The git provider for go-semantic-release.
This plugin will make sure that the continuous integration environment conditions are met. Namely that the release is happening on the correct branch.
To use this plugin you need to include the following block in your
.semrelrc
file.
{
"plugins": {
"provider": {
"name": "git",
// Options can be omitted if you want to use the defaults.
// See the section on configuration below.
"options": {
// Put configuration options here
}
}
}
}
Name | Default Value | Description |
---|---|---|
default_branch | master | The branch where deployments should happen. |
tagger_name | semantic-release | The name of the user creating the tag. |
tagger_email | [email protected] | The email address of the user creating the tag. |
remote_name | The name of the remote to push to. | |
auth | (Depends on origin URL) | The authentication type to use (basic, ssh) |
auth_username | git | The name of the user to use for authentication. |
auth_password | The password to use for basic auth or the SSH key. | |
auth_private_key | The path to an SSH private key file. | |
git_path | . | The path to the Git repository. |
push_options | The push options for the git tag push. |
If you don't pick a specific authentication mechanism then an authentication mechanism will be picked based on the URL of the Git remote. Under the covers go-git is responsible for determining how to perform this kind of authentication.
Basic authentication uses a username and password pair to perform authentication over HTTP/HTTPS.
For this method you'll need to set auth_username
and auth_password
.
SSH authentication uses an SSH private key to authenticate with the Git remote ove ran SSH connection.
For this method you'll need to set auth_username
and
auth_private_key
. If your private key uses a password then you'll
also need to set auth_password
.
Copyright © 2020 Christoph Witzko