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132 lines
5.9 KiB
Markdown
132 lines
5.9 KiB
Markdown
# How to release the specification
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The whole specification is now released as a single unit/artifact. This document is
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the process for releasing the specification and a description of how the (public)
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machinery works.
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## Timeline
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The spec is released each calendar quarter. The *target* months are:
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* Q1: January or February.
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* Q2: May.
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* Q3: August.
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* Q4: November.
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The SCT aims to have dates picked out 2 weeks before the chosen release date. When
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possible, releases should be scheduled for Thursdays and Fridays to allow a few
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consecutive business days for identifying blockers.
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When a release date is picked, a [checklist](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-spec/issues/new?assignees=&labels=release-blocker&projects=&template=release.md&title=Matrix+1.X)
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issue is created to track details of the release. Release blockers should continue
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to be accepted at the discretion of whoever is doing the release (typically, blockers
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should be allowed up to 1-2 days before the release date).
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**Release dates are not promises.** The SCT reserves the ability to change, cancel,
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postpone, etc a release for any reason. Do not rely on a release happening on a given
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day until the release has actually happened & blog post published.
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Once a release is *scheduled*, the SCT will begin planning what the next release is
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expected to look like. The plan should be included in the spec release blog post,
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and be ready for execution on spec release day. Plans are guides and not promises.
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A blog post for the SCT members to review should be ready 2-3 days prior to the
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release at minimum. Preferably a week in advance.
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1-2 days before the release itself, the prerequisite steps below are executed to
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ensure the spec release can go ahead.
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## Release composition
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*This section is a work in progress.*
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Spec releases do not currently have attached themes, though when planning a release
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a broad theme may be considered. Ideally, each release contains a "hero feature"
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which is highlighted in the later blog post.
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## Prerequisites / preparation
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First, can we even release the spec? This stage is mostly preparation work needed
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to ensure a consistent and reliable specification.
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1. Ensure `main` is committed with all the spec changes you expect to be there.
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2. Review the changelog to look for typos, wording inconsistencies, or lines which
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can be merged. For example, "Fix typos" and "Fix spelling" can be condensed to
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"Fix various typos throughout the specification".
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3. Do a quick skim to ensure changelogs reference the MSCs which brought the changes
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in. They should be linked to the GitHub MSC PR (not the markdown document).
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## The release
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Assuming the preparation work is complete, all that remains is the actual specification
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release.
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1. Create a `release/v1.2` branch where `v1.2` is the version you're about to release.
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2. Update the `params.version` section of `config.toml` to use the following template:
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```toml
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[params.version]
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status = "stable"
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current_version_url = "https://spec.matrix.org/latest"
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# This will be the spec version you're releasing. If that's v1.2, then `major = "1"`
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# and `minor = "2"`
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major = "1"
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minor = "2"
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# Today's date. Please use the format implied here for consistency.
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release_date = "October 01, 2021"
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```
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3. Commit the changes.
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4. Generate the changelog.
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1. Activate your python virtual environment.
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2. Run `./scripts/generate-changelog.sh v1.2 "October 01, 2021"` (using the correct
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version number and same `release_date` format from the hugo config).
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3. Commit the result.
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5. Tag the branch with the spec release with a format of `v1.2` (if releasing Matrix 1.2).
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6. Push the release branch and the tag.
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7. GitHub Actions will run its build steps. Wait until these are successful. If fixes
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need to be made to repair the pipeline or spec build, delete and re-tag the release.
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You may need to fix up the changelog file by hand in this case.
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8. Check out and fast-forward `main` to the release branch.
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9. Create a new release on GitHub from the newly created tag.
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* The title should be just "v1.2" (for example).
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* The description should be a copy/paste of the changelog. The generated changelog
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will be at `content/changelog/v1.2.md` - copy/paste verbatim.
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* Upload the artifacts of the GitHub Actions build for the release to the GitHub
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release as artifacts themselves. This should be the tarball that will be deployed
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to spec.matrix.org.
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10. Commit a reversion to `params.version` of `config.toml` on `main`:
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```toml
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[params.version]
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status = "unstable"
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current_version_url = "https://spec.matrix.org/latest"
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# major = "1"
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# minor = "2"
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# release_date = "October 01, 2021"
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```
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11. Push pending commits and ensure the unstable spec updates accordingly from the
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GitHub Actions pipeline.
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12. Deploy the release on the webserver. See internal wiki.
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## Patching a release
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Patch releases are used to fix the most recent release on record. Typically a patch
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release will be deployed if there is an issue with the build machinery, a factual
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error is introduced by the release, or there are notable clarity issues introduced
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by the release which may affect implementation. It's usually not a good idea to
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ship a patch release if it can be avoided.
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Typos and similar do not generally require a patch release.
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**Patch releases must not to be used for spec changes (new MSCs, etc) beyond fixing
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factual errors.**
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1. Add the required changes to the release branch (`release/v1.2` for example).
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2. Fast forward the `v1.2` tag to the release branch head.
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3. Push both the release branch and fast-forwarded tag.
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4. Wait for the GitHub Actions build to complete on the tag.
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5. Update the assets on the GitHub release to those generated by the latest Actions build.
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6. Deploy the release on the webserver. See internal wiki.
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7. Remove the changelog entries from `main`, if the changes landed on `main`.
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8. Update the github release changelog and changelog on `main`, likely by hand.
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