Containing shared CI logic to quickly set up your repository with:
- Tests running for each pull request
- Danger reports for each pull request
What's in it for me? Well, quite a lot! With low effort to add it to your project.
- Integrate SwiftLint to lint source code and tests
- Integrate Fastlane to run tests for PRs
- Integrate Danger to automatically improve PR reviews
- Easily add automated releases based on tag-triggers
Following is a list of features which are posted in a comment on PRs based on the submitted files.
- Warn for big PRs, containing more than 500 lines of code
- Warn for missing PR description
- Warn for missing updated tests
- Show code coverage of PR related files
- Show any failed tests
- Show all
warnings
anderrors
in the project
All this is written in Swift and fully tested 🚀
These warnings are posted inline inside the PR, helping you to solve them easily.
- Check for
final class
usage override
methods without adding logic- Suggest
weak
overunowned
- Suggest
// MARK:
usage for large files
This is an example comment. Note that WeTransferBot
will be replaced by your own bot. More info can be found here: Getting started with Danger.
Add this repository as a submodule with the correct path Submodules/WeTransfer-iOS-CI
:
[submodule "Submodules/WeTransfer-iOS-CI"]
path = Submodules/WeTransfer-iOS-CI
url = https://github.com/WeTransfer/WeTransfer-iOS-CI.git
Create a fastlane file which executes testing with code coverage enabled. Import the Fastfile from this repo and trigger the test
lane.
import "./../Submodules/WeTransfer-iOS-CI/Fastlane/Fastfile"
import "./../Submodules/WeTransfer-iOS-CI/Fastlane/shared_lanes.rb"
desc "Run the tests and prepare for Danger"
lane :test do |options|
test_project(
project_path: "YOUR_PROJECT_PATH/",
project_name: "YOUR_PROJECT_NAME",
scheme: "YOUR_PROJECT_SCHEME")
end
Add a run script and use the common used SwiftLint script:
./Submodules/WeTransfer-iOS-CI/SwiftLint/swiftlint.sh
The shared Bitrise.yml files make it really easy to integrate CI into open-source projects. It's been optimized using this blog post for caching and triggers like:
- Manage gems & brews
- Cache pulling
- Run fastlane for testing
- Run Danger from this repo
- Cache pushing
For Danger, you need to set the DANGER_GITHUB_API_TOKEN
in your Bitrise secrets.
Make sure your Bitrise.yml looks like this:
trigger_map:
- pull_request_source_branch: "*"
workflow: wetransfer_pr_testing
workflows:
wetransfer_pr_testing:
steps:
- activate-ssh-key:
run_if: '{{getenv "SSH_RSA_PRIVATE_KEY" | ne ""}}'
- git-clone: {}
- script:
title: Continue from WeTransfer-iOS-CI repo
inputs:
- content: |-
#!/bin/bash
set -ex
bitrise run --config ./Bitrise/testing_bitrise.yml "${BITRISE_TRIGGERED_WORKFLOW_ID}"
Note: Don't change wetransfer_pr_testing
as this needs to match the Bitrise.yml file workflow.
By making use of the Bitrise tag triggered builds we can automate the releases of open-source projects. The automation currently performs the following steps:
- Automatically fetch the changelog using the ChangelogProducer
- Create a GitHub release containing the changelog
- Update and push the podspec
- Update the
Changelog.md
with the new changes - Create a release branch and open a PR for those changes
As open-source projects are making use of HTTPS by default we need to force Bitrise to use SSH instead. Therefore, we need to add the SSH key manually to the secret environment variables with the key SSH_RSA_PRIVATE_KEY
. You can can read more about this here: How can I generate an SSH key pair?.
We also need to create a environment secret for CocoaPods trunk pushes with the key COCOAPODS_TRUNK_TOKEN
. How to do that is explained here: Automated CocoaPod releases with CI.
After all, you're secrets should look as follows:
After that, we need to add a new trigger for tags:
trigger_map:
- pull_request_source_branch: "*"
workflow: wetransfer_pr_testing
- tag: "*"
workflow: wetransfer_tag_releasing
And we need to add the new workflow:
wetransfer_tag_releasing:
steps:
- activate-ssh-key:
run_if: '{{getenv "SSH_RSA_PRIVATE_KEY" | ne ""}}'
- script:
title: Force SSH
inputs:
- content: |-
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# As we work with submodules, make sure we use SSH for this config so we can push our PR later on.
# See for more info: https://discuss.bitrise.io/t/git-force-to-use-ssh-url-instead-of-https-for-github-com/4384
git config --global url."git@github.com:".insteadOf "https://github.com/"
- git-clone: {}
- script:
title: Continue from WeTransfer-iOS-CI repo
inputs:
- content: |-
#!/bin/bash
set -ex
bitrise run --config ./Submodules/WeTransfer-iOS-CI/Bitrise/tag_releasing_bitrise.yml "${BITRISE_TRIGGERED_WORKFLOW_ID}"
After that, you can simply create a new tag and the whole release process will be triggered! 🚀
If you are building an app instead of a framework you can make use of the deployment lanes.
The beta
lane takes care of:
- Generating a changelog based on the GH issues that were solved and PR's that were merged in since the last beta build.
- Create a draft release in GitHub.
- Create a new AppStore release candidate and upload it to TestFlight.
The release
does the following:
- Fetch the lates green (approved) release from GitHub.
- Create a new release branch in GitHub.
- Create a PR that merges the release branch into the main branch.
- Create a PR that merges the release branch into develop in order to make sure that develop contains the updated changelog and incremented build number.
- Create a release build, upload it to TestFlight and submit for review.
These two lanes allow for the following workflow:
- Use the
beta
lane to upload an AppStore Release Candidate to TestFlight. - Once the build went trough QA and has been approved for release mark it as green.
- Submit a new build to the App Store using the
release
lane.
- Find the draft release matching the tested TestFlight build number at
http://github.com/{organization}/{repo}/releases
. - Edit the draft and press the green button
Publish release
.
Import the deployment_lanes.rb
from this repo into the Fastfile. If you haven't done so already in step 2 also import the shared_lanes
file.
import "./../Submodules/WeTransfer-iOS-CI/Fastlane/deployment_lanes.rb"
Then you need to make sure to authenticate with App Store Connect before running the deployment lanes. This can be done by adding a before_all
block, like so:
before_all do |lane, options|
authenticate
end
Then there is two ways you can start using the deployment lanes. The first one is to create a new lane in the Fastfile from which you call one of the deployment lanes specifying values for all the options. The other option is to use environment variables, for example by using a .env file. In that case the lanes can be called directly without passing any options. An example of a .env file can be found here.
The provisioning lanes help you with provisioning related task such as code signing and device management. To use them all you need to do is import provisioning_lanes.rb
from this repo into the Fastfile.
Make sure to have your Bitrise.yml
locally inside your repo and then just run bitrise run <workflow_local>
after adding the following local testing workflow:
<workflow_name>_local:
steps:
- script:
title: Setup environment variables
inputs:
- content: |-
#!/bin/bash
# Change these for your current local session.
export BITRISE_IO="fake_bitrise"
export BITRISEIO_GIT_REPOSITORY_OWNER="WeTransfer"
export BITRISEIO_GIT_REPOSITORY_SLUG="WeTransfer-iOS-SDK"
export BITRISE_PULL_REQUEST=452
bitrise run <workflow_name>
Doing so allows you to run Bitrise workflows locally which will even update the Danger messages in GitHub itself. It kind of mimics this Bitrise representation using env variables.
WeTransfer-iOS-CI is available under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.