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wp-release

Tags and deploys a WordPress plugin release from Git to the Subversion WordPress Plugin Directory.

WordPress plugin developers want to use this script, in case

  1. you develop and maintain your plugin using Git (e.g., on github)
  2. you want to maintain and publish releases for your plugin in the WordPress Plugin Directory
  3. you want to automate this process (and stay away from ugh, Subversion) as much as possible.

Features

  • Verifies and confirms release information prior to execution.
  • Dump-exports git tag into svn checkout (without history), ignoring git specific files.
  • Commits, pushes, and creates a new release tag in both git and svn.
  • Cleanly separated configuration and execution to support plugin-specific configuration.
  • Dry-run support for initial testing.

Installation

  1. Clone or download this package; e.g.,

     /usr/local/bin/wp-release
    
  2. Make wp-release.sh executable; e.g.,

     chmod 755 /usr/local/bin/wp-release/wp-release.sh
    
  3. Copy the .wp-release.conf template file into your plugin directory; e.g.,

     cp /usr/local/bin/wp-release/.wp-release.conf /path/to/myplugin/.wp-release.conf
    
  4. Customize (and optionally commit) the .wp-release.conf file to your plugin's git repository.

     git add .wp-release.conf
     git commit
    
  5. Optional: Make the script available in a directory of your shell environment PATH; e.g.,

     ln -s /usr/local/bin/wp-release/wp-release.sh /usr/local/bin/wp-release
    

For example, a typical setup would look like this:

  (executable) /usr/local/bin/wp-release/wp-release.sh
  (link)       /usr/local/bin/wp-release -> wp-release/wp-release.sh
  
  (conf)       /var/www/mydevsite/wp-content/plugins/myplugin/.wp-release.conf

Windows

Harder. As usual. Try this:

  1. Start the mingw32/bash shell (assuming TortoiseGit) or Cygwin bash shell.
  2. Change to your plugin directory.
  3. Execute the script via /c/path/to/wp-release/wp-release.sh

Ideas and improvements very welcome.

Usage

  1. Change to your plugin directory.

      $ cd /var/www/mydevsite/wp-content/plugins/myplugin
    
  2. Prepare the changelog for the new release in readme.txt.

      $ vi readme.txt
    
  3. Prepare the new release version (e.g., 1.0) in readme.txt and your plugin's main PHP file.

      $ vi readme.txt
      $ vi myplugin.php
    
  4. Execute the script from within your plugin directory.

      $ wp-release.sh
    

    Doing so will:

    1. Validate your .wp-release.conf file.
    2. Verify whether versions in readme.txt and the plugin's PHP header match.
    3. Validate that the specified version does not exist as tag yet.
    4. Ask you to review & commit the changes to git.
    5. Check out the WordPress subversion repository.
    6. Dump-export the code of the git tag into svn trunk.
    7. Ask you to confirm the changes to svn.
    8. Commit the changes + new tag to the WordPress Plugin Directory.

    After execution, the new release is effectively published and out of the door; both in git as well as on WordPress.org.

Post-release steps

Bump the version to e.g. 1.1-dev in your plugin's main PHP file and commit the new development version to git, so as to ensure that all users of it can be identified:

diff --git a/myplugin.php b/myplugin.php
index 8656659..f83492c 100644
--- a/myplugin.php
+++ b/myplugin.php
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
 /*
   Plugin Name: My Plugin
   Plugin URI: https://example.com
-  Version: 1.0
+  Version: 1.1-dev
   Text Domain: myplugin
   Description: ...
   Author: ...
diff --git a/readme.txt b/readme.txt
index 4775c82..c2fa408 100644
--- a/readme.txt
+++ b/readme.txt
@@ -146,6 +146,9 @@
 
 == Changelog ==
 
+= 1.1 =
+
+
 = 1.0 =
 2013-10-22

FAQ

Why no history in svn?

Because WordPress.org infrastructure maintainers explicitly ask you to omit it. You're using WordPress.org as a tool for publishing releases only. If you don't develop on WordPress.org, there's no point in syncing the entire history.

Dump-export replacements for each release is all you want and need. — This fact inherently eliminates the topic of git-svn.

Can I help to improve this?

Weird question. Of course, you can! :) Here's how:

  1. Fork the repo on github, create a branch, do your changes, and create a pull request (PR) when you're done.
  2. Ensure the changes in your PR are focused and atomic. Change one thing at a time. Use multiple PRs for multiple different issues.
  3. Ensure your commits are topically atomic, isolated, and cleanly separated. Perform one set of directly related changes at a time. Use multiple commits for different/additional changes.

Credits

License

None of the authors ever specified a license; the most permissive MIT license is assumed.

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Release a WordPress plugin from git to svn

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