10 KiB
User: Follow these instructions. Don't modify the file.
GitHub Copilot: Understood. I will not modify any files as per your instructions. If you have a specific task or question related to the EZ-Homelab project or any other coding assistance, please let me know how I can help!
User: The repository is in excellent shape atm. I want to create a release. I made some release notes but I haven't do that before. I could use suggestions.
GitHub Copilot: Based on your description, it sounds like you're ready to formalize a release for the EZ-Homelab repository—great timing since you mentioned it's in excellent shape! Since this is your first time, I'll provide clear, step-by-step suggestions tailored to a GitHub repository like this one (which appears to be a Docker-based homelab setup with scripts, configs, and documentation). I'll focus on best practices for open-source projects, keeping things simple and actionable.
I'll break this down into preparation, release notes improvements, creation process, and post-release tips. These are based on standard GitHub release workflows, but adapted for a project like EZ-Homelab (e.g., emphasizing Docker compatibility, user setup, and community-friendly notes).
1. Preparation Before Creating the Release
- Decide on Versioning: Use semantic versioning (e.g., MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH). Your existing file is release-notes-v0.1.md, so:
- If this is a minor update (new features or improvements without breaking changes), go with v0.1.1 or v0.2.0.
- If it's a major milestone (e.g., stable production-ready), consider v1.0.0.
- Suggestion: Start with v0.1.0 if this is the first official release, to align with your notes.
- Test Thoroughly: Since EZ-Homelab involves Docker stacks and scripts, run a final test:
- Deploy on a fresh environment (e.g., a VM or container) using your
ez-homelab.shscript. - Verify core functionality: Traefik routing, Authelia SSO, Sablier lazy loading, and a few services from different stacks (e.g., Homepage, Dockge).
- Check for any breaking changes (e.g., environment variables or network requirements).
- Deploy on a fresh environment (e.g., a VM or container) using your
- Update Documentation: Ensure docs like README.md, getting-started.md, and services-overview.md reflect the latest state. If you've made changes, update version references.
- Commit and Push Changes: Make sure all your release notes and any last-minute fixes are committed and pushed to the main branch.
2. Improving Your Release Notes
Your release-notes-v0.1.md is a solid start—it's concise and covers key areas like setup, security, and services. Here's how to enhance it for a professional release (GitHub releases support Markdown, so format it nicely with headings, lists, and links):
-
Structure It Like a Changelog:
- Overview/Summary: Start with a 1-2 sentence high-level summary (e.g., "This release introduces automated SSL, SSO, and lazy loading for 50+ Docker services in a production-ready homelab setup.").
- What's New: List new features, services, or improvements (e.g., "Added Sablier lazy loading to reduce resource usage" or "Integrated DuckDNS and Let's Encrypt for wildcard SSL").
- Bug Fixes: If applicable, note any issues resolved (e.g., "Fixed port conflicts in ez-homelab.sh options 1 & 2").
- Breaking Changes: Highlight anything that might break existing setups (e.g., "Updated network requirements; users must recreate traefik-network").
- Known Issues/Limitations: Be transparent (e.g., "Sablier may cause occasional timeouts; refresh the page to resolve").
- Installation/Upgrade Instructions: Provide clear steps (e.g., "For fresh installs: Run
./ez-homelab.sh. For upgrades: Pull latest images and redeploy stacks via Dockge."). - Credits/Thanks: If community contributions exist, acknowledge them.
-
Make It User-Friendly:
- Use bullet points and subheadings for scannability.
- Include links to docs (e.g., "Getting Started").
- Add emojis or icons for visual appeal (e.g., 🚀 for new features, 🐛 for fixes).
- Keep it concise—aim for 300-500 words. Focus on value for users (e.g., "Saves power bills with lazy loading").
-
Example Enhanced Version (based on your notes):
# Release Notes v0.1.0 ## Overview EZ-Homelab v0.1.0 brings automated SSL, SSO, and resource-efficient lazy loading to your Docker homelab, supporting 50+ services out of the box. ## What's New - 🚀 **Sablier Lazy Loading**: Reduces resource usage and power costs by starting services on-demand. - 🔒 **Security Enhancements**: Authelia SSO enabled by default (with 2FA support) and TLS certificates for Docker proxy. - 🌐 **DNS & Proxy**: DuckDNS integration with Let's Encrypt wildcard certificates; Traefik routing for local and remote services. - 📊 **Dashboards**: Preconfigured Homepage at `homepage.yoursubdomain.duckdns.org` for easy service access. ## Services Included - Core, Infrastructure, Dashboards, Media, Media Management, Productivity, Transcoders, Utilities, VPN, and Wikis stacks—all with Traefik/Sablier support. - Note: Monitoring stack not yet configured; Alternatives stack untested. ## Installation - Fresh OS: Follow Getting Started and run `./ez-homelab.sh`. - Upgrade: Pull images and redeploy via Dockge. ## Known Issues - ez-homelab.sh options 1 & 2 need testing. - Sablier may cause brief delays or timeouts—refresh the page. ## Thanks Thanks to the community for feedback on the GitHub Wiki! -
Suggestion: Save this as
release-notes-v0.1.0.md(or similar) in the repo root, and reference it in the GitHub release. You can also auto-generate notes from commits if using GitHub's tools.
3. Creating the Release on GitHub
-
Step-by-Step Process:
-
Create a Git Tag Locally:
- Open a terminal in your repo:
cd /path/to/EZ-Homelab. - Create an annotated tag:
git tag -a v0.1.0 -m "Release v0.1.0: Automated SSL, SSO, and lazy loading for Docker homelab". - Push the tag:
git push origin v0.1.0.
- Open a terminal in your repo:
-
Create the Release on GitHub:
- Go to your repo on GitHub.com → Releases → Create a new release.
- Tag version: Select
v0.1.0(or create it here if you skipped the local step). - Release title: "EZ-Homelab v0.1.0 - Production-Ready Docker Homelab".
- Description: Copy-paste your enhanced release notes (or link to the file).
- Attach Assets: If applicable, add binaries/scripts (e.g., a zipped version of
ez-homelab.shfor non-Git users). - Mark as Pre-Release: If this isn't fully stable, check this box.
- Click Publish Release.
-
-
Automation Tip: Set up a GitHub Action for releases (e.g., using
actions/create-release) to automate tagging and publishing when you push a tag. This is great for future releases.
4. Post-Release Tips
- Announce It: Share on relevant communities (e.g., Reddit's r/homelab, Docker forums) with a link to the release.
- Monitor Feedback: Watch for issues or PRs post-release. Use GitHub's release discussions if enabled.
- Plan Next Release: Start a changelog for v0.1.1 (e.g., track new services or fixes).
- Security/Compliance: Since this involves security (SSO, TLS), consider adding a security policy file (
SECURITY.md) for reporting vulnerabilities. - If Issues Arise: You can edit the release notes or create a patch release (e.g., v0.1.1) quickly.
If you'd like me to help refine your release notes (e.g., by suggesting specific wording or formatting), review your current release-notes-v0.1.md file, or assist with any of these steps (without modifying files), just let me know! For example, I can generate a sample release notes template or walk through the Git commands. What's your next step? - Suggestion: Save this as release-notes-v0.1.0.md (or similar) in the repo root, and reference it in the GitHub release. You can also auto-generate notes from commits if using GitHub's tools.
3. Creating the Release on GitHub
-
Step-by-Step Process:
-
Create a Git Tag Locally:
- Open a terminal in your repo:
cd /path/to/EZ-Homelab. - Create an annotated tag:
git tag -a v0.1.0 -m "Release v0.1.0: Automated SSL, SSO, and lazy loading for Docker homelab". - Push the tag:
git push origin v0.1.0.
- Open a terminal in your repo:
-
Create the Release on GitHub:
- Go to your repo on GitHub.com → Releases → Create a new release.
- Tag version: Select
v0.1.0(or create it here if you skipped the local step). - Release title: "EZ-Homelab v0.1.0 - Production-Ready Docker Homelab".
- Description: Copy-paste your enhanced release notes (or link to the file).
- Attach Assets: If applicable, add binaries/scripts (e.g., a zipped version of
ez-homelab.shfor non-Git users). - Mark as Pre-Release: If this isn't fully stable, check this box.
- Click Publish Release.
-
-
Automation Tip: Set up a GitHub Action for releases (e.g., using
actions/create-release) to automate tagging and publishing when you push a tag. This is great for future releases.
4. Post-Release Tips
- Announce It: Share on relevant communities (e.g., Reddit's r/homelab, Docker forums) with a link to the release.
- Monitor Feedback: Watch for issues or PRs post-release. Use GitHub's release discussions if enabled.
- Plan Next Release: Start a changelog for v0.1.1 (e.g., track new services or fixes).
- Security/Compliance: Since this involves security (SSO, TLS), consider adding a security policy file (
SECURITY.md) for reporting vulnerabilities. - If Issues Arise: You can edit the release notes or create a patch release (e.g., v0.1.1) quickly.
If you'd like me to help refine your release notes (e.g., by suggesting specific wording or formatting), review your current release-notes-v0.1.md file, or assist with any of these steps (without modifying files), just let me know! For example, I can generate a sample release notes template or walk through the Git commands. What's your next step?