diff --git a/.github/semantic.yaml b/.github/semantic.yaml new file mode 100644 index 0000000..728e9de --- /dev/null +++ b/.github/semantic.yaml @@ -0,0 +1,59 @@ +############################################################################### +# This file configures "Semantic Pull Requests", which is documented here: +# https://github.com/zeke/semantic-pull-requests +############################################################################### + +# Scopes are optionally supplied after a 'type'. For example, in +# +# feat(cdr): autostart ui +# +# '(cdr)' is the scope. Scopes are used to signify where the change occurred. +scopes: [] + +# We only check that the PR title is semantic. The PR title is automatically +# applied to the "Squash & Merge" flow as the suggested commit message, so this +# should suffice unless someone drastically alters the message in that flow. +titleOnly: true + +# Types are the 'tag' types in a commit or PR title. For example, in +# +# chore: fix thing +# +# 'chore' is the type. +types: + # A build of any kind. + - build + + # A RELEASED fix that will NOT be back-ported. The originating issue may have + # been discovered internally or externally to Coder. + - fix + + # Any code task that is ignored for changelog purposes. Examples include + # devbin scripts and internal-only configurations. + - chore + + # Any work performed on CI. + - ci + + # An UNRELEASED correction. For example, features are often built + # incrementally and sometimes introduce minor flaws during a release cycle. + # Corrections address those increments and flaws. + - correct + + # Work that directly implements or supports the implementation of a feature. + - feat + + # A fix for a RELEASED bug (regression fix) that is intended for patch-release + # purposes. + - hotfix + + # A refactor changes code structure without any behavioral change. + - refactor + + # A git revert for any style of commit. + - revert + + # Adding tests of any kind. Should be separate from feature or fix + # implementations. For example, if a commit adds a fix + test, it's a fix + # commit. If a commit is simply bumping coverage, it's a test commit. + - test