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How to do a GTK release?
========================
## Before we begin
Make sure you have suitable versions of Meson and Ninja.
Also make sure you have the following packages installed with all their
dependencies:
* gtk-doc
* docbook-utils
Without those packages make distcheck will *not* pass.
Make sure that gtk-doc is the latest released version.
## Release check list
0. Save all your work, then move to the branch from which you want
to release. Go back to a pristine working directory. With Git,
this works:
```sh
$ git clean -dfx
```
1. Build using the common sequence:
```sh
$ meson _build .
$ ninja -C _build
```
2. Update NEWS based on the content of git log; follow the format of prior
entries. This includes finding noteworthy new features, collecting
summaries for all the fixed bugs that are referenced and collecting all
updated translations. Also collect the names of all contributors that
are mentioned. We don't discriminate between bug reporters, patch
writers, committers, etc. Anybody who is mentioned in the commit log
gets a credit, but only real names, not email addresses or nicknames.
3. Update the pot files and commit the changes:
```sh
$ ninja -C _build gtk40-pot
$ ninja -C _build gtk40-properties-pot
```
4. If this is a major, stable, release, verify that the release notes
in the API reference contain the relevant items.
5. Verify that the version in `meson.build` has been bumped after the last
release. **Note**: this is critical, a slip-up here will cause the soname
to change.
6. Make sure that `meson test` is happy (`ninja dist` will also run the test
suite, but it's better to catch issues before committing and tagging
the release). Typical problems to expect here (depending on whether this
is a devel snapshot or a stable release):
* forgotten source files
* new symbols missing the `GDK_AVAILABLE_IN_` annotation
* wrong introspection annotations
* missing documentation
7. If this is a devel release, make sure that the docs for new symbols are
in good shape. Look at the -unused.txt files and add stuff found there
to the corresponding `-sections.txt` file. Look at the `-undocumented.txt`
files and see if there is anything in there that should be documented.
If it is, this may be due to typos in the doc comments in the source.
Make sure that all new symbols have proper Since: tags, and that there
is an index in the main `-docs.xml` for the next stable version.
8. Run `ninja dist` to generate the tarball.
9. Fix broken stuff found by 8), commit changes, repeat.
10. Once `dist` succeeds, verify that the tree is clean and all the changes
needed to make the release have been committed: `git diff` should come
up empty. The last commit must be the commit that bumps up the version
of the release in the `meson.build` file. Use `git rebase` if you had to
add more commits after the version bump and `dist` successfully passing.
If you change the history, remember to rebuild the tarball.
11. Now you've got the tarball. Check that the tarball size looks reasonable
compared to previous releases. If the size goes down a lot, likely the
docs went missing for some reason. Or the translations. If the size goes
up by a lot, something else may be wrong.
12. Tag the release. The git command for doing that looks like:
```sh
$ git tag -m "GTK 4.2.0" 4.2.0
```
13. Bump the version number in `meson.build` and commit the change.
14. Push the changes upstream, and push the tag as well. The git command for
doing that is:
```sh
$ git push origin
$ git push origin 4.2.0
```
15. Upload the tarball to `master.gnome.org` and run `ftpadmin install` to
transfer it to `download.gnome.org`. If you don't have an account on
`master.gnome.org`, find someone who can do it for you. The command for
this looks like:
```sh
$ scp gtk-4.2.0.tar.xz matthiasc@master.gnome.org:
$ ssh matthiasc@master.gnome.org ftpadmin install gtk-4.2.0.tar.xz
```
16. Go to the gnome-announce list archives, find the last announce message,
create a new message in the same form, replacing version numbers,
commentary at the top about "what this release is about" and the
summary of changes.
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