# Maintainers' Guide ## PR Merge Checklist * All the CI tests pass * New tests are added where applicable * Benchmarks are added where applicable * Run benchmarks locally if you suspect any regressions * Documentation is added for any new combinators * New combinators have time and space complexity annotations * New combinators have `since` annotation * Changelog entry is added for exposed combinators. * Optionally, look at hlint output if anything in that is worth fixing. * Merge the PR by rebasing. Note that github always creates new commits when merged with rebase, it records the committer as well as the author in the commit. This makes the local branch diverge from master. You can rebase and merge the commit manually in your local git tree and push the resulting master branch to avoid new commits and divergence from the original tree. ## Release Checklist * Check if any critical pending bugs or issues are to be included * If this is a major release check if any previously deprecated features are to be removed in this release. * _Documentation_: * README is updated * Haddock docs are consistent with the changes in the release * Tutorial has been updated for new changes * Documents in the `docs` directory are consistent with new changes * All combinators have time and space complexity annotations * All combinators have `since` annotation * _Benchmarks_: * Check regressions from previous release * Run benchmarks with large stream size (`bench.sh -- long`) to check for space leaks and to ensure constant memory usage for streaming operations. * Run benchmarks with `dev` flag on. Some `fileio` benchmarks are disabled in regular runs. * Check comparative benchmarks using streaming-benchmarks * _Tests_: * Run tests with `dev` flag on. Many tests are disabled in regular runs. * _Update Package Metadata:_ * Update `stack.yaml` to latest stable resolver, cleanup extra-deps * Make sure the description in cabal file is in sync with README and other docs * Make sure CI configs include last three major releases of GHC in CI testing. * Update `tested-with` field * Make sure all dependency bounds can use latest versions * Make sure any additional files are added to `extra-source-files` in cabal file * Copyrights and Contibutors * Make sure contributors to the release are listed in `credits/CONTRIBUTORS.md`. * Bump the release version in `credits/CONTRIBUTORS.md`. * Make sure any third party code included in the release has been listed in `credits/COPYRIGHTS.md` and the license is added to the repo. * Change the `Unreleased` section, if exists, at the top of `credits/COPYRIGHTS.md` to the new release version number. * _Update changelog & Version_: * Make sure all the bug fixes being included in this release are marked with a target release on github. So that users can search by release if they want. * Change the `Unreleased` section at the top of changelog file to the new release version number. * Bump the package version in cabal file or package.yaml * Bump the package version in configure.ac and run autoreconf * _Upload_: * Wait for final CI tests to pass: * Create a git tag corresponding to the release where X.Y.Z is the new package version (`git tag vX.Y.Z && git push -f origin vX.Y.Z`). * Mask out the build status lines from the README * Upload to hackage * Use a clean workspace to create source distribution by freshly cloning the git repository. The reason for doing this is that we use wild-cards in cabal file for `extra-source-files`, these wild-cards may match additional files lying around in the workspace and unintentionally ship them as well. * `cabal v2-sdist`; `cabal upload --publish ` * `stack upload .` * Add to stackage (`build-constraints.yaml` in Stackage repo) if needed * Optionally upload `package-X.Y.Z-sdist.tar.gz` to github release page * Update release contributors on github release page (`git shortlog -s prev_tag..new_tag | sed $'s/^[0-9 \t]*/* /' | sort -f`) * Update and if needed release streaming-benchmarks package * Check https://matrix.hackage.haskell.org/package/streamly * Check haddocks on Hackage, upload if not built * Announce to haskell-cafe@haskell.org ## Managing Issues ### User Impacting Changes __RULE__: Any commit that may affect the end user in some way MUST have either a changelog entry OR MUST have an issue marked with one of the following labels OR both. We can have more than one of these labels on the same issue e.g. breaking, enhancement: * breaking * deprecating * enhancement * performance * usability * documentation * bug Note that if you are making a big feature change you may have a single issue for that feature and attach many commits with it. So you do not necessarily need to have an issue for each commit. ### Maintenance Changes Commits that do not impact the end user in any way are not required to have a changelog entry or an issue. Issues that do not have a corresponding commit may be left without a label but preferably should be marked with one of the following: * question * discussion * maintenance * testing * invalid * wontfix ### Feature Labels For big features with many issues we can introduce a custom feature label to group the issues together. ### Other Labels * help wanted * duplicate * deferred ## Correlating Changes, Issues and Releases For planning purposes, open issues may be marked with milestones or target releases. However, it may not always be known which release a fix will finally land in. For example, we may decide to make a minor release instead of a major one if there are no breaking changes yet, so we may not always know what would be the next release version. Trackability means that we should be able to find which issues got fixed in which release. Or what all issues got fixed in a particular release. We track significant changes using the changelog. However, there may be more changes that can only be tracked via issues, PRs or commits. When we make a release we can mark all the issues fixed in that release with a correct release target for future trackability. For better trackability of which issue got fixed in which release we need the following: * Before you close an issue make sure a commit or a PR fixing the issue is attached with it. In the commit message you can reference an issue like "fixes #50", you can do the same in a PR as well. * Before we make a new release EVERY issue with a commit included in that release that affects the end user, especially bugs and breaking changes MUST have the target release correctly set. ## Changelog Management Keep the unreleased changes in the `Unreleased` section at the top of changelog file. Using `Unreleased` instead of the next release number for unreleased changes is important. First, we do not know the next release number in advance, it could be a major or minor release. Second, if we use the next release number instead, then when adding a new change to the changelog, at one look we cannot know whether the release number on top is unreleased or released. ## TODO * GPG signed releases and tags