The action is designed to be used right before `cargo publish`. It will check the API of your crate for semver violations, comparing it to the latest normal (not pre-release or yanked) version published on crates.io. At the moment, the action does not support checking against other baselines, such as the destination branch of a pull request.
If your repository is just a crate or a workspace, the action will work out-of-the-box with sensible defaults:
```yaml
semver-checks:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Check semver
uses: obi1kenobi/cargo-semver-checks-action@v2
```
> **Note**
> By default, the action always installs the latest stable Rust and ignores the `rust-toolchain.toml` file and any local overrides. This ensures we use the latest version of rustdoc, taking advantage of the latest bugfixes and avoiding false-positives. If you want to change this default behavior, see [Use toolchain other than `stable`](#use-toolchain-other-than-stable).
| `package` | Comma-separated list of the packages whose API to check for semver (in Package Id Specification format, see https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/pkgid-spec.html for reference). If not set, all packages defined in the Cargo.toml file are processed. | |
| `exclude` | Comma-separated list of the packages that will be excluded from being processed. Has effect only if the input `package` is not specified. | |
| `manifest-path` | Path to Cargo.toml of crate or workspace to check. If not specified, the action assumes the manifest is under the default [`GITHUB_WORKSPACE`](https://docs.github.com/en/actions/learn-github-actions/variables#default-environment-variables) path. | |
| `feature-group` | Which [feature group](https://github.com/obi1kenobi/cargo-semver-checks#what-features-does-cargo-semver-checks-enable-in-the-tested-crates) to enable. When not set, the action heuristically enables all features that are not unstable, nightly, or internal-only. Possible values: `all-features`, `default-features`, `only-explicit-features`. | |
| `feature` | Explicitly enable a list of features when checking. Corresponds to [the tool's `--feature` flag](https://github.com/obi1kenobi/cargo-semver-checks#what-features-does-cargo-semver-checks-enable-in-the-tested-crates). | |
| `release-type` | Sets the release type instead of deriving it from the version number specified in the `Cargo.toml` file. Possible values are `major`, `minor`, `patch`. | |
| `rust-toolchain` | Rust toolchain name to use, e.g. `stable`, `nightly` or `1.68.0`. It will be installed if necessary and used regardless of local overrides and the `rust-toolchain.toml` file. However, if the input is set to `manual`, the action assumes some Rust toolchain is already installed and uses the default one. | `stable` |
| `shared-key` | A cache key that will be used instead of the automatic key based on the name of the GitHub job and values of the inputs `package`, `exclude` and `manifest-path`. Might be provided e.g. to share the cache between the jobs. | |
| `prefix-key` | Additional prefix of the cache key, can be set to start a new cache manually. | |
| `github-token` | The `GITHUB_TOKEN` secret used to download precompiled binaries from GitHub API. If not specified, the [automatic GitHub token](https://docs.github.com/en/actions/security-guides/automatic-token-authentication) provided to the workflow will be used. The token may be alternatively passed in an environment variable `GITHUB_TOKEN`. | `${{ github.token }}` |
The action will work well with defaults settings if it is run inside the package root directory. When the package location is different, you have to specify the path to its `Cargo.toml` file:
By default, all packages defined in the `Cargo.toml` file are processed. You can specify one or more packages to be checked instead using input `package`.
By default, the actions installs (if necessary) and then uses the `stable` toolchain regardless of local overrides and the `rust-toolchain.toml` file. You can force using a different toolchain using `rust-toolchain`:
If you want to setup the toolchain manually, you can set `rust-toolchain` to `manual`. In this case, the action assumes some Rust toolchain is already installed and uses the default one:
-`shared-key` input if provided, otherwise the value of environmental variable `GITHUB_JOB` concatenated with a hash of the values of inputs `package`, `exclude` and `manifest-path` (we hash the path itself, not the file it points to),
- internal, unchangable component, being a concatenation of the runner OS, `rustc` version, `cargo-semver-checks` version and hash of all `Cargo.lock` files in the current workspace,
- constant suffix `"semver-checks-rustdoc"`.
Runs that differ in at least one of the above components will use separate caches. Inputs `shared-key` and `cache-key` might be therefore used to customize the caching strategy. For example, the two following jobs will share the key even despite using different `manifest-path`:
```yaml
semver:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Check semver
uses: obi1kenobi/cargo-semver-checks-action@v2
with:
shared-key: my-workspace-semver
semver2:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v3
with:
path: semver
- name: Check semver
uses: obi1kenobi/cargo-semver-checks-action@v2
with:
manifest-path: semver/Cargo.toml
shared-key: my-workspace-semver
```
which is reasonable until they are checking the same packages. Runs with different targets must not share the cache! For example, the below job is doing well with default settings:
```yaml
semver:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
strategy:
matrix:
crate: ['api', 'core']
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Check semver
uses: obi1kenobi/cargo-semver-checks-action@v2
with:
package: ${{ matrix.crate }}
# Do not do this!
# shared-key: 'my-workspace-semver'
```
as both runs will use separate caches, but providing the shared key will lead to data race and significant drop of performance. On the other hand, if you want to further separate the caches that are shared by default, you can use the input `prefix-key`: