Agent skill

release-funstack

A skill to make a GitHub release for the `@funstack/static` package. Use this skill when the user wants to release a new version of the package.

Stars 163
Forks 31

Install this agent skill to your Project

npx add-skill https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry/tree/main/skills/data/release-funstack

SKILL.md

Release FUNSTACK Skill

To release a new version of the @funstack/static package, follow these steps:

  1. Read the packages/static/package.json file to determine the current version of the package.
  • User may or may not have already updated the version in package.json. Ask the user to confirm if they have updated the version. If not, you should update the version based on semantic versioning rules (patch, minor, major) as per user's instruction.
  1. Update the version in packages/static/package.json, commit and push if necessary.
  • The commit message should be chore: bump version to x.y.z where x.y.z is the new version.
  1. Inspect the git log since the last release tag to generate release notes.
  • The release notes should summarize the changes made since the last release.
  • Especially, highlight any breaking changes, new features, or important fixes.
  1. Use the gh CLI to create a new release on GitHub with the new version and the generated release notes.
  • The tag name should be x.y.z where x.y.z is the new version.
  1. Inform the user that the release has been created successfully, providing the URL to the release page on GitHub.

Writing Release Notes

When writing release notes, consider the following structure:

markdown
## What's Changed

### Breaking Changes

- Change defer API to accept JSX element instead of component (#14)

### Features

- Add cache busting for main RSC payload (#16)

### Improvements

- Simplify RSC payload path (#15)

**Full Changelog**: https://github.com/uhyo/funstack-static/compare/0.0.1...0.0.2

Notes:

  • Highlight breaking changes if any.
  • Group changes into categories like "Features", "Improvements", "Fixes", etc.
  • Documentation updates and dependency updates should be omitted unless they are significant (e.g. breaking changes).
  • Provide a link to the full changelog comparing the previous version and the new version.

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