Versioning

If you're maintaining a 3rd party tool for Shaarli (theme, plugin, etc.), It's important to understand how Shaarli branches work ensure your tool stays compatible.

master branch

The master branch is the development branch. Any new change MUST go through this branch using Pull Requests.

Remarks:

  • This branch shouldn't be used for production as it isn't necessary stable.
  • 3rd party aren't required to be compatible with the latest changes.
  • Official plugins, themes and libraries (contained within Shaarli organization repos) must be compatible with the master branch.

v0.x branch

The v0.x branch points to the latest v0.x.y release.

If a major bug affects the original v0.x.0 release, we may backport a fix for this bug from master, to the v0.x branch, and create a new bugfix release (eg. v0.x.1) from this branch.

This allows users of the original release to upgrade to the fixed version, without having to upgrade to a completely new minor/major release.

latest branch

This branch point the latest release. It recommended to use it to get the latest tested changes.

Releases

For every release, we manually generate a .zip file which contains all Shaarli dependencies, making Shaarli's installation only one step.

Advices on 3rd party git repos workflow

Versioning

Any time a new Shaarli release is published, you should publish a new release of your repo if the changes affected you since the latest release (take a look at the changelog (Draft means not released yet) and the commit log (like tpl folder for themes)). You can either:

  • use the Shaarli version number, with your repo version. For example, if Shaarli v0.8.3 is released, publish a v0.8.3-1 release, where v0.8.3 states Shaarli compatibility and -1 is your own version digit for the current Shaarli version.
  • use your own versioning scheme, and state Shaarli compatibility in the release description.

Using this, any user will be able to pick the release matching his own Shaarli version.

Major bugfix backport releases

To be able to support backported fixes, it recommended to use our workflow:

# In master, fix the major bug
git commit -m "Katastrophe"
git push origin master
# Get your commit hash
git log --format="%H" -n 1
# Create a new branch from your latest release, let's say v0.8.2-1 (the tag name)
git checkout -b katastrophe v0.8.2-1
# Backport the fix commit to your brand new branch
git cherry-pick <fix commit hash>
git push origin katastrophe
# Then you just have to make a new release from the `katastrophe` branch tagged `v0.8.3-1`