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CHECKLST.txt
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CHECKLST.txt
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Checklists for PuTTY administrative procedures
==============================================
Going into pre-release stabilisation
------------------------------------
When we begin to work towards a release and want to enable
pre-releases on the website:
- Make a branch whose tip will be the current state of the
pre-release. Regardless of whether the branch is from main or
from a prior release branch, the name of the branch must now be in
the form 'pre-X.YZ', or else the website will fail to link to it
properly in gitweb and the build script will check out the wrong
thing.
- Edit ~/adm/puttysnap.sh on my build machine to set $prerelver correctly.
- Edit ~/adm/puttysnap.sh on the master machine to enable pre-release
builds, by changing the 'if false' to 'if true'.
- Wait for a nightly build to run, so that the first pre-release
snapshot actually exists.
- Put the website into pre-release mode, by defining prerel_version()
in components/Base.mc to return the upcoming version number. Also
add a news announcement in components/news. (Previous naming
convention has been to name it in the form 'X.YZ-pre.mi'.)
- Optionally: write an announcement email for the availability of
pre-releases, and send it out to <putty-announce@lists.tartarus.org>.
Things to do during the branch-stabilisation period:
- Go through the source (including the documentation), and the
website, and review anything tagged with a comment containing the
word XXX-REVIEW-BEFORE-RELEASE. (Any such comments should state
clearly what needs to be done.)
- Test the Unix build with Address Sanitiser. In particular, any
headline features for the release should get a workout with memory
checking enabled!
- Test the Windows build with Address Sanitiser too (as of VS 2022).
+ In the course of that, give a recent Windows pterm a try, to
make sure that still works.
- Test building and running on old platforms:
+ build on Debian stretch (containing CMake 3.7, the earliest
CMake we claim support for)
+ build with all three major versions of GTK
+ build the old-Windows binaries and test-run them on Win95 (PuTTY
proper even without WinSock2)
- Check Coverity is happy.
- Check the side-channel tester is happy.
- Check all the non-SSH network backends still basically work.
Making a release candidate build
--------------------------------
- Make a directory to hold all the release paraphernalia. I usually
call it ~/src/putty/X.YZ (where X.YZ will stand throughout for the
version number).
- Inside that directory, clone the PuTTY git repository to a
subdirectory ~/src/putty/X.YZ/putty. Here you can make release-
related commits and tags tentatively, and keep them out of the way
of any 'git push' you might still be doing in other checkouts.
- Double-check that we have removed anything tagged with a comment
containing the words XXX-REMOVE-BEFORE-RELEASE or
XXX-REVIEW-BEFORE-RELEASE. ('git grep XXX-RE' should only show up
hits in this file itself.)
- Now update the version numbers and the transcripts in the docs, by
checking out the release branch in the release-specific checkout
and running
./release.pl --version=X.YZ --setver
Then check that the resulting automated git commit has updated the
version number in the following places:
* putty/LATEST.VER
* putty/doc/plink.but
* putty/doc/pscp.but
and also check that it has reset the definition of 'Epoch' in
Buildscr.
- Make the release tag, pointing at the version-update commit we just
generated.
- Make a release-candidate build from the release tag, and put the
build.out and build.log files somewhere safe. Normally I store
these inside the ~/src/putty/X.YZ directory, alongside the git
checkout at ~/src/putty/X.YZ/putty, so I'll sit in that checkout
directory and run a command like
bob -o ../build-X.YZ-rcN.out -l ../build-X.YZ-rcN.log -c X.YZ . RELEASE=X.YZ
This should generate a basically valid release directory as
`build-X.YZ-rcN.out/putty', and provide link maps and sign.sh
alongside that.
- Double-check in build-X.YZ-rcN.log that the release was built from
the right git commit.
- Make a preliminary gpg signature, but don't run the full release-
signing procedure. (We use the presence of a full set of GPG
signatures to distinguish _abandoned_ release candidates from the
one that ended up being the release.) In the 'build.X.YZ-rcN.out'
directory, run
sh sign.sh -r -p putty
which will generate a clearsigned file called
sha512sums-preliminary.gpg _outside_ the 'putty' subdirectory.
- For my own safety, make the release candidate build read-only.
chmod -R a-w build-X.YZ-rcN.{out,log}
- Now do some checking of the release binaries, and pass them to the
rest of the team to do some as well. Do at least these things:
* make sure they basically work
* check they report the right version number
* if there's any easily observable behaviour difference between
the release branch and main, arrange to observe it
* test that the Windows installer installs successfully
+ on x86 and Arm, and test that putty.exe runs in both cases
* test that the Unix source tarball unpacks and builds
+ on at least a reasonably current stable Linux distro, and
also try Debian sid
+ test-build with all of GTK 1, 2 and 3
+ test-build with -DNOT_X_WINDOWS
* test that the Windows source builds with Visual Studio (just in
case there's an unguarded clangism that would prevent it)
* quick check of the outlying network protocols (Telnet, SUPDUP
etc)
* feed the release-candidate source to Coverity and make sure it
didn't turn up any last-minute problems
* make sure we have a clean run of testsc
* do some testing on a system with a completely clean slate (no
prior saved session data)
Preparing to make the release
-----------------------------
- Write a release announcement (basically a summary of the changes
since the last release). Check the draft version into the putty-aux
repository, so the whole team can help wordsmith it if they want to.
- Update the website, in a local checkout:
* Write a release file in components/releases which identifies the
new version, a section for the Changes page, and a news
announcement for the front page.
+ The one thing this can't yet contain is the release date;
that has to be put in at the last minute, when the release
goes live. Fill in 'FIXME', for the moment.
* Disable the pre-release sections of the website (if previously
enabled), by editing prerel_version() in components/Base.mc to
return undef.
- Prepare some 'what's new in this release' blurb for the Windows
Store. This should be very brief - even briefer than the website
news item. Keep it to a couple of sentences in a single paragraph,
templated along the lines of 'X.YZ adds support for this, that and
the other, and fixes bugs including this and that', or 'X.YZ is a
bug-fix release, mostly in the area of Foo, with one important fix
to Bar'.
* Might as well check this into putty-aux too.
- Update the wishlist, in a local checkout:
* If there are any last-minute wishlist entries (e.g. security
vulnerabilities fixed in the new release), write entries for
them.
* If any other bug fixes have been cherry-picked to the release
branch (so that the wishlist mechanism can't automatically mark
them as fixed in the new release), add appropriate Fixed-in
headers for those.
- Sign the release in full. In the `build-X.YZ-rcN.out' directory,
re-verify that the preliminary signed checksums file has a correct
signature on it and also matches the files you're about to sign for real:
gpg -d sha512sums-preliminary.gpg | (cd putty; grep -vF ' (installer version)' | grep . | sha512sum -c)
If the combined output of that pipeline reports both a good
signature (from the release key) and a successful verification of
all the sha512sums, then all is well and you can do the full
signing (not forgetting that the directory will have been readonly
during the last-minute testing period):
chmod -R u+w putty
sh sign.sh -r putty # and enter the release key passphrase
chmod -R a-w putty
The actual release procedure
----------------------------
Once all the above preparation is done and the release has been built
locally, this is the procedure for putting it up on the web.
- Make a final adjustment to your local website changes, filling in
the release date in components/releases/X.YZ.mi.
- Upload the release itself and its link maps to everywhere it needs
to be, by running this in the build-X.YZ-rcN.out directory:
../putty/release.pl --version=X.YZ --upload
- Check that downloads via version-numbered URLs all work:
../putty/release.pl --version=X.YZ --precheck
- Switch the 'latest' links over to the new release:
* Update the HTTP redirect at the:www/putty/htaccess .
- Now verify that downloads via the 'latest' URLs are all redirected
correctly and work:
../putty/release.pl --version=X.YZ --postcheck
- If the release is on a branch (which I expect it generally will
be), merge that branch to main, so that the 'update version number'
change appears on main and the snapshots start announcing
themselves as post-X.YZ.
- Push all the git repositories:
* run 'git push' in the website checkout
* run 'git push' in the wishlist checkout
* push from the main PuTTY checkout. Typically this one will be
pushing both the release tag and the merge we just made to the
main branch, plus removing the pre-release branch, so you'll
want some
commands along these lines:
git push origin main # update the main branch
git push origin --tags # should push the new release tag
git push origin :pre-X.YZ # delete the pre-release branch
- Run ~/adm/puttyweb.sh on thyestes to update the website after all
those git pushes.
- Check that the unpublished website on thyestes looks sensible.
- Run webupdate, so that all the changes on thyestes propagate to
chiark. Important to do this _before_ announcing that the release
is available.
- After running webupdate, run update-rsync on chiark and verify that
the rsync mirror package (~/ftp/putty-website-mirror) contains a
subdirectory for the new version and that the links from its
latest.html point into that subdirectory.
- Start the process of updating our Windows Store entry:
+ log into partner.microsoft.com and go to Partner Center
+ start editing the existing app submission, which should
automatically create a new submission
* provide a new set of installer URLs, then click "save all"
which actually uploads them
+ be careful to use URLs without "latest" in the pathname!
Just copying from the links on the download page is wrong.
Change "latest" to the version number, and test-download
via those URLs to check you didn't make a typo.
* change the "what's new in this release" text in the store
listing
* upload revised screenshots, if necessary
* update the URL in the "Applicable license terms" box
+ press Publish or Submit (or whatever the button is called this
time) to submit that to the actual upload process
- Announce the release!
+ Construct a release announcement email whose message body is the
announcement written above, and which includes the following
headers:
* Reply-To: <putty@projects.tartarus.org>
* Subject: PuTTY X.YZ is released
+ Mail that release announcement to
<putty-announce@lists.tartarus.org>.
+ Post it to comp.security.ssh.
+ Mention it in <TDHTT> on mono.
- Edit the master ~/adm/puttysnap.sh to disable pre-release builds,
if they were previously enabled.
- Relax (slightly).