To make a release of Weston and/or Wayland, follow these steps. 0. Verify the test suites and codebase checks pass. All of the tests pass should either pass or skip. $ make check 1. Update the first three lines of configure.ac to the intended version, commit. Also note that Weston includes versioned dependencies on 'wayland-server' and 'wayland-client' in configure.ac which typically need updated as well. Then commit your changes: $ git status $ git commit configure.ac -m "configure.ac: bump to version x.y.z for the xxx release" $ git push 2. Run the release.sh script to generate the tarballs, sign and upload them, and generate a release announcement template. This script can be obtained from X.org's modular package: http://cgit.freedesktop.org/xorg/util/modular/tree/release.sh The script supports a --dry-run option to test it without actually doing a release. If the script fails on the distcheck step due to a testsuite error that can't be fixed for some reason, you can skip testsuite by specifying the --dist argument. Pass --help to see other supported options. 3. Compose the release announcements. The script will generate *.x.y.0.announce files with a list of changes and tags, one for wayland, one for weston. Prepend these with a human-readable listing of the most notable changes. For x.y.0 releases, indicate the schedule for the x.y+1.0 release. 4. Send the release announcements to wayland-devel@lists.freedesktop.org 5. Get your freshly posted release email URL from http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/wayland-devel/ 6. Update releases.html in wayland-web with links to tarballs and the release email URL. $ git commit releases.html -m "Add x.y.z release" $ git push $ rsync -avz * wayland.freedesktop.org:/srv/wayland.freedesktop.org/www/ 7. Update topic in #wayland to point to the release announcement URL For x.y.0 releases, also create the x.y branch. The x.y branch is for bug fixes and conservative changes to the x.y.0 release, and is where we release x.y.z releases from. Creating the x.y branch opens up master for new development and lets new development move on. We've done this both after the x.y.0 release (to focus development on bug fixing for the x.y.1 release for a little longer) or before the x.y.0 release (like we did with the 1.5.0 release, to unblock master development early). $ git branch x.y $ git push origin x.y The master branch configure.ac version should always be (at least) x.y.90, with x.y being the most recent stable branch. Stable branch configure version is just whatever was most recently released from that branch. For stable branches, we commit fixes to master first, then cherry-pick them back to the stable branch.