This commit:
- Adds config for building Windows installers
- Adds an action for fetching exe files built by goreleaser
- Adds an action for building Windows installers
- Adds an action for adding MSI files to an existing GH release
- Adds MSI signing to our release flow
- Disables homebrew formula bumping for prereleases
- Allows the release asset copying action to copy windows assets
We use green to signify "open" state of issues & PRs in `list` commands
(as opposed to red for "closed" and purple for "merged" state), so let's
be consistent in `status` commands too, where all displayed items are
guaranteed to be open.
If multiple templates are found, the user is prompted to select one.
The templates are searched for, in order of preference:
- issues:
1. `.github/ISSUE_TEMPLATE/*.md`
2. `.github/ISSUE_TEMPLATE.md`
3. `ISSUE_TEMPLATE/*.md`
4. `ISSUE_TEMPLATE.md`
5. `docs/ISSUE_TEMPLATE/*.md`
6. `docs/ISSUE_TEMPLATE.md`
- pull requests:
1. `.github/PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE/*.md`
2. `.github/PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md`
3. `PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE/*.md`
4. `PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md`
5. `docs/PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE/*.md`
6. `docs/PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md`
The filename matches are case-insensitive.
Currently, goreleaser injects the date that includes time & timezone
information, but this is visually noisy. This configures it to inject
the simpler `2019-12-16` date format into the build, which also matches
what our Makefile does in development.
This splits help text over paragraphs and lines to make the output of
`gh` easier to read. It takes care not to go over 80 characters in width
and wraps the URL in `<...>` which will help the URL get auto-linked
when these docs are converted to man and HTML formats.
This stubs stderr separately from stdout in command tests (before those
streams were combined) and improves test assertions around output.
Additionally, no longer use the `cmd.Print*()` family of Cobra functions
because their name sounds like the text will go to stdout, but they
write to stderr instead. Use the more explicit `cmd.ErrOrStderr()` as
output destination instead.