releaser-pleaser
is a tool designed to automate versioning and changelog management for your projects. Building on the concepts of release-please
, it streamlines the release process through GitHub Actions or GitLab CI.
- Automated Pull Requests: Opens a PR when releasable changes are detected.
- Smart Versioning: Suggests new versions based on conventional commits and semantic versioning.
- Version Reference Updates: Automatically updates committed version references in the PR.
- Changelog Generation: Creates new changelog entries based on commits.
- Automated Releases: Upon PR merge, creates tags and GitHub/GitLab Releases with appropriate messages.
- Version Overrides: Allows manual override of the suggested version.
- Prerelease Support: Offers options to create alpha, beta, or release candidate versions.
releaser-pleaser
simplifies release management, allowing maintainers to focus on development while ensuring consistent and well-documented releases.
After using
release-please
for 1.5 years, I've found it to be the best tool for low-effort releases currently available. While I appreciate many of its features, I identified several additional capabilities that would significantly enhance my workflow. Although it might be possible to incorporate these features into
release-please
, I decided to channel my efforts into creating a new tool that specifically addresses my needs.
Key differences in releaser-pleaser
include:
- Support for multiple forges (both GitHub and GitLab)
- Better support for pre-releases
One notable limitation of
release-please
is its deep integration with the GitHub API, making the addition of support for other platforms (like GitLab) a substantial undertaking.
releaser-pleaser
aims to overcome this limitation by design, offering a more versatile solution for automated release management across different platforms and project requirements.
This project is licensed under the GNU General Public License v3.0 (GPL-3.0).