A small commandline app written in Go that allows you to easily create and delete releases of your projects on Github. In addition it allows you to attach files to those releases.
It interacts with the github releases API. Though it's entirely
possible to do all these things with cURL, it's not really that
user-friendly. For example, you need to first query the API to find the id of
the release you want, before you can upload an artifact. github-release
takes
care of those little details.
It might still be a bit rough around the edges, pull requests are welcome!
If you don't have the Go toolset installed, and you don't want to, but still want to use the app, you can download binaries for your platform on the releases page. Yes, that's dogfooding, check the makefile!
If you have Go installed, you can just do:
go get github.com/github-release/github-release
This will automatically download, compile and install the app.
After that you should have a github-release
executable in your
$GOPATH/bin
.
NOTE: for these examples I've created a github token and set it as
the env variable GITHUB_TOKEN
. github-release
will automatically pick it up
from the environment so that you don't have to pass it as an argument.
# set your token
export GITHUB_TOKEN=...
# check the help
$ github-release --help
# make your tag and upload
$ git tag ... && git push --tags
# check the current tags and existing releases of the repo
$ github-release info -u aktau -r gofinance
git tags:
- v0.1.0 (commit: https://api.github.com/repos/aktau/gofinance/commits/f562727ce83ce8971a8569a1879219e41d56a756)
releases:
- v0.1.0, name: 'hoary ungar', description: 'something something dark side 2', id: 166740, tagged: 29/01/2014 at 14:27, published: 30/01/2014 at 16:20, draft: ✔, prerelease: ✗
- artifact: github.go, downloads: 0, state: uploaded, type: application/octet-stream, size: 1.9KB, id: 68616
# create a formal release
$ github-release release \
--user aktau \
--repo gofinance \
--tag v0.1.0 \
--name "the wolf of source street" \
--description "Not a movie, contrary to popular opinion. Still, my first release!" \
--pre-release
# you've made a mistake, but you can edit the release without
# having to delete it first (this also means you can edit without having
# to upload your files again)
$ github-release edit \
--user aktau \
--repo gofinance \
--tag v0.1.0 \
--name "Highlander II: The Quickening" \
--description "This is the actual description!"
# upload a file, for example the OSX/AMD64 binary of my gofinance app
$ github-release upload \
--user aktau \
--repo gofinance \
--tag v0.1.0 \
--name "gofinance-osx-amd64" \
--file bin/darwin/amd64/gofinance
# upload other files...
$ github-release upload ...
# you're not happy with it, so delete it
$ github-release delete \
--user aktau \
--repo gofinance \
--tag v0.1.0
The release
command does not have an --auth-user
flag because in practice,
Github ignores the --auth-user
flag when validating releases. The only thing
that matters is passing a token that has permission to create the release.
You can point to a different GitHub API endpoint via the environment variable GITHUB_API
:
export GITHUB_API=http://github.company.com/api/v3
Package | Description | License |
---|---|---|
github.com/dustin/go-humanize | humanize file sizes | MIT |
github.com/tomnomnom/linkheader | GH API pagination | MIT |
github.com/voxelbrain/goptions | option parsing | BSD |
github.com/kevinburke/rest | HTTP client | MIT |
- Check if an artifact is already uploaded before starting a new upload
Copyright (c) 2014-2017, Nicolas Hillegeer. All rights reserved. Copyright (c) 2020, Meter, Inc. All rights reserved.