Release Process - spacetelescope/stdatamodels GitHub Wiki
This guide assumes that you have cloned stdatamodels, and added a remote named upstream pointing to the central repository:
git remote add upstream https://github.com/spacetelescope/stdatamodels.git
1. Update metadata in the main / master branch
These steps should be undertaken on the main / master branch:
-
Run
towncrier buildwith the desired release version, to build the next changelog entry inCHANGES.rstfrom fragments in thechanges/directory:pip install towncrier towncrier build --version 0.16.0 -
Commit your changes and push to
main/masteronspacetelescope/stdatamodels.
2. Create or update the release branch
If you're making a major or minor version release, then the release branch will not yet exist. If you're releasing a patch version, then a release branch will already exist. Select one of the next two sections accordingly.
New major / minor version
-
Fetch and checkout the upstream
main/master:git fetch --all --tags git checkout -t upstream/master -
Inspect the log to ensure that no commits have snuck in since your changelog updates:
git log -
Create a new release branch. The name of the release branch should share the major and minor version of your release version, but the patch version should be
x. For example, when releasing1.8.0, name the branchrelease/1.8.x.
git checkout -b release/a.b.x
-
Push the branch to the upstream remote:
git push -u upstream HEAD -
GitHub actions should notice the new branch and run the tests. Wait until the job completes before proceeding.
Patch release of an existing major / minor version
In the case of a patch release, the release branch will already exist.
-
Checkout and freshen release branch (this assumes that your local branch is already tracking
upstream/release/a.b.x):git checkout release/a.b.x git pull -
Cherry-pick relevant commits from
main/masterthat should be included in the patch release (including the new changelog commit):git cherry-pick ... -
Push updates to the upstream remote:
git push upstream HEAD
3. Review the release branch's latest automated test run
The creation or update of the release branch should have triggered a CI job on GitHub actions. Find the latest build on the release branch in the Actions tab:
https://github.com/spacetelescope/stdatamodels/actions/workflows/ci.yml
4. Run tests on downstream packages against the desired release commit
Once the release branch is situated, it's a good idea to confirm that our release candidate doesn't break the following test suites:
jwstregression tests (add a PEP508 string to thepipdependencies input field that points to the release commit, e.g.git+https://github.com/spacetelescope/stdatamodels.git@fbd97cc)
5. Tag the desired release commit with the release version
At this point, you should have the release branch checked out and ready to tag.
-
Create an annotated tag with a name that matches your intended release:
git tag -a a.b.c -m "a.b.c on release/a.b.x" -
Push the new tag to the upstream remote:
git push upstream a.b.c
6. Maintain the stable branch (if necessary)
The stable branch points to the latest official release of stdatamodels. If the current release has become the latest, then the next step is to rewrite the stable branch to point our new tag.
git checkout stable
git reset --hard a.b.c
git push upstream stable --force
7. Make a GitHub release and publish the package to PyPI
Create a new GitHub release
-
Visit the
spacetelescope/stdatamodelsrepository's releases page. -
Click Draft a new release.
-
Select the existing tag that you just created and pushed, and title the release the same as the tag (i.e.,
a.b.c). -
Publishthe release.
Validate that the package did publish to PyPI
Publishing the GitHub release should trigger an automated workflow that should build the wheel and source distribution and publish the package to PyPI.
After this workflow completes, you can confirm that the new release appears on PyPI: https://pypi.org/project/stdatamodels/#history
Additionally, you can test installing the new version with pip:
pip install stdatamodels==a.b.c
8. Prepare main / master for further development
-
Make sure
CHANGES.rsthas a section for the next release. -
If the commit with the release tag is not on
main/master, you should tag the next commit onmain/masterwith a development tag (i.e. if we just released version1.2.1onrelease/1.2.x, the development tag should be1.2.1.devon themain/mastercommit directly after the divergence). This allowssetuptools-scmto show the correct version when installing the package locally (pip install .).git fetch upstream git checkout upstream/master git tag -a a.b.d.dev -m "development tag after divergence" git push upstream a.b.d.dev