- Target Tag means the target deployment version, while Previous Tag means the latest version as of now. Previous Tag is used for Release Note only - showing the file / commit differences between two tags.
### Tagging
The naming convention would be following given the actual release tag is `0.100.0`
Why? Sometimes we may mess up in NPM deployment. As NPM doesn't allow us to redeploy to the same tag again, in this case we cannot just use the previous tag + 1. Therefore, we need to use previous tag + 2 instead and we manually configure it.
- After that, click `Run workflow` to start
- You can see Summary for the overall job status.
- Once `release-draft-note` and `release-executables` is finished, then go to [releases](https://github.com/nocodb/nocodb/releases), edit the draft note and save as draft for time being.
- Example: Adding header, update content if necessary, and click `Auto-generate release notes` to include more info.
- Once `release-docker` is finished, then test it locally first. You'll be expected to see `Upgrade Available` notification in UI as we haven't published the release note. (the version is retrieved from there)
- Once everything is finished, then publish the release note and the deployment is considered as DONE.
### How does release action work ?
#### validate-branch
To check if `github.ref` is master. Otherwise, other branches will be not accepted.
#### process-input
To enrich target tag or previous tag if necessary.
#### pr-to-master
Automate a PR from develop to master branch so that we know the actual differences between the previous tag and the current tag. We choose master branch for a deployment base.
#### release-npm
Build frontend and backend and release them to NPM. The changes during built such as version bumping will be committed and pushed to a temporary branch and an automated PR will be created and merged to master branch.
Note that once you publish with a certain tag, you cannot publish with the same tag again.
#### release-draft-note
Generate a draft release note. Some actions need to be done after this step.
#### release-docker
Build docker image and publish it to Docker Hub. It may take around 15 - 30 mins.
#### close-issues
Open issues marked with label `Status: Fixed` and `Status: Resolved` will be closed by bot automatically with comment mentioning the fix is included in which version.
`nocodb-sdk` is used in frontend and backend. However, in develop branch, the value would be `file:../nocodb-sdk` for development purpose (so that the changes done in nocodb-sdk in develop will be included in frontend and backend). During the deployment, the value will be changed to the target tag. This job is to update them back.
#### sync-to-develop
Once the deployment is finished, there would be some new changes being pushed to master branch. This job is to sync the changes back to develop so that both branch won't have any difference.
## Daily builds
### What are daily builds ?
- NocoDB creates every 6 hours from develop branches and publishes as nocodb/nocodb-daily
- This is so that we can easily try what is in the develop branch easily.
### Docker images
- The docker images will be built and pushed to Docker Hub (See [nocodb/nocodb-daily](https://hub.docker.com/r/nocodb/nocodb-daily/tags) for the full list).
When a non-draft Pull Request is created, reopened or synchronized, a timely build for Docker would be triggered for the changes only included in the following paths.
The docker images will be built and pushed to Docker Hub (See [nocodb/nocodb-timely](https://hub.docker.com/r/nocodb/nocodb-timely/tags) for the full list). Once the image is ready, Github bot will add a comment with the command in the pull request. The tag would be `<NOCODB_CURRENT_VERSION>-pr-<PR_NUMBER>-<YYYYMMDD>-<HHMM>`.
Similarly, we provide a timely build for executables for non-docker users. The source code will be built, packaged as binary files, and pushed to Github (See [nocodb/nocodb-timely](https://github.com/nocodb/nocodb-timely/releases) for the full list).