507 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
507 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
PEP: 101
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Title: Doing Python Releases 101
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Version: $Revision$
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Last-Modified: $Date$
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Author: barry@zope.com (Barry A. Warsaw), guido@python.org (Guido van Rossum)
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Status: Active
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Type: Informational
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Created: 22-Aug-2001
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Post-History:
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Abstract
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Making a Python release is an arduous processes that takes a
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minimum of half a day's work even for an experienced releaser.
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Until recently, most -- if not all -- of that burden was borne by
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Guido himself. But several recent releases have been performed by
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other folks, so this PEP attempts to collect, in one place, all
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the steps needed to make a Python release.
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(Note: These steps were recorded during the Python 2.2a2 release
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done by Barry and Guido. It will be checked for accuracy with the
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subsequent release, to be done by Barry.)
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How to Make A Release
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Here are the steps taken to make a Python release. Some steps are
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more fuzzy than others because there's little that can be
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automated (e.g. writing the NEWS entries). Where a step is
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usually performed by An Expert, the name of that expert is given.
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Otherwise, assume the step is done by the Release Manager (RM),
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the designated person performing the release. Almost every place
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the RM is mentioned below, this step can also be done by Guido,
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naturally!
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XXX: We should include a dependency graph to illustrate the steps
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that can be taken in parallel, or those that depend on other
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steps.
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We use the following conventions in the examples below. Where a
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release number is given, it is of the form X.YaZ, e.g. 2.1a3 for
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Python 2.1 alpha 3, where "a" == alpha, "b" == beta, "rc" ==
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release candidate, and "f" == final. If a micro release number is
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used, then we'll say X.Y.MaZ.
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- A day or two before the release, create a branch for X.YaZ.
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All Python development happens on the trunk. A few days before
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the release, the RM will create a branch for this release. Only
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the RM is authorized to make commits to this branch, but
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check ins can proceed as normal on the trunk. It is the
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responsibility of the RM to decide on a case-by-case basis which
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trunk modifications should be merged into the branch.
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To create a branch the following steps are taken:
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* Do a CVS update with the -A flag, e.g.
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% cvs update -A
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* CVS tag the trunk with the symbolic name "rXYaZ-fork", e.g.
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% cvs tag r22a3-fork
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* Make the branch with the symbolic name "rXYaZ-branch", e.g.
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% cvs tag -b r22a3-branch
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* Check out a clean version of the branch into a new directory.
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You'll be doing a lot of work in this directory and you want
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to keep it straight from your trunk working directory. E.g.
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% cvs -d <cvsroot> -q co -d python-22a3 -r 22a3-branch python/dist/src
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- Send an email to python-dev@python.org indicating the fork and
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branch tags you've just created.
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- Put a freeze on check ins into the branch. At this point,
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nobody except the RM should make any commits to the branch (or
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his duly assigned agents, i.e. Guido the BDFL, Fred Drake for
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documentation, or Tim Peters for Windows). If the RM screwed up
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and some desperate last minute change to the branch is
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necessary, it can mean extra work for Fred and Tim. So try to
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avoid this!
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- In the branch, change Include/patchlevel.h in two places, to
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reflect the new version number you've just created. You'll want
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to change the PY_VERSION macro, and one or several of the
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version subpart macros just above PY_VERSION, as appropriate.
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- For the next few days, selectively merge stuff from trunk into
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branch. For each change you see on the trunk (i.e. via the
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python-checkins mailing list), you need to decide whether the
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change should also be applied to the branch.
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If so, it's fairly easy to apply the change by diff'ing the file
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and patching it manually. You can also sometimes get away with
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just copying the file from the trunk directory to the branch
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directory, but be careful so you don't lose changes that only
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exist in the branch!
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- The night before the release, the RM updates the Misc/NEWS file,
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adding high level items new to this release. E.g. if we're
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releasing 2.2a3, there must be a section at the top of the file
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explaining "What's new in Python 2.2a3". It will be followed by
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a section entitled "What's new in Python 2.2a2".
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Note that you /hope/ that as developers add new features to the
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trunk, they've updated the NEWS file accordingly. You can't be
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positive, so double check. If you're a Unix weenie, it helps to
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verify with Tim Peters about changes on Windows, and Jack Jansen
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about changes on the Mac.
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- Once the branch is frozen, Fred Drake needs to create the HTML
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from the documentation. He does this and uploads the file to
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www.python.org. Then he tells Tim Peters where this file is.
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This may generate some last minute changes on the branch.
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- Tim Peters grabs the HTML and uses this to build the Windows
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installer. Tim then creates a new "release" named X.YaZ on the
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SourceForge file release manager.
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(Diversion: SF's file manager has "packages" and "releases". We
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use packages to name major upcoming releases, e.g. python-2.2 or
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python-2.1.1. Inside each package are a number of "releases"
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for each new actual release -- i.e. the thing you're building.
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An example of a release name is 2.2a3. Once created, packages
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and releases are never deleted, but old ones are hidden to
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reduce confusion. More on this below.)
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If this is the first release for this major Python version, Tim
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will create a new package containing the major Python version
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number.
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- Tim performs his Windows magic, generating an installer
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executable. He uploads this file to SourceForge under the
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release he just created. He then sends the RM a notice which
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includes the MD5 checksum of the Windows executable.
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Note that Tim's creation of the Windows executable may generate
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a few more commits on the branch.
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- Now, you're ready to build the source tarball. First cd to your
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working directory for the branch. E.g.
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% cd .../python-22a3
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- Do a "cvs update" in this directory. You should not see any "M"
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files, but you may see several "P" files. I.e. you better not
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have any uncommitted changes in your working directory, but you
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may pick up some of Fred's or Tim's last minute changes.
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- Now tag the branch using a symbolic name like "rXYaZ",
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e.g. r22a3
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% cvs tag r22a3
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- Change to a neutral directory, i.e. one in which you can do a
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fresh, virgin, export of the branch. You will be creating a new
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directory at this location, to be named "Python-X.YaZ". Do a
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CVS export of the tagged branch.
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% cd ~
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% cvs -d <cvsroot> export -rr22a3 -d Python-2.2a3 python/dist/src
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- Generate the tarball. Note that we're not using the `z' option
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on the tar command because 1) that's only supported by GNU tar
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as far as we know; 2) we're going to max out the compression
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level, which isn't a supported option.
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% tar cf - Python-2.2a2 | gzip -9 > Python-2.2a2.tgz
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- Calculate the MD5 checksum of the tgz file you just created
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% md5sum Python-2.2a2.tgz
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Note that if you don't have the md5sum program, there is a
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Python replacement in the Tools/scripts/md5sum.py file.
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- Now you want to perform the very important step of checking the
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tarball you just created, to make sure a completely clean,
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virgin build passes the regression test. Here are the best
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steps to take:
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% cd /tmp
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% tar zxvf ~/Python-2.2a3.tgz
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% cd Python-2.2a3
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% ls
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(Do things look reasonable?)
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% ./configure
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(Loads of configure output)
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% make test
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(Do all the expected tests pass?)
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If the tests pass, then you can feel good that the tarball is
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fine. If some of the tests pass, or anything else about the
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freshly unpacked directory looks weird, you better stop now and
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figure out what the problem is.
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- Start your upload to SF. You need to get Python-2.2a3.tgz into
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SourceForge. This can take a while both because of the time it
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takes to upload such a huge file, /and/ because SF has a 30
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minute delay built into the file release process. The next few
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steps can be taken in parallel, so it's best to start the upload
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now and keep an eye on its progress.
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I've found that the `ncftpput' program is a great tool to use if
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you have it available. You can execute the following command to
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do the upload:
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% ncftpput -F upload.sf.net incoming Python-2.2a3.tgz
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If you don't have ncftpput around, you can use whatever ftp
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client you're comfortable with. Just be sure that you're
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uploading this to the "incoming" directory on upload.sf.net.
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- You also need to upload the tgz file to creosote.python.org.
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Usually Tim will have already uploaded the exe file to creosote,
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but if not, you'll need to do that too. These steps can take a
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long time depending on your network bandwidth. You have two
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choices:
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1) Upload them to SF first, then wget them from creosote. Pros:
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easy to do; much friendlier to your own personal bandwidth.
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Cons: can take even longer because you're subject to the 30
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minute SF file upload delay, and the upload rate from
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SF->creosote never seems to get above 20 KB/sec.
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2) scp both files from your own machine to creosote. Pros: you
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avoid the 30 minute SF delay. Cons: you don't get much else
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done if you're on a small pipe.
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- While you're waiting, you can start twiddling the web pages to
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include the announcement.
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* In the python.org web site CVS tree, cd to the X.Y
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subdirectory, and copy index.ht to new-index.ht
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% cd .../pydotorg/2.2
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% cp index.ht new-index.ht
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* Edit the file for content: usually you can globally replace
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X.Ya(Z-1) with X.YaZ. However, you'll need to think about the
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"What's New?" section. You also need to watch out about two
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specific links in the file, one which references "the full
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scoop" on changes -- a shownotes link, and one which
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references the downloads on SF -- a showfiles link. You won't
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be able to update either link until you've completed the steps
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below. For now just note what needs to change.
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Also, update the MD5 checksums.
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* Preview the web page by doing a "make" -- NOT a "make install".
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View the page via a file: url.
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* Similarly, edit the ../index.ht file, i.e. the python.org home
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page. In the Big Blue Announcement Block, move the paragraph
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for the new version up to the top and boldify the phrase
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"Python X.YaZ is out". Edit for content, and preview as
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above. Do NOT do a "make install" yet!
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- Now we're waiting for the ncftpput command, and the scp to
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creosote to finish. Da de da, da de dum, hmm, hmm, dum de dum.
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- Do the SourceForge file release dance.
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* Go to the Python project and click on "Admin"
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* Click on "Edit/Release Files"
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* Since Tim has usually by now created the package and release
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we're going to use, scroll down and click on "Edit Releases"
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for the package we're releasing into.
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* Find the release named X.YaZ and click on "Edit This Release"
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You should now perform Step 1 of the file release dance...
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* The "Status" field should be "Active" not "Hidden"
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* In the text box that says "Paste The Notes In", paste in all
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the "What's New" entries from the Misc/NEWS file that describe
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this major version of Python, /not/ just the ones for this
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particular release. E.g. If we're releasing Python 2.2a3,
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we'd include the "What's New" sections for Python 2.2a3,
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2.2a2, and 2.2a1.
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* Leave the "Paste The Change Log In" section blank, but click
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on "Preserve my pre-formatted text".
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* Hit the Submit/Refresh button for Step 1.
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This will bring you back to the file release page. DO NOT do
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the following step until your ftp upload is complete! Once it
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is, you can perform Step 2 of the file release dance...
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* Click on the checkbox next to the file Python-X.YaZ.tgz. Be
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sure no other box is checked! Then click on the "Add Files
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and/or Refresh View" button for Step 2.
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And now, Step 3...
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* There should be exactly two files listed here, one is the tgz
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file you just added, and the other is the exe file that Tim
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added earlier.
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* For the tgz file, be sure that the "Processor" field says
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"Any" and the "File Type" field says "Source .gz".
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* Click on "Update/Refresh" for the .tgz file.
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* For the exe file, make sure that the "Processor" field says
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"i386" and the "File Type" field says "Other". Tim usually
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gets this right <wink>, but if not, make any necessary changes
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and click on "Update/Refresh" for the exe file.
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Step 4...
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DO NOT DO STEP 4 NOW. Wait until after you send out the email
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announcement to send the SF email notice.
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- Still on SF, click on the "Files" button at the top of the
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page. Find the release you've just made and click on it -- not
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on the tgz or exe file, but on the release link under the
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package name. E.g. package named python-2.2, click on the
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"2.2a3" link.
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This should be a page that says "Release Name: X.YaZ" and it
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should contain the "What's New" sections you pasted in earlier.
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Note the url of this page. Copy and paste it into the
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pydotorg/X.Y/new-index.ht file you created above. This is the
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"shownotes" link mentioned earlier.
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- Now click on the "Summary" link at the top of the page and
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scroll down to the "Latest File Releases" section. Find the
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package you just made a release for (the Version should be
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X.YaZ, and the Date should be today's date). Click on the
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"Download" link.
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Your new release should be highlighted in pink. Note the url
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for this page. Copy and paste it into the
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pydotorg/X.Y/new-index.ht file from above. This is the
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"showfiles" link mentioned earlier.
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- Now you need to go to creosote.python.org and move all the files
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in place over there. Our policy is that every Python version
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gets its own directory, but each directory may contain several
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releases. We keep all old releases, moving them into a "prev"
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subdirectory when we have a new release.
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So, there's a directory called "2.2" which contains
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Python-2.2a2.exe and Python-2.2a2.tgz, along with a "prev"
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subdirectory containing Python-2.2a1.exe and Python-2.2a1.tgz.
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So...
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* On creosote, cd to ~ftp/pub/python/X.Y creating it if
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necessary.
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* Move the previous release files to a directory called "prev"
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creating the directory if necessary (make sure the directory
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has g+ws bits on). If this is the first alpha release of a
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new Python version, skip this step.
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* Move the .tgz file and the .exe file to this directory. Make
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sure they are world readable. They should also be group
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writable, and group-owned by webmaster.
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- Update the X.Y/bugs.ht file if necessary. You may need to get
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BDFL input for this step.
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- Now preview the new-index.ht file once more. IMPORTANT: follow
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every link on the page to make sure it goes where you expect it
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to go, and that what you expect to be there is there.
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- If everything looks good, move new-index.ht to index.ht and do a
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"make install" in this directory. Go up to the parent directory
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(i.e. the root of the web page hierarchy) and do a "make
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install" there too. You're release is now live!
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- Now it's time to write the announcement for the mailing lists.
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This is the fuzzy bit because not much can be automated. You
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can use one of Guido's earlier announcements as a template, but
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please edit it for content!
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Once the announcement is ready, send it to the following
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addresses:
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python-list@python.org
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python-announce@python.org
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python-dev@python.org
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- Go back to the file releases page on SF and complete Step 4,
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sending out the email notification.
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Now it's time to do some cleanup. These steps are very important!
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- Go back to SF, Admin->Edit/Release Files. Click on "Edit
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Releases" for the package you just added to. For each old
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release, click on "Edit This Release" and under Step 1, change
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the "Status" to "Hidden". Click on the Step 1 Submit/Refresh
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button.
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- Merge the branch back into the trunk! Now that we've released
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this branch, we don't need it any more. We've already tagged it
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so we can always reproduce it. Note that merging branches is a
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bit of a black art, but here's what's worked for us.
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* Check out a completely clean, virgin working directory of the
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trunk, by doing this in the directory that is the parent of
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your branch working directory python-XYaZ:
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% cvs -d <cvsroot> co -d python-clean python/dist/src
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* Run a diff against your branch by doing this in the common
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parent directory containing both python-clean and python-XYaZ:
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% diff -r python-clean python-22a2 | grep ^diff | grep -v CVS
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* Take the output of this and stick it in a file,
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e.g. /tmp/diffcmd.sh
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* Edit diffcmd.sh to get rid of files that you know don't have
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important changes. You're looking for files that have updates
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in the branch that haven't made it to the trunk. If you've
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been diligent about merging changes from the trunk into the
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branch, there shouldn't be many of these files.
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* Edit /tmp/diffcmd.sh, changing all the -r's into -u's. Run
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the /tmp/diffcmd.sh command like so:
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% sh /tmp/diffcmd.sh > /tmp/pydiff.txt
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* Attempt to patch your python-clean working directory. Do this
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first, noting that --dry-run does not actually apply any
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patches, it just makes sure that the patch command runs
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successfully to completion:
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% patch -p1 --dry-run < /tmp/pydiff.txt
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* If this goes well, run it again, taking out the --dry-run
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option. If this fails, or if it prompts you for a file to
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patch, try using -p0 instead of -p1. Otherwise, your diff
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command was messed up, so try again.
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* cd to python-clean and do a "cvs commit". Use as your log
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message something like "Merging the rXYaZ-branch tag back into
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the trunk".
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* Edit the file Include/patchlevel.h so that the PY_VERSION
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string says something like "X.YaZ+". Note the trailing `+'
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indicating that the trunk is going to be moving forward with
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development. E.g. the line should look like:
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#define PY_VERSION "2.2a2+"
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Commit this change.
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* Now test your clean, merged trunk by doing
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% make distclean
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% ./configure
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% make test
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To ensure that the regression test suite passes. If not, you
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screwed up somewhere!
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Step 5 ...
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Verify! This can be interleaved with Step 4. Pretend you're a
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user: download the files from python.org *and* SourceForge, and make
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Pythons from them. This step is too easy to overlook, and on
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several occasions we've had useless release files. Once a general
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server problem caused mysterious corruption of all files; once the
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source tarball got built incorrectly; more than once the file upload
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process on SF truncated files; and so on.
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What Next?
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Rejoice. Drink. Be Merry. Write a PEP like this one. Or be
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like unto Guido and take A Vacation.
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You've just made a Python release!
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Windows Notes
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Windows has a GUI installer, various flavors of Windows have "special
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limitations", and the Windows installer also packs precompiled
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"foreign" binaries (Tcl/Tk, expat, etc). So Windows testing is
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tiresome but very necessary.
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Concurrent with uploading the installer, I install Python from it
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twice: once into the default directory suggested by the installer,
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and later into a directory with embedded spaces in its name. For
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each installation, run the full regression suite from a DOS box, and
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both with and without -0. Also try *every* shortcut created under
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Start -> Menu -> the Python group. When trying IDLE this way, verify
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that Help -> Python Documentation works. When trying pydoc this way
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(the "Module Docs" Start menu entry), make sure the "Start Browser"
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button works, and make sure you can search for a random module (I
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use "random" <wink>) and then that the "go to selected" button works.
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It's amazing how much can go wrong here -- and even more amazing how
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often last-second checkins break one of these things. If you're "the
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Windows geek", keep in mind that you're likely the only person
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routinely testing on Windows, and that Windows is simply a mess.
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Repeat all of the above on at least one flavor of Win9x, and one of
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NT/2000. On NT/2000, try both an Admin and a plain User (not Power
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User) account.
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WRT Step 5 above (verify the release media), since by the time release
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files are ready to download I've generally run many Windows tests on
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the installer I uploaded, I usually don't do anything for Step 5
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except a full byte-comparison ("fc /b" if using a Windows shell) of
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the downloaded file against the file I uploaded.
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Copyright
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This document has been placed in the public domain.
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Local Variables:
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mode: indented-text
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indent-tabs-mode: nil
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End:
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