, if your release branch is master, the last release published on your project is 1.1.0 and the last commit included has the sha 1234567, you must make sure this commit is in master history and is tagged with v1.1.0.

# Make sure the commit 1234567 is in the release branch history
$ git branch --contains 1234567

# If the commit is not in the branch history it means that either:
# - you use a different branch than the one your release from before
# - or the commit sha has been rewritten (with git rebase)
# In both cases you need to configure your repository to have the last release commit in the history of the release branch

# List the tags for the commit 1234567
$ git tag --contains 1234567

# If v1.1.0 is not in the list you add it with
$ git tag v1.1.0 1234567
$ git push origin v1.1.0

Last updated