Skip to content

Generate a markdown changelog document from a GitHub milestone.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

jwage/changelog-generator

Repository files navigation

Changelog Generator

Build Status Scrutinizer Code Quality Code Coverage

This library will generate a changelog markdown document from a GitHub milestone. It is based off of weierophinney/changelog_generator.

Features

Installation

You can install with composer:

$ composer require jwage/changelog-generator

Or you can download the latest changelog-generator.phar file from the releases pages.

Example

Here is what an example changelog looks like. It was generated from the 0.0.3 milestone in GitHub for this project:

0.0.3

  • Total issues resolved: 7
  • Total pull requests resolved: 7
  • Total contributors: 1

Enhancement

You can also look at the CHANGELOG.md file which is generated by this project.

Basic Usage

Generate a change log based on a GitHub milestone with the following command:

$ ./vendor/bin/changelog-generator generate --user=doctrine --repository=migrations --milestone=2.0

Write to File

Write the generated changelog to a file with the --file option. If you don't provide a value, it will be written to the current working directory in a file named CHANGELOG.md:

$ ./vendor/bin/changelog-generator generate --user=doctrine --repository=migrations --milestone=2.0 --file

You can pass a value to --file to specify where the changelog file should be written:

$ ./vendor/bin/changelog-generator generate --user=doctrine --repository=migrations --milestone=2.0 --file=changelog.md

By default it will overwrite the file contents but you can pass the --append option to append the changelog to the existing contents.

$ ./vendor/bin/changelog-generator generate --user=doctrine --repository=migrations --milestone=2.0 --file=changelog.md --append

If you want to prepend the changelog to an existing file, use the --prepend option:

$ ./vendor/bin/changelog-generator generate --user=doctrine --repository=migrations --milestone=2.0 --file=changelog.md --prepend

Connecting Issues & Pull Requests

To make the changelog easier to read, we try to connect pull requests to issues by looking for #{ISSUE_NUMBER} in the body of the pull request. When the user of the issue and pull request are different github users, the changelog line will look like the following:

Filtering by Labels

You can filter the changelog by label names using the --label option:

$ ./vendor/bin/changelog-generator generate --user=doctrine --repository=migrations --milestone=2.0 --label=Enhancement --label=Bug

Including Open Issues & Pull Requests

It can be convenient when preparing release notes for an upcoming release to include open issues and pull requests. For this you can use the --include-open option:

$ ./vendor/bin/changelog-generator generate --user=doctrine --repository=migrations --milestone=2.0 --include-open

Configuration File

You can provide a PHP configuration file to the changelog generator if you don't want to provide the data manually each time. Put the following contents in a file named config.php:

<?php

declare(strict_types=1);

use ChangelogGenerator\ChangelogConfig;

return [
    'changelog-generator' => (new ChangelogConfig())
        ->setUser('jwage')
        ->setRepository('changelog-generator')
        ->setMilestone('0.0.4')
        ->setLabels(['Enhancement', 'Bug'])
        ->setIncludeOpen(true)
    ,
    'another-project' => (new ChangelogConfig())
        // ...
    ,
];

Then you can use the configuration file like the following:

$ ./vendor/bin/changelog-generator generate --config=config.php

By default it will generate a changelog for the first changelog config in the array returned by the file. You can use the --project option if you want to generate a changelog for a specific project in the config file:

$ ./vendor/bin/changelog-generator generate --config=config.php --project=another-project

By default if you name your config file changelog-generator-config.php, the changelog generator will look for that file if no --config option is passed.

$ ./vendor/bin/changelog-generator generate

You can override options provided by the ChangelogConfig object from the command line by passing options to the generate command:

$ ./vendor/bin/changelog-generator generate --include-open=0

GitHub Enterprise Support

You can configure the URL of your GitHub instance by using the rootGitHubUrl option. In your config.php you can pass a 5th argument to ChangelogConfig that contains an array of options:

<?php

declare(strict_types=1);

use ChangelogGenerator\ChangelogConfig;

return [
    'changelog-generator' => (new ChangelogConfig())
        ->setUser('jwage')
        ->setRepository('changelog-generator')
        ->setMilestone('0.0.3')
        ->setLabels(['Enhancement', 'Bug'],)
        ->setOption('rootGitHubUrl', 'https://git.mycompany.com/api/v3')
    ,
];

GitHub Authentication

By default it is not required to authenticate with GitHub to use this tool. But if you want higher rate limits or want to use it with private repositories then you will need to authenticate.

Personal Credentials

You can authenticate with your username and password or a personal access token instead of your password using the ChangelogGenerator\GitHubUsernamePassword class:

<?php

declare(strict_types=1);

use ChangelogGenerator\ChangelogConfig;
use ChangelogGenerator\GitHubUsernamePassword;

return [
    'changelog-generator' => (new ChangelogConfig())
        // ...
        ->setGitHubCredentials(new GitHubUsernamePassword('username', 'passwordOrToken'))
    ,
];

OAuth Token

You can authenticate with an OAuth token as well using the ChangelogGenerator\GitHubOAuthToken class:

<?php

declare(strict_types=1);

use ChangelogGenerator\ChangelogConfig;
use ChangelogGenerator\GitHubOAuthToken;

return [
    'changelog-generator' => (new ChangelogConfig())
        // ...
        ->setGitHubCredentials(new GitHubOAuthToken('the oauth token'))
    ,
];