.. _changelog-templates: Version Change Reports ====================== When using the :ref:`cmd-version` and :ref:`cmd-changelog` commands, Python Semantic Release (PSR) will generate a changelog and release notes for your project automatically in the default configuration. The changelog is rendered using the `Jinja`_ template engine, and in the default configuration, PSR will use a built-in template file to render the changelog at the file location defined by the :ref:`changelog_file ` setting. Through the use of the templating engine & the :ref:`template_dir ` configuration setting, you can customize the appearance of your changelog and release notes content. You may also generate a set of files using your custom template directory and the templates will be rendered relative to the root of your repository. Because PSR uses a third-party library, `Jinja`_, as its template engine, we do not include all the syntax within our documentation but rather you should refer to the `Template Designer Documentation`_ for guidance on how to customize the appearance of your release files. If you would like to customize the template environment itself, then certain options are available to you via :ref:`changelog environment configuration `. If you do not want to use the changelog generation features, you can disable changelog generation entirely during the :ref:`cmd-version` command by providing the :ref:`--no-changelog ` command-line option. .. _Jinja: https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/en/3.1.x/ .. _Template Designer Documentation: https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/en/3.1.x/templates/ .. _changelog-templates-default_changelog: Using the Default Changelog --------------------------- If you don't provide any custom templates in the :ref:`changelog.template_dir `, the default changelog templates will be used to render the changelog. PSR provides two default changelog output formats: 1. Markdown (``.md``), *default* 2. reStructuredText (``.rst``), *available since v9.11.0* Both formats are kept in sync with one another to display the equivalent information in the respective format. The default changelog template is located in the ``data/templates/`` directory within the PSR package. The templates are written in modular style (ie. multiple files) and during the render process are ultimately combined together to render the final changelog output. The rendering start point is the ``CHANGELOG.{FORMAT_EXT}.j2`` underneath the respective format directory. PSR provides a few configuration options to customize the default changelog output and can be found under the :ref:`changelog.default_templates ` section as well as some common configuration options under the :ref:`config-changelog` section. To toggle the output format, you only need to set the :ref:`changelog.default_templates.changelog_file ` file name to include the desired file extension (``.md`` or ``.rst``). If you would like a different extension for the resulting changelog file, but would like to still have control over the template format, you can set the :ref:`changelog.default_templates.output_format ` configuration setting to the desired format. A common and *highly-recommended* configuration option is the :ref:`changelog.exclude_commit_patterns ` setting which allows the user to define regular expressions that will exclude commits from the changelog output. This is useful to filter out change messages that are not relevant to your external consumers (ex. ``ci`` and ``test`` in the conventional commit standard) and only include the important changes that impact the consumer of your software. Another important configuration option is the :ref:`changelog.mode ` setting which determines the behavior of the changelog generation. There are 2 modes that available that described in detail below. 1. :ref:`changelog-templates-default_changelog-init` when ``mode = "init"``. 2. :ref:`changelog-templates-default_changelog-update` when ``mode = "update"``. .. _changelog-templates-default_changelog-init: Initialization Mode ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ When using the initialization mode, the changelog file will be created from scratch using the entire git history and **overwrite** any existing changelog file. This is the default behavior introduced in ``v8.0.0``. This is useful when you are trying to convert over to Python Semantic Release for the first time or when you want to automatically update the entire format of your changelog file. .. warning:: If you have an existing changelog in the location you have configured with the :ref:`changelog.changelog_file ` setting, PSR will overwrite the contents of this file on each release. Please make sure to refer to :ref:`changelog-templates-migrating-existing-changelog`. .. _changelog-templates-default_changelog-update: Update Mode ^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. note:: Introduced in ``v9.10.0``. When using the update mode, only the change information from the last release will be prepended into the existing changelog file (defined by the :ref:`changelog.changelog_file `). This mimics the behavior that was used in versions prior to ``v8.0.0`` before the conversion to a templating engine but now uses the `Jinja`_ to accomplish the update. This mode is best suited for managing changes over the lifetime of your project when you may have a need to make manual changes or adjustments to the changelog and its not easily recreated with a template. **How It Works** In order to insert the new release information into an existing changelog file, your changelog file must have an insertion flag to indicate where the new release information should be inserted. The default template will read in your existing changelog file, split the content based on the insertion flag, and then recombine the content (including the insertion flag) with the new release information added after the insertion flag. The insertion flag is customizable through the :ref:`changelog.insertion_flag ` setting. Generally, your insertion flag should be unique text to your changelog file to avoid any unexpected behavior. See the examples below. In the case where the insertion flag is **NOT** found in the existing changelog file, the changelog file will be re-written without any changes. If there is no existing changelog file found, then the changelog file will be initialized from scratch as if the mode was set to ``init``, except the :ref:`changelog.insertion_flag ` will be included into the newly created changelog file. .. tip:: We have accomplished changelog updating through the use of the `Jinja`_ templating and additional context filters and context variables. This is notable because in the case that you want to customize your changelog template, you now can use the same logic to enable changelog updates of your custom template! .. seealso:: - :ref:`changelog-templates-migrating-existing-changelog`. **Example** Given your existing changelog looks like the following with a :ref:`changelog.insertion_flag ` set to ````, when you run the :ref:`cmd-version` command, the new release information will be inserted after the insertion flag. **Before** .. code:: markdown # CHANGELOG ## 1.0.0 - Initial Release **After** .. code:: markdown # CHANGELOG ## v1.1.0 ### Feature - feat: added a new feature ### Fix - fix: resolved divide by zero error ## 1.0.0 - Initial Release .. _changelog-templates-default_changelog-examples: Configuration Examples ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 1. Goal: Configure an updating reStructuredText changelog with a custom insertion flag within ``pyproject.toml``. .. code:: toml [tool.semantic_release.changelog] mode = "update" insertion_flag = "..\n All versions below are listed in reverse chronological order" [tool.semantic_release.changelog.default_templates] changelog_file = "CHANGELOG.rst" output_format = "rst" # optional because of the file extension 2. Goal: Configure an updating Markdown changelog with custom file name and default insertion flag within a separate config file ``releaserc.json``. .. code:: json { "semantic_release": { "changelog": { "mode": "update", "default_templates": { "changelog_file": "docs/HISTORY", "output_format": "md" } } } } 3. Goal: Configure an initializing reStructuredText changelog with filtered conventional commits patterns and merge commits within a custom config file ``releaserc.toml``. .. code:: toml [semantic_release.changelog] mode = "init" default_templates = { changelog_file = "docs/CHANGELOG.rst" } exclude_commit_patterns = [ '''chore(?:\([^)]*?\))?: .+''', '''ci(?:\([^)]*?\))?: .+''', '''refactor(?:\([^)]*?\))?: .+''', '''style(?:\([^)]*?\))?: .+''', '''test(?:\([^)]*?\))?: .+''', '''build\((?!deps\): .+)''', '''Merged? .*''', ] If identified or supported by the parser, the default changelog templates will include a separate section of breaking changes and additional release information. Refer to the :ref:`commit parsing ` section to see how to write commit messages that will be properly parsed and displayed in these sections. .. _changelog-templates-default_release_notes: Using the Default Release Notes ------------------------------- PSR has the capability to generate release notes as part of the publishing of a new version similar to the changelog. The release notes are generated using a `Jinja`_ template and posted to the your remote version control server (VCS) such as GitHub, GitLab, etc during the :ref:`cmd-version` command. PSR provides a default built-in template out-of-the-box for generating release notes. The difference between the changelog and release notes is that the release notes only contain the changes for the current release. Due to the modularity of the PSR templates, the format is similar to an individual version of the default changelog but may include other version specific information. At this time, the default template for version release notes is only available in Markdown format for all VCS types. If you want to review what the default release notes look like you can use the following command to print the release notes to the console (remove any configuration for defining a custom template directory): .. code:: console # Create a current tag git tag v1.0.0 semantic-release --noop changelog --post-to-release-tag v1.0.0 The default template provided by PSR will respect the :ref:`config-changelog-default_templates-mask_initial_release` setting and will also add a comparison link to the previous release if one exists without customization. As of ``v9.18.0``, the default release notes will also include a statement to declare which license the project was released under. PSR determines which license to declare based on the value of ``project.license-expression`` in the ``pyproject.toml`` file as defined in the `PEP 639`_ specification. .. seealso:: - To personalize your release notes, see the :ref:`changelog-templates-custom_release_notes` section. .. _PEP 639: https://peps.python.org/pep-0639/ .. _changelog-templates-template-rendering: Custom Changelogs ----------------- If you would like to customize the appearance of your changelog, you can create your own custom templates and configure PSR to render your templates instead during the :ref:`cmd-version` and :ref:`cmd-changelog` commands. To use a custom template, you need to create a directory within your repository and set the :ref:`template_dir ` setting to the name of this directory. The default name is ``"templates"``. Templates are identified by giving a ``.j2`` extension to the template file. Any such templates have the ``.j2`` extension removed from the target file. Therefore, to render an output file ``foo.csv``, you should create a template called ``foo.csv.j2`` within your template directory. If you have additional files that you would like to render alongside your changelog, you can place these files within the template directory. A file within your template directory which does *not* end in ``.j2`` will not be treated as a template; it will be copied to its target location without being rendered by the template engine. .. tip:: Hidden files within the template directory (i.e. filenames that begin with a period ``"."``) are *excluded* from the rendering process. Hidden folders within the template directory are also excluded, *along with all files and folders contained within them*. This is useful for defining macros or other template components that should not be rendered individually. .. tip:: When initially starting out at customizing your own changelog templates, you should reference the default template embedded within PSR. The template directory is located at ``data/templates/`` within the PSR package. Within our templates directory we separate out each type of commit parser (e.g. conventional) and the content format type (e.g. markdown). You can copy this directory to your repository's templates directory and then customize the templates to your liking. .. _changelog-templates-template-rendering-directory-structure: Directory Structure ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ When the templates are rendered, files within the templates directory tree are output to the location within your repository that has the *same relative path* to the root of your project as the *relative path of the template within the templates directory*. **Example** An example project has the following structure: .. code-block:: example-project/ ├── src/ │   └── example_project/ │   └── __init__.py └── ch-templates/ ├── CHANGELOG.md.j2 ├── .components/ │   └── authors.md.j2 ├── .macros.j2 ├── src/ │   └── example_project/ │   └── data/ │   └── data.json.j2 └── static/ └── config.cfg And a custom templates folder configured via the following snippet in ``pyproject.toml``: .. code-block:: toml [tool.semantic_release.changelog] template_dir = "ch-templates" After running a release with Python Semantic Release, the directory structure of the project will now look like this (excluding the template directory): .. code-block:: example-project/ ├── CHANGELOG.md ├── src/ │   └── example_project/ │   ├── data/ │   │   └── data.json │   └── __init__.py └── static/ └── config.cfg Importantly, note the following: * There is no top-level ``.macros`` file created, because hidden files are excluded from the rendering process. * There is no top-level ``.components`` directory created, because hidden folders and all files and folders contained within it are excluded from the rendering process. * The ``.components/authors.md.j2`` file is not rendered directly, however, it is used as a component to the ``CHANGELOG.md.j2`` via an ``include`` statement in the changelog template. * To render data files into the ``src/`` folder, the path to which the template should be rendered has to be created within the ``ch-templates`` directory. * The ``ch-templates/static`` folder is created at the top-level of the project, and the file ``ch-templates/static/config.cfg`` is *copied, not rendered* to the new top-level ``static`` folder. You may wish to leverage this behavior to modularize your changelog template, to define macros in a separate file, or to reference static data which you would like to avoid duplicating between your template environment and the remainder of your project. .. _changelog-templates-template-rendering-template-context: Changelog Template Context ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ During the rendering of a directory tree, Python Semantic Release provides information about the history of the project available within the templating environment in order for it to be used to generate the changelog and other desired documents. Important project information is provided to the templating environment through the global variable ``context`` or ``ctx`` for short. Within the template environment, the ``context`` object has the following attributes: * ``changelog_insertion_flag (str)``: the insertion flag used to determine where the new release information should be inserted into the changelog file. This value is passed directly from :ref:`changelog.insertion_flag `. *Introduced in v9.10.0.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {% set changelog_parts = prev_changelog_contents.split( ctx.changelog_insertion_flag, maxsplit=1 ) %} * ``changelog_mode (Literal["init", "update"])``: the mode of the changelog generation currently being used. This can be used to determine different rendering logic. This value is passed directly from the :ref:`changelog.mode ` configuration setting. *Introduced in v9.10.0.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {% if ctx.changelog_mode == "init" %}{% include ".changelog_init.md.j2" %}{# #}{% elif ctx.changelog_mode == "update" %}{% include ".changelog_update.md.j2" %}{# #}{% endif %} * ``history (ReleaseHistory)``: the :class:`ReleaseHistory ` instance for the project (See the :ref:`Release History ` section for more information). **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {% set unreleased_commits = ctx.history.unreleased | dictsort %}{% for release in context.history.released.values() %}{% include ".versioned_changes.md.j2" #}{% endfor %} * ``hvcs_type (str)``: the name of the VCS server type currently configured. This can be used to determine which filters are available or different rendering logic. *Introduced in v9.6.0.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {% if ctx.hvcs_type == "github" %}{{ "29" | pull_request_url }}{# #}{% elif ctx.hvcs_type == "gitlab" %}{{ "29" | merge_request_url }}{# #}{% endif %} * ``mask_initial_release (bool)``: a boolean value indicating whether the initial release should be masked with a generic message. This value is passed directly from the :ref:`changelog.default_templates.mask_initial_release ` configuration setting. *Introduced in v9.14.0.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja #}{% if releases | length == 1 and ctx.mask_initial_release %}{# # On a first release, generate a generic message #}{% include ".components/first_release.md.j2" %}{% else %}{# # Not the first release #}{% include ".components/versioned_changes.md.j2" %}{% endif %} * ``repo_name (str)``: the name of the current repository parsed from the Git url. **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {{ ctx.repo_name }} .. code:: markdown example_repo * ``repo_owner (str)``: the owner of the current repository parsed from the Git url. **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {{ ctx.repo_owner }} .. code:: markdown example_org * ``prev_changelog_file (str)``: the path to the previous changelog file that should be updated with the new release information. This value is passed directly from :ref:`changelog.changelog_file `. *Introduced in v9.10.0.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {% set prev_changelog_contents = prev_changelog_file | read_file | safe %} .. _changelog-templates-template-rendering-template-context-release-history: Release History """"""""""""""" A :py:class:`ReleaseHistory ` object has two attributes: ``released`` and ``unreleased``. The ``unreleased`` attribute is of type ``Dict[str, List[ParseResult]]``. Each commit in the current branch's commit history since the last release on this branch is grouped by the ``type`` attribute of the :py:class:`ParsedCommit ` returned by the commit parser, or if the parser returned a :py:class:`ParseError ` then the result is grouped under the ``"unknown"`` key. For this reason, every element of ``ReleaseHistory.unreleased["unknown"]`` is a :py:class:`ParseError `, and every element of every other value in ``ReleaseHistory.unreleased`` is of type :py:class:`ParsedCommit `. Typically, commit types will be ``"feature"``, ``"fix"``, ``"breaking"``, though the specific types are determined by the parser. For example, the :py:class:`EmojiCommitParser ` uses a textual representation of the emoji corresponding to the most significant change introduced in a commit (e.g. ``":boom:"``) as the different commit types. As a template author, you are free to customize how these are presented in the rendered template. .. note:: If you are using a custom commit parser following the guide at :ref:`commit_parser-custom_parser`, your custom implementations of :py:class:`ParseResult `, :py:class:`ParseError ` and :py:class:`ParsedCommit ` will be used in place of the built-in types. The ``released`` attribute is of type ``Dict[Version, Release]``. The keys of this dictionary correspond to each version released within this branch's history, and are of type :py:class:`Version `. You can use the ``as_tag()`` method to render these as the Git tag that they correspond to inside your template. A :py:class:`Release ` object has an ``elements`` attribute, which has the same structure as the ``unreleased`` attribute of a :py:class:`ReleaseHistory `; that is, ``elements`` is of type ``Dict[str, List[ParseResult]]``, where every element of ``elements["unknown"]`` is a :py:class:`ParseError `, and elements of every other value correspond to the ``type`` attribute of the :py:class:`ParsedCommit ` returned by the commit parser. The commits represented within each ``ReleaseHistory.released[version].elements`` grouping are the commits which were made between version and the release corresponding to the previous version. That is, given two releases ``Version(1, 0, 0)`` and ``Version(1, 1, 0)``, ``ReleaseHistory.released[Version(1, 0, 0)].elements`` contains only commits made after the release of ``Version(1, 0, 0)`` up to and including the release of ``Version(1, 1, 0)``. To maintain a consistent order of subsections in the changelog headed by the commit type, it's recommended to use Jinja's `dictsort `_ filter. Each :py:class:`Release ` object also has the following attributes: * ``tagger: git.Actor``: The tagger who tagged the release. * ``committer: git.Actor``: The committer who made the release commit. * ``tagged_date: datetime``: The date and time at which the release was tagged. .. seealso:: * :ref:`commit_parser-builtin` * :ref:`Commit Parser Tokens ` * `git.Actor `_ * `datetime.strftime Format Codes `_ .. _changelog-templates-custom_templates-filters: Changelog Template Filters ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ In addition to the context variables, PSR seeds the template environment with a set of custom functions (commonly called ``filters`` in `Jinja`_ terminology) for use within the template. Filter's first argument is always piped (``|``) to the function while any additional arguments are passed in parentheses like normal function calls. The filters provided vary based on the VCS configured and available features: * ``autofit_text_width (Callable[[textStr, maxWidthInt, indent_sizeInt], textStr])``: given a text string, fit the text to the maximum width provided. This filter is useful when you want to wrap text to a specific width. The filter will attempt to break the text at word boundaries and will indent the text by the amount specified in the ``indent_size`` parameter. *Introduced in v9.12.0.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {{ "This is a long string that needs to be wrapped to a specific width" | autofit_text_width(40, 4) }} **Markdown Output:** .. code:: markdown This is a long string that needs to be wrapped to a specific width * ``convert_md_to_rst (Callable[[MdStr], RstStr])``: given a markdown string, convert it to reStructuredText format. This filter is useful when building a reStructuredText changelog but your commit messages are in markdown format. It is utilized by the default RST changelog template. It is limited in its ability to convert all markdown to reStructuredText, but it handles most common cases (bold, italics, inline-raw, etc.) within commit messages. *Introduced in v9.11.0.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {{ "\n* %s (`%s`_)\n" | format( commit.message.rstrip() | convert_md_to_rst, commit.short_hash, ) }} * ``create_pypi_url(package_name: str, version: str = "")``: given a package name and an optional version, return a URL to the PyPI page for the package. If a version is provided, the URL will point to the specific version page. If no version is provided, the URL will point to the package page. *Introduced in v9.18.0.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {{ "example-package" | create_pypi_url }} {{ "example-package" | create_pypi_url("1.0.0") }} **Markdown Output:** .. code:: markdown https://pypi.org/project/example-package https://pypi.org/project/example-package/1.0.0 * ``create_release_url (Callable[[TagStr], UrlStr])``: given a tag, return a URL to the release page on the remote vcs. This filter is useful when you want to link to the release page on the remote vcs. *Introduced in v9.18.0.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {{ "v1.0.0" | create_release_url }} **Markdown Output:** .. code:: markdown https://example.com/example/repo/releases/tag/v1.0.0 * ``create_server_url (Callable[[PathStr, AuthStr | None, QueryStr | None, FragmentStr | None], UrlStr])``: when given a path, prepend the configured vcs server host and url scheme. Optionally you can provide, a auth string, a query string or a url fragment to be normalized into the resulting url. Parameter order is as described above respectively. *Introduced in v9.6.0.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {{ "example/repo.git" | create_server_url }} {{ "example/repo" | create_server_url(None, "results=1", "section-header") }} **Markdown Output:** .. code:: markdown https://example.com/example/repo.git https://example.com/example/repo?results=1#section-header * ``create_repo_url (Callable[[RepoPathStr, QueryStr | None, FragmentStr | None], UrlStr])``: when given a repository path, prepend the configured vcs server host, and repo namespace. Optionally you can provide, an additional query string and/or a url fragment to also put in the url. Parameter order is as described above respectively. This is similar to ``create_server_url`` but includes the repo namespace and owner automatically. *Introduced in v9.6.0.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {{ "releases/tags/v1.0.0" | create_repo_url }} {{ "issues" | create_repo_url("q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aclosed") }} **Markdown Output:** .. code:: markdown https://example.com/example/repo/releases/tags/v1.0.0 https://example.com/example/repo/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aclosed * ``commit_hash_url (Callable[[hashStr], UrlStr])``: given a commit hash, return a URL to the commit in the remote. *Introduced in v8.0.0.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {{ commit.hexsha | commit_hash_url }} **Markdown Output:** .. code:: markdown https://example.com/example/repo/commit/a1b2c3d435657f5d339ba10c7b1ed81b460af51d * ``compare_url (Callable[[StartRefStr, StopRefStr], UrlStr])``: given a starting git reference and a ending git reference create a comparison url between the two references that can be opened on the remote *Introduced in v9.6.0.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {{ "v1.0.0" | compare_url("v1.1.0") }} **Markdown Output:** .. code:: markdown https://example.com/example/repo/compare/v1.0.0...v1.1.0 * ``issue_url (Callable[[IssueNumStr | IssueNumInt], UrlStr])``: given an issue number, return a URL to the issue on the remote vcs. In v9.12.2, this filter was updated to handle a string that has leading prefix symbols (ex. ``#32``) and will strip the prefix before generating the URL. *Introduced in v9.6.0, Modified in v9.12.2.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {# Add Links to issues annotated in the commit message # NOTE: commit.linked_issues is only available in v9.15.0 or greater # #}{% for issue_ref in commit.linked_issues %}{{ "- [%s](%s)" | format(issue_ref, issue_ref | issue_url) }}{% endfor %} **Markdown Output:** .. code:: markdown - [#32](https://example.com/example/repo/issues/32) * ``merge_request_url (Callable[[MergeReqStr | MergeReqInt], UrlStr])``: given a merge request number, return a URL to the merge request in the remote. This is an alias to the ``pull_request_url`` but only available for the VCS that uses the merge request terminology. In v9.12.2, this filter was updated to handle a string that has leading prefix symbols (ex. ``#29``) and will strip the prefix before generating the URL. *Introduced in v9.6.0, Modified in v9.12.2.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {{ "[%s](%s)" | format( commit.linked_merge_request, commit.linked_merge_request | merge_request_url ) }} {# commit.linked_merge_request is only available in v9.13.0 or greater #} **Markdown Output:** .. code:: markdown [#29](https://example.com/example/repo/-/merge_requests/29) * ``pull_request_url (Callable[[PullReqStr | PullReqInt], UrlStr])``: given a pull request number, return a URL to the pull request in the remote. For remote vcs' that use merge request terminology, this filter is an alias to the ``merge_request_url`` filter function. In v9.12.2, this filter was updated to handle a string that has leading prefix symbols (ex. ``#29``) and will strip the prefix before generating the URL. *Introduced in v9.6.0, Modified in v9.12.2.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {# Create a link to the merge request associated with the commit # NOTE: commit.linked_merge_request is only available in v9.13.0 or greater #}{{ "[%s](%s)" | format( commit.linked_merge_request, commit.linked_merge_request | pull_request_url ) }} **Markdown Output:** .. code:: markdown [#29](https://example.com/example/repo/pull/29) * ``format_w_official_vcs_name (Callable[[str], str])``: given a format string, insert the official VCS type name into the string and return. This filter is useful when you want to display the proper name of the VCS type in a changelog or release notes. The filter supports three different replace formats: ``%s``, ``{}``, and ``{vcs_name}``. *Introduced in v9.18.0.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {{ "%s Releases" | format_w_official_vcs_name }} {{ "{} Releases" | format_w_official_vcs_name }} {{ "{vcs_name} Releases" | format_w_official_vcs_name }} **Markdown Output:** .. code:: markdown GitHub Releases GitHub Releases GitHub Releases * ``read_file (Callable[[str], str])``: given a file path, read the file and return the contents as a string. This function was added specifically to enable the changelog update feature where it would load the existing changelog file into the templating environment to be updated. *Introduced in v9.10.0.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {% set prev_changelog_contents = prev_changelog_file | read_file | safe %} * ``sort_numerically (Callable[[Iterable[str], bool], list[str]])``: given a sequence of strings with possibly some non-number characters as a prefix or suffix, sort the strings as if they were just numbers from lowest to highest. This filter is useful when you want to sort issue numbers or other strings that have a numeric component in them but cannot be cast to a number directly to sort them. If you want to sort the strings in reverse order, you can pass a boolean value of ``True`` as the second argument. *Introduced in v9.16.0.* **Example Usage:** .. code:: jinja {{ ["#222", "#1023", "#444"] | sort_numerically }} {{ ["#222", "#1023", "#444"] | sort_numerically(True) }} **Markdown Output:** .. code:: markdown ['#222', '#444', '#1023'] ['#1023', '#444', '#222'] Availability of the documented filters can be found in the table below: ========================== ========= ===== ====== ====== **filter - hvcs_type** bitbucket gitea github gitlab ========================== ========= ===== ====== ====== autofit_text_width ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ convert_md_to_rst ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ create_pypi_url ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ create_server_url ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ create_release_url ❌ ✅ ✅ ✅ create_repo_url ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ commit_hash_url ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ compare_url ✅ ❌ ✅ ✅ format_w_official_vcs_name ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ issue_url ❌ ✅ ✅ ✅ merge_request_url ❌ ❌ ❌ ✅ pull_request_url ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ read_file ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ sort_numerically ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ========================== ========= ===== ====== ====== .. seealso:: * `Filters `_ .. _changelog-templates-template-rendering-example: Example ^^^^^^^ The following template is a simple example of how to render a changelog using the PSR template context to create a changelog in Markdown format. **Configuration:** ``pyproject.toml`` .. code:: toml [tool.semantic_release.changelog] template_dir = "templates" **Template:** ``templates/CHANGELOG.md.j2`` .. code:: jinja # CHANGELOG {% for version, release in ctx.history.released.items() %}{{ "## %s (%s)" | format(version.as_tag(), release.tagged_date.strftime("%Y-%m-%d")) }}{% for type_, commits in release["elements"] if type_ != "unknown" | dictsort %}{{ "### %s" | format(type_ | title) }}{% for commit in commits %}{{ "* %s ([`%s`](%s))" | format( commit.descriptions[0] | capitalize, commit.hexsha[:7], commit.hexsha | commit_hash_url, ) }}{% endfor %}{% endfor %}{% endfor %} **Result:** ``CHANGELOG.md`` .. code:: markdown # CHANGELOG ## v1.1.0 (2022-01-01) ### Feature * Added a new feature ([`a1b2c3d`](https://github.com/example/repo/commit/a1b2c3d)) ## v1.0.0 (2021-12-31) ### Fix * Resolved divide by zero error ([`e4f5g6h`](https://github.com/example/repo/commit/e4f5g6h)) It is important to note that the template utilizes the ``context`` variable to extract the project history as well as the ``commit_hash_url`` filter to generate a URL to the remote VCS for each commit. Both of these are injected into the template environment by PSR. .. _changelog-templates-custom_release_notes: Custom Release Notes -------------------- If you would like to customize the appearance of your release notes, you can add a hidden file named ``.release_notes.md.j2`` at the root of your :ref:`changelog.template_dir `. This file will automatically be detected and used to render the release notes during the :ref:`cmd-version` and :ref:`cmd-changelog` commands. A similar :ref:`template rendering ` mechanism is used to render the release notes as is used for the changelog. There are minor differences in the context available to the release notes template but the template directory structure and modularity is maintained. .. tip:: When initially starting out at customizing your own release notes template, you should reference the default template embedded within PSR. The release notes template can be found in the directory ``data/templates//md`` within the PSR package. .. _changelog-templates-custom_release_notes-context: Release Notes Context ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ All of the changelog's :ref:`template context ` is exposed to the `Jinja`_ template when rendering the release notes. Additionally, the following two globals are available to the template: * ``release`` (:py:class:`Release `): contains metadata about the content of the release, as parsed from commit logs *Introduced in v8.0.0.* * ``version`` (:py:class:`Version `): contains metadata about the software version to be released and its ``git`` tag *Introduced in v8.0.0.* .. _changelog-templates-release-notes-template-example: Example ^^^^^^^ Below is an example template that can be used to render release notes (it's similar to GitHub's `automatically generated release notes`_): .. _Automatically generated release notes: https://docs.github.com/en/repositories/releasing-projects-on-github/automatically-generated-release-notes **Configuration:** ``pyproject.toml`` .. code:: toml [tool.semantic_release.changelog] template_dir = "templates" **Template:** ``templates/.release_notes.md.j2`` .. code:: jinja ## What's Changed {% for type_, commits in release["elements"] | dictsort %}{%- if type_ != "unknown" %}{{ "### %s" | format(type_ | title) }}{% for commit in commits %}{{ "* %s by %s in [`%s`](%s)" | format( commit.descriptions[0] | capitalize, commit.commit.author.name, commit.hexsha[:7], commit.hexsha | commit_hash_url, ) }}{%- endfor %}{% endif %}{% endfor %} **Result:** ``https://github.com/example/repo/releases/tag/v1.1.0`` .. code:: markdown ## What's Changed ### Feature * Added a new feature by John Doe in [`a1b2c3d`](https://github.com/example/repo/commit/a1b2c3d) .. _changelog-templates-migrating-existing-changelog: Migrating an Existing Changelog ------------------------------- **v9.10.0 or greater** Migrating an existing changelog is simple with Python Semantic Release! To preserve your existing changelog, follow these steps: 1. **Set the changelog.mode to "update"** in your configuration file. This will ensure that only the new release information is added to your existing changelog file. 2. **Set the changelog.insertion_flag to a unique string.** You may use the default value or set it to a unique string that is not present in your existing changelog file. This flag is used to determine where the new release information should be inserted into your existing changelog. 3. **Add the insertion flag to your changelog file.** This must match the value you set in step 2. The insertion flag should be placed in the location above where you would like the new release information to be inserted. .. note:: If you are trying to convert an existing changelog to a new format, you will need to do most of the conversion manually (or rebuild via init and modify) and make sure to include your insertion flag into the format of the new changelog. **Prior to v9.10.0** If you have an existing changelog that you would like to preserve, you will need to add the contents of the changelog file to your changelog template - either directly or via Jinja's `include `_ tag. If you would like only the history from your next release onwards to be rendered into the changelog in addition to the existing changelog, you can add an `if statement `_ based upon the versions in the keys of ``context.released``. .. _changelog-templates-upgrading-templates: Upgrading Templates ------------------- As PSR evolves, new features and improvements are added to the templating engine. If you have created your own custom templates, you may need to update them to take advantage of some new features. Below are some instructions on how to upgrade your templates to gain the benefits of the new features. .. _changelog-templates-upgrading-updating_changelog: Incrementally Updating Changelog Template ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. note:: This section is only relevant if you are upgrading from a version of PSR greater than v8.0.0 and prior to ``v9.10.0`` and have created your own custom templates. If you have previously created your own custom templates and would like to gain the benefits of the new updating changelog feature, you will need to make a few changes to your existing templates. The following steps are a few suggestions to help upgrade your templates but primarily you should review the embedded default templates in the PSR package for a full example. You can find the default templates at `data/templates/`__ directory. __ https://github.com/python-semantic-release/python-semantic-release/tree/master/src/semantic_release/data/templates 1. **Add a conditional to check the changelog_mode.** This will allow you to determine if you should render the entire changelog or just the new release information. See ``data/templates/*/md/CHANGELOG.md.j2`` for reference. 2. **Use the new read_file filter** to read in the existing changelog file ``ctx.prev_changelog_file``. This will allow you to include the existing changelog content in your new changelog file. See ``data/templates/*/md/.components/changelog_update.md.j2`` for reference. 3. **Split the changelog content based on the insertion flag.** This will allow you to insert the new release information after the insertion flag (``ctx.changelog_insertion_flag``). See ``data/templates/*/md/.components/changelog_update.md.j2`` for reference. 4. **Print the leading content before the insertion flag.** This ensures you maintain any content that should be included before the new release information. See ``data/templates/*/md/.components/changelog_update.md.j2`` for reference. 5. **Print your insertion flag.** This is imperative to ensure that the resulting changelog can be updated in the future. See ``data/templates/*/md/.components/changelog_update.md.j2`` for reference. 6. **Print the new release information.** Be sure to consider both unreleased and released commits during this step because of the :ref:`cmd-changelog` command that can be run at any time. See ``data/templates/*/md/.components/changelog_update.md.j2`` for reference. 7. **Print the trailing content after the insertion flag.** This ensures you maintain any content that should be included after the new release information. See ``data/templates/*/md/.components/changelog_update.md.j2`` for reference. .. tip:: Modularity of your templates is key to handling both modes of changelog generation. Reference the default templates for examples on how we handle both modes and defensively handle numerous breaking scenarios. .. tip:: If you are having trouble upgrading your templates, please post a question on the `PSR GitHub`__ __ https://github.com/python-semantic-release/python-semantic-release/issues