6.3 KiB
FAQ
If you need a specific behaviour and it's not mentioned here - or it's more complicated - feel free to raise an Issue - configuration questions are welcome in this repository.
What Is The Default Behaviour?
Renovate will:
- Look for configuration options in a
renovate.json
file and in eachpackage.json
file under therenovate
object - Find and process all
package.json
files in each repository - Process
dependencies
,devDependencies
andoptionalDependencies
in eachpackage.json
- Use separate branches/PR for each dependency
- Use separate branches for each major version of each dependency
- Pin dependencies to a single version, rather than use ranges
- Update
yarn.lock
and/orpackage-lock.json
files if found - Create Pull Requests immediately after branch creation
What If I Need To .. ?
Run renovate on all repositories that the account has access to
Set configuration option autodiscover
to true
, via CLI, environment, or configuration file. Obviously it's too late to set it in any renovate.json
or package.json
.
Support private npm modules
If you are running your own Renovate instance, then the easiest way to support private modules is to make sure the appropriate credentials are in ~/.npmrc
;
If you are using hosted Renovate instance, and your repository package.json
includes private modules, then you can:
- Commit an
.npmrc
file to the repository, and Renovate will use this, or - If using the GitHub App hosted service, authorize the npm user named "renovate" with read-only access to the relevant modules. This "renovate" account is used solely for the purpose of the renovate GitHub App.
Control renovate's schedule
Renovate itself will run as often as its administrator has configured it (e.g. hourly, daily, etc). But you may wish to update certain repositories less often, or even specific packages at a different schedule.
If you want to control the days of the week or times of day that renovate updates packages, use the timezone
and schedule
configuration options.
By default, Renovate schedules will use the timezone of the machine that it's running on. This can be overridden in global config. Finally, it can be overridden on a per-repository basis too, e.g.:
"timezone": "America/Los_Angeles",
The timezone must be one of the valid IANA time zones.
Now that your timezone is set, you can define days of week or hours of the day in which renovate will make changes. For this we rely on text parsing of the library later and its concepts of "days", "time_before", and "time_after".
Example scheduling:
every weekend
before 5:00am
after 10pm and before 5:00am
after 10pm and before 5am every weekday
on friday and saturday
This scheduling feature can be particularly useful for "noisy" packages that are updated frequently, such as aws-sdk
.
To restrict aws-sdk
to only weekly updates, you could add this package rule:
"packages": [
{
"packageName": "aws-sdk",
"schedule": "after 9pm on sunday"
}
]
Selectively enable or disable renovate for specific package.json
files
You could:
- Add a
renovate.json
to the root of your repository and explicitly whitelist whichpackage.json
files you want renovated in thepackageFiles
configuration option, or - Add a
renovate
section to anypackage.json
files you don't want renovated, with the configuration option"enabled": false
Disable renovate for certain dependency types
If you want to disable renovate
for optionalDependencies
, for example, you could define your own depTypes
array (in either a renovate.json
or package.json
file)
Use a single branch/PR for all dependency upgrades
Add a configuration for configuration option groupName
set to value "all"
, at the top level of your renovate.json
or package.json
.
Use separate branches per dependency, but not one per major release
Set configuration option separateMajorReleases
to false
.
Keep using semver ranges, instead of pinning dependencies
Set configuration option pinVersions
to false
.
Keep yarn.lock
sub-dependencies up-to-date, even when package.json
hasn't changed
This is enabled by default, but its schedule is set to 'before 5am on monday'. If you want it more frequently, then update the schedule
field inside the lockFileMaintenance
object.
Wait until tests have passed before creating the PR
Set configuration option prCreation
to "status-success"
Wait until tests have passed before creating a PR, but create the PR even if they fail
Set configuration option prCreation
to "not-pending"
Assign PRs to specific user(s)
Set the configuration option assignees
to an array of usernames.
Add labels to PRs
Set the configuration option labels
to an array of labels to use
Apply a rule, but only to package abc
?
- Add a
packages
array to your configuration. - Create one object inside this array
- Set field
packageName
to value"abc"
- Add the configuration option to the same object.
e.g.
"packages": [
{
"packageName": "abc",
"assignees": ["importantreviewer"]
}
]
Apply a rule, but only for packages starting with abc
Do the same as above, but instead of using packageName
, use packagePattern
and a regex. e.g.
"packages": [
{
"packagePattern": "^abc",
"assignees": ["importantreviewer"]
}
]
Group all packages starting with abc
together in one PR
As above, but apply a groupName
, e.g.
"packages": [
{
"packagePattern": "^abc",
"groupName": ["abc packages"]
}
]
Change the default branch name, commit message, PR title or PR description
Set the branchName
, commitMessage
, prTitle
or prBody
configuration options:
"branchName": "vroom/{{depName}}-{{newVersionMajor}}.x",
"commitMessage": "Vroom vroom dependency {{depName}} to version {{newVersion}}",
"prTitle": "Vroom {{depName}},
Automatically merge passing Pull Requests
Set configuration option autoMerge
to minor
if you want this to apply only to minor upgrades, or set to value all
if you want it applied to both minor and major upgrades.