Toolkit for the Ansible community. This is mainly the antsibull-tool command. Please check out the documentation for more information.
You can find a list of changes in the antsibull-tool changelog.
antsibull-tool is covered by the Ansible Code of Conduct.
Need help or want to discuss the project? See our Community guide to learn how to join the conversation!
From version 1.0.0 on, antsibull-tool sticks to semantic versioning and aims at providing no backwards compatibility breaking changes to the command line API (antsibull-tool) during a major release cycle. We might make exceptions from this in case of security fixes for vulnerabilities that are severe enough.
We explicitly exclude code compatibility. antsibull-tool is not supposed to be used as a library. If you want to use a certain part of antsibull-tool as a library, please create an issue so we can discuss whether we add a stable interface for parts of the Python code. We do not promise that this will actually happen though.
Install and run nox to run all tests. That's it for simple contributions!
nox will create virtual environments in .nox inside the checked out project
and install the requirements needed to run the tests there.
antsibull-tool depends on the sister antsibull-core and antsibull-fileutils projects.
By default, nox will install a development version of these projects from Github.
If you're hacking on antsibull-core and/or antsibull-fileutils alongside antsibull-tool,
nox will automatically install the projects from ../antsibull-core
and ../antsibull-fileutils when running tests if those paths exist.
You can change this behavior through the OTHER_ANTSIBULL_MODE env var:
OTHER_ANTSIBULL_MODE=auto— the default behavior described aboveOTHER_ANTSIBULL_MODE=local— install the projects from../antsibull-coreand../antsibull-fileutils. Fail if those paths don't exist.OTHER_ANTSIBULL_MODE=git— install the projects from the Github main branchOTHER_ANTSIBULL_MODE=pypi— install the latest versions from PyPI
To run specific tests:
nox -e testto only run unit tests;nox -e lintto run all linters and formatter;nox -e codeqato runflake8,pylint,reuse lint, andantsibull-changelog lint;nox -e formattersto runisortandblack;nox -e typingto runmypy.
To create a more complete local development env:
git clone https://github.com/ansible-community/antsibull-core.git
git clone https://github.com/ansible-community/antsibull-fileutils.git
cd antsibull-tool
python3 -m venv venv
. ./venv/bin/activate
pip install -e '.[dev]' -e ../antsibull-core -e ../antsibull-fileutils
[...]
nox- Run
nox -e bump -- <version> <release_summary_message>. This:- Bumps the package version in
src/antsibull_tool/__init__.py. - Creates
changelogs/fragments/<version>.ymlwith arelease_summarysection. - Runs
antsibull-changelog release --version <version>and adds the changed files to git. - Commits with message
Release <version>.and runsgit tag -a -m 'antsibull-tool <version>' <version>. - Runs
hatch build --clean.
- Bumps the package version in
- Run
git pushto the appropriate remotes. - Once CI passes on GitHub, run
nox -e publish. This:- Runs
hatch publish; - Bumps the version to
<version>.post0; - Adds the changed file to git and run
git commit -m 'Post-release version bump.';
- Runs
- Run
git push --follow-tagsto the appropriate remotes and create a GitHub release.
Unless otherwise noted in the code, it is licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public License v3 or, at your option, later. See LICENSES/GPL-3.0-or-later.txt for a copy of the license.
The repository follows the REUSE Specification for declaring copyright and
licensing information. The only exception are changelog fragments in changelog/fragments/.