βοΈ Important announcement: Greenkeeper will be saying goodbye π and passing the torch to Snyk on June 3rd, 2020! Find out how to migrate to Snyk and more at greenkeeper.io
π π β¨ Greenkeeper now has built-in support for updating lockfiles β¨π π
Read all about it here: https://blog.greenkeeper.io/announcing-native-lockfile-support-85381a37a0d0
β If you have an
npm-shrinkwrap.json
file or are using private npm packages you will still needgreenkeeper-lockfile
.
- β npm (including npm5)
- β yarn
-
β Travis CI
-
β Circle CI Thank you @ethanrubio π
-
β Jenkins
-
β Wercker
-
β Bitrise Thank you @zetaron π
-
β Buildkite Thank you @justindowning π
-
β Codeship Thank you @selbyk π
-
β Semaphore Thank you @cbothner π
-
β TeamCity Thank you @tagoro9 & @dbrockman π
-
β Drone.io Thank you @donny-dont π
-
β AppVeyor Thank you @patkub π
-
β GitLab CI Thank you @baer95 π
-
π Contribute your own
- Detect whether the current CI build is caused by Greenkeeper
- Update the lockfile with the latest version of the updated dependency using the package managerβs built in mechanism
- Push a commit with the updated lockfile back to the Greenkeeper branch
- create a GitHub access token with push access to your repository and make it available to your CI's environment as
GH_TOKEN
.
If you use Travis CI, you may add the token using the CLI app as follows:
travis encrypt GH_TOKEN=<token> --add
-
Configure your CI to use the npm/yarn version you want your lockfiles to be generated with before it installs your dependencies. Install
greenkeeper-lockfile
as well. -
Configure your CI to run
greenkeeper-lockfile-update
right before it executes your tests andgreenkeeper-lockfile-upload
right after it executed your tests.
The next Step is only applicable greenkeeper-lockfile version 2 (with monorepo support)
- If you use a default branch that is not
master
then you have to add the environment variableGK_LOCK_DEFAULT_BRANCH
with the name of your default branch to your CI.
before_install:
# package-lock.json was introduced in npm@5
- '[[ $(node -v) =~ ^v9.*$ ]] || npm install -g npm@latest' # skipped when using node 9
- npm install -g greenkeeper-lockfile
install: npm install
before_script: greenkeeper-lockfile-update
after_script: greenkeeper-lockfile-upload
π¨ npm ci won't work with greenkeeper pull requests because:
If dependencies in the package lock do not match those in package.json, npm ci will exit with an error, instead of updating the package lock.
Travis will use npm ci
by default if lockfiles are present so you'll need to explicitly tell your CI to run npm install
instead of npm ci
install: npm install
before_install: yarn global add greenkeeper-lockfile@1
before_script: greenkeeper-lockfile-update
after_script: greenkeeper-lockfile-upload
Custom yarn command line arguments
To run the lockfile-update script with custom command line arguments, set the GK_LOCK_YARN_OPTS
environment variable to your needs (set it to --ignore-engines
, for example). They will be appended to the yarn add
command.
greenkeeper-lockfile 2.0.0 offers support for monorepos. To use it make sure you install greenkeeper-lockfile@2
explicitly.
If you are using a default branch on Github that is not called master
, please set an Environment Variable GK_LOCK_DEFAULT_BRANCH
with the name of your default branch in your CI.
It is common to test multiple node versions and therefor have multiple test jobs for one build. In this case the lockfile will automatically be updated for every job, but only uploaded for the first one.
node_js:
- 6
- 4
before_install:
- npm install -g npm
- npm install -g greenkeeper-lockfile@1
install: npm install
before_script: greenkeeper-lockfile-update
# Only the node version 6 job will upload the lockfile
after_script: greenkeeper-lockfile-upload
In order to use greenkeeper-lockfile
with CircleCI workflows, greenkeeper-lockfile-update
must be run in the first job, while greenkeeper-lockfile-upload
can be run in any job.
If you want to upload the lockfile in a later job, the .git
directory needs to be saved to cache after updating, and restored before uploading. (example workflow config)
Use sequential job execution to ensure the job that runs greenkeeper-lockfile-update
is always executed first.
For example, if greenkeeper-lockfile-update
is run in the lockfile
job, all other jobs in the workflow must require the lockfile
job to finish before running:
workflows:
version: 2
workflow_name:
jobs:
- lockfile
- job1:
requires:
- lockfile
In order for this to work with TeamCity, the build configuration needs to set the following environment variables:
- VCS_ROOT_URL from the vcsroot..url parameter
- VCS_ROOT_BRANCH from the teamcity.build.branch parameter
Environment Variable | default value | what is it for? |
---|---|---|
GK_LOCK_YARN_OPTS | '' | Add yarn options that greenkeeper should use e.g. --ignore-engines |
GK_LOCK_DEFAULT_BRANCH | 'master' | Set your default github branch name |
GK_LOCK_COMMIT_AMEND | false | Lockfile commit should be amended to the regular Greenkeeper commit |
GK_LOCK_COMMIT_NAME | 'greenkeeperio-bot' | Set your prefered git commit name |
GK_LOCK_COMMIT_EMAIL | 'support@greenkeeper.io' | Set your prefered git commit email |
In order to support a CI service this package needs to extract some information from the environment.
- repoSlug The GitHub repo slug e.g.
greenkeeper/greenkeeper-lockfile
- branchName The name of the current branch e.g.
greenkeeper/lodash-4.0.0
- firstPush Is this the first push on this branch i.e. the Greenkeeper commit
- correctBuild Is this a regular build (not a pull request for example)
- uploadBuild Should the lockfile be uploaded from this build (relevant for testing multiple node versions)
The following optional information may be needed:
- ignoreOutput The method to ignore command output when staging the updated lockfile (e.g.
2>NUL || (exit 0)
on Windows)
Have a look at our Travis CI reference implementation.
Write a test that returns whether this package runs in your CI serviceβs environment and add it to our ci-services/tests.
In order to test this plugin with your own CI service install your fork directly from git.
+ npm i -g you/greenkeeper-lockfile#my-ci
- npm i -g greenkeeper-lockfile@1
We are looking forward to your contributions π Donβt forget to add your CI service to the list at the top of this file.