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PyPy's Release Process
========================

Release Policy
++++++++++++++

We try to create a stable release a few times a year. These are released on
a branch named like release-pypy3.5-v2.x or release-pypy3.5-v4.x, and each
release is tagged, for instance release-pypy3.5-v4.0.1. 

The release version number should be bumped. A micro release increment means
there were no changes that justify rebuilding c-extension wheels, since
the wheels are marked with only major.minor version numbers. It is ofen not
clear what constitues a "major" release verses a "minor" release, the release
manager can make that call.

After release, inevitably there are bug fixes. It is the responsibility of
the commiter who fixes a bug to make sure this fix is on the release branch,
so that we can then create a tagged bug-fix release, which will hopefully
happen more often than stable releases.

How to Create a PyPy Release
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

As a meta rule setting up issues in the tracker for items here may help not
forgetting things. A set of todo files may also work.

Check and prioritize all issues for the release, postpone some if necessary,
create new  issues also as necessary. An important thing is to get
the documentation into an up-to-date state!


Release Steps
++++++++++++++

Make the release branch
------------------------

This is needed only in case you are doing a new major version; if not, you can
probably reuse the existing release branch.

We want to be able to freely merge default into the branch and vice-versa;
thus we need to do a complicate dance to avoid to patch the version number
when we do a merge::

  $ hg up -r default
  $ # edit the version to e.g. 7.0.0-final
  $ hg ci
  $ hg branch release-pypy2.7-v7.x && hg ci
  $ hg up -r default
  $ # edit the version to 7.1.0-alpha0
  $ hg ci
  $ hg up -r release-pypy2.7-v7.x
  $ hg merge default
  $ # edit the version to AGAIN 7.0.0-final
  $ hg ci

Then, we need to do the same for the 3.x branch::

  $ hg up -r py3.5
  $ hg merge default # this brings the version fo 7.1.0-alpha0
  $ hg branch release-pypy3.5-v7.x
  $ # edit the version to 7.0.0-final
  $ hg ci
  $ hg up -r py3.5
  $ hg merge release-pypy3.5-v7.x
  $ # edit the version to 7.1.0-alpha0
  $ hg ci

To change the version, you need to edit three files:

  - ``module/sys/version.py``

  - ``module/cpyext/include/patchlevel.h``

  - ``doc/conf.py``


Other steps
-----------


* Make sure the RPython builds on the buildbot pass with no failures

* Maybe bump the SOABI number in module/imp/importing. This has many
  implications, so make sure the PyPy community agrees to the change.
  Wheels will use the major.minor release numbers in the name, so bump
  them if there is an incompatible change to cpyext.

* Update and write documentation

  * update pypy/doc/contributor.rst (and possibly LICENSE)
    pypy/doc/tool/makecontributor.py generates the list of contributors

  * rename pypy/doc/whatsnew_head.rst to whatsnew_VERSION.rst
    create a fresh whatsnew_head.rst after the release
    and add the new file to  pypy/doc/index-of-whatsnew.rst

  * rename pypy/doc/whatsnew-pypy3-HEAD.rst to whatsnew-pypy3-VERSION.rst
    create a fresh whatsnew-pypy3_HEAD.rst after the release
    and add the new file to  pypy/doc/index-of-whatsnew.rst

  * write release announcement pypy/doc/release-VERSION.rst
    The release announcement should contain a direct link to the download page

  * Add the new files to  pypy/doc/index-of-{whatsnew,release-notes}.rst

* Build and upload the release tar-balls

  * go to pypy/tool/release and run
    ``force-builds.py <release branch>``
    The following JIT binaries should be built, however, we need more buildbots
    windows, linux-32, linux-64, osx64, armhf-raspberrian, armel,
    freebsd64 

  * wait for builds to complete, make sure there are no failures

  * send out a mailing list message asking for people to test before uploading
    to prevent having to upload more than once

  * add a tag on the pypy/jitviewer repo that corresponds to pypy release, so
    that the source tarball can be produced in the next steps

  * download the builds, repackage binaries. Tag the release-candidate version
    (it is important to mark this as a candidate since usually at least two
    tries are needed to complete the process) and download and repackage source
    from the buildbot. You may find it convenient to use the ``repackage.sh``
    script in ``pypy/tool/release`` to do this. 

    Also repackage and upload source "-src.tar.bz2"

  * Upload binaries to https://buildbot.pypy.org/mirror. Add the files to
    the ``versions.json`` in ``pypy/tools/release``, upload it, and run the
    ``check_versions.py`` file in that directory. This file is used by various
    downstream tools like "github actions" to find valid pypy downloads. It
    takes an hour for
    https://downloads.python.org/pypy/ to sync

* Send out a mailing list message asking for last-minute comments and testing

* RELEASE !  

  * update pypy.org (under extradoc/pypy.org), rebuild and commit, using the
    hashes produced from the ``repackage.sh`` script or by hand

  * post announcement on morepypy.blogspot.com
  * send announcements to twitter.com, pypy-dev, python-list,
    python-announce, python-dev ...

* If all is OK, document the released version and suggest popular tools update
  to support it. Github actions will pick up the versions.json.

  * add a tag on the codespeed web site that corresponds to pypy release
  * revise versioning at https://readthedocs.org/projects/pypy
  * suggest updates to multibuild_ and cibuildwheel_

.. _multibuild: https://github.com/matthew-brett/multibuild
.. _cibuildwheel: https://github.com/joerick/cibuildwheel