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diff --git a/RELEASE.md b/RELEASE.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..af711a1 --- /dev/null +++ b/RELEASE.md @@ -0,0 +1,114 @@ +GNOME Software Release Notes +=== + +Release schedule +--- + +GNOME Software releases are done on the timetable set by the [GNOME release schedule](https://wiki.gnome.org/Schedule). + +Maintainers take it in turns to make releases so that the load is spread out evenly. + +Making a release +--- + +Adapted from the [GNOME release process](https://wiki.gnome.org/MaintainersCorner/Releasing). + +These instructions use the following variables: + - `new_version`: the version number of the release you are making, for example 3.38.1 + - `previous_version`: the version number of the most-recently released version in the same release series, for example 3.38.0 + - `branch`: the branch which the release is based on, for example gnome-40 or main + - `key_id`: the ID of your GPG key, see the output of `gpg --list-keys` and the note at the end of this file + +Make sure your repository is up to date and doesn’t contain local changes: +``` +git pull +git status +``` + +Check the version in `meson.build` is correct for this release. + +Download +[gitlab-changelog](https://gitlab.gnome.org/pwithnall/gitlab-changelog) and use +it to write release entries: +``` +gitlab-changelog.py GNOME/gnome-software ${previous_version}.. +``` + +Edit this down to just the user visible changes, and list them in +`data/metainfo/org.gnome.Software.metainfo.xml.in`. User visible changes are ones +which the average user might be interested to know about, such as a fix for an +impactful bug, a UI change, or a feature change. + +You can get review of your metainfo changes from other co-maintainers if you wish. + +Generate `NEWS` file: +``` +appstreamcli metainfo-to-news ./data/metainfo/org.gnome.Software.metainfo.xml.in ./NEWS +``` + +Commit the release: +``` +git add -p +git commit -m "Release version ${new_version}" +``` + +Build the release tarball: +``` +# Only execute git clean if you don't have anything not tracked by git that you +# want to keep +git clean -dfx +meson --prefix $PWD/install -Dbuildtype=release -Dsoup2=true build/ +ninja -C build/ dist +``` + +Tag, sign and push the release (see below for information about `git evtag`): +``` +git evtag sign -u ${key_id} ${new_version} +git push --atomic origin ${branch} ${new_version} +``` +To use a specific key add an option `-u ${keyid|email}` after the `sign` argument. + +Use `Tag ${new_version} release` as the tag message. + +Upload the release tarball: +``` +scp build/meson-dist/gnome-software-${new_version}.tar.xz master.gnome.org: +ssh master.gnome.org ftpadmin install gnome-software-${new_version}.tar.xz +``` + +Add the release notes to GitLab and close the milestone: + - Go to https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-software/-/releases/new?tag_name=${new_version} + - set `Release title` to `${new_version}` + - set the Milestone of the release, if such exists + - copy the Release notes for the new release from the `NEWS` file + (replace `~~~~~~~~~~~~` with `===` (only three `=`)) + - in the Links section add: + | URL | Link title | Type | + | ------ | ------ | ------ | + | `https://download.gnome.org/sources/gnome-software/${new_major_version}/gnome-software-${new_version}.tar.xz` | Release tarball | Other | + | `https://download.gnome.org/sources/gnome-software/${new_major_version}/gnome-software-${new_version}.sha256sum` | Release tarball sha256sum | Other | + - save the changes with `Create release` button + - verify the added links for the release artifacts work + - Go to https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-software/-/milestones/ + choose the milestone and close it, as all issues and merge requests tagged + for this release should now be complete + +Post release version bump in `meson.build`: +``` +# edit meson.build, then +git commit -a -m "trivial: Post release version bump" +git push +``` + +`git-evtag` +--- + +Releases should be done with `git evtag` rather than `git tag`, as it provides +stronger security guarantees. See +[its documentation](https://github.com/cgwalters/git-evtag) for more details. +In particular, it calculates its checksum over all blobs reachable from the tag, +including submodules; and uses a stronger checksum than SHA-1. + +You will need a GPG key for this, ideally which has been signed by others so +that it can be verified as being yours. However, even if your GPG key is +unsigned, using `git evtag` is still beneficial over using `git tag`. |