Automating Ember releases with Rust

anchorIf you're facing challenges with Ember.js and need a helping hand, reach out!

Contact us!

anchorRelease process for the Ember project

An Ember project release involves 4 different Core teams: Framework, Data, CLI and Learning. The release is usually done over the period of a week, because some steps of the release depend on previous steps being completed. The steps are as follows:

  • The Framework team releases the new version of the Ember npm package, ember-source. This package contains the Ember framework code that is bundled with the app, and provides the @ember module imports that developers use when developing.
  • The Data team updates their dependency on ember-source, tests that everything is working as expected and releases a new version of ember-data. This package contains the code for the Ember Data library, which is Ember's default data management solution. You can read more in the Ember Data guides.
  • The CLI team updates the ember-source and ember-data dependencies in the application and addon blueprints, tests that everything works as expected and releases a new version of ember-cli. ember-cli is a command-line application that makes it easy to create, build, test and serve applications locally, as well as generating code such as components, routes and controllers. You can read more in the Ember CLI guides.
  • The Learning team releases the relevant versions of the Guides and the API documentation, updates the Releases page, releases any relevant Deprecations, and finally coordinates and releases the release blog post.

The release blog post marks the official release of a new project version, since it means that all of the sub-projects and relevant documentation is ready and tested for developers to use and consult.

anchorThe Learning team process

As you might have noticed in the list above, the Learning team touches on several projects during the course of the release process. The team maintains a handbook with all the steps of the Ember release process. At the time of writing, they are:

  1. Guides
  2. API documentation
  3. Release blog post
  4. Release pages
  5. Deprecations
  6. Upgrade Guide
  7. Glitch Ember starter
  8. Ember Wikipedia
  9. Release bot

The steps are a mix of easily automated tasks and tasks that necessitate manual intervention.

I started automating this process by creating bash scripts for the Guides project. The bash scripts turn the manual steps into a guided process with minimal interface and error handling around them. The scripts assume that you have the project cloned and does some housekeeping to make sure you don't accidentally lose any work you were doing when you trigger the release script. This will be relevant later on.

Codifying the steps in bash was a big improvement, but we ran into some minor issues. The first of which is that bash is not a language the developer in the team are deeply familiar with. This is fine for small scripts, but as soon as you try to introduce error handling and better ergonomics for the caller of the script, it becomes considerably harder to write the necessary bash code.

The other reason is that bash is not natively supported on Windows. There are ways to run bash on Windows systems, but we wanted to reduce incidental dependencies in order to make releases portable and easier for the user.

So to run all of the steps you would need to clone the relevant repositories and follow the release handbook line by line to make sure you get the order correct.

anchorCreating tool-new-release

There was still a lot of automation left on the table, so I got to work figuring out how to improve the situation. When picking what technology I would use for the tool I had two main concerns: portability, and ease of packaging as a binary.

At the time I was dabbling in Rust and had already made a couple of tools for myself using that language, so I decided to give Rust a go. Picking Rust also had the benefit of giving me a single binary that a maintainer can download and run, not having to deal with runtime and dependencies versions. And so, work started on tool-new-release.

anchorFirst steps

anchorHandling Git

The first things I needed were a library to handle git operations, and a library to generate temporary folders that I could clone the repositories into. The decision to clone the relevant repositories into temporary folders was twofold: ensure the tool is working with the most recent commits of the repository, and clean up the repositories after the tool was done running. I decided to go with git2-rs and tempfile, which looks something like this:

use tempfile::tempdir;
use git2::Repository;

let folder = tempdir().unwrap().into_path();
folder.push("guides-source");
let repo = Repository::clone("https://github.com/ember-learn/guides-source.git", &folder)?;

In the actual tool a temporary folder is created at the top that is then fed to the different steps so they can manage the cloning they need to do.

anchorShelling out

Determined to have a viable release tool as quickly as possible and afterwards iterate for improvements, I decided to call the Bash scripts already present in the guides-source repository using std::process::Command from Rust's standard library:

use std::process::Command;

Command::new("npm")
    .current_dir(&guides_source_dir)
    .arg("run")
    .arg("release:guides:minor")
    .spawn()
    .expect("Could not start process")
    .wait()
    .expect("Failed to release guides.");

While shelling out did not improve on the portability problem, making the tool do something useful was a motivator to keep developing it.

anchorProviding command-line arguments

Next I added structopt to provide command-line argument parsing. This would be useful to allow the user to select which project they want to run the release steps for, to provide the target version, and more. structopt makes it really straightforward to implement interfaces using native Rust structures. Here's an example of a --project flag that accepts either Guides or Api as values:

#[derive(Debug, StructOpt)]
enum Project {
    Guides,
    Api,
}

/// Ember Learning team release helper.
#[derive(Debug, StructOpt)]
struct Opts {
    /// Pick which step to run the deploy pipeline for.
    #[structopt(short, long)]
    project: Option<Project>,
}

I want to note that this also gives us documentation via the --help flag out of the box:

$ tool-new-release --help
Ember Learning team release helper

USAGE:
    tool-new-release [FLAGS] [OPTIONS]

FLAGS:
    -h, --help             Prints help information
    -V, --version          Prints version information

OPTIONS:
    -p, --project <project>    Pick which project to run the deploy pipeline for [possible values: Guides, Api]

Now that I had the basics of the tool working for Guides and API documentation, it was time to make it available for other people.

anchorReleasing the tool

I wanted the tool to be useable from Linux, Windows and macOS so I had to figure out a way to build the Rust project to those targets. Since the project is hosted on GitHub, I could use GitHub Actions to build the project for me, and then make a release.

After some research I was able to put together a GitHub Action workflow. You can see it currently look like in the repository's workflows directory and if you have any suggestions, please let me know! The project is still a work in progress so you might find things that are not done optimally.

There's two things I'd like to point out in the workflow. One is that I ended up using musl through rustup in order to build the Linux binary. The other is that I'm currently publishing the binary as a draft, so it will not show up on the homepage of the repository.

anchorNext steps

Now that the Core Learning team had a working tool, it was time to codify the rest of the steps and apply some improvements to make the tool easier to use and to maintain. I will cover that and more in future posts, so keep an eye out!

anchorIf you're facing challenges with Ember.js and need a helping hand, reach out!

Contact us!

Stay up to date on Ember

Subscribe to our newsletter and stay up to date about the latest events, workshops, and other news around Ember.

Team up with us to go further!

Our experts are ready to guide you through your next big move. Let us know how we can help.
Get in touch