Changelog
Purpose
The purpose of a changelog is to log or record notable changes.
Tone
instructional, straightforward
content_type
changelog
Ownership
Developers and engineers maintain changelogs manually or via an automated process that their team owns. PCX provides a review but should not own creating or writing changelogs.
The structure of the page can differ depending on the frequency or type of page.
Structure (single-page)
When creating a changelog, you need a Markdown page file and a corresponding YAML file in the /data/changelogs
folder.
The combination of these files allows us to:
- Render traditional changelog content on an HTML page.
- Programmatically create an RSS feed with the changelog content.
- Pull all our changelog content into a Cloudflare-wide changelog.
Markdown file
Your Markdown file needs to have several special values to pull in the changelog information. These values are highlighted in the sample page.
/queues/changelog.md---pcx_content_type: changelogtitle: Changelogweight: 11layout: changelogchangelog_file_name: [<YAML_FILE_NAME>] (for example, [queues])outputs: - html - rss---
# Changelog
{{<product-changelog>}}
YAML file
The product-changelog
component renders data that lives in a file within the /data/changelogs
folder.
link
string
- Relative path to the changelog page, such as
"/queues/changelog/"
.
- Relative path to the changelog page, such as
productName
string
- Product name to display on the changelog product filter list, as well as other areas of the template.
entries
object
publish_date
date
- Date of published change, formatted as
YYYY-MM-DD
.
- Date of published change, formatted as
title
string
- Name of published change. Optional, but highly encouraged.
description
string
- Markdown string that also follows YAML conventions. For multi-line strings, start the entry with
|-
and then type on an indented new line.
- Markdown string that also follows YAML conventions. For multi-line strings, start the entry with
/data/changelogs/queues.yaml---
link: "/queues/changelog/"
productName: Queuesentries:
- publish_date: '2023-03-28' title: Consumer concurrency (enabled) description: Queue consumers will now [automatically scale up](/queues/learning/consumer-concurrency/) based on the number of messages being written to the queue. To control or limit concurrency, you can explicitly define a [`max_concurrency`](/queues/platform/configuration/#consumer) for your consumer.- publish_date: '2023-03-15' title: Consumer concurrency (upcoming) description: |- Queue consumers will soon automatically scale up concurrently as a queues' backlog grows in order to keep overall message processing latency down. Concurrency will be enabled on all existing queues by 2023-03-28.
**To opt-out, or to configure a fixed maximum concurrency**, set `max_concurrency = 1` in your `wrangler.toml` file or via [the queues dashboard](https://dash.cloudflare.com/?to=/:account/queues).
**To opt-in, you do not need to take any action**: your consumer will begin to scale out as needed to keep up with your message backlog. It will scale back down as the backlog shrinks, and/or if a consumer starts to generate a higher rate of errors. To learn more about how consumers scale, refer to the [consumer concurrency](/queues/learning/consumer-concurrency/) documentation.- publish_date: '2023-03-02' title: Explicit acknowledgement (new feature) description: |- You can now [acknowledge individual messages with a batch](/queues/learning/batching-retries/#explicit-acknowledgement) by calling `.ack()` on a message.
This allows you to mark a message as delivered as you process it within a batch, and avoids the entire batch from being redelivered if your consumer throws an error during batch processing. This can be particularly useful when you are calling external APIs, writing messages to a database, or otherwise performing non-idempotent actions on individual messages within a batch.- publish_date: '2023-03-01' title: Higher per-queue throughput description: The per-queue throughput limit has now been [raised to 400 messages per second](/queues/platform/limits/).- publish_date: '2022-12-12' title: Increased per-account limits description: Queues now allows developers to create up to 100 queues per account, up from the initial beta limit of 10 per account. This limit will continue to increase over time.- publish_date: '2022-12-13' title: sendBatch support description: The JavaScript API for Queue producers now includes a `sendBatch` method which supports sending up to 100 messages at a time.
Structure (multi-page)
In some cases, your changelog may have a separate page for each entry. The general structure is the same as the single-page changelog, but with a few small differences.
Markdown files
Top-level pages
For the top-level pages, you need the same frontmatter as the single-page example, but do not include any shortcodes in the body of the page.
Individual entries
For each entry page, create a regular markdown page. These do not require a separate style of page or any adjustments.
YAML file
Each individual entry needs an abbreviated entry in the changelog .yaml
file.
/data/changelogs/waf.yaml---
link: "/waf/change-log/"
productName: WAFentries:
- publish_date: '2023-09-18' individual_page: true scheduled: true link: '/waf/change-log/scheduled-changes/'
- publish_date: '2023-09-18' individual_page: true link: '/waf/change-log/2023-09-18/'
...
publish_date
date
- Date of scheduled change, formatted as
YYYY-MM-DD
.
- Date of scheduled change, formatted as
individual_page
boolean
- Used to pull in the content from the page itself, as opposed to structured data in YAML.
link
string
- Link to the individual page.
scheduled
boolean
- Should be included for scheduled pages. Because this component renders content on the underlying page, you should only have a) one scheduled entry per scheduled entry page and b) only a scheduled entry when the scheduled entry page has content.