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lerna-changelog
Everything is the name, expect it's integrated with Gitlab!
Gitlab PR-based changelog generator with monorepo support
Install with yarn
:
yarn add lerna-changelog-gitlab --dev
# or globally
yarn global add lerna-changelog-gitlab
We're using yarn
but you can use npm
if you like:
npm install --save-dev lerna-changelog-gitlab
# or globally
npm install --global lerna-changelog-gitlab
$ lerna-changelog-gitlab
## Unreleased (2018-05-24)
#### :bug: Bug Fix
* [#198](https://github.com/my-org/my-repo/pull/198) Avoid an infinite loop ([@helpful-hacker](https://github.com/helpful-hacker))
#### :house: Internal
* [#183](https://github.com/my-org/my-repo/pull/183) Standardize error messages ([@careful-coder](https://github.com/careful-coder))
#### Commiters: 2
- Helpful Hacker ([@helpful-hacker](https://github.com/helpful-hacker))
- [@careful-coder](https://github.com/careful-coder)
By default lerna-changelog-gitlab
will show all pull requests that have been merged
since the latest tagged commit in the repository. That is however only true for
pull requests with certain labels applied. The labels that are supported by
default are:
breaking
(:boom: Breaking Change)enhancement
(:rocket: Enhancement)bug
(:bug: Bug Fix)documentation
(:memo: Documentation)internal
(:house: Internal)
You can also use the --from
and --to
options to view a different
range of pull requests:
lerna-changelog-gitlab --from=v1.0.0 --to=v2.0.0
If you have a packages folder and your projects in subfolders of that folder lerna-changelog-gitlab
will detect it and include the package names in the changelog for the relevant changes.
Since lerna-changelog-gitlab
interacts with the GitLab API you may run into rate
limiting issues which can be resolved by supplying a "personal access token":
export AUTH_TOKEN="..."
You'll need a personal access token
for the GitLab API with the read_repository
scope for your private repositories.
You can configure lerna-changelog-gitlab
in various ways. The easiest way is by
adding a changelog
key to the package.json
file of your project:
{
// ...
"changelog": {
"labels": {
"feature": "New Feature",
"bug": "Bug Fix"
}
}
}
The supported options are:
-
repo
: Your "org/repo" on GitHub (automatically inferred from thepackage.json
file) -
nextVersion
: Title for unreleased commits (e.g.Unreleased
) -
labels
: GitHub PR labels mapped to changelog section headers -
ignoreCommitters
: List of committers to ignore (exact or partial match). Useful for example to ignore commits from bots. -
cacheDir
: Path to a GitHub API response cache to avoid throttling (e.g..changelog
)
lerna-changelog
is released under the MIT License.