Use black
to format the code when making changes:
$ black $(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)
Refer to the black docs for how to set up your editor to format code for you automatically.
There are a few commits that introduce the black
code style which touch almost all files. These are listed in the .git-blame-ignore-revs
file at the top level of the repo. See here for how to use this file to make it easier to inspect git history with git blame
by ignoring the commits that only introduce formatting changes.
fiaas-deploy-daemon is released by pushing an annotated git tag (a tag containing a message) named v$SEMVER_VERSION
:
git tag -a vMAJOR.MINOR.PATCH [git ref]
The version number must follow semantic versioning. git ref must be a commit on the master branch.
The message of the annotated tag should contain the release notes, describing the changes included in the release. A header will be added automatically by the release tooling, so you don't need to include one in the release notes. These release notes end up on the resulting release in Github.
(Regular non-annotated git tags should also create a release, but in that case the tagged commit's message will be used as the release notes, which might not be particularly descriptive.)
When you're done writing release notes and the tag is created locally, push it to trigger the CI tag build, which creates a release in github:
git push origin vMAJOR.MINOR.PATCH
- If a backwards incompatible change is introduced or a feature is removed, increase the major version.
- If a new feature is added, but backwards compatibility is preserved, increase the minor version.
- For bug fixes and similar, increase the patch version.
For cases that do not fit into the above, refer to the semver spec (and consider updating this documentation).