How to do a GTK+ release?
=========================
-Make sure you have Owen's special autoconf and libtool RPMs, available at:
-http://people.redhat.com/otaylor/gtk/autotools/.
-
+Make sure you have suitable versions of autoconf and libtool.
Also make sure you have the following packages installed with all their
-dependencies (I used the RPM package names from RedHat 9):
+dependencies:
* gtk-doc
-* linuxdoc-tools
* docbook-utils
-
Without those packages make distcheck will *not* pass.
+Make sure that gtk-doc is the latest released version.
+
+
+ 0) Go back to a pristine working directory. With git, this works:
+
+ git clean -f -x
+
+ 1) autogen and build it, make sure to enable docs by specifying
+ --enable-gtk-doc --enable-man
+
+ 2) Update NEWS based on the content of git log; follow the format
+ of prior entries. This includes finding noteworthy new features,
+ collecting summaries for all the fixed bugs that are referenced
+ and collecting all updated translations.
+ Also collect the names of all contributors that are mentioned.
+ We don't discriminate between bug reporters, patch writers,
+ committers, etc. Anybody who is mentioned in ChangeLog gets
+ credits, but only real names, not email addresses or nicknames.
+
+ 3) In particular, if this is a major, stable, release, verify that
+ README.in contains the relevant release notes and that the
+ required versions of dependencies in INSTALL.in are in sync
+ with configure.ac.
+
+ 4) Verify that the version in configure.ac has been bumped after the last
+ release. (Note that this is critical, a slip-up here will cause the
+ soname to change).
+
+ 5) Make sure that make check is happy (If you don't do it here, make distcheck
+ will also catch it, but it is kind of disheartening to see make distcheck
+ fail due to an extraneous symbol after watching it build the docs for an
+ hour...).
+ Typical problems to expect here (depending on whether this is a devel
+ snapshot or a stable release):
+ * forgotten source files
+ * new symbols missing from .symbols files
+ * symbols that are exported by should be private (static or _-prefixed)
+ * symbols that cause PLT entries. This is either caused by using
+ a in the same library function without including the header or by
+ using a function from a different library, which is not yet allowed
+ by the filter in pltcheck.sh
+
+ 6) If this is a devel release, make sure that the docs for new symbols
+ are in good shape. Look at the -unused.txt files and add stuff found
+ there to the corresponding -sections.txt file. Look at the
+ -undocumented.txt files and see if there is anything in there that
+ should be documented. If it is, this may be due to typos in the doc
+ comments in the source. Make sure that all new symbols have proper
+ Since: tags, and that there is an index in the main -docs.sgml for
+ the next stable version.
+
+ 7) make distcheck
+
+ 8) Fix broken stuff found by 7), repeat
+
+ 9) Commit all changes: git commit -a. You will have a bunch of po file
+ changes, NEWS and maybe some doc changes too
+
+10) Now you've got the tarball. Check that the tarball size looks
+ reasonable compared to previous releases. If the size goes down
+ a lot, likely the docs went missing for some reason. Or the translations.
+ If the size goes up by a lot, something else may be wrong.
+
+11) Tag the release. The git command for doing that looks like
+
+ git tag -m "GTK+ 2.12.10" 2.12.10
+
+12) Push the tagged commit upstream. The git command for doing that is
+
+ git push origin refs/tags/2.12.10
+
+13) Bump the version number in configure.ac and commit and push this change
+
+14) Upload the tarball to master.gnome.org and run install-module to transfer
+ it to download.gnome.org. If you don't have an account on master.gnome.org,
+ find someone who can do it for you. The command for this looks like
+
+ scp gtk+-2.12.10.tar.gz matthiasc@master.gnome.org:
+ ssh matthiasc@master.gnome.org
+ install-module gtk+-2.12.10.tar.gz
+
+15) Get the .bz2 tarball and the .md5sum files back from master.gnome.org
+ You can probably also create it locally, but I've experienced md5
+ mismatches when doing so.
+
+16) Upload the .gz and .bz2 tarballs and checksums to ftp.gtk.org and put
+ them in the right directory below /ftp/pub. Pay attention to correct
+ ownership, and don't forget to update the LATEST file in the directory.
+
+17) Go to the gnome-announce list archives, find the last announce message,
+ create a new message in the same form, replacing version numbers,
+ commentary at the top about "what this release is about" and the
+ summary of changes.
+18) Send it to gnome-announce-list, gtk-list, gtk-app-devel-list and
+ gtk-devel-list. Set reply-to to desktop-devel-list.
-0) Blow away your gtk+ directory, check a new version out
-1) autogen and build it, make sure to enable docs.
-2) Update NEWS based on ChangeLog
-3) Update version in configure.in, increase micro and interface age by 1.
-(Note that this is critical, a slip-up here will cause the soname to change).
-4) Add === Released 2.x.y === at the top of the ChangeLog
-5) make mydistcheck
-6) Fix broken stuff found by 4) repeat
-7) cvs commit; you'll have a bunch of po file changes, and maybe some
-doc changes too (NOTE: be sure to use cvs with compression, else you'll
-end up waiting for a long time :).
-8) If 7) fails because someone else committed inbetween, curse, cvs up
-fix conflicts and go to 5)
-9) type 'cvs tag GTK_2_x_y' in the toplevel directory
-10) You now have the tarball, and the CVS tag, now upload the tarball to
-gnome.org and gtk.org
-11) Go to the gnome-announce list archives, find the last announce message,
-create a new message in the same form, replacing version numbers, commentary
-at the top about "what this release is about" and the Summary of changes.
-12) Send it to gnome-announce-list, gtk-list, gtk-app-devel-list and
-gtk-devel-list. Set reply-to to gnome-hackers.
+19) Add a link to the release announcement to www.gtk.org which lives
+ in the gtk-web git module.