Chocolatey Package: Verpatch
Install Chocolatey, and run the following command to install the latest approved stable version from the Chocolatey Community Repository:
choco install verpatch --source="'https://community.chocolatey.org/api/v2'"Alternatively, the packages as published on the Chocolatey Community Repository will also be mirrored on this repository's Releases page. The nupkg can be installed from the current directory as follows:
choco install verpatch --source="'.'"Install Chocolatey, the Chocolatey Automatic Package Updater Module, and the PowerShellForGitHub PowerShell Module, then clone this repository.
Once cloned, simply run build.ps1. The ZIP archive is intentionally untracked to avoid bloating the repository, so the script will download the Verpatch portable ZIP archive from the official distribution point, then packs everything together.
A successful build will create verpatch.x.y.z.nupkg, where x.y.z should be the Nuspec's normalized version value at build time.
Note
Chocolatey package builds are non-deterministic. Consequently, an independently built package's checksum will not match that of the officially published package.
This package has an update script implemented with the Chocolatey Automatic Package Updater Module, with update queries implemented by the PowerShellForGitHub PowerShell Module, but the project does not appear to be actively maintained anymore, so it is not included with my normally scheduled update runs. If the project has a new release, please open an issue.
AU expects the parent directory that contains this repository to share a name with the Nuspec (verpatch). Your local repository should therefore be cloned accordingly:
git clone git@github.com:brogers5/chocolatey-package-verpatch.git verpatchAlternatively, a junction point can be created that points to the local repository (preferably within a repository adopting the AU packages template):
mklink /J verpatch ..\chocolatey-package-verpatchOnce created, simply run update.ps1 from within the created directory/junction point. Assuming all goes well, all relevant files should change to reflect the latest version available. This will also build a new package version using the modified files.
Before submitting a pull request, please test the package using the latest Chocolatey Testing Environment first.