1=encoding utf8 2 3=head1 NAME 4 5release_managers_guide - Releasing a new version of perl 5.x 6 7Note that things change at each release, so there may be new things not 8covered here, or tools may need updating. 9 10=head1 MAKING A CHECKLIST 11 12If you are preparing to do a release, you can run the 13F<Porting/make-rmg-checklist> script to generate a new version of this 14document that starts with a checklist for your release. 15 16This script is run as: 17 18 perl Porting/make-rmg-checklist \ 19 --version [5.X.Y-RC#] > /tmp/rmg.pod 20 21You can also pass the C<--html> flag to generate an HTML document instead of 22POD. 23 24 perl Porting/make-rmg-checklist --html \ 25 --version [5.X.Y-RC#] > /tmp/rmg.html 26 27=head1 SYNOPSIS 28 29This document describes the series of tasks required - some automatic, some 30manual - to produce a perl release of some description, be that a release 31candidate, or final, numbered release of maint or blead. 32 33New releases of perl are made each month on the 20th by a release engineer 34appointed by the Steering Council. The release engineer roster and schedule 35can be found in Porting/release_schedule.pod. 36 37This document both helps as a check-list for the release engineer 38and is a base for ideas on how the various tasks could be automated 39or distributed. 40 41The checklist of a typical release cycle is as follows: 42 43 (5.10.1 is released, and post-release actions have been done) 44 45 ...time passes... 46 47 a few weeks before the release, a number of steps are performed, 48 including bumping the version to 5.10.2 49 50 ...a few weeks pass... 51 52 perl-5.10.2-RC1 is released 53 54 perl-5.10.2 is released 55 56 post-release actions are performed, including creating new 57 perldelta.pod 58 59 ... the cycle continues ... 60 61=head1 DETAILS 62 63Some of the tasks described below apply to all four types of 64release of Perl. (blead, RC, final release of maint, final 65release of blead). Some of these tasks apply only to a subset 66of these release types. If a step does not apply to a given 67type of release, you will see a notation to that effect at 68the beginning of the step. 69 70This guide assumes you are working on the Perl master repository (i.e. 71L<https://github.com/Perl/perl5>) and B<not> on your own fork of the perl5 72repository. While it is possible to prepare a release on your own fork 73this guide is not written with that in mind and as a result several 74key steps are missing. If you do use your own fork then extra care 75needs to be taken when setting/pushing the tag and doing the merge 76(do B<not> use a PR). 77 78=head2 Release types 79 80=over 4 81 82=item Release Candidate (RC) 83 84A release candidate is an attempt to produce a tarball that is as close as 85possible to the final release. Indeed, unless critical faults are found 86during the RC testing, the final release will be identical to the RC 87barring a few minor fixups (updating the release date in F<perlhist.pod>, 88removing the RC status from F<patchlevel.h>, etc). If faults are found, 89then the fixes should be put into a new release candidate, never directly 90into a final release. 91 92 93=item Stable/Maint release (MAINT). 94 95A release with an even version number, and subversion number > 0, such as 965.14.1 or 5.14.2. 97 98At this point you should have a working release candidate with few or no 99changes since. 100 101It's essentially the same procedure as for making a release candidate, but 102with a whole bunch of extra post-release steps. 103 104Note that for a maint release there are two versions of this guide to 105consider: the one in the maint branch, and the one in blead. Which one to 106use is a fine judgement. The blead one will be most up-to-date, while 107it might describe some steps or new tools that aren't applicable to older 108maint branches. It is probably best to review both versions of this 109document, but to most closely follow the steps in the maint version. 110 111=item A blead point release (BLEAD-POINT) 112 113A release with an odd version number, such as 5.15.0 or 5.15.1. 114 115This isn't for production, so it has less stability requirements than for 116other release types, and isn't preceded by RC releases. Other than that, 117it is similar to a MAINT release. 118 119=item Blead final release (BLEAD-FINAL) 120 121A release with an even version number, and subversion number == 0, such as 1225.14.0. That is to say, it's the big new release once per year. 123 124It's essentially the same procedure as for making a release candidate, but 125with a whole bunch of extra post-release steps, even more than for MAINT. 126 127=back 128 129=for checklist begin 130 131=head2 Prerequisites 132 133Before you can make an official release of perl, there are a few 134hoops you need to jump through: 135 136=head3 PAUSE account with pumpkin status 137 138Make sure you have a PAUSE account suitable for uploading a perl release. 139If you don't have a PAUSE account, then request one: 140 141 https://pause.perl.org/pause/query?ACTION=request_id 142 143Check that your account is allowed to upload perl distros: go to 144L<https://pause.perl.org/pause/authenquery?ACTION=who_pumpkin> and check that 145your PAUSE ID is listed there. If not, ask Andreas KE<0xf6>nig to add your ID 146to the list of people allowed to upload something called perl. You can find 147Andreas' email address at: 148 149 https://pause.perl.org/pause/query?ACTION=pause_04imprint 150 151=head3 GitHub access 152 153You will need a working C<git> installation, checkout of the perl 154git repository and perl commit bit. For information about working 155with perl and git, see L<perlgit>. 156 157If you are not yet a perl committer, you won't be able to make a 158release. You will need to have a GitHub account (if you don't have one) 159and contact the Steering Council with your username to get membership in the 160L<< Perl-Releasers|https://github.com/orgs/Perl/teams/perl-releasers >> team. 161 162=head3 web-based file share 163 164You will need to be able to share tarballs with #p5p members for 165pre-release testing, and you may wish to upload to PAUSE via URL. 166Make sure you have a way of sharing files, such as a web server or 167file-sharing service. 168 169If you use Dropbox, you can append "raw=1" as a parameter to their usual 170sharing link to allow direct download (albeit with redirects). 171 172=head3 Quotation for release announcement epigraph 173 174You will need a quotation to use as an epigraph to your release announcement. 175It will live forever (along with Perl), so make it a good one. 176 177=head3 Install the previous version of perl 178 179During the testing phase of the release you have created, you will be 180asked to compare the installed files with a previous install. Save yourself 181some time on release day, and have a (clean) install of the previous 182version ready. 183 184=head3 Email account subscribed to perl5-porters 185 186In order for your release announcement email to be delivered to the 187perl5-porters distribution list, the email address that you intend to 188send from must be subscribed to the list. 189 190Instructions for subscribing can be found here: 191L<List: perl5-porters|https://lists.perl.org/list/perl5-porters.html> 192 193=head2 Building a release - advance actions 194 195The work of building a release candidate for an even numbered release 196(BLEAD-FINAL) of perl generally starts several weeks before the first 197release candidate. Some of the following steps should be done regularly, 198but all I<must> be done in the run up to a release. 199 200=head3 dual-life CPAN module synchronisation 201 202To see which core distro versions differ from the current CPAN versions: 203 204 $ ./perl -Ilib Porting/core-cpan-diff -x -a 205 206However, this only checks whether the version recorded in 207F<Porting/Maintainers.pl> differs from the latest on CPAN. It doesn't tell you 208if the code itself has diverged from CPAN. 209 210You can also run an actual diff of the contents of the modules, comparing core 211to CPAN, to ensure that there were no erroneous/extraneous changes that need to 212be dealt with. You do this by not passing the C<-x> option: 213 214 $ ./perl -Ilib Porting/core-cpan-diff -a -o ~/corediffs 215 216Passing C<-u cpan> will probably be helpful, since it limits the search to 217distributions with 'cpan' upstream source. (It's OK for blead upstream to 218differ from CPAN because those dual-life releases usually come I<after> perl 219is released.) 220 221See also the C<-d> and C<-v> options for more detail (and the C<-u> option as 222mentioned above). You'll probably want to use the C<-c cachedir> option to 223avoid repeated CPAN downloads and may want to use C<-m file:///mirror/path> if 224you made a local CPAN mirror. Note that a minicpan mirror won't actually work, 225but can provide a good first pass to quickly get a list of modules which 226definitely haven't changed, to avoid having to download absolutely everything. 227 228For a BLEAD-POINT or BLEAD-FINAL release with 'cpan' upstream, if a CPAN 229release appears to be ahead of blead, then consider updating it (or asking the 230relevant porter to do so). (However, if this is a BLEAD-FINAL release or one of 231the last BLEAD-POINT releases before it and hence blead is in some kind of 232"code freeze" state (e.g. the sequence might be "contentious changes freeze", 233then "user-visible changes freeze" and finally "full code freeze") then any 234CPAN module updates must be subject to the same restrictions, so it may not be 235possible to update all modules until after the BLEAD-FINAL release.) If blead 236contains edits to a 'cpan' upstream module, this is naughty but sometimes 237unavoidable to keep blead tests passing. Make sure the affected file has a 238CUSTOMIZED entry in F<Porting/Maintainers.pl>. 239 240If you are making a MAINT release, run C<core-cpan-diff> on both blead and 241maint, then diff the two outputs. Compare this with what you expect, and if 242necessary, fix things up. For example, you might think that both blead 243and maint are synchronised with a particular CPAN module, but one might 244have some extra changes. 245 246In any case, any cpan-first distribution that is listed as having files 247"Customized for blead" in the output of cpan-core-diff should have requests 248submitted to the maintainer(s) to make a cpan release to catch up with blead. 249 250Additionally, all files listed as "modified" but not "customized for blead" 251should have entries added under the C<CUSTOMIZED> key in 252F<Porting/Maintainers.pl>, as well as checksums updated via: 253 254 cd t; ../perl -I../lib porting/customized.t --regen 255 256=head4 Sync CPAN modules with the corresponding cpanE<sol> distro 257 258In most cases, once a new version of a distribution shipped with core has been 259uploaded to CPAN, the core version thereof can be synchronized automatically 260with the program F<Porting/sync-with-cpan>. (But see the comments at the 261beginning of that program. In particular, it has not yet been exercised on 262Windows as much as it has on Unix-like platforms.) 263 264If, however, F<Porting/sync-with-cpan> does not provide good results, follow 265the steps below. 266 267=over 4 268 269=item * 270 271Fetch the most recent version from CPAN. 272 273=item * 274 275Unpack the retrieved tarball. Rename the old directory; rename the new 276directory to the original name. 277 278=item * 279 280Restore any F<.gitignore> file. This can be done by issuing 281C<git checkout .gitignore> in the F<cpan/Distro> directory. 282 283=item * 284 285Remove files we do not need. That is, remove any files that match the 286entries in C<@IGNORABLE> in F<Porting/Maintainers.pl>, and anything that 287matches the C<EXCLUDED> section of the distro's entry in the C<%Modules> 288hash. 289 290=item * 291 292Restore any files mentioned in the C<CUSTOMIZED> section, using 293C<git checkout>. Make any new customizations if necessary. Also, 294restore any files that are mentioned in C<@IGNORE>, but were checked 295into the repository anyway. 296 297=item * 298 299For any new files in the distro, determine whether they are needed. 300If not, delete them, and list them in either C<EXCLUDED> or C<@IGNORABLE>. 301Otherwise, add them to C<MANIFEST>, and run C<git add> to add the files 302to the repository. 303 304=item * 305 306For any files that are gone, remove them from C<MANIFEST>, and use 307C<git rm> to tell git the files will be gone. 308 309=item * 310 311If the C<MANIFEST> file was changed in any of the previous steps, run 312C<perl Porting/manisort --output MANIFEST.sort; mv MANIFEST.sort MANIFEST>. 313 314=item * 315 316For any files that have an execute bit set, either remove the execute 317bit, or edit F<Porting/exec-bit.txt> 318 319=item * 320 321Run C<make> (or C<nmake> on Windows), see if C<perl> compiles. 322 323=item * 324 325Run the tests for the package. 326 327=item * 328 329Run the tests in F<t/porting> (C<make test_porting>). 330 331=item * 332 333Update the C<DISTRIBUTION> entry in F<Porting/Maintainers.pl>. 334 335=item * 336 337Run a full configure/build/test cycle. 338 339=item * 340 341If everything is ok, commit the changes. 342 343=back 344 345For entries with a non-simple C<FILES> section, or with a C<MAP>, you 346may have to take more steps than listed above. 347 348=head3 Ensure dual-life CPAN module stability 349 350This comes down to: 351 352 for each module that fails its regression tests on $current 353 did it fail identically on $previous? 354 if yes, "SEP" (Somebody Else's Problem, but try to make sure a 355 bug ticket is filed) 356 else work out why it failed (a bisect is useful for this) 357 358 attempt to group failure causes 359 360 for each failure cause 361 is that a regression? 362 if yes, figure out how to fix it 363 (more code? revert the code that broke it) 364 else 365 (presumably) it's relying on something un-or-under-documented 366 should the existing behaviour stay? 367 yes - goto "regression" 368 no - note it in perldelta as a significant bugfix 369 (also, try to inform the module's author) 370 371=head3 monitor smoke tests for failures 372 373Similarly, monitor the smoking of core tests, and try to fix. See 374L<https://tux.nl/perl5/smoke/index.html>, L<https://perl5.test-smoke.org/> 375and L<http://perl.develop-help.com> for a summary. See also 376L<https://www.nntp.perl.org/group/perl.daily-build.reports/> which has 377the raw reports. 378 379Similarly, monitor the smoking of perl for compiler warnings, and try to 380fix. 381 382Additionally both L<Travis CI|https://travis-ci.org/Perl/perl5> and 383L<GitHub Actions|https://github.com/Perl/perl5/actions> smokers run 384automatically. 385 386=for checklist skip BLEAD-POINT 387 388=head3 monitor CPAN testers for failures 389 390For any release except a BLEAD-POINT: Examine the relevant analysis report(s) 391at L<http://analysis.cpantesters.org/beforemaintrelease> to see how the 392impending release is performing compared to previous releases with 393regard to building and testing CPAN modules. 394 395That page accepts a query parameter, C<pair> that takes a pair of 396colon-delimited versions to use for comparison. For example: 397 398L<http://analysis.cpantesters.org/beforemaintrelease?pair=5.20.2:5.22.0%20RC1> 399 400=head3 update perldelta 401 402Get perldelta in a mostly finished state. 403 404Read F<Porting/how_to_write_a_perldelta.pod>, and try to make sure that 405every section it lists is, if necessary, populated and complete. Copy 406edit the whole document. 407 408You won't be able to automatically fill in the "Updated Modules" section until 409after Module::CoreList is updated (as described below in 410L<"update Module::CoreList">). 411 412=head3 Bump the version number 413 414Do not do this yet for a BLEAD-POINT release! You will do this at the end of 415the release process (after building the final tarball, tagging etc). 416 417Increase the version number (e.g. from 5.12.0 to 5.12.1). 418 419For a release candidate for a stable perl, this should happen a week or two 420before the first release candidate to allow sufficient time for testing and 421smoking with the target version built into the perl executable. For 422subsequent release candidates and the final release, it is not necessary to 423bump the version further. 424 425There is a tool to semi-automate this process: 426 427 $ ./perl -Ilib Porting/bump-perl-version -i 5.10.0 5.10.1 428 429Remember that this tool is largely just grepping for '5.10.0' or whatever, 430so it will generate false positives. Be careful not change text like 431"this was fixed in 5.10.0"! 432 433Use git status and git diff to select changes you want to keep. 434 435Be particularly careful with F<INSTALL>, which contains a mixture of 436C<5.10.0>-type strings, some of which need bumping on every release, and 437some of which need to be left unchanged. 438See below in L<"update INSTALL"> for more details. 439 440For the first RC release leading up to a BLEAD-FINAL release, update the 441description of which releases are now "officially" supported in 442F<pod/perlpolicy.pod>. 443 444When doing a BLEAD-POINT or BLEAD-FINAL release, also make sure the 445C<PERL_API_*> constants in F<patchlevel.h> are in sync with the version 446you're releasing, unless you're absolutely sure the release you're about to 447make is 100% binary compatible to an earlier release. Note: for BLEAD-POINT 448releases the bump should have already occurred at the end of the previous 449release and this is something you would have to do at the very end. 450When releasing a MAINT perl version, the C<PERL_API_*> constants C<MUST NOT> 451be changed as we aim to guarantee binary compatibility in maint branches. 452 453After editing, regenerate uconfig.h (this must be run on a system with a 454/bin/sh available): 455 456 $ perl regen/uconfig_h.pl 457 458This might not cause any new changes. 459 460You may also need to regen opcodes: 461 462 $ ./perl -Ilib regen/opcode.pl 463 464Test your changes: 465 466 $ git clean -xdf # careful if you don't have local files to keep! 467 $ ./Configure -des -Dusedevel 468 $ make 469 $ make test 470 471Do note that at this stage, porting tests will fail. They will continue 472to fail until you've updated Module::CoreList, as described below. 473 474Commit your changes: 475 476 $ git status 477 $ git diff 478 B<review the delta carefully> 479 480 $ git commit -a -m 'Bump the perl version in various places for 5.X.Y' 481 482At this point you may want to compare the commit with a previous bump to 483see if they look similar. See commit f7cf42bb69 for an example of a 484previous version bump. 485 486When the version number is bumped, you should also update Module::CoreList 487(as described below in L<"update Module::CoreList">) to reflect the new 488version number. 489 490=head3 update INSTALL 491 492Review and update INSTALL to account for the change in version number. 493INSTALL for a BLEAD-POINT release should already contain the expected version. 494The lines in F<INSTALL> about "is not binary compatible with" may require a 495correct choice of earlier version to declare incompatibility with. These are 496in the "Changes and Incompatibilities" and "Coexistence with earlier versions 497of perl 5" sections. 498 499Be particularly careful with the section "Upgrading from 5.X.Y or earlier". 500The "X.Y" needs to be changed to the most recent version that we are 501I<not> binary compatible with. 502 503For MAINT and BLEAD-FINAL releases, this needs to refer to the last 504release in the previous development cycle (so for example, for a 5.14.x 505release, this would be 5.13.11). 506 507For BLEAD-POINT releases, it needs to refer to the previous BLEAD-POINT 508release (so for 5.15.3 this would be 5.15.2). If the last release manager 509followed instructions, this should have already been done after the last 510blead release, so you may find nothing to do here. 511 512=head3 update AUTHORS 513 514The AUTHORS file can be updated by running F<Porting/updateAUTHORS.pl>. 515This shouldn't really be necessary anymore, and in theory nothing should 516change as our CI should not pass if a commit would result in AUTHORS 517needing to change, but do it anyway to be sure. Make sure all your changes 518are committed first. 519 520Review the changes to the AUTHORS file, be sure you are not adding duplicate 521entries or removing any entries, then commit your changes. 522 523 $ git commit -a AUTHORS -m 'Update AUTHORS list for 5.X.Y' 524 525=head3 Check copyright years 526 527Check that the copyright years are up to date by running: 528 529 $ pushd t; ../perl -I../lib porting/copyright.t --now 530 531Remedy any test failures by editing README or perl.c accordingly (search for 532the "Copyright"). If updating perl.c, check if the file's own copyright date in 533the C comment at the top needs updating, as well as the one printed by C<-v>. 534 535=head3 Check more build configurations 536 537Try running the full test suite against multiple Perl configurations. Here are 538some sets of Configure flags you can try: 539 540=over 4 541 542=item * 543 544C<-Duseshrplib -Dusesitecustomize> 545 546=item * 547 548C<-Duserelocatableinc> 549 550=item * 551 552C<-Dusethreads> 553 554=back 555 556If you have multiple compilers on your machine, you might also consider 557compiling with C<-Dcc=$other_compiler>. 558 559You can also consider pushing the repo to GitHub where Travis CI is enabled 560which would smoke different flavors of Perl for you. 561 562=head3 update perlport 563 564L<perlport> has a section currently named I<Supported Platforms> that 565indicates which platforms are known to build in the current release. 566If necessary update the list and the indicated version number. 567 568=head3 check a readonly build 569 570Even before other prep work, follow the steps in L</build the tarball> and test 571it locally. Because a perl source tarballs sets many files read-only, it could 572test differently than tests run from the repository. After you're sure 573permissions aren't a problem, delete the generated directory and tarballs. 574 575 576=head2 Building a release - on the day 577 578This section describes the actions required to make a release 579that are performed near to, or on the actual release day. 580 581=head3 re-check earlier actions 582 583Review all the actions in the previous section, 584L<"Building a release - advance actions"> to ensure they are all done and 585up-to-date. 586 587=head3 create a release branch 588 589For BLEAD-POINT releases, making a release from a release branch avoids the 590need to freeze blead during the release. This is less important for 591BLEAD-FINAL, MAINT, and RC releases, since blead will already be frozen in 592those cases. Create the branch by running 593 594 git checkout -b release-5.X.Y 595 596=head3 build a clean perl 597 598Make sure you have a gitwise-clean perl directory (no modified files, 599unpushed commits etc): 600 601 $ git status 602 $ git clean -dxf 603 604then configure and build perl so that you have a Makefile and porting tools: 605 606 $ ./Configure -Dusedevel -des && make 607 608=head3 Check module versions 609 610For each Perl release since the previous release of the current branch, check 611for modules that have identical version numbers but different contents by 612running: 613 614 $ ./perl -Ilib Porting/cmpVERSION.pl --tag=v5.X.Y 615 616(This is done automatically by F<t/porting/cmp_version.t> for the previous 617release of the current branch, but not for any releases from other branches.) 618 619Any modules that fail will need a version bump, plus a nudge to the upstream 620maintainer for 'cpan' upstream modules. 621 622=head3 update Module::CoreList 623 624=head4 Bump Module::CoreList* $VERSIONs 625 626If necessary, bump C<$VERSION> (there's no need to do this 627for every RC; in RC1, bump the version to a new clean number that will 628appear in the final release, and leave as-is for the later RCs and final). 629It may also happen that C<Module::CoreList> has been modified in blead, and 630hence has a new version number already. (But make sure it is not the same 631number as a CPAN release.) 632 633C<$Module::CoreList::Utils::VERSION> should always be equal to 634C<$Module::CoreList::VERSION>. If necessary, bump those two versions to match 635before proceeding. 636 637Once again, the files to modify are: 638 639=over 4 640 641=item * 642 643F<dist/Module-CoreList/lib/Module/CoreList.pm> 644 645=item * 646 647F<dist/Module-CoreList/lib/Module/CoreList/Utils.pm> 648 649=back 650 651=head4 Update C<Module::CoreList> with module version data for the new release. 652 653Note that if this is a MAINT release, you should run the following actions 654from the maint branch, but commit the C<CoreList.pm> changes in 655I<blead> and subsequently cherry-pick any releases since the last 656maint release and then your recent commit. XXX need a better example 657 658[ Note that the procedure for handling Module::CoreList in maint branches 659is a bit complex, and the RMG currently don't describe a full and 660workable approach. The main issue is keeping Module::CoreList 661and its version number synchronised across all maint branches, blead and 662CPAN, while having to bump its version number for every RC release. 663See this brief p5p thread: 664 665 Message-ID: <20130311174402.GZ2294@iabyn.com> 666 667If you can devise a workable system, feel free to try it out, and to 668update the RMG accordingly! 669 670DAPM May 2013 ] 671 672F<corelist.pl> uses www.cpan.org to verify information about dual-lived 673modules on CPAN. It can use a full, local CPAN mirror and/or fall back 674on HTTP::Tiny to fetch package metadata remotely. 675 676(If you'd prefer to have a full CPAN mirror, see 677L<https://www.cpan.org/misc/cpan-faq.html#How_mirror_CPAN>) 678 679Change to your perl checkout, and if necessary, 680 681 $ make 682 683Then, If you have a local CPAN mirror, run: 684 685 $ ./perl -Ilib Porting/corelist.pl ~/my-cpan-mirror 686 687Otherwise, run: 688 689 $ ./perl -Ilib Porting/corelist.pl cpan 690 691This will chug for a while, possibly reporting various warnings about 692badly-indexed CPAN modules unrelated to the modules actually in core. 693Assuming all goes well, it will update 694F<dist/Module-CoreList/lib/Module/CoreList.pm> and possibly 695F<dist/Module-CoreList/lib/Module/CoreList/Utils.pm>. 696 697Check those files over carefully: 698 699 $ git diff dist/Module-CoreList/lib/Module/CoreList.pm 700 $ git diff dist/Module-CoreList/lib/Module/CoreList/Utils.pm 701 702=head4 Bump version in Module::CoreList F<Changes> 703 704Also edit Module::CoreList's new version number in its F<Changes> file. 705This file is F<dist/Module-CoreList/Changes>. 706(BLEAD-POINT releases should have had this done already as a post-release 707action from the last commit.) 708 709=head4 Add Module::CoreList version bump to perldelta 710 711Add a perldelta entry for the new Module::CoreList version. You only 712need to do this if you want to add notes about the changes included 713with this version of Module::CoreList. Otherwise, its version bump 714will be automatically filled in below in L</finalize perldelta>. 715 716=for checklist skip RC 717 718=head4 Update C<%Module::CoreList::released> 719 720For any release except an RC: Update this version's entry in the C<%released> 721hash with today's date. 722 723=head4 Commit Module::CoreList changes 724 725Finally, commit the new version of Module::CoreList: 726(unless this is for MAINT; in which case commit it to blead first, then 727cherry-pick it back). 728 729 $ git commit -m 'Update Module::CoreList for 5.X.Y' \ 730 dist/Module-CoreList/Changes \ 731 dist/Module-CoreList/lib/Module/CoreList.pm \ 732 dist/Module-CoreList/lib/Module/CoreList/Utils.pm 733 734=head4 Rebuild and test 735 736Build and test to get the changes into the currently built lib directory and to 737ensure all tests are passing. 738 739=head3 finalize perldelta 740 741Finalize the perldelta. In particular, fill in the Acknowledgements 742section, which can be generated with something like: 743 744 $ perl Porting/acknowledgements.pl v5.LAST..HEAD 745 746Fill in the "New/Updated Modules" sections now that Module::CoreList is 747updated: 748 749 $ ./perl -Ilib Porting/corelist-perldelta.pl \ 750 --mode=update pod/perldelta.pod 751 752For a MAINT release use something like this instead: 753 754 $ ./perl -Ilib Porting/corelist-perldelta.pl 5.020001 5.020002 \ 755 --mode=update pod/perldelta.pod 756 757Ideally, also fill in a summary of the major changes to each module for which 758an entry has been added by F<corelist-perldelta.pl>. 759 760Re-read the perldelta to try to find any embarrassing typos and thinkos; 761remove any C<TODO> or C<XXX> flags; update the "Known Problems" section 762with any serious issues for which fixes are not going to happen now; and 763run through pod and spell checkers, e.g. 764 765 $ podchecker -warnings -warnings pod/perldelta.pod 766 $ spell pod/perldelta.pod 767 $ aspell list < pod/perldelta.pod | sort -u 768 769Also, you may want to generate and view an HTML version of it to check 770formatting, e.g. 771 772 $ ./perl -Ilib ext/Pod-Html/bin/pod2html pod/perldelta.pod > \ 773 ~/perldelta.html 774 775You should add pod links for GitHub issue references thusly: 776 777 $ perl -p -i -e'BEGIN{undef $/}; s{(GH\s+#)(\d+)}{L<$1$2|https://github.com/Perl/perl5/issues/$2>}mg' pod/perldelta.pod 778 779If you make changes, be sure to commit them. 780 781=for checklist skip BLEAD-POINT MAINT RC 782 783=head3 remove stale perldeltas 784 785For the first RC release that is ONLY for a BLEAD-FINAL, the perldeltas 786from the BLEAD-POINT releases since the previous BLEAD-FINAL should have 787now been consolidated into the current perldelta, and hence are now just 788useless clutter. They can be removed using: 789 790 $ git rm <file1> <file2> ... 791 792For example, for RC0 of 5.16.0: 793 794 $ cd pod 795 $ git rm perldelta515*.pod 796 797=for checklist skip BLEAD-FINAL BLEAD-POINT 798 799=head3 add recent perldeltas 800 801For the first RC for a MAINT release, copy in any recent perldeltas from 802blead that have been added since the last release on this branch. This 803should include any recent maint releases on branches older than your one, 804but not newer. For example if you're producing a 5.14.x release, copy any 805perldeltas from recent 5.10.x, 5.12.x etc maint releases, but not from 8065.16.x or higher. Remember to 807 808 $ git add <file1> <file2> ... 809 810=head3 update and commit perldelta files 811 812If you have added or removed any perldelta files via the previous two 813steps, then edit F<pod/perl.pod> to add/remove them from its table of 814contents, then run F<Porting/pod_rules.pl> to propagate your changes there 815into all the other files that mention them (including F<MANIFEST>). You'll 816need to C<git add> the files that it changes. 817 818Then build a clean perl and do a full test 819 820 $ git status 821 $ git clean -dxf 822 $ ./Configure -Dusedevel -des 823 $ make 824 $ make test 825 826Once all tests pass, commit your changes. 827 828=head3 final check of perldelta placeholders 829 830Check for any 'XXX' leftover section in the perldelta. 831Either fill them or remove these sections appropriately. 832 833 $ git grep XX pod/perldelta.pod 834 835=head3 build a clean perl 836 837If you skipped the previous step (adding/removing perldeltas), 838again, make sure you have a gitwise-clean perl directory (no modified files, 839unpushed commits etc): 840 841 $ git status 842 $ git clean -dxf 843 844then configure and build perl so that you have a Makefile and porting tools: 845 846 $ ./Configure -Dusedevel -des && make 847 848=for checklist skip BLEAD-FINAL BLEAD-POINT 849 850=head3 synchronise from blead's perlhist.pod 851 852For the first RC for a MAINT release, copy in the latest 853F<pod/perlhist.pod> from blead; this will include details of newer 854releases in all branches. In theory, blead's version should be a strict 855superset of the one in this branch, but it's probably safest to examine the 856changes first, to ensure that there's nothing in this branch that was 857forgotten from blead. An easy way to do that is with C<< git checkout -p >>, 858to selectively apply any changes from the blead version to your current 859branch: 860 861 $ git fetch origin 862 $ git checkout -p origin/blead pod/perlhist.pod 863 $ git commit -m 'Sync perlhist from blead' pod/perlhist.pod 864 865=head3 update perlhist.pod 866 867Add an entry to F<pod/perlhist.pod> with the release date, e.g.: 868 869 David 5.10.1 2009-Aug-06 870 871List yourself in the left-hand column, and if this is the first release 872that you've ever done, make sure that your name is listed in the section 873entitled C<THE KEEPERS OF THE PUMPKIN>. 874 875I<If you're making a BLEAD-FINAL release>, also update the "SELECTED 876RELEASE SIZES" section with the output of 877F<Porting/perlhist_calculate.pl>. 878 879Be sure to commit your changes: 880 881 $ git commit -m 'Add new release to perlhist' pod/perlhist.pod 882 883=for checklist skip BLEAD-POINT 884 885=head3 update patchlevel.h 886 887I<You MUST SKIP this step for a BLEAD-POINT release> 888 889Update F<patchlevel.h> to add a C<-RC1>-or-whatever string; or, if this is 890a final release, remove it. For example: 891 892 static const char * const local_patches[] = { 893 NULL 894 + ,"RC1" 895 #ifdef PERL_GIT_UNCOMMITTED_CHANGES 896 ,"uncommitted-changes" 897 #endif 898 899Be sure to commit your change: 900 901 $ git commit -m 'Bump version to RCnnn' patchlevel.h 902 903=head3 run makemeta to update META files 904 905 $ ./perl -Ilib Porting/makemeta 906 907Be sure to commit any changes (if applicable): 908 909 $ git status # any changes? 910 $ git commit -m 'Update META files' META.* 911 912=head3 build, test and check a fresh perl 913 914Build perl, then make sure it passes its own test suite, and installs: 915 916 $ git clean -xdf 917 $ ./Configure -des -Dprefix=/tmp/perl-5.X.Y-pretest 918 919 # or if it's an odd-numbered version: 920 $ ./Configure -des -Dusedevel -Dprefix=/tmp/perl-5.X.Y-pretest 921 922 $ make test install 923 924Check that the output of C</tmp/perl-5.X.Y-pretest/bin/perl -v> and 925C</tmp/perl-5.X.Y-pretest/bin/perl -V> are as expected, 926especially as regards version numbers, patch and/or RC levels, and @INC 927paths. Note that as they have been built from a git working 928directory, they will still identify themselves using git tags and 929commits. (Note that for an odd-numbered version, perl will install 930itself as C<perl5.X.Y>). C<perl -v> will identify itself as: 931 932 This is perl 5, version X, subversion Y (v5.X.Y (v5.XX.Z-NNN-gdeadbeef)) 933 934where 5.X.Z is the latest tag, NNN the number of commits since this tag, 935and C<< deadbeef >> commit of that tag. 936 937Then delete the temporary installation. 938 939=head3 create the release tag 940 941Create the I<annotated> tag identifying this release (e.g.): 942 943 $ git tag v5.11.0 -m 'First release of the v5.11 series!' 944 945It is B<VERY> important that from this point forward, you not push 946your git changes to the Perl master repository. If anything goes 947wrong before you publish your newly-created tag, you can delete 948and recreate it. Once you push your tag, we're stuck with it 949and you'll need to use a new version number for your release. 950 951Verify that your tag is annotated: 952 953 $ git show v5.X.Y 954 955The output must look similar to the following: 956 957 tag v5.X.Y 958 Tagger: Jesse Vincent <jesse@bestpractical.com> 959 Date: Fri Oct 2 16:29:56 2009 -0400 960 961=head3 build the tarball 962 963Before you run the following, you might want to install 7-Zip (the 964C<p7zip-full> package under Debian or the C<p7zip> port on MacPorts) or 965the AdvanceCOMP suite (e.g. the C<advancecomp> package under Debian, 966or the C<advancecomp> port on macports - 7-Zip on Windows is the 967same code as AdvanceCOMP, so Windows users get the smallest files 968first time). These compress about 5% smaller than gzip and bzip2. 969Over the lifetime of your distribution this will save a lot of 970people a small amount of download time and disk space, which adds 971up. 972 973In order to produce the C<xz> tarball, XZ Utils are required. The C<xz> 974utility is included with most modern UNIX-type operating systems and 975is available for Cygwin. A Windows port is available from 976L<https://tukaani.org/xz/>. 977 978B<IMPORTANT>: if you are on OS X, you must export C<COPYFILE_DISABLE=1> 979to prevent OS X resource files from being included in your tarball. After 980creating the tarball following the instructions below, inspect it to ensure 981you don't have files like F<._foobar>. 982 983Create a tarball. Use the C<-s> option to specify a suitable suffix for 984the tarball and directory name: 985 986 $ cd root/of/perl/tree 987 988 $ perl Porting/makerel -x -s RC1 # for a release candidate 989 $ perl Porting/makerel -x # for the release itself 990 991This creates the directory F<../perl-x.y.z-RC1> or similar, copies all 992the MANIFEST files into it, sets the correct permissions on them, then 993tars it up as F<../perl-x.y.z-RC1.tar.gz>. The C<-x> also produces a 994C<tar.xz> file. 995 996If you're getting your tarball suffixed with -uncommitted and you're sure 997your changes were all committed, you can override the suffix with: 998 999 $ perl Porting/makerel -x -s '' 1000 1001XXX if we go for extra tags and branches stuff, then add the extra details 1002here 1003 1004Finally, clean up the temporary directory, e.g. 1005 1006 $ rm -rf ../perl-x.y.z-RC1 1007 1008=head3 test the tarball 1009 1010Once you have a tarball it's time to test the tarball (not the repository). 1011 1012=head4 Copy the tarball to a web server 1013 1014Copy the tarballs (.gz and .xz) to a web server somewhere you have access to. 1015 1016=head4 Download the tarball to another machine and unpack it 1017 1018Download the tarball to some other machine. For a release candidate, 1019you really want to test your tarball on two or more different platforms 1020and architectures. 1021 1022=head4 Ask #p5p to test the tarball on different platforms 1023 1024Once you've verified the tarball can be downloaded and unpacked, 1025ask the #p5p IRC channel on irc.perl.org for volunteers to test the 1026tarballs on whatever platforms they can. 1027 1028If you're not confident in the tarball, you can defer this step until after 1029your own tarball testing, below. 1030 1031=head4 Check that F<Configure> works 1032 1033Check that basic configuration and tests work on each test machine: 1034 1035 $ ./Configure -des && make all minitest test 1036 1037 # Or for a development release: 1038 $ ./Configure -Dusedevel -des && make all minitest test 1039 1040=head4 Run the test harness and install 1041 1042Check that the test harness and install work on each test machine: 1043 1044 $ make distclean 1045 $ ./Configure -des -Dprefix=/install/path && \ 1046 make all test_harness install 1047 $ cd /install/path 1048 1049(Remember C<-Dusedevel> above, for a development release.) 1050 1051=head4 Check C<perl -v> and C<perl -V> 1052 1053Check that the output of C<perl -v> and C<perl -V> are as expected, 1054especially as regards version numbers, patch and/or RC levels, and @INC 1055paths. 1056 1057Note that the results may be different without a F<.git/> directory, 1058which is why you should test from the tarball. 1059 1060=head4 Run the Installation Verification Procedure utility 1061 1062 $ ./perl -Ilib ./utils/perlivp 1063 # Or, perhaps: 1064 $ ./perl5.X.Y ./utils/perlivp5.X.Y 1065 ... 1066 All tests successful. 1067 $ 1068 1069=head4 Compare the installed paths to the last release 1070 1071Compare the pathnames of all installed files with those of the previous 1072release (i.e. against the last installed tarball on this branch which you 1073have previously verified using this same procedure). In particular, look 1074for files in the wrong place, or files no longer included which should be. 1075For example, suppose the about-to-be-released version is 5.10.1 and the 1076previous is 5.10.0: 1077 1078 cd installdir-5.10.0/ 1079 find . -type f | perl -pe's/5\.10\.0/5.10.1/g' | sort > /tmp/f1 1080 cd installdir-5.10.1/ 1081 find . -type f | sort > /tmp/f2 1082 diff -u /tmp/f[12] 1083 1084=head4 Disable C<local::lib> if it's turned on 1085 1086If you're using C<local::lib>, you should reset your environment before 1087performing these actions: 1088 1089 $ unset PERL5LIB PERL_MB_OPT PERL_LOCAL_LIB_ROOT PERL_MM_OPT 1090 1091=head4 Bootstrap the CPAN client 1092 1093Bootstrap the CPAN client on the clean install: 1094 1095 $ bin/cpan 1096 1097 # Or, perhaps: 1098 $ bin/cpan5.X.Y 1099 1100=head4 Install the Inline module with CPAN and test it 1101 1102Try installing a popular CPAN module that's reasonably complex and that 1103has dependencies; for example: 1104 1105 CPAN> install Inline::C 1106 CPAN> quit 1107 1108Check that your perl can run this: 1109 1110 $ bin/perl -Ilib -lwe "use Inline C => q[int f() { return 42;}]; print f" 1111 42 1112 $ 1113 1114=head4 Make sure that perlbug works 1115 1116Test L<perlbug> with the following: 1117 1118 $ bin/perlbug 1119 ... 1120 Subject: test bug report 1121 Local perl administrator [yourself]: 1122 Editor [vi]: 1123 Module: 1124 Category [core]: 1125 Severity [low]: 1126 (edit report) 1127 Action (Send/Display/Edit/Subject/Save to File): f 1128 Name of file to save message in [perlbug.rep]: 1129 1130and carefully examine the output (in F<perlbug.rep]>), especially 1131the "Locally applied patches" section. 1132 1133=for checklist skip BLEAD-POINT 1134 1135=head3 monitor smokes 1136 1137XXX This is probably irrelevant if working on a release branch, though 1138MAINT or RC might want to push a smoke branch and wait. 1139 1140Wait for the smoke tests to catch up with the commit which this release is 1141based on (or at least the last commit of any consequence). 1142 1143Then check that the smoke tests pass (particularly on Win32). If not, go 1144back and fix things. 1145 1146Note that for I<BLEAD-POINT> releases this may not be practical. It takes a 1147long time for the smokers to catch up, especially the Win32 1148smokers. This is why we have a RC cycle for I<MAINT> and I<BLEAD-FINAL> 1149releases, but for I<BLEAD-POINT> releases sometimes the best you can do is 1150to plead with people on IRC to test stuff on their platforms, fire away, 1151and then hope for the best. 1152 1153=head3 upload to PAUSE 1154 1155Once smoking is okay, upload it to PAUSE. This is the point of no return. 1156If anything goes wrong after this point, you will need to re-prepare 1157a new release with a new minor version or RC number. 1158 1159 https://pause.perl.org/ 1160 1161(Log in, then select 'Upload a file to CPAN') 1162 1163If your workstation is not connected to a high-bandwidth, 1164high-reliability connection to the Internet, you should probably use the 1165"GET URL" feature (rather than "HTTP UPLOAD") to have PAUSE retrieve the 1166new release from wherever you put it for testers to find it. This will 1167eliminate anxious gnashing of teeth while you wait to see if your 116815 megabyte HTTP upload successfully completes across your slow, twitchy 1169cable modem. 1170 1171I<Remember>: if your upload is partially successful, you 1172may need to contact a PAUSE administrator or even bump the version of perl. 1173 1174Upload the .gz and .xz versions of the tarball. 1175 1176Note: You can also use the command-line utility to upload your tarballs, if 1177you have it configured: 1178 1179 cpan-upload perl-5.X.Y.tar.gz 1180 cpan-upload perl-5.X.Y.tar.xz 1181 1182Do not proceed any further until you are sure that your tarballs are on CPAN. 1183Check your authors directory metacpan.org to confirm that your uploads have 1184been successful. 1185 1186 https://metacpan.org/author/YOUR_PAUSE_ID/releases 1187 1188You can also check 1189 1190 https://metacpan.org/release/YOUR_PAUSE_ID/perl-5.X.Y 1191 1192which may be faster. 1193 1194=for checklist skip RC BLEAD-POINT 1195 1196=head3 wait for indexing 1197 1198I<You MUST SKIP this step for RC and BLEAD-POINT> 1199 1200Wait until you receive notification emails from the PAUSE indexer 1201confirming that your uploads have been received. IMPORTANT -- you will 1202probably get an email that indexing has failed, due to module permissions. 1203This is considered normal. 1204 1205=for checklist skip BLEAD-POINT 1206 1207=head3 disarm patchlevel.h 1208 1209I<You MUST SKIP this step for BLEAD-POINT release> 1210 1211Disarm the F<patchlevel.h> change; for example, 1212 1213 static const char * const local_patches[] = { 1214 NULL 1215 - ,"RC1" 1216 #ifdef PERL_GIT_UNCOMMITTED_CHANGES 1217 ,"uncommitted-changes" 1218 #endif 1219 1220Be sure to commit your change: 1221 1222 $ git commit -m 'Disarm RCnnn bump' patchlevel.h 1223 1224=head3 announce to p5p 1225 1226Mail perl5-porters@perl.org to announce your new release, with a quote you prepared earlier. 1227Get the SHA256 digests from the PAUSE email responses. 1228 1229Use the template at Porting/release_announcement_template.txt 1230 1231Send a carbon copy to C<noc@metacpan.org> 1232 1233If your email does not appear on the list, but does not obviously bounce 1234either, check that the email you are sending from is subscribed to the list. 1235 1236=head3 merge release branch back to blead 1237 1238Merge the (local) release branch back into master now, and delete it. 1239 1240 git checkout blead 1241 git pull 1242 git merge release-5.X.Y 1243 git push 1244 git branch -d release-5.X.Y 1245 1246Note: The merge will create a merge commit if other changes have been pushed 1247to blead while you've been working on your release branch. Do NOT rebase your 1248branch to avoid the merge commit (as you might normally do when merging a 1249small branch into blead) since doing so will invalidate the tag that you 1250created earlier. 1251 1252=head3 publish the release tag 1253 1254Now that you've shipped the new perl release to PAUSE and pushed your changes 1255to the Perl master repository, it's time to publish the tag you created 1256earlier too (e.g.): 1257 1258 $ git push origin tag v5.X.Y 1259 1260=head3 update epigraphs.pod 1261 1262Add your quote to F<Porting/epigraphs.pod> and commit it. 1263You can include the customary link to the release announcement even before your 1264message reaches the web-visible archives by looking for the X-List-Archive 1265header in your message after receiving it back via perl5-porters. 1266 1267=head3 blog about your epigraph 1268 1269If you have a blog, please consider writing an entry in your blog explaining 1270why you chose that particular quote for your epigraph. 1271 1272=head3 update the link to the latest perl on perlweb 1273 1274Submit a pull request to L<https://github.com/perlorg/perlweb>. For a dev 1275release, update the link in F<docs/dev/perl5/index.html>. For a stable 1276release, update F<docs/shared/tpl/stats.html>. 1277 1278=for checklist skip RC 1279 1280=head3 Release schedule 1281 1282I<You MUST SKIP this step for RC> 1283 1284Tick the entry for your release in F<Porting/release_schedule.pod>. 1285 1286=for checklist skip RC 1287 1288=head3 Module::CoreList nagging 1289 1290I<You MUST SKIP this step for RC> 1291 1292Remind the current maintainer of C<Module::CoreList> to push a new release 1293to CPAN. 1294 1295=for checklist skip RC 1296 1297=head3 new perldelta 1298 1299I<You MUST SKIP this step for RC> 1300 1301Create a new perldelta. 1302 1303=over 4 1304 1305=item * 1306 1307Confirm that you have a clean checkout with no local changes. 1308 1309=item * 1310 1311Run: 1312 perl Porting/new-perldelta.pl 1313 1314=item * 1315 1316Run the C<git add> commands it outputs to add new and modified files. 1317 1318=item * 1319 1320Verify that the build still works, by running C<./Configure> and 1321C<make test_porting>. (On Win32 use the appropriate make utility). 1322 1323=item * 1324 1325If F<t/porting/podcheck.t> spots errors in the new F<pod/perldelta.pod>, 1326run C<./perl -MTestInit t/porting/podcheck.t | less> for more detail. 1327Skip to the end of its test output to see the options it offers you. 1328 1329=item * 1330 1331When C<make test_porting> passes, commit the new perldelta. 1332 1333 git commit -m'New perldelta for 5.X.Y' 1334 1335=back 1336 1337At this point you may want to compare the commit with a previous bump to 1338see if they look similar. See commit ba03bc34a4 for an example of a 1339previous version bump. 1340 1341=for checklist skip MAINT RC 1342 1343=head3 bump version 1344 1345I<You MUST SKIP this step for RC and MAINT> 1346 1347If this was a BLEAD-FINAL release (i.e. the first release of a new maint 1348series, 5.x.0 where x is even), then bump the version in the blead branch 1349in git, e.g. 5.12.0 to 5.13.0. 1350 1351First, add a new feature bundle to F<regen/feature.pl>, initially by just 1352copying the exiting entry, and bump the file's $VERSION (after the __END__ 1353marker); e.g. 1354 1355 "5.14" => [qw(switch say state unicode_strings)], 1356 + "5.15" => [qw(switch say state unicode_strings)], 1357 1358Run F<regen/feature.pl> to propagate the changes to F<lib/feature.pm>. 1359 1360Then follow the section L<"Bump the version number"> to bump the version 1361in the remaining files and test and commit. 1362 1363If this was a BLEAD-POINT release, then just follow the section 1364L<"Bump the version number">. 1365 1366After bumping the version, follow the section L<"update INSTALL"> to 1367ensure all version number references are correct. 1368 1369(Note: The version is NOT bumped immediately after a MAINT release in order 1370to avoid confusion and wasted time arising from bug reports relating to 1371"intermediate versions" such as 5.20.1-and-a-bit: If the report is caused 1372by a bug that gets fixed in 5.20.2 and this intermediate version already 1373calls itself 5.20.2 then much time can be wasted in figuring out why there 1374is a failure from something that "should have been fixed". If the bump is 1375late then there is a much smaller window of time for such confusing bug 1376reports to arise. (The opposite problem -- trying to figure out why there 1377*is* a bug in something calling itself 5.20.1 when in fact the bug was 1378introduced later -- shouldn't arise for MAINT releases since they should, 1379in theory, only contain bug fixes but never regressions.)) 1380 1381=head3 clean build and test 1382 1383Run a clean build and test to make sure nothing obvious is broken. This is 1384very important, as commands run after this point must be run using the perl 1385executable built with the bumped version number. 1386 1387 $ git clean -xdf 1388 $ ./Configure -des -Dusedevel 1389 $ make 1390 $ make test 1391 1392In particular, F<Porting/perldelta_template.pod> is intentionally exempted 1393from podchecker tests, to avoid false positives about placeholder text. 1394However, once it's copied to F<pod/perldelta.pod> the contents can now 1395cause test failures. Problems should be resolved by doing one of the 1396following: 1397 1398=over 1399 1400=item 1 1401 1402Replace placeholder text with correct text. 1403 1404=item 2 1405 1406If the problem is from a broken placeholder link, you can add it to the 1407array C<@perldelta_ignore_links> in F<t/porting/podcheck.t>. Lines 1408containing such links should be marked with C<XXX> so that they get 1409cleaned up before the next release. 1410 1411=item 3 1412 1413Following the instructions output by F<t/porting/podcheck.t> on how to 1414update its exceptions database. 1415 1416=back 1417 1418=head3 push commits 1419 1420Finally, push any commits done above. 1421 1422 $ git push origin .... 1423 1424=for checklist skip BLEAD-POINT MAINT RC 1425 1426=head3 create maint branch 1427 1428I<You MUST SKIP this step for RC, BLEAD-POINT, MAINT> 1429 1430If this was a BLEAD-FINAL release (i.e. the first release of a new maint 1431series, 5.x.0 where x is even), then create a new maint branch based on 1432the commit tagged as the current release. 1433 1434Assuming you're using git 1.7.x or newer: 1435 1436 $ git checkout -b maint-5.X v5.X.0 1437 $ git push origin -u maint-5.X 1438 1439 1440=for checklist skip BLEAD-POINT MAINT RC 1441 1442=head3 make the maint branch available in the APC 1443 1444Clone the new branch into /srv/gitcommon/branches on camel so the APC will 1445receive its changes. 1446 1447 $ git clone --branch maint-5.14 /gitroot/perl.git \ 1448 ? /srv/gitcommon/branches/perl-5.14.x 1449 $ chmod -R g=u /srv/gitcommon/branches/perl-5.14.x 1450 1451And nag the sysadmins to make this directory available via rsync. 1452 1453XXX Who are the sysadmins? Contact info? 1454 1455=for checklist skip BLEAD-POINT RC 1456 1457=head3 copy perldelta.pod to blead 1458 1459I<You MUST SKIP this step for RC, BLEAD-POINT> 1460 1461Copy the perldelta.pod for this release into blead; for example: 1462 1463 $ cd ..../blead 1464 $ cp -i ../5.10.x/pod/perldelta.pod pod/perl5101delta.pod #for example 1465 $ git add pod/perl5101delta.pod 1466 1467Don't forget to set the NAME correctly in the new file (e.g. perl5101delta 1468rather than perldelta). 1469 1470Edit F<pod/perl.pod> to add an entry for the file, e.g.: 1471 1472 perl5101delta Perl changes in version 5.10.1 1473 1474Then rebuild various files: 1475 1476 $ perl Porting/pod_rules.pl 1477 1478Finally, commit and push: 1479 1480 $ git commit -a -m 'Add perlXXXdelta' 1481 $ git push origin .... 1482 1483=for checklist skip BLEAD-POINT 1484 1485=head3 copy perlhist.pod entries to blead 1486 1487Make sure any recent F<pod/perlhist.pod> entries are copied to 1488F<perlhist.pod> on blead. e.g. 1489 1490 5.8.9 2008-Dec-14 1491 1492=head3 Relax! 1493 1494I<You MUST RETIRE to your preferred PUB, CAFE or SEASIDE VILLA for some 1495much-needed rest and relaxation>. 1496 1497Thanks for releasing perl! 1498 1499=head2 Building a release - the day after 1500 1501=for checklist skip BLEAD-FINAL MAINT RC 1502 1503=head3 update Module::CoreList 1504 1505I<After a BLEAD-POINT release only> 1506 1507After Module::CoreList has shipped to CPAN by the maintainer, update 1508Module::CoreList in the source so that it reflects the new blead 1509version number: 1510 1511=over 4 1512 1513=item * 1514 1515Update F<Porting/Maintainers.pl> to list the new DISTRIBUTION on CPAN, 1516which should be identical to what is currently in blead. 1517 1518=item * 1519 1520Bump the $VERSION in F<dist/Module-CoreList/lib/Module/CoreList.pm> 1521and F<dist/Module-CoreList/lib/Module/CoreList/Utils.pm>. 1522 1523=item * 1524 1525If you have a local CPAN mirror, run: 1526 1527 $ ./perl -Ilib Porting/corelist.pl ~/my-cpan-mirror 1528 1529Otherwise, run: 1530 1531 $ ./perl -Ilib Porting/corelist.pl cpan 1532 1533This will update F<dist/Module-CoreList/lib/Module/CoreList.pm> and 1534F<dist/Module-CoreList/lib/Module/CoreList/Utils.pm> as it did before, 1535but this time adding new sections for the next BLEAD-POINT release. 1536 1537=item * 1538 1539Add the new $Module::CoreList::VERSION to 1540F<dist/Module-CoreList/Changes>. 1541 1542=item * 1543 1544Remake perl to get your changed .pm files propagated into F<lib/> and 1545then run at least the F<dist/Module-CoreList/t/*.t> tests and the 1546test_porting makefile target to check that they're ok. 1547 1548 $ cd t; ./TEST ../dist/Module-CoreList/t/*.t 1549 $ make test_porting 1550 1551=item * 1552 1553Run 1554 1555 $ ./perl -Ilib -MModule::CoreList \ 1556 -le 'print Module::CoreList->find_version($]) ? "ok" : "not ok"' 1557 1558and check that it outputs "ok" to prove that Module::CoreList now knows 1559about blead's current version. 1560 1561=item * 1562 1563Commit and push your changes. 1564 1565 $ git add -u 1566 $ git commit -m "Prepare Module::Corelist for 5.X.Y" 1567 $ git push origin 1568 1569=back 1570 1571=head3 check tarball availability 1572 1573Check various website entries to make sure the that tarball has appeared 1574and is properly indexed: 1575 1576=over 4 1577 1578=item * 1579 1580Check your author directory under L<https://www.cpan.org/authors/id/> 1581to ensure that the tarballs are available on the website. 1582 1583=item * 1584 1585Check F</src> on CPAN (on a fast mirror) to ensure that links to 1586the new tarballs have appeared: There should be links in F</src/5.0> 1587(which is accumulating all new versions), and (for BLEAD-FINAL and 1588MAINT only) an appropriate mention in F</src/README.html> (which describes 1589the latest versions in each stable branch, with links). 1590 1591The F</src/5.0> links should appear automatically, some hours after upload. 1592If they don't, or the F</src> description is inadequate, 1593ask Ask <ask@perl.org>. 1594 1595=item * 1596 1597Check L<https://www.cpan.org/src/> to ensure that the F</src> updates 1598have been correctly mirrored to the website. 1599If they haven't, ask Ask <ask@perl.org>. 1600 1601=item * 1602 1603Check L<https://metacpan.org> to see if it has indexed the distribution. 1604It should be visible at a URL like C<https://metacpan.org/release/DAPM/perl-5.10.1>. 1605 1606=back 1607 1608=head3 update release manager's guide 1609 1610Go over your notes from the release (you did take some, right?) and update 1611F<Porting/release_managers_guide.pod> with any fixes or information that 1612will make life easier for the next release manager. 1613 1614=head3 For a BLEAD-POINT .0 release 1615 1616This is the time for the project to decide the fate and begin to 1617implement the required changes for experimental/deprecated features and 1618API elements for the next BLEAD-FINAL, a year away. 1619 1620Fortunately your job is not to do this yourself, but merely to remind 1621people that this needs to get done. Send email to 1622L<p5p|mailto:perl5-porters@perl.org>. All of L<perlexperiment>, 1623L<perldeprecation>, F<mathoms.c>, L<perlapi>, and L<perlintern> need to 1624be considered. 1625 1626=for checklist end 1627 1628=head1 SOURCE 1629 1630Based on 1631L<http://www.xray.mpe.mpg.de/mailing-lists/perl5-porters/2009-05/msg00608.html>, 1632plus a whole bunch of other sources, including private correspondence. 1633 1634=cut 1635