4
4
This document describes the processes for making and announcing a Bazaar
5
release, and managing the release process. This is just one phase of the
6
`overall development cycle
7
<http://doc.bazaar.canonical.com/developers/cycle.html>`_, (go re-read this
8
document to ensure it hasn't been updated since you last read it) but it's
11
If you're doing your first release you can follow this document and read
12
each step explanation. It's also a good practice to read it for any release
13
to ensure you don't miss a step and to update it as the release process
5
release, and managing the release process. This is just one phase of
6
the `overall development cycle
7
<http://doc.bazaar.canonical.com/developers/cycle.html>`_, (go re-read
8
this document to ensure it hasn't been updated) but it's the most
9
complex part. This document gives a checklist you can follow from start
16
12
If you're helping the Release Manager (RM) for one reason or another, you
17
13
may notice that he didn't follow that document scrupulously. He may have
18
14
good reasons to do that but he may also have missed some parts.
16
Follow the document yourself and don't hesitate to create the missing
17
milestones for example (we tend to forget these ones a lot).
26
#. PQM access rights (or you won't be able to land any change)
28
25
#. Download the pqm plugin and install it into your ``~/.bazaar/plugins``::
30
27
bzr branch lp:bzr-pqm ~/.bazaar/plugins/pqm
32
#. Alternatively, you can download and install ``lp:hydrazine`` (the main
33
difference is that hydrazine requires the branch to land to be hosted on
39
In this document, we're talking about source releases only, packages and
40
installers are built from this but we won't talk about them here.
42
Every release is part of a series, ``bzr-2.4.1`` is part of series ``2.4``.
44
We do two different kind of releases: the betas releases and the stable
45
releases for a given series.
47
For a given series, releases will be done to deliver new versions of bzr to
48
different kinds of users:
50
#. beta releases: named ``x.ybn`` where ``x.y`` is the series and ``n``
51
starts at 1 and is incremented. These releases are targeted to beta
52
testers who don't want to run from source but are interested in features
55
#. stable releases: name ``x.y.z`` where ``x.y.`` is the series and ``z``
56
starts at 1 and is incremented. These releases are targeted at people
57
that want bugfixes only and no new features.
60
Differences in the release process between beta and stable release will be
61
mentioned when needed.
63
30
When do we relase ?
64
31
===================
66
As of July 2011, we maintain four series (and one that is about to be EOLed).
67
Concurrently releasing them all at the same time makes it harder to shorten
68
the delay between the source availability and the package building longer
69
than necessary (we delay the official announcement until most of our users
70
can install the new release).
33
As of October 2010, we mantain four series. Concurrently releasing them
34
all at the same time makes it harder to shorten the delay between the
35
source availability and the package building longer than necessary (we
36
delay the official announcement until most of our users can install the new
72
39
In order to continue to do time-based releases, we need to plan the
73
40
releases by series to minimize the collisions. In the end, it's the Release
74
41
Manager call to decide whether he prefers to do all releases at once
75
42
though, so the rules presented here are a conservative approach.
77
We want to respect the following rules:
79
#. as much as possible releases should not disturb development, and
80
ongoing development should not disturb releases,
82
#. the most recent development series should release once a month during
83
the beta period (see `Development cycles <cycle.html>`_ for more
86
#. the most recent stable series should release every other month (based
87
on the amount of bug fixes, this can be shorter or longer depending on
90
#. previous series should release on a regular basis without interfering
91
with the most recent series with a decreasing order of priority (again
92
this should be based on bugs importance and user feedback),
94
#. the death of a series should be planned ahead of time. 6 months should
95
give enough time to our users to migrate to a more recent series. This
96
doesn't mean we will make a release at the end of the series, just that
97
before the end date we *could* possibly put out another release if
98
there was a sufficiently important fix. Beyond that date, we won't
99
even land changes on that branch (unless something causes a miraculous
102
#. there should not be more than 2 releases in the same week (but the
103
Release Manager is free to ignore this (get in touch with packagers
106
#. the series are aligned with Ubuntu releases for convenience since we
107
create a new series every 6 months. This means that we support the
108
stable series for 18 months. Note that we also propose the most recent
109
stable series via the stable PPA but that the SRU processs allow us to
110
reach a wider audience.
112
At the start of a series cycle
113
==============================
115
To start a new series cycle:
117
#. Create a new series ``x.y`` at <https://launchpad.net/bzr/+addseries>.
119
#. Add milestones at <https://launchpad.net/bzr/x.y/+addmilestone> to that
120
series for the beta releases and the stable series mentioning their
121
expected dates. Only the milestone associated to the next release in
122
this series should be left active to avoid clutter when targeting bugs.
124
#. If you made a new series, you will need to create a new pqm-controlled
125
branch for this release series. This branch will be used only from the
126
first non-beta release onwards. It needs to be created by a Canonical
127
sysadmin (ask the core devs for instructions or to do it for you).
129
#. Start a new release-notes file::
131
cd doc/en/release-notes
132
cp series-template.txt bzr-x.y.txt # e.g. bzr-2.3.txt
135
#. Start a new whats-new file::
138
cp template.txt bzr-x.y.txt # e.g. bzr-2.6.txt
44
We want to respect the following rules::
46
#. as much as possible releases should not disturb development, and
47
ongoing development should not disturb releases,
49
#. the most recent development series should release once a month during
50
the beta period (see `Development cycles <cycle.html>`_ for more
53
#. the most recent stable series should release every other month (based
54
on the amount of bug fixes, this can be shorter or longer depending on
57
#. previous series should relesase on a regular basis without interfering
58
with the most recent series with a decreasing order of priority (again
59
this should be based on bugs importance and user feedback),
61
#. the death of a series should be planned ahead of time. 6 months should
62
give enough time to our users to migrate to a more recent series. This
63
doesn't mean we will make a release at the end of the series, just that
64
before the end date we _could_ possibly put out another release if
65
there was a sufficiently important fix. Beyond that date, we won't
66
even land changes on that branch (unless something causes a miraculous
69
#. there should not be more than 2 releases in the same week (but the
70
Release Manager is free to ignore this (get in touch with packagers
73
#. the series are aligned with Ubuntu releases for convenience since we
74
create a new series every 6 months. This means that we support the
75
stable series for 18 months. Note that we also propose the most recent
76
stable series via the ppa, so whether we keep supporting LTS directly
77
or via the ppa is still an open question.
142
80
At the start of a release cycle
145
83
To start a new release cycle:
85
#. If this is the first release for a given *x.y* then create a new
86
series at <https://launchpad.net/bzr/+addseries>. There is one series
87
for every *x.y* release.
89
#. If you made a new series, create a new pqm-controlled branch for this
90
release series, by asking a Canonical sysadmin. This branch means that
91
from the first release beta or candidate onwards, general development
92
continues on the trunk, and only specifically-targeted fixes go into
95
#. If you made a new series, add milestones at
96
<https://launchpad.net/bzr/x.y/+addmilestone> to that series for
97
the beta release, release candidate and the final release, and their
100
#. Create a new milestone <https://launchpad.net/bzr/x.y/+addmilestone>
101
and add information about this release. We will not use it yet, but it
102
will be available for targeting or nominating bugs.
147
104
#. Send mail to the list with the key dates, who will be the release
148
105
manager, and the main themes or targeted bugs. Ask people to nominate
149
106
objectives, or point out any high-risk things that are best done early,
150
107
or that interact with other changes. This is called the metronome mail
151
108
and is described in `Development cycles <cycle.html>`_.
153
#. Make a local branch to prepare the release::
155
bzr branch lp:bzr/x.y x.y-dev
157
If you're doing your first beta release, branch from trunk::
159
bzr branch lp:bzr x.y-dev
161
Note that you will generally reuse the same branch for all releases in a
110
#. Make a local branch for preparing this release. (Only for the first
111
release in a series, otherwise you should already have a branch.) ::
113
bzr branch trunk prepare-1.14
164
115
#. Configure pqm-submit for this branch, with a section like this (where
165
``x.y`` is the series for your release). **Or use hydrazine for easier
166
setup** ``~/.bazaar/locations.conf``::
116
x.y is the version to release). **Or use hydrazine for easy use**
117
``~/.bazaar/locations.conf``::
168
[/home/mbp/bzr/x.y-dev]
119
[/home/mbp/bzr/prepare-x.y]
169
120
pqm_email = Canonical PQM <pqm@bazaar-vcs.org>
170
121
submit_branch = http://bazaar.launchpad.net/~bzr-pqm/bzr/x.y
171
122
parent_branch = http://bazaar.launchpad.net/~bzr-pqm/bzr/x.y
172
public_branch = http://bazaar.example.com/x.y-dev
123
public_branch = http://bazaar.example.com/prepare-x.y
173
124
submit_to = bazaar@lists.canonical.com
174
125
smtp_server = mail.example.com:25
377
331
<https://bugs.launchpad.net/launchpad/+bug/586445>
380
Kick off the next cycle
381
-----------------------
383
From that point, there is no possible return, the tarball has been uploaded
384
so you can relax a bit.
386
You're still holding a "social" lock on the launchpad branch though. Until
387
your start the next cycle, nobody should land anything on this branch. If
388
they do, they either targeted the wrong branch or didn't update the news
389
file correctly, so the sooner the branch is opened again, the better.
391
This matters more for ``lp:bzr`` than for ``lp:bzr/x.y``, ``lp:bzr`` should
392
always be open for landing, so you should do `At the start of a release
393
cycle`_ as soon as possible (i.e. update the version number in ``bzr`` and
394
``bzrlib/__init__``, create/update the news files and create/update the
395
milestone for the next relase).
397
You may also need to do `At the start of a series cycle`_ if you're starting
400
A word of caution: the instructions above works well for all releases but
401
there is one special case that requires a bit more care: when you release
402
the *last* beta for a given ``x.y`` series (from trunk aka lp:bzr), you need
403
to setup *two* branches for the next cycle:
405
#. ``lp:bzr`` needs to be opened for the next *series* ``x.(y+1)``
407
#. ``lp:bzr/x.y`` needs to be opened for the next *release* ``x.y.0`` in the
408
series. Since this is first real use of ``lp:bzr/x.y``, this is also the
409
deadline for the PQM branch to be created.
411
Both are important as ``lp:bzr`` should remain open so any change can be
412
landed, ``lp:bzr/x.y`` on the other hand should be ready to receive bug
415
``lp:bzr`` is generally more important as the bug fixes on ``lp:bzr/x.y``
416
won't be released sooner than a month from now whereas people may already
417
been waiting to land on ``lp:bzr``.
421
#. Create or update the ``x.y`` PQM branch based on whatever
422
revision you want to release
424
#. Open ``lp:bzr`` for ``x.(y+1)``
426
#. Release ``x.y.0`` from ``lp:bzr/x.y``
428
#. Open ``lp:bzr/x.y`` for bug fixes
430
334
Announcing the source freeze
431
335
----------------------------
518
432
``Links`` box are edited. This should rarely change except for the URLs
519
433
related to the latest stable release.
521
* New announcement: When doing a release, put the summary of the release
522
(you can't embed URLs there, the moderation staff remove them). Users
523
can still access the releases notes via the ``Release Notes`` URL in
524
the ``Links`` box in the upper right area of the page. When doing the
525
first stable release in a series, delete the ``Unstable installers``
526
<https://launchpad.net/bzr/x.y/x.ybn> and ``Unstable source tarball``
435
* New announcement: When doing a release (beta, candidates, final), put the
436
summary of the release (you can't embed URLs there, the moderation staff
437
remove them). Users can still access the releases notes via the ``Release
438
Notes`` URL in the ``Links`` box in the upper right area of the
439
page. When doing the first stable release in a series, delete the
440
``Unstable installers`` <https://launchpad.net/bzr/x.y/x.ybn> and
441
``Unstable source tarball``
527
442
<http://launchpad.net/bzr/x.y/x.ybn/+download/bzr-x.ybn.tar.gz>
528
links. Conversely, when creating the first beta in a development
529
series, create these links again. Check all links when doing other
443
links. Conversely, when creating the first beta in a development series,
444
create these links again. Check all links when doing other kinds of
532
447
* Set direct download: When releasing a new stable release, this should
533
448
point to the corresponding launchpad page:
534
449
<https://launchpad.net/bzr/x.y/x.y.z/>
536
451
#. Update `<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bazaar_(software)>`_ -- this should
537
be done for the stable and beta releases.
452
be done for final releases but not for beta releases or Release Candidates.
539
454
#. Update the python package index: <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/bzr> - best
540
455
done by running ::
542
457
python setup.py register
544
Remember to check the results afterward -- this should be done for
545
stable releases but not for beta releases.
459
Remember to check the results afterwards -- this should be done for
460
final releases but not for beta releases or Release Candidates.
547
462
To be able to register the release you must create an account on
548
463
<http://pypi.python.org/pypi> and have one of the existing owners of
563
479
created the corresponding milestone to ensure the continuity in bug
564
480
targeting or nominating. Depending on the change, you may even have to
565
481
create a new series (if your change the major or minor release number), in
566
that case go to `At the start of a series cycle`_ and follow the
567
instructions from there.
482
that case go to `At the start of a release cycle` and follow the instructions from there.
484
You should also merge (not pull) the release branch into
485
``lp:~bzr/bzr/current``, so that branch contains the current released code
570
488
Releases until the final one
571
489
----------------------------
573
Congratulations - you have made your first release. Have a beer or fruit
574
juice - it's on the house! If it was a beta, you're not finished
575
yet. Another beta or hopefully a stable release is still to come.
491
Congratulations - you have made your first release. Have a beer
492
or fruit juice - it's on the house! If it was a beta, or
493
candidate, you're not finished yet. Another beta or candidate or
494
hopefully a final release is still to come.
577
The process is the same as for the first release. Goto `Doing a particular
578
release`_ and follow the instructions again. Some details change between
579
beta and stable releases, but they should be documented. If the instructions
580
aren't clear enough, please fix them.
496
The process is the same as for the first release. Goto `Doing a
497
particular release`_ and follow the instructions again. Some details change
498
between beta, candidate and final releases, but they should be
499
documented. If the instructions aren't clear enough, please fix them.
583
502
Getting the release into Ubuntu