620 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
620 lines
25 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@python.org (Barry 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 a thrilling and crazy process. You've heard
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the expression "herding cats"? Imagine trying to also saddle those
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purring little creatures up, and ride them into town, with some of their
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buddies firmly attached to your bare back, anchored by newly sharpened
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claws. At least they're cute, you remind yourself.
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Actually, no that's a slight exaggeration <wink>. The Python release
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process has steadily improved over the years and now, with the help of our
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amazing community, is really not too difficult. This PEP attempts to
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collect, in one place, all the steps needed to make a Python release. It
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is organized as a recipe and you can actually print this out and check
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items off as you complete them.
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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 more
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fuzzy than others because there's little that can be automated (e.g.
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writing the NEWS entries). Where a step is usually performed by An
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Expert, the role of that expert is given. Otherwise, assume the step is
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done by the Release Manager (RM), the designated person performing the
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release. The roles and their current experts are:
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* RM = Release Manager: Georg Brandl <georg@python.org> (Central Europe)
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* WE = Windows: Martin von Loewis <martin@v.loewis.de> (Central Europe)
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* ME = Mac: Ronald Oussoren <ronaldoussoren@mac.com> (Central Europe)
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* DE = Docs: Georg Brandl <georg@python.org> (Central Europe)
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* IE = Idle Expert: ??
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NOTE: It is highly recommended that the RM contact the Experts the day
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before the release. Because the world is round and everyone lives
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in different timezones, the RM must ensure that the release tag is
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created in enough time for the Experts to cut binary releases.
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IT IS HIGHLY RECOMMENDED THAT YOU AT LEAST TAG THE TREE 24 HOURS
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BEFORE A FINAL RELEASE. This will give the Experts enough time to
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do their bits before the announcement goes out.
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In any case, the RM MUST wait for the "green light" from the
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following experts before updating the web pages and sending the
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announcement: WE, DE
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XXX: We should include a dependency graph to illustrate the steps that can
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be taken in parallel, or those that depend on other steps.
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As much as possible, the release steps are automated and guided by the
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release script, which is available in a separate repository:
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http://hg.python.org/release/
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We use the following conventions in the examples below. Where a release
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number is given, it is of the form X.Y.ZaN, e.g. 3.3.0a3 for Python 3.3.0
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alpha 3, where "a" == alpha, "b" == beta, "rc" == release candidate.
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Release tags are named "vX.Y.ZaN". The branch name for minor release
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maintenance branches is "X.Y".
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This helps by performing several automatic editing steps, and guides you
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to perform some manual editing steps.
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___ Log into irc.freenode.net and join the #python-dev channel.
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You probably need to coordinate with other people around the world.
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This IRC channel is where we've arranged to meet.
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___ Check to see if there are any showstopper bugs.
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Go to http://bugs.python.org and look for any open bugs that can block
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this release. You're looking at the Priority of the open bugs for the
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release you're making; here are the relevant definitions:
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release blocker - Stops the release dead in its tracks. You may not
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make any release with any open release blocker bugs.
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deferred blocker - Doesn't block this release, but it will block a
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future release. You may not make a final or
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candidate release with any open deferred blocker
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bugs.
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critical - Important bugs that should be fixed, but which does not block
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a release.
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Review the release blockers and either resolve them, bump them down to
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deferred, or stop the release and ask for community assistance. If
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you're making a final or candidate release, do the same with any open
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deferred.
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___ Check the stable buildbots.
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Go to http://www.python.org/dev/buildbot/stable/
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(the trailing slash is required). Look at the buildbots for the release
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you're making. Ignore any that are offline (or inform the community so
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they can be restarted). If what remains are (mostly) green buildbots,
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you're good to go. If you have non-offline red buildbots, you may want
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to hold up the release until they are fixed. Review the problems and
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use your judgement, taking into account whether you are making an alpha,
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beta, or final release.
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___ Make a release clone.
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Create a local clone of the cpython repository (called the "release
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clone" from now on).
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Also clone the repo at http://hg.python.org/cpython using the
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server-side clone feature. The name of the new clone should preferably
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have a "releasing/" prefix. The other experts will use the release
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clone for making the binaries, so it is important that they have access
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to it!
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Optionally, set up your local release clone to push to the remote
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release clone by default (by editing .hg/hgrc to that effect).
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___ Notify all committers by sending email to python-committers@python.org.
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Since we're now working with a distributed version control system, there
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is no need to stop everyone from pushing to the main repo; you'll just
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work in your own clone. Therefore, there won't be any checkin freezes.
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However, all committers should know the point at which your release
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clone was made, as later commits won't make it into the release without
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extra effort.
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___ Make sure the current branch of your release clone is the branch you
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want to release from.
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___ Regenerate Lib/pydoc-topics.py.
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cd to the Doc directory and type ``make pydoc-topics``. Then copy
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``build/pydoc-topics/pydoc-topics.py`` to ``../Lib/pydoc_topics.py``.
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___ Check the docs for markup errors.
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In the Doc directory, type ``make suspicious``. If any markup errors
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are found, fix them.
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___ Commit any changes to pydoc_topics.py and the doc sources.
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___ Make sure the SOURCE_URI in ``Doc/tools/sphinxext/pyspecific.py``
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points to the right branch in the hg repository (or ``default`` for
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unstable releases of the default branch).
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___ Bump version numbers via the release script.
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$ .../release/release.py --bump X.Y.ZaN
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This automates updating various release numbers, but you will have to
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modify a few files manually. If your $EDITOR environment variable is
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set up correctly, release.py will pop up editor windows with the files
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you need to edit.
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It is important to update the Misc/NEWS file, however in recent years,
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this has become easier as the community is responsible for most of the
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content of this file. You should only need to review the text for
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sanity, and update the release date with today's date.
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Commit the changes once you have reviewed them.
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___ Check the years on the copyright notice. If the last release
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was some time last year, add the current year to the copyright
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notice in several places:
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___ README
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___ LICENSE (make sure to change on trunk and the branch)
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___ Python/getcopyright.c
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___ Doc/README.txt (at the end)
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___ Doc/copyright.rst
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___ Doc/license.rst
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___ PC/python_nt.rc sets up the DLL version resource for Windows
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(displayed when you right-click on the DLL and select
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Properties).
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___ The license.ht file for the distribution on the website
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contains what purports to be an HTML-ized copy of the LICENSE
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file from the distribution. You'll need to bump the version number to
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the one you're releasing. BROKEN
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___ Check with the IE (if there is one <wink>) to be sure that
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Lib/idlelib/NEWS.txt has been similarly updated.
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___ For a final release, edit the first paragraph of
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Doc/whatsnew/X.Y.rst to include the actual release date; e.g. "Python
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2.5 was released on August 1, 2003." There's no need to edit this for
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alpha or beta releases. Note that Andrew Kuchling often takes care of
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this.
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___ Tag the release for X.Y.ZaN.
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$ .../release/release.py --tag X.Y.ZaN
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___ If this is a final major release, branch the tree for X.Y.
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When making a major release (e.g., for 3.2), you must create the
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long-lived maintenance branch.
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___ Note down the current revision ID of the tree.
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$ hg identify
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___ First, set the original trunk up to be the next release.
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$ .../release/release.py --bump 3.3a0
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___ Edit all version references in the README
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___ Move any historical "what's new" entries from Misc/NEWS to
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Misc/HISTORY.
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___ The LICENSE file. Add the pending version to the list of
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releases, and be sure to check the release dates.
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___ There's a copy of the license in Doc/license.rst.
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___ Doc/tutorial/interpreter.rst (2 references to '[Pp]ython32', one
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to 'Python 3.2').
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___ Doc/tutorial/stdlib.rst and Doc/tutorial/stdlib2.rst, which have
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each one reference to '[Pp]ython32'.
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___ Update the version number in configure.in and re-run autoconf.
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___ Update the version numbers for the Windows builds in PC/ and
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PCbuild/, which have references to python32.
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$ find PC/ PCbuild/ -type f | xargs sed -i 's/python32/python33/g'
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$ hg mv -f PC/os2emx/python32.def PC/os2emx/python33.def
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___ Commit these changes to the default branch.
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___ Now, go back to the previously noted revision and make the
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maintenance branch *from there*.
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$ hg update deadbeef # revision ID noted down before
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$ hg branch 3.2
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___ Push your commits to the remote release clone.
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$ hg push ssh://hg.python.org/releasing/...
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___ Notify the experts that they can start building binaries.
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___ STOP STOP STOP STOP STOP STOP STOP STOP
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At this point you must receive the "green light" from other experts in
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order to create the release. There are things you can do while you wait
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though, so keep reading until you hit the next STOP.
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___ XXX The WE builds the Windows helpfile, using (in Doc/) either
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$ make htmlhelp (on Unix)
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or
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> make.bat htmlhelp (on Windows)
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to create suitable input for HTML Help Workshop in build/htmlhelp. HTML
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Help Workshop is then fired up on the created python26.hhp file, finally
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resulting in an python26.chm file. He then copies the file into the Doc
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directories of the build trees (once for each target architecture).
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XXX The CHM file should also be scp'd to the docs download location.
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___ XXX The WE then generates Windows installer files for each Windows
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target architecture (for Python 2.6, this means x86 and AMD64). He has
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one checkout tree per target architecture, and builds the pcbuild.sln
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project for the appropriate architecture. He then edits
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Tools/msi/config.py to update full_current_version, sets snapshot to
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False and runs msi.py with ActivePython 2.5 or Python 2.5 with pywin32.
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For that to work, the following prerequisites must be met:
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- PC\icons.mak must have been run with nmake.
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- The cmd.exe window in which this is run must have Cygwin/bin in its
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path (atleast for x86).
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- The cmd.exe window must have MS compiler tools for the target
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architecture in its path (VS 2003 for x86, the platform SDK for
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AMD64).
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- The cmd.exe window must also have cabarc.exe from the CAB SDK in its
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path.
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The WE checksums the files (*.msi and *.chm), uploads them to some place
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in the net, and emails you the location and md5sums.
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___ Time to build the source tarball. Be sure to update your clone to the
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correct branch. E.g.
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$ hg update 3.2
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___ Do a "hg status" in this directory.
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You should not see any files. I.e. you better not have any uncommitted
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changes in your working directory.
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___ Use the release script to create the source gzip and bz2 tarballs, md5
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checksums, documentation tar and zip files, and gpg signature files.
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$ .../release/release.py --export X.Y.ZaN
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This will leave all the relevant files in a subdirectory called
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'X.Y.ZaN/src', and the built docs in 'X.Y.ZaN/docs' (for final releases).
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___ scp or rsync all the files to your home directory on dinsdale.python.org.
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While you're waiting for the files to finish uploading, you can continue
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on with the remaining tasks. You can also ask folks on #python-dev
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and/or python-committers to download the files as they finish uploading
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so that they can test them on their platforms as well.
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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 xvf ~/Python-3.2rc2.tgz
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$ cd Python-3.2rc2
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$ ls
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(Do things look reasonable?)
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$ ls Lib
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(Are there stray .pyc files?)
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$ ls Doc/tools
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(Make sure it doesn't contain "docutils", "sphinx", "jinja" or
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"pygments" directories. Also look for stray .pyc files.)
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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 you're feeling lucky and have some time to kill, or if you are making
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a release candidate or final release, run the full test suite:
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$ make TESTOPTS='-u all' test
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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 fail, 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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___ Now you need to go to dinsdale.python.org and move all the files in
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place over there. Our policy is that every Python version gets its own
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directory, but each directory may contain several releases. We keep all
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old releases, moving them into a "prev" subdirectory when we have a new
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release.
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So, there's a directory called "3.2" which contains Python-3.2.msi and
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Python-3.2.tgz, along with a "prev" subdirectory containing
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Python-3.2a1.msi, Python-3.2a1.tgz, Python-3.2a1.tar.bz2, etc.
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___ On dinsdale, cd /data/ftp.python.org/pub/python/X.Y.Z
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creating it if necessary. Make sure it is owned by group 'webmaster'
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and group-writable.
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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 has
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g+ws bits on). If this is the first alpha release of a new Python
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version, skip this step.
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For pre-releases (alpha, beta, rc), don't move things into a 'prev'
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directory, You'll move everything in there when the final release
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comes out.
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___ Move the release .tgz, tar.bz2, and .msi files into place, as well
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as the .asc GPG signature files.
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Make sure they are world readable. They should also be group
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writable, and group-owned by webmaster.
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___ md5sum the files and make sure they got uploaded intact.
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___ If this is a final release: Move the doc zips and tarballs to
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/data/ftp.python.org/pub/python/doc/X.Y.Z creating the directory
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if necessary, and adapt the "current" symlink in .../doc to point to
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that directory. Note though that if you're releasing a maintenance
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release for an older version, don't change the current link.
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___ If this is a final release (even a maintenance release), also unpack
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the HTML docs to
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/data/ftp.python.org/pub/docs.python.org/release/X.Y.Z.
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___ Let the DE check if the docs are built and work all right.
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___ If this is a major release: Tell the DE to adapt redirects for
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docs.python.org/X.Y in the Apache config for docs.python.org, update
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the script Doc/tools/dailybuild.py to point to the right
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stable/development branches, and to install it and make the initial
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checkout.
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___ For the extra paranoid, do a completely clean test of the
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release. This includes downloading the tarball from
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www.python.org.
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Make sure the md5 checksums match. Then unpack the tarball,
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and do a clean make test.
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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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Now it's time to twiddle the web site.
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To do these steps, you must have the permission to edit the website. If you
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don't have that, ask someone on pydotorg@python.org for the proper
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permissions. It's insane for you not to have it.
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I'm not going to go into the details of building the site or pushing it
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live. Plenty of people on pydotorg can help you, and there's a good README
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once you get the branch. All the directories below are named relative to
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the data subdirectory unless otherwise noted.
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This page will probably come in handy:
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http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docs/user/rst/quickref.html
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None of the web site updates are automated by release.py.
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___ Build the basic site.
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In the top directory, do an `svn update` to get the latest code. In the
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build subdirectory, do `make` to build the site. Do `make serve` to
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start service the pages on localhost:8005. Hit that url to see the site
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as it is right now. At any time you can re-run `make` to update the
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local site. You don't have to restart the server.
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Don't `svn commit` until you're all done!
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___ If this is the first release for this version (even a new patch
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version), you'll need to create a subdirectory inside download/releases
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to hold the new version files. It's probably a good idea to copy an
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existing recent directory and twiddle the files in there for the new
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version number.
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___ Add a news section item to the front page by editing newsindex.yml. The
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format should be pretty self evident.
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___ If this is a final release...
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___ update the 'Quick Links' section on the front page. Edit the
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top-level `content.ht` file.
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___ update the download page, editing `download/content.ht`
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___ edit the previous release's last release content.ht page to point to
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the new release.
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___ update `doc/content.ht` to indicate the new current documentation
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version, and remove the current version from any 'in development'
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section. Update the version in the "What's New" link.
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___ Add the new version to `doc/versions/content.ht`.
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___ Edit download/releases/content.ht to update the version numbers for
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this release. There are a bunch of places you need to touch:
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___ The subdirectory name as the first element in the Nav rows.
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___ Possibly the Releases section, and possibly in the experimental
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releases section if this is an alpha, beta or release candidate.
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___ Update the version specific pages.
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___ cd to download/releases/X.Y.Z
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___ Edit the version numbers in content.ht
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___ Comment out the link to the CHM file if this is not a final,
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remove the comment if it is.
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___ Update the md5 checksums
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Note, you don't have to copy the actual .tgz or tar.bz2 tarballs into
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this directory because they only live on dinsdale in the ftp directory.
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___ When everything looks good, `svn commit` in the data directory. This
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will trigger the live site to update itself, and at that point the
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release is live.
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___ If this is a final release, create a new python.org/X.Y Apache alias
|
||
(or ask pydotorg to do so for you).
|
||
|
||
Now it's time to write the announcement for the mailing lists. This is the
|
||
fuzzy bit because not much can be automated. You can use an earlier
|
||
announcement as a template, but edit it for content!
|
||
|
||
___ STOP STOP STOP STOP STOP STOP STOP STOP
|
||
|
||
___ Have you gotten the green light from the WE?
|
||
|
||
___ Have you gotten the green light from the DE?
|
||
|
||
|
||
___ Once the announcement is ready, send it to the following
|
||
addresses:
|
||
|
||
python-list@python.org
|
||
python-announce@python.org
|
||
python-dev@python.org
|
||
|
||
Now it's time to do some cleaning up. These steps are very important!
|
||
|
||
___ Do the guided post-release steps with the release script.
|
||
|
||
$ .../release/release.py --done X.Y.ZaN
|
||
|
||
Review and commit these changes.
|
||
|
||
___ Merge your release clone into the main development repo:
|
||
|
||
$ cd ../cpython # your clone of the main repo
|
||
$ hg pull ssh://hg.python.org/cpython # update from remote first
|
||
$ hg pull ../cpython-releaseX.Y # now pull from release clone
|
||
|
||
Now merge your release clone's changes in every branch you touched
|
||
(usually only one, except if you made a new maintenance release).
|
||
Easily resolvable conflicts may appear in Misc/NEWS.
|
||
|
||
Commit and push to the main repo.
|
||
|
||
___ You can delete the remote release clone, or simply reuse it for the next
|
||
release.
|
||
|
||
___ Send email to python-committers informing them that the release has been
|
||
published.
|
||
|
||
___ Update any release PEPs (e.g. 361) with the release dates.
|
||
|
||
___ Update the tracker at http://bugs.python.org:
|
||
|
||
___ Flip all the deferred blocker issues back to release blocker
|
||
for the next release.
|
||
|
||
___ Add version X.Y+1 as when version X.Y enters alpha.
|
||
|
||
___ Change non-doc RFEs to version X.Y+1 when version X.Y enters beta.
|
||
|
||
___ Update 'behavior' issues from versions that your release make
|
||
unsupported to the next supported version.
|
||
|
||
___ Review open issues, as this might find lurking showstopper bugs,
|
||
besides reminding people to fix the easy ones they forgot about.
|
||
|
||
|
||
What Next?
|
||
|
||
___ Verify! Pretend you're a user: download the files from python.org, and
|
||
make Python from it. This step is too easy to overlook, and on several
|
||
occasions we've had useless release files. Once a general server problem
|
||
caused mysterious corruption of all files; once the source tarball got
|
||
built incorrectly; more than once the file upload process on SF truncated
|
||
files; and so on.
|
||
|
||
___ Rejoice. Drink. Be Merry. Write a PEP like this one. Or be
|
||
like unto Guido and take A Vacation.
|
||
|
||
You've just made a Python release!
|
||
|
||
|
||
Windows Notes
|
||
|
||
Windows has a MSI installer, various flavors of Windows have
|
||
"special limitations", and the Windows installer also packs
|
||
precompiled "foreign" binaries (Tcl/Tk, expat, etc). So Windows
|
||
testing is tiresome but very necessary.
|
||
|
||
Concurrent with uploading the installer, the WE installs Python
|
||
from it twice: once into the default directory suggested by the
|
||
installer, and later into a directory with embedded spaces in its
|
||
name. For each installation, he runs the full regression suite
|
||
from a DOS box, and both with and without -0. For maintenance
|
||
release, he also tests whether upgrade installations succeed.
|
||
|
||
He also tries *every* shortcut created under Start -> Menu -> the
|
||
Python group. When trying IDLE this way, you need to verify that
|
||
Help -> Python Documentation works. When trying pydoc this way
|
||
(the "Module Docs" Start menu entry), make sure the "Start
|
||
Browser" button works, and make sure you can search for a random
|
||
module (like "random" <wink>) and then that the "go to selected"
|
||
button works.
|
||
|
||
It's amazing how much can go wrong here -- and even more amazing
|
||
how often last-second checkins break one of these things. If
|
||
you're "the Windows geek", keep in mind that you're likely the
|
||
only person routinely testing on Windows, and that Windows is
|
||
simply a mess.
|
||
|
||
Repeat the testing for each target architecture. On XP/2003, try
|
||
both an Admin and a plain User (not Power User) account. If you
|
||
can, also test the installer on Windows 9x.
|
||
|
||
WRT Step 5 above (verify the release media), since by the time
|
||
release files are ready to download the WE has generally run many
|
||
Windows tests on the installer he uploaded, he usually doesn't do
|
||
anything for Step 5 except a full byte-comparison ("fc /b" if
|
||
using a Windows shell) of the downloaded file against the file he
|
||
uploaded.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Copyright
|
||
|
||
This document has been placed in the public domain.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Local Variables:
|
||
mode: indented-text
|
||
indent-tabs-mode: nil
|
||
End:
|