create-github-release
About
This skill automates creating GitHub releases with proper semantic versioning tags, changelog generation, and artifact uploads. It's designed for publishing stable software versions, libraries, or distributing build artifacts via GitHub CLI. Developers should use it when they need to standardize their release process with automated tagging and release notes.
Quick Install
Claude Code
Recommendednpx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanacgit clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/create-github-releaseCopy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill
Documentation
Create GitHub Release
Create a tagged GitHub release with release notes and optional artifacts.
When to Use
- Marking a stable version of software for distribution
- Publishing a new version of a library or application
- Creating release notes for stakeholders
- Distributing build artifacts (binaries, tarballs)
Inputs
- Required: Version number (semantic versioning)
- Required: Summary of changes since last release
- Optional: Build artifacts to attach
- Optional: Whether this is a pre-release
Procedure
Step 1: Determine Version Number
Follow semantic versioning (MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH):
| Change | Example | When |
|---|---|---|
| MAJOR | 1.0.0 -> 2.0.0 | Breaking changes |
| MINOR | 1.0.0 -> 1.1.0 | New features, backward compatible |
| PATCH | 1.0.0 -> 1.0.1 | Bug fixes only |
Got: A version number is chosen that accurately reflects the scope of changes since the last release.
If fail: If unsure whether changes are breaking, review the public API diff. Any removal or signature change of an exported function is a breaking change requiring a MAJOR bump.
Step 2: Update Version in Project Files
DESCRIPTION(R packages)package.json(Node.js)Cargo.toml(Rust)pyproject.toml(Python)
Got: The version number is updated in the appropriate project file and committed to version control.
If fail: If the version was already updated in a previous step (e.g., via usethis::use_version() in R), verify it matches the intended release version.
Step 3: Write Release Notes
Create or update changelog. Organize by category:
## What's Changed
### New Features
- Added user authentication (#42)
- Support for custom themes (#45)
### Bug Fixes
- Fixed crash on empty input (#38)
- Corrected date parsing in UTC (#41)
### Improvements
- Improved error messages
- Updated dependencies
### Breaking Changes
- `old_function()` renamed to `new_function()` (#50)
**Full Changelog**: https://github.com/user/repo/compare/v1.0.0...v1.1.0
Got: Release notes are organized by category (features, fixes, breaking changes) with issue/PR references for traceability.
If fail: If changes are hard to categorize, review git log v1.0.0..HEAD --oneline to reconstruct the list of changes since the last release.
Step 4: Create Git Tag
git tag -a v1.1.0 -m "Release v1.1.0"
git push origin v1.1.0
Got: An annotated tag v1.1.0 exists locally and on the remote. git tag -l shows the tag.
If fail: If the tag already exists, delete it with git tag -d v1.1.0 && git push origin :refs/tags/v1.1.0 and recreate it. If push is rejected, ensure you have write access to the remote.
Step 5: Create GitHub Release
Using GitHub CLI (recommended):
gh release create v1.1.0 \
--title "v1.1.0" \
--notes-file CHANGELOG.md
With artifacts:
gh release create v1.1.0 \
--title "v1.1.0" \
--notes "Release notes here" \
build/app-v1.1.0.tar.gz \
build/app-v1.1.0.zip
Pre-release:
gh release create v2.0.0-beta.1 \
--title "v2.0.0 Beta 1" \
--prerelease \
--notes "Beta release for testing"
Got: Release visible on GitHub with tag, notes, and attached artifacts (if any).
If fail: If gh is not authenticated, run gh auth login. If the tag does not exist on the remote, push it first with git push origin v1.1.0.
Step 6: Auto-Generate Release Notes
GitHub can auto-generate notes from merged PRs:
gh release create v1.1.0 \
--title "v1.1.0" \
--generate-notes
Configure categories in .github/release.yml:
changelog:
categories:
- title: New Features
labels:
- enhancement
- title: Bug Fixes
labels:
- bug
- title: Documentation
labels:
- documentation
- title: Other Changes
labels:
- "*"
Got: Release notes are auto-generated from merged PR titles, categorized by label. .github/release.yml controls the categories.
If fail: If auto-generated notes are empty, ensure PRs were merged (not closed) and had labels assigned. Manually write notes as a fallback.
Step 7: Verify Release
# List releases
gh release list
# View specific release
gh release view v1.1.0
Got: gh release list shows the new release. gh release view displays the correct title, tag, notes, and assets.
If fail: If the release is missing, check the Actions tab for any release workflows that may have failed. Verify the tag exists with git tag -l.
Validation
- Version tag follows semantic versioning
- Git tag points to the correct commit
- Release notes accurately describe changes
- Artifacts (if any) are attached and downloadable
- Release is visible on the GitHub repository page
- Pre-release flag is set correctly
Pitfalls
- Tagging wrong commit: Always verify
git logbefore tagging. Tag after version-bump commit. - Forgetting to push tags:
git pushdoesn't push tags. Usegit push --tagsorgit push origin v1.1.0. - Inconsistent version format: Decide on
v1.0.0vs1.0.0and stick with it. - Empty release notes: Always provide meaningful notes. Users need to know what changed.
- Deleting and recreating tags: Avoid changing tags after push. If needed, create a new version instead.
Related Skills
commit-changes- staging and committing workflowmanage-git-branches- branch management for release preprelease-package-version- R-specific release workflowconfigure-git-repository- Git setup prerequisitesetup-github-actions-ci- automate releases via CI
GitHub Repository
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