dotnet-releaser is an all-in-one command line tool that fully automates the release cycle of your .NET libraries and applications to NuGet and GitHub by building, testing, running coverage, cross-compiling, packaging, creating release notes from PR/commits and publishing.
In practice, dotnet-releaser will automate the build and publish process of your .NET libraries and applications by wrapping:
dotnet buildwith potentially multiple solutionsdotnet test- Plus the automatic support for coverage.
dotnet packfor creating NuGet packagesdotnet publishthat can automatically cross-compile to 9+ CPU/OS platforms.- And create additionally, by default, multiple packages (zip, debian, rpm...) to distribute your app
dotnet nuget pushto publish your package to a NuGet registry- Pretty changelog creation from pull-requests and commits.
- Create and upload the changelog and all the packages packed to your GitHub repository associated with the release tag.
- It can publish automatically the coverage results to a badge in a GitHub gist or to https://coveralls.io if your repository is created there.
dotnet-releasertool requires .NET 9.0 runtime to be installed.
- Very simple to use, configure and integrate into your GitHub Action CI
- Build and tests your .NET libraries and applications from multiple solutions.
- Add automatic coverage support via coverlet with your tests.
- Cross-compile your .NET 6.0+ application to 9+ OS/CPU targets.
- Create zip archives, Linux packages (debian, rpm) and Homebrew taps
- Allow to publish your application as a service (only
Systemdfor now fordebandrpmpackages). - Create and publish beautiful release notes by extracting the information directly from pull-requests and commits, while offering customizable templates.
- Publish all artifacts to NuGet and GitHub
- Can be used to build/tests/package/publish locally or from GitHub Action using the same command.
By default, dotnet-releaser will:
- Build your project(s)/solution(s) in Release
- Run tests in Release
- Create NuGet packages for libraries and applications (packed as a .NET global tool)
- Create application packages for any packable application in your project:
Platform Packages win-x64,win-arm64ziplinux-x64,linux-arm64rpm,deb,tarosx-x64,osx-arm64tar - Publish libraries and/or applications to NuGet
- Upload all the package artifacts and your changelog to GitHub on the tag associated with your package version (e.g your package is
1.0.0, it will try to find a git tagv1.0.0or1.0.0). - Create a Homebrew repository and formula (e.g
user_or_org/homebrew-your-app-name) for all the tar files associated with the targets for Linux and MacOS.
Any of these steps can be configured or even entirely disabled easily from a config file. See the user guide on how to setup this differently for your application.
- Install
dotnet-releaseras a global .NET tool.dotnet tool install --global dotnet-releaser - Go to a folder where you have your solution
.slnfile or your project file (.csproj,.fsproj,.vbproj) and run:dotnet releaser new - It should create a
dotnet-releaser.tomlat the same level than your solution with a content like:[msbuild] project = "Tonlyn.sln" [github] user = "xoofx" repo = "Tomlyn"
- If you want to try a full build locally:
dotnet-releaser build --force dotnet-releaser.toml - If you want to integrate it to GitHub Action, use the
dotnet-releaser runcommand. More details in the doc Adding dotnet-releaser to your CI on GitHub. It is no more complicated than adding the following lines in your GitHub workflow file:Notice the recommended usage ofsteps: - name: Checkout uses: actions/checkout@v4 with: fetch-depth: 0 - name: Install .NET 9.0 uses: actions/setup-dotnet@v4 with: dotnet-version: '9.0.x' - name: Build, Tests, Cover, Pack and Publish (on push tag) shell: bash run: | dotnet tool install --global dotnet-releaser dotnet-releaser run --nuget-token "${{secrets.NUGET_TOKEN}}" --github-token "${{secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN}}" src/dotnet-releaser.toml
shell: bashso that if a secrets token is empty, bash won't remove the quotes, unlike pwsh.
See the user guide below for further details on how to use dotnet-releaser.
For more details on how to use dotnet-releaser, please visit the user guide.
This software is released under the BSD-Clause 2 license.
It's brand new, so it's mainly used by the author for now! 😇
You can visit the .github/workflows folder, or check the release notes of the following projects to see dotnet-releaser in action:
Applications:
- grpc-curl: An application shipping multiple executables.
- lunet: An application shipping a .NET global tool to NuGet.
Regular .NET Libraries:
dotnet-releaser is a wrapper around many amazing OSS libraries:
- dotnet-packaging by using their NuGet Packaging.Targets to hook package creation into MSBuild user's project.
- CommandLineUtils for handling parsing command line arguments
- Microsoft.Extensions.Logging for logging to the console.
- MsBuildPipeLogger for interacting with MSBuild structured output.
- Octokit.NET for interacting with GitHub.
- Tomlyn for parsing the TOML configuration file.
- CliWrap to easily wrap and launch executables.
- Spectre.Console for generating pretty logs and table reports.
- Scriban used for text templating of the changelog/release notes.
- DotNet.Glob used by changelog filtering on files.
Alexandre Mutel aka xoofx.
