Use this command to clean up branches created by wiby (i.e. branches with the "wiby-" prefix).
Options:
--dependent URL of a dependent [string]
--config Path to the configuration file. By default it will try to load
the configuration from the first file it finds in the current
working directory: `.wiby.json`, `.wiby.js` [string]
--all Remove all branches with "wiby-" prefix. By default, `wiby clean`
will only remove the branch that would be created if `wiby test`
ran in the current repository, on the current branch.
--dry-run Print the list of branches to be removed.
Install the bundled versions of the wiby workflows. Will overwrite existing
.github/workflows/wiby.yaml
, if any.
Check if you have the bundled version of wiby Github workflow installed. Will exit with zero if .github/workflows/wiby.yaml is up to date, and non-zero if it is outdated.
Use this command to fetch the results of your latest test against a dependent. wiby will go off to the dependent’s repo and fetch the results of the CI run against the patch branch wiby had created.
Options:
--dependent URL of a dependent [string]
--config Path to the configuration file. By default it will try to load
the configuration from the first file it finds in the current
working directory: `.wiby.json`, `.wiby.js` [string]
Use this command to test your breaking changes against any one of your
dependents. wiby will go off to the dependent’s repo and create a branch with a
patch to the package.json
pointing to your latest version (with the new
changes) triggering the dependent’s CI to run.
Options:
--dependent URL of a dependent [string]
--config Path to the configuration file. By default it will try to load
the configuration from the first file it finds in the current
working directory: `.wiby.json`, `.wiby.js` [string]
Check the structure of the configuration file.
Options:
--config Path to the configuration file. By default it will try to load the
configuration from the first file it finds in the current working
directory: `.wiby.json`, `.wiby.js` [string]