Auto-Tag


Automatically tag a branch with the next semantic version tag.

This is useful if you want to generate tags every time something is merged. Microservice and GitOps repository are good candidates for this type of action.


How to install

~ $ pip install auto-tag

To see if it works, you can try

~ $ auto-tag  -h usage: auto-tag [-h] [-b BRANCH] [-r REPO] [-u [UPSTREAM_REMOTE [UPSTREAM_REMOTE ...]]] [-l {CRITICAL,FATAL,ERROR,WARN,WARNING,INFO,DEBUG,NOTSET}] [--name NAME] [--email EMAIL] [-c CONFIG] [--skip-tag-if-one-already-present] [--append-v-to-tag] [--tag-search-strategy {biggest-tag-in-repo,biggest-tag-in-branch,latest-tag-in-repo,latest-tag-in-branch}] .....

How it Works

The flow is as follows:

  • figure our repository based on the argument
  • load detectors from file if specified (-c option), if none specified load default ones (see Detectors)
  • check for the last tag (depending on the search strategy see Search Strategy
  • look at all commits done after that tag on a specific branch (or from the start of the repository if no tag is found)
  • apply the detector (see Detectors) on each commit and save the highest change detected (PATH, MINOR, MAJOR)
  • bump the last tag with the approbate change and apply it using the default git author in the system or a specific one (see Git Author)
  • if an upstream was specified push the tag to that upstream

Examples

Here we can see in commit 2245d5d that it stats with feature( so the latest know tag (0.2.1) was bumped to 0.3.0

~ $ git log --oneline
2245d5d (HEAD -> master) feature(component) commit #4
939322f commit #3
9ef3be6 (tag: 0.2.1) commit #2
0ee81b0 commit #1
~ $ auto-tag
2019-08-31 14:10:24,626: Start tagging <git.Repo "/Users/matei/git/test-auto-tag-branch/.git">
2019-08-31 14:10:24,649: Bumping tag 0.2.1 -> 0.3.0
2019-08-31 14:10:24,658: No push remote was specified
~ $ git log --oneline
2245d5d (HEAD -> master, tag: 0.3.0) feature(component) commit #4
939322f commit #3
9ef3be6 (tag: 0.2.1) commit #2
0ee81b0 commit #1

In this example we can see 2245d5deb5d97d288b7926be62d051b7eed35c98 introducing a feature that will trigger a MINOR change but we can also see 0de444695e3208b74d0b3ed7fd20fd0be4b2992e having a BREAKING_CHANGE that will introduce a MAJOR bump, this is the reason the tag moved from 0.2.1 to 1.0.0

~ $ git log
commit 0de444695e3208b74d0b3ed7fd20fd0be4b2992e (HEAD -> master)
Author: Matei-Marius Micu <[email protected]>
Date:   Fri Aug 30 21:58:01 2019 +0300

    fix(something) ....

    BREAKING_CHANGE: this must trigger major version bump

commit 65bf4b17669ea52f84fd1dfa4e4feadbc299a80e
Author: Matei-Marius Micu <[email protected]>
Date:   Fri Aug 30 21:57:47 2019 +0300

    fix(something) ....

commit 2245d5deb5d97d288b7926be62d051b7eed35c98
Author: Matei-Marius Micu <[email protected]>
Date:   Fri Aug 30 19:52:10 2019 +0300

    feature(component) commit #4

commit 939322f1efaa1c07b7ed33f2923526f327975cfc
Author: Matei-Marius Micu <[email protected]>
Date:   Fri Aug 30 19:51:24 2019 +0300

    commit #3

commit 9ef3be64c803d7d8d3b80596485eac18e80cb89d (tag: 0.2.1)
Author: Matei-Marius Micu <[email protected]>
Date:   Fri Aug 30 19:51:18 2019 +0300

    commit #2

commit 0ee81b0bed209941720ee602f76341bcb115b87d
Author: Matei-Marius Micu <[email protected]>
Date:   Fri Aug 30 19:50:25 2019 +0300

    commit #1
~ $ auto-tag
2019-08-31 14:10:24,626: Start tagging <git.Repo "/Users/matei/git/test-auto-tag-branch/.git">
2019-08-31 14:10:24,649: Bumping tag 0.2.1 -> 1.0.0
2019-08-31 14:10:24,658: No push remote was specified
~ $ git log
commit 0de444695e3208b74d0b3ed7fd20fd0be4b2992e (HEAD -> master, tag: 1.0.0)
Author: Matei-Marius Micu <[email protected]>
Date:   Fri Aug 30 21:58:01 2019 +0300

    fix(something) ....

    BREAKING_CHANGE: this must trigger major version bump

commit 65bf4b17669ea52f84fd1dfa4e4feadbc299a80e
Author: Matei-Marius Micu <[email protected]>
Date:   Fri Aug 30 21:57:47 2019 +0300

    fix(something) ....

commit 2245d5deb5d97d288b7926be62d051b7eed35c98
Author: Matei-Marius Micu <[email protected]>
Date:   Fri Aug 30 19:52:10 2019 +0300

    feature(component) commit #4

commit 939322f1efaa1c07b7ed33f2923526f327975cfc
Author: Matei-Marius Micu <[email protected]>
Date:   Fri Aug 30 19:51:24 2019 +0300

    commit #3

commit 9ef3be64c803d7d8d3b80596485eac18e80cb89d (tag: 0.2.1)
Author: Matei-Marius Micu <[email protected]>
Date:   Fri Aug 30 19:51:18 2019 +0300

    commit #2

commit 0ee81b0bed209941720ee602f76341bcb115b87d
Author: Matei-Marius Micu <[email protected]>
Date:   Fri Aug 30 19:50:25 2019 +0300

    commit #1

Detectors

If you want to detect what commit enforces a specific tag bump(PATH, MINOR, MAJOR) you can configure detectors. They are configured in a yaml file that looks like this:

detectors: check_for_feature_heading: type: CommitMessageHeadStartsWithDetector    produce_type_change: MINOR    params: pattern: 'feature' check_for_breaking_change: type: CommitMessageContainsDetector    produce_type_change: MAJOR    params: pattern: 'BREAKING_CHANGE'      case_sensitive: false

Here is the default configuration for detectors if none is specified. We can see we have two detectors check_for_feature_heading and check_for_breaking_change, with a type, what change they will trigger and specific parameters for each one. This configuration will do the following:

  • if the commit message starts with feature( a MINOR change will BE triggered
  • if the commit has BREAKIN_CHANGE in the message a MAJOR change will be triggered The bump on the tag will be based on the higher priority found.

The type and produce_type_change parameters are required params is specific to every detector.

To pass the file to the process just use the -c CLI parameter.

Currently we support the following triggers:

  • CommitMessageHeadStartsWithDetector
  • Parameters:
  • case_sensitive of type bool, if the comparison is case sensitive
  • strip of type bool, if we strip the spaces from the commit message
  • pattern of type string, what pattern is searched at the start of the commit message
  • CommitMessageContainsDetector
  • case_sensitive of type bool, if the comparison is case sensitive
  • strip of type bool, if we strip the spaces from the commit message
  • pattern of type string, what pattern is searched in the body of the commit message
  • CommitMessageMatchesRegexDetector
  • strip of type bool, if we strip the spaces from the commit message
  • pattern of type string, what regex pattern to match against the commit message

The regex detector is the most powerful one.

Git Author

When creating and tag we need to specify a git author, if a global one is not set (or if we want to make this one with a specific user), we have the option to specify one. The following options will add a temporary config to this repository(local config). After the tag was created it will restore the existing config (if any was present)

  --name NAME           User name used for creating git objects.If not
                        specified the system one will be used.
  --email EMAIL         Email name used for creating git objects.If not
                        specified the system one will be used.

If another user interacts with git while this process is taking place it will use the temporary config, but we assume we are run in a CI pipeline and this is the only process interacting with git.

Search Strategy

If you want to bump a tag first you need to find the last one, we have a few implementations to search for the last tag that can be configured with --tag-search-strategy CLI option.

  • biggest-tag-in-repo consider all tags in the repository as semantic versions and pick the biggest one
  • biggest-tag-in-branch consider all tags on the specified branch as semantic versions and pick the biggest one
  • latest-tag-in-repo compare commit date for each commit that has a tag in the repository and take the latest
  • latest-tag-in-branch compare commit date for each commit that has a tag one the specifid branch and take the latest

This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license.

GitHub

GitHub - mateimicu/auto-tag: Automatically tag a branch based on configurable rules
Automatically tag a branch based on configurable rules - GitHub - mateimicu/auto-tag: Automatically tag a branch based on configurable rules