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=================
Release checklist
=================
Checklist for ordinary releases
===============================
* Git branch naming note
- ``vN.N.N-release-prep``: use this naming for bumping version number, etc.
Merge to master before tagging release.
- ``vN.N.N-release-post``: use this naming for bumping version number after
release, checklist fixes after release, etc.
* Git maintenance
- ensure git commits are up-to-date
- ensure branches are merged, unused branches deleted (also remotely)
- ensure branches are rebased where applicable
- git fsck --full
- git gc --aggressive
* Finalize DUK_VERSION
- Change previous development version (with patch level 99) to release
version
- Verify by running Duktape cmdline and evaluating ``Duktape.version``
* Check for API calls and config options tagged experimental to see if they
should lose their experimental status
* Check dist-files/README.rst
- Update release specific release notes link
* Ensure LICENSE.txt is up-to-date
- Check year range
* Ensure RELEASES.rst is up-to-date
- New release is in place
- Release date is in place
* Ensure tests/api/test-all-public-symbols.c is up-to-date
- Must add all new API calls
* Compilation tests:
- Clean compile for command line tool with (a) no options and (b) common
debug options (DUK_USE_DEBUG, DUK_USE_DEBUG_LEVEL=0, DUK_USE_DEBUG_PRINT=...,
DUK_USE_SELF_TESTS, DUK_USE_ASSERTIONS)
- Compile both from ``src`` and ``src-separate``.
- Run ``mandel.js`` to test the the command line tool works.
- Check that ``duk_tval`` is packed by default on x86 and unpacked on
x64
- util/checklist_compile_test.sh: linux compiler/arch combinations,
run in dist, check output manually
- Platform / compiler combinations (incomplete, should be automated):
+ FreeBSD clang
+ FreeBSD clang + -m32
+ Windows MinGW
+ Windows MinGW-w64
+ Windows MSVC (cl) x86
+ Windows MSVC (cl) x64
+ Windows Cygwin 32-bit
+ Windows Cygwin 64-bit
+ Linux MIPS gcc
+ Linux ARMEL gcc (little endian)
+ Linux gcc on some mixed endian ARM platform
+ Linux SH4 gcc
- Check ``make duk-clang``, covers ``-Wcast-align``
- Check compile warnings when DUK_NORETURN() is not defined
* Test configure.py manually using metadata from the distributable
- Ensure that Duktape compiles with e.g. ``-DDUK_USE_FASTINT`` configure
argument
* duk-sanitize-clang:
- Run::
$ make duk-sanitize-clang
$ for i in tests/ecmascript/test-*.js; do python util/runtest.py --duk ./duk-sanitize-clang --timeout 30 $i; done
* ECMAScript testcases
- On x86-64 (exercise 16-byte duk_tval):
- make ecmatest
- VALGRIND_WRAP=1 make ecmatest # valgrind test
- On x86-32 (exercise 8-byte duk_tval)
- make ecmatest
- Run testcases on all endianness targets
- Run with assertions enabled at least on x86-64
* Run testcases with torture options
- DUK_USE_GC_TORTURE
- DUK_USE_SHUFFLE_TORTURE
- DUK_USE_FINALIZER_TORTURE
- DUK_USE_FINALIZER_TORTURE + DUK_USE_GC_TORTURE
- DUK_USE_STRTAB_TORTURE
* Memory usage testing
- Leaks are mostly detected by Valgrind, but bugs in valstack or object
resize algorithms (or similar) can lead to unbounded or suboptimal
memory usage
- Minimal manual refcount leak test:
- test-dev-refcount-leak-basic.js
* API testcases
- On x86-64:
- make apitest
- -Werror is no longer enabled so check apitest output for any test
case warnings (or enable -Werror manually in runtests.js)
* test262
- on x86-64
- make test262test
- Run with assertions enabled at least on x86-64
* Assorted release tests driven by Makefile
- on x86-64
- make clean releasetest
- Run with assertions enabled at least on x86-64
- Makefile should now error out if any test fails
* Debugger test
- Test Makefile.dukdebug + debugger/duk_debug.js to ensure all files
are included (easy to forget e.g. YAML metadata files)
- Test JSON proxy
* Performance testing and Wiki performance results page
- Update and run ``util/bench_microbenchmarks.py`` to get raw microbenchmark
results. Then use ``util/format_perftest.py`` to format into HTML; the
different parts of the Wiki performance page need manual tweaking of the
format_perftest.py script.
- Run Octane results manually for now.
* Website index page footprint/RAM figures
- Run ``util/index_page_sizes.sh`` manually and update index page results
accordingly.
* Prepare an update pull for compat-table
- Fork and branch
- Compile "duk", Duktape.version must match upcoming release
- Go through data-*.js files, and copy previous results directly, e.g.
"duktape20: false," -> add line "duktape21: false,"
- Run "nodejs duktape.js" in compat-table, and update data files to match
new results
- Rerun "nodejs build.js", and finalize the pull
* Release notes (``doc/release-notes-*.rst``)
- Write new release notes for release
- Ensure instructions for upgrading from last release are correct
- Detailed test outputs are no longer included
* Git release and tag
- Tagging should be done before creating the candidate tar files so that
"git describe" output will have a nice tag name.
- This will be a preliminary tag which can be moved if necessary. Don't
push it to the public repo until the tag is certain not to move anymore.
- There can be commits to the repo after tagging but nothing that will
affect "make dist" output.
- Make sure the tag is in the master commit chain, so that git describe will
provide a useful output for dist packages built after the release
- ``git tag -l -n1`` to list current tags
- ``git tag -s -m "<one line release description>" vN.N.N`` to set tag
- ``git tag -f -s -m "<one line release description>" vN.N.N`` to forcibly
reset tag if it needs to be moved
* If release is a stable major/minor release (e.g. 1.1.0), create a maintenance
branch ``vN.N-maintenance`` off the release tag.
* Build candidate tar.xz files
- These should remain the same after this point so that their hash
values are known.
- Check git describe output from dist ``README.rst``, ``src/duktape.h``,
``src/duktape.c``, and ``src/duk_config.h``. It should show the release
tag.
- This should be done in a fresh checkout to minimize chance of any
uncommitted files, directories, etc affecting the build
* Check source dist contents
- Check file list
- Grep for FIXME and XXX
- Trivial compile test for combined source
- Trivial compile test for separate sources (important because
it's easy to forget to add files in util/dist.py)
* Store binaries to duktape-releases repo
- Add the tar.xz to the master branch
- Create an independent branched named ``unpacked-vN.N.N`` with unpacked
tar.xz contents
+ http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15034390/how-to-create-a-new-and-empty-root-branch
+ http://stackoverflow.com/questions/9034540/how-to-create-a-git-branch-that-is-independent-of-the-master-branch
- Tag the final branch with ``vN.N.N``, push the tag, and delete the branch.
The branch is not pushed to the server.
- The concrete commands are packaged into ``add-unpacked.sh`` in
duktape-releases repo. Add the tar.xz into master first.
* Update website downloads page
- Release date
- Link
- Date
- "latest" class
- Release notes (layout and contents) for release
* Build website
- Readthrough
- Test that the Duktape REPL (Dukweb) works
- Check duk command line version number in Guide "Getting started"
- Diff website HTML against current website
* Upload website and test
* Final Git stuff
- Ensure ``master`` is pushed and unnecessary branches are cleaned up
- Push the release tag
- Push the maintenance branch if created
* Make GitHub release
- Release description should match tag description but be capitalized
- Attach the end user distributable to the GitHub release
* Bump Duktape version for next release and testing
- Set patch level to 99, e.g. after 0.10.0 stable release, set DUK_VERSION
from 1000 to 1099. This ensures that any forks off the trunk will have a
version number easy to distinguish as an unofficial release.
- ``src/duktape.h.in``
Checklist for maintenance releases
==================================
* Make fixes to master and cherry pick fixes to maintenance branch (either
directly or through a fix branch). Test fixes in maintenance branch too.
* Update release notes and website in master. **Don't** update these in
the maintenance branch.
* Bump DUK_VERSION in maintenance branch.
* Review diff between previous release and new patch release.
* Tag release; description "maintenance release" should be good enough for
most patch releases.
* Build release. Compare release to previous release package by diffing the
unpacked directories. Check out the maintenance branch for the build so
that the branch in C defines is that branch instead of "HEAD".
* Build website from master. Deploy only ``download.html``.
This is rather hacky: we need the release notes so the build must be made
from master, but master may also contain website changes for the next
release.