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# Usage of Proclamation to maintain changelogs
This file:
```txt
SPDX-License-Identifier: CC0-1.0
SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2020 Collabora, Ltd. and the Proclamation contributors
```
This project uses the [Proclamation][] tool to maintain changelogs. Contributors
to this project do not need to use Proclamation, but they are asked to write a
fragment for the changelog describing their change. See below for more details.
- Directory to run Proclamation in: `doc/changes`
- Config file: default name (`.proclamation.json`)
- Location of the per-changelog-section directories: `doc/changes`
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[Proclamation]: https://gitlab.com/proclamation/proclamation
## Table of Contents
- [Quick Start Instructions for Contributors](#quick-start-instructions-for-contributors)
- [About Proclamation and Usage Instructions](#about-proclamation-and-usage-instructions)
- [Fragments](#fragments)
- [References](#references)
- [Sections](#sections)
- [Configuration](#configuration)
- [Sample Usage Workflow](#sample-usage-workflow)
- [During Development](#during-development)
- [Preparing for a Release](#preparing-for-a-release)
## Quick Start Instructions for Contributors
- Get a merge/pull request number for your change: this might involve pushing it
as a WIP.
- Create a file in the appropriate section's directory, named `mr.YOURNUMBER.md`
- In that file, briefly describe your change as you would like it describe in
the changelog for the next release.
- If your changes affect multiple sections, you can have a file in each section
describing the section-specific changes.
- If your change resolves an issue or otherwise references some issue or
merge/pull request, you can add those references to the beginning of your
changelog fragment. See the full instructions below regarding
[References](#references).
## About Proclamation and Usage Instructions
The "Proclamation" tool assembles changelogs, which incorporate fragments of
changelog text added by the author of a change in a specific location and
format.
### Fragments
Each change should add a changelog fragment file, whose contents are
Markdown-formatted text describing the change briefly. Reference metadata will
be used to automatically add links to associated issues/merge requests/pull
requests, so no need to add these in your fragment text. The simplest changelog
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fragment contains one line of Markdown text describing the change:
```md
Here the author of a change has written some text about it.
```
### References
The changelog fragment system revolves around "references" - these are issue
reports, pull requests, or merge requests associated with a
change. Each fragment must have at least one of these, which forms the main part
of the filename. If applicable, additional can be added within the file - see
below for details.
This portion of the Proclamation system is intentionally left very flexible,
since there are very many ways of organizing and managing a project. By default,
references are delimited by the `.` character. The first two fields have some
conventional meaning, while any additional fields are up to the user and are
only used if a custom template is supplied by a project.
The format of references in general is:
```txt
<ref_type>.<number>
```
where
- `ref_type` is "issue", "mr", or "pr"
- `number` is the issue, MR, or PR number
- any additional `.`-delimited tokens are passed on to the template in the
`service_params` list.
Your changelog fragment filename is simply the "main" reference with the `.md`
extension added. (You can also use `.rst` or `.txt` as your extension in your
project.)
To specify additional references in a file, prefix the contents of the changelog
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fragment with a block delimited before and after by `---`, with one reference on
each line. (This can be seen as a very minimal subset of "YAML Front Matter", if
you're familiar with that concept.) For example:
```md
---
- issue.35
- mr.93
---
Here the author of a change has written some text about it.
```
There are provisions for providing your own reference parser if this format is
entirely unusable, but they're underdeveloped. (Most use cases found by the
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original author can actually be accommodated by changing the template and
specifying `.`-delimited fields in references.) If this functionality is
interesting to you, get involved in the development of Proclamation and help
finish it!
### Sections
Changelog fragments are organized into sections, each of which should have its
own directory. These might be "type-of-change" sections (e.g. new feature,
bugfix, etc). Alternately, they might be logical sub-projects - it's permissible
to have multiple projects configured in one config file and repo with
partially-overlapping sections. (This is actually a part of one of the
originally motivating use cases for this tool.)
Every file whose filename parses and meets some basic checks will be used! (You
do need to add e.g. an `.md` file extension to files for them to parse as
references.) Having a `changes/your_section_name` directory for each section is
recommended. You can provide a `README.md` file with a modified subset of this
file in that directory, as guidance to contributors to your project.
(`README.md` won't parse as a reference, so it will not be treated as a
changelog fragment.)
Use whatever works for your project. Right now, all changelog fragments must be
in a section, sections must be a single directory, and sections may not be
nested. If you'd like to loosen these assumptions, get involved in the development of Proclamation and help!
## Configuration
Your project should have a configuration file: the default name is
`.proclamation.json`. The top level object can either be a project config object
directly, or contain a member named "projects" with an array of project config
objects.
You can look at the config file for this project for guidance, since it's a
pretty simple use case of this tool. (Proclamation was designed to handle more
elaborate use-cases than this.)
- Project attributes:
- `project_name` - Required. Used to form the heading in the default template,
etc.
- `base_url` - Technically optional, but required if you're using the default
template. Passed to the template which may use it to form reference links.
- `news_filename` - Optional, in case your changelog isn't called NEWS.
- `sections` - Required: contains an object. The key names are the section
names (used by the default template for section headers), while the values
are objects. Sections might be logical sub-projects, or alternately
categories of changes (feature, bug fix, etc), it's up to you.
- The only key valid right now in the child of the section is `directory`,
which indicates the directory to search for changelog fragments.
- `template` - Optional. The name of a Jinja2 template for a single release's
changelog section. `base.md` comes with Proclamation and is used by default.
Your custom template might inherit from this if you only need to change a
few small details. Evaluated relative to the current working directory when
you run Proclamation.
- `insert_point_pattern` - Useful mainly if you're not using the default
template. The first match of this regex will be considered the first line of
a release entry, and your new release will be put in your changelog file
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before it. Default works with the default template (looks for a second-level
Markdown heading).
- `extra_data` - Any extra data you'd like to pass along to your custom
template.
## Sample Usage Workflow
Note that the base `proclamation` script and all its subcommands have help,
accessible through `-h` or `--help`. The guidance in this section of the README
is intentionally minimal, to avoid contradicting the online help which remains
up-to-date implicitly. This is also only the simplest, minimal way to perform
these operations: if your project is more complex, there may already be more
features to support your needs in the command line help.
### During Development
As changes get submitted to your project, have each change author create a
changelog fragment file. Since these are all separate files, with names made
unique by your issue/repo tracker, there won't be merge conflicts no matter what
order they're merged in. (This is the central benefit of Proclamation, and its
inspiration, towncrier, over having each contributor edit CHANGES as part of
their submission.)
At any time you can run `proclamation draft` to preview the release portion that
would be added to your changelog if you released at that time.
### Preparing for a Release
When you're ready to perform a release, you'll want to run Proclamation to
update your changelog, then remove the fragments that you've incorporated into
the regular changelog. You can use a command like the following:
```sh
proclamation build YOUR_NEW_VERSION
```
to preview the full file on screen. When you're ready to actually perform the
update, run something like:
```sh
proclamation build YOUR_NEW_VERSION --delete-fragments --overwrite
```
to overwrite your changelog file with the updated one and delete the used
changelog fragments.
You're welcome to manually edit the new (or old!) changelog entries as desired:
as long as the `insert_point_pattern` (by default, `^## .*`) can still match,
Proclamation will not be confused.
Finally, make sure the deletion of the fragments and the update of the changelog
has been checked in to your version control system.