Releaser
Builds go binaries for several platforms, creates a github release and then
push it to a custom homebrew repository
How it works?
The idea started with a simple shell script,
but it quickly became more complex and I also wanted to publish binaries via
homebrew.
So, the all-new goreleaser was born.
Usage
Basically, you need to create a goreleaser.yml
file in the root of your
repository. A minimal config would look like this:
repo: user/repo
binary_name: my-binary
This will build main.go
file as my-binary
, for Darwin and Linux,
x86_64 and i386, packaging the binary, LICENSE.md
and README.md
and publish a new github release in the user/repo
repository with
the .tar.gz
files there.
Homebrew
To push it to a homebrew repo, just add a brew
section:
repo: user/repo
binary_name: my-binary
brew:
repo: user/homebrew-formulae
caveats: "Optional caveats to add to the formulae"
Build customization
Just add a build
section
repo: user/repo
binary_name: my-binary
build:
main: ./cmd/main.go
oses:
- darwin
- freebsd
arches:
- amd64
oses
and arches
should be in GOOS
/GOARCH
-compatible format.
Add more files
You might also want to change the files that are packaged by adding a files
section:
repo: user/repo
binary_name: my-binary
files:
- LICENSE.txt
- README.md
- CHANGELOG.md
Wire it with travis-ci
You may want to wire this to auto-deploy your new tags on travis, for examepl:
after_success:
test ! -z "$TRAVIS_TAG" && curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/goreleaser/get/master/latest | bash
How the end result looks like
The release on github looks pretty much like this:
And the homebrew formulae would look like:
class Antibody < Formula
desc "A faster and simpler antigen written in Golang."
homepage "http://getantibody.github.io"
url "https://github.com/getantibody/antibody/releases/download/v2.2.2/antibody_#{%x(uname -s).gsub(/\n/, '')}_#{%x(uname -m).gsub(/\n/, '')}.tar.gz"
head "https://github.com/getantibody/antibody.git"
version "v2.2.2"
def install
bin.install "antibody"
end
def caveats
"To start using antibody, you need to add `source <(antibody init)` to your `~/.zshrc`."
end
end