You cannot select more than 25 topics
Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
53 lines
3.0 KiB
Markdown
53 lines
3.0 KiB
Markdown
# How to release a specification
|
|
|
|
There are several specifications that belong to matrix, such as the client-server
|
|
specification, server-server specification, and identity service specification. Each
|
|
of these gets released independently of each other with their own version numbers.
|
|
|
|
Once a specification is ready for release, a branch should be created to track the
|
|
changes in and to hold potential future hotfixes. This should be the name of the
|
|
specification (as it appears in the directory structure of this project) followed
|
|
by "release-" and the release version. For example, if the Client-Server Specification
|
|
was getting an r0.4.0 release, the branch name would be `client_server/release-r0.4.0`.
|
|
|
|
*Note*: Historical releases prior to this process may or may not have an appropriate
|
|
release branch. Releases after this document came into place will have an appropriate
|
|
branch.
|
|
|
|
The remainder of the process is as follows:
|
|
1. Activate your Python 3 virtual environment.
|
|
1. Having checked out the new release branch, navigate your way over to `./changelogs`.
|
|
1. Follow the release instructions provided in the README.md located there.
|
|
1. Update any version/link references across all specifications.
|
|
1. From translate.riot.im, push repository changes and merge the subsequent PR.
|
|
1. Run `./scripts/i18n.py` to ensure all translatable files are up to date.
|
|
1. Generate the specification using `./scripts/gendoc.py`, specifying all the
|
|
API versions at the time of generation. For example: `./scripts/gendoc.py -c r0.4.0 -s r0.1.0 -i r0.1.0 #etc`
|
|
1. PR the changes to the matrix-org/matrix.org repository (for historic tracking).
|
|
* This is done by making a PR to the `unstyled_docs/spec` folder for the version and
|
|
specification you're releasing.
|
|
* Don't forget to symlink the new release as `latest`.
|
|
* For the client-server API, don't forget to generate the swagger JSON by using
|
|
`./scripts/dump-swagger.py -c r0.4.0`. This will also need symlinking to `latest`.
|
|
1. Commit the changes and PR them to master. **Wait for review from the spec core team.**
|
|
* Link to your matrix-org/matrix.org so both can be reviewed at the same time.
|
|
1. Tag the release with the format `client_server/r0.4.0`.
|
|
1. Perform a release on GitHub to tag the release.
|
|
1. Yell from the mountaintop to the world about the new release.
|
|
|
|
### Creating a release for a brand-new specification
|
|
|
|
Some specifications may not have ever had a release, and therefore need a bit more work
|
|
to become ready.
|
|
|
|
1. Activate your Python 3 virtual environment.
|
|
1. Having checked out the new release branch, navigate your way over to `./changelogs`.
|
|
1. Follow the "new changelog" instructions provided in the README.md located there.
|
|
1. Open the specification RST file and make some changes:
|
|
* Using a released specification as a template, update the changelog section.
|
|
* Use the appropriate changelog variable in the RST.
|
|
1. Create/define the appropriate variables in `gendoc.py`.
|
|
1. Update `targets.yml`.
|
|
1. Update any version/link references across all specifications.
|
|
1. Follow the regular release process.
|