Monorepo¶
GoReleaser Pro
The monorepo support is a GoReleaser Pro feature.
If you want to use GoReleaser within a monorepo and use tag prefixes to mark "which tags belong to which sub project", GoReleaser has you covered.
Premises¶
You project falls into either one of these categories:
- tags are like 
subproject1/v1.2.3andsubproject2/v1.2.3; - tags are like 
@user/thing@v1.2.3(for a NPM package, for example) andv1.2.3for the rest of the (Go) code. 
Usage¶
Category 1¶
You'll need to create a .goreleaser.yaml for each subproject you want to use GoReleaser in:
# subroj1/.goreleaser.yaml
project_name: subproj1
monorepo:
  tag_prefix: subproject1/
  dir: subproj1
Then, you can release with (from the project's root directory):
goreleaser release --clean -f ./subproj1/.goreleaser.yaml
Then, the following is different from a "regular" run:
- GoReleaser will then look if current commit has a tag prefixed with 
subproject1, and the previous tag with the same prefix; - Changelog will include only commits that contain changes to files within the 
subproj1directory; - Release name gets prefixed with 
{{ .ProjectName }}if empty; - All build's 
dirsetting get set tomonorepo.dirif empty; - if yours is not, you might want to change that manually;
 - Extra files on the release, archives, Docker builds, etc are prefixed with 
monorepo.dir; - If using 
changelog.use: git, only commits matching files inmonorepo.dirwill be included in the changelog. - On templates, 
{{.PrefixedTag}}will bemonorepo.prefix/tag(aka the actual tag name), and{{.Tag}}has the prefix stripped; 
The rest of the release process should work as usual.
Category 2¶
You'll need to create a .goreleaser.yaml for your Go code in the root of the project:
# .goreleaser.yaml
monorepo:
  tag_prefix: v
Then, you can release with:
goreleaser release --clean
GoReleaser will then ignore the tags that are not prefixed with v, and it should work as expected from there on.