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author | Tristan Van Berkom <tristan.vanberkom@codethink.co.uk> | 2019-02-17 21:30:11 +0900 |
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committer | Tristan Van Berkom <tristan.vanberkom@codethink.co.uk> | 2019-02-18 17:41:57 +0900 |
commit | ee2296ab744f7298d7e756ee0b1a3b5be5e26387 (patch) | |
tree | 416cb33b341280975a2370822683b021daf97024 /CONTRIBUTING.rst | |
parent | 232906b13c946ab6d857d29df940cb8b21267be6 (diff) | |
download | buildstream-ee2296ab744f7298d7e756ee0b1a3b5be5e26387.tar.gz |
CONTRIBUTING.rst: Documenting the release process
So that other people can also make releases.
Diffstat (limited to 'CONTRIBUTING.rst')
-rw-r--r-- | CONTRIBUTING.rst | 258 |
1 files changed, 258 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/CONTRIBUTING.rst b/CONTRIBUTING.rst index b993b08b6..6a3fbf05f 100644 --- a/CONTRIBUTING.rst +++ b/CONTRIBUTING.rst @@ -1234,6 +1234,8 @@ This will give you a ``doc/build/html`` directory with the html docs which you can view in your browser locally to test. +.. _contributing_session_html: + Regenerating session html ''''''''''''''''''''''''' The documentation build will build the session files if they are missing, @@ -1252,6 +1254,8 @@ To force rebuild session html while building the doc, simply run `tox` with the env BST_FORCE_SESSION_REBUILD=1 tox -e docs +.. _contributing_man_pages: + Man pages ~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately it is quite difficult to integrate the man pages build @@ -1779,3 +1783,257 @@ changing the ``.in`` file, run the following to update the matching ``.txt`` file:: make -C requirements + + +Making releases +--------------- +This is a checklist of activities which must be observed when creating +BuildStream releases, it is important to keep this section up to date +whenever the release process changes. + + +Requirements +~~~~~~~~~~~~ +There are a couple of requirements and accounts required in order +to publish a release. + +* Ability to send email to ``buildstream-list@gnome.org`` and + to ``gnome-announce-list@gnome.org``. + +* Shell account at ``master.gnome.org``. + +* Access to the `BuildStream project on PyPI <https://pypi.org/project/BuildStream/>`_ + +* An email client which still knows how to send emails in plain text. + + +Pre-release changes +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +Before actually rolling the release, here is a list of changes which +might need to be done in preparation of the release. + +* Ensure that the man pages are up to date + + The man pages are committed to the repository because we are + currently unable to integrate this generation into the setuptools + build phase, as outlined in issue #8. + + If any of the user facing CLI has changed, or if any of the + related docstrings have changed, then you should + :ref:`regenerate the man pages <contributing_man_pages>` and + add/commit the results before wrapping a release. + +* Ensure the documentation session HTML is up to date + + The session HTML files are committed to the repository for multiple + reasons, one of them being that the documentation must be buildable + from within a release build environment so that downstream distribution + packagers can easily create the docs package. + + This is currently only needed for the first stable release + in a stable line of releases, after this point the API is frozen + and will not change for the remainder of the stable release lifetime, + so nothing interesting will have changed in these session files. + + If regeneration is needed, follow :ref:`the instructions above <contributing_session_html>`. + +* Ensure the NEWS entry is up to date and ready + + For a stable release where features have not been added, we + should at least add some entries about the issues which have + been fixed since the last stable release. + + For development releases, it is worthwhile going over the + existing entries and ensuring all the major feature additions + are mentioned and there are no redundancies. + +* Push pre-release changes + + Now that any final pre-release changes to generated files or NEWS have + been made, push these directly to the upstream repository. + + Do not sit around waiting for CI or approval, these superficial changes + do not affect CI and you are intended to push these changes directly + to the upstream repository. + + +Release process +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +* Ensure that the latest commit is passing in CI + + Of course, we do not release software which does not pass it's own + tests. + +* Get the list of contributors + + The list of contributors for a given list is a list of + any contributors who have landed any patches since the + last release. + + An easy way to get this list is to ask git to summarize + the authors of commits since the *last release tag*. For + example, if we are about to create the ``1.1.1`` release, then + we need to observe all of the commits since the ``1.1.0`` + release: + + .. code:: shell + + git shortlog -s 1.1.0...@ + + At times, the same contributor might make contributions from different + machines which they have setup their author names differently, you + can see that some of the authors are actually duplicates, then + remove the duplicates. + +* Start composing the release announcement email + + The first thing to do when composing the release email is to + ensure your mail client has disabled any HTML formatting and will + safely use plain text only. + + Try to make the release announcement consistent with other release + announcements as much as possible, an example of the email + can be `found here <https://mail.gnome.org/archives/buildstream-list/2019-February/msg00039.html>`_. + + The recipients of the email are ``buildstream-list@gnome.org`` and + ``gnome-announce-list@gnome.org`` and the title of the email should + be of the form: ``BuildStream 1.1.1 released``, without any exclamation point. + + The format of the email is essentially:: + + Hi all, + + This is the personalized message written to you about this + release. + + If this is an unstable release, this should include a warning + to this effect and an invitation to users to please help us + test this release. + + This is also a good place to highlight specific bug fixes which + users may have been waiting for, or highlight a new feature we + want users to try out. + + + What is BuildStream ? + ===================== + This is a concise blurb which describes BuildStream in a couple of + sentences, and is taken from the the README.rst. + + The easiest thing is to just copy this over from the last release email. + + + ================= + buildstream 1.1.1 + ================= + This section is directly copy pasted from the top of the NEWS file + + + Contributors + ============ + - This is Where + - You Put + - The Contributor + - Names Which + - You Extracted + - Using git shortlog -s + + + Where can I get it ? + ==================== + https://download.gnome.org/sources/BuildStream/1.1/ + + For more information on the BuildStream project, visit our home page + at https://buildstream.build/ + +* Publish the release tag + + Now that any pre-release changes are upstream, create and push the + signed release tag like so: + + .. code:: shell + + git tag -s 1.1.1 + git push origin 1.1.1 + +* Upload the release tarball + + First get yourself into a clean repository state, ensure that you + don't have any unfinished work or precious, uncommitted files lying + around in your checkout and then run: + + .. code:: shell + + git clean -xdff + + Create the tarball with the following command: + + .. code:: shell + + python3 setup.py sdist + + And upload the resulting tarball to the master GNOME server: + + .. code:: shell + + scp dist/BuildStream-1.1.1.tar.gz <user>@master.gnome.org: + + And finally login to your account at ``master.gnome.org`` and run + the install scripts to publish the tarball and update the mirrors: + + .. code:: shell + + ftpadmin install BuildStream-1.1.1.tar.gz + +* Send the release email + + Now that the release tag is up and the tarball is published, + you can send the release email. + + +Post-release activities +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +Once the release has been published, there are some activities +which need to be done to ensure everything is up to date. + +* If this is a stable release, then the tarball should also be + uploaded to PyPI. + + Make sure you have ``twine`` installed and upload the tarball + like so: + + .. code:: shell + + pip3 install --user twine + twine upload -r pypi dist/BuildStream-1.0.1.tar.gz + +* Update the topic line in the #buildstream IRC channel if needed + + The IRC channel usually advertizes the latest stable release + in the topic line, now is the right time to update it. + +* Update the website repository + + The website wants to link to release announcements, but this + cannot be automated because we cannot guess what the link to + the release email will be in the mailing list archive. + + Find the URL to the announcement you just published + `in the mailing list archives <https://mail.gnome.org/archives/buildstream-list/>`_, + and use that URL to update the ``anouncements.json`` file in the website + repository. + + Commit and push this change to the the ``anouncements.json`` file to + the upstream website repository, and gitlab will take care of automatically + updating the website accordingly. + +* Regenerate BuildStream documentation + + In order to update the badges we use in various documentation + which reflects what is the latest stable releases and the latest + development snapshots, we simply need to ensure a pipeline runs + for the master branch in the BuildStream repository. + + You can do this by using the "Run Pipeline" feature on the + `pipelines page in the gitlab UI <https://gitlab.com/BuildStream/buildstream/pipelines>`_. |