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308 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
308 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
# Maintainers' Guide
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## Branch organization
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The essence of this branching scheme is that you create "release branches" of
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independently releasable units of work. These can then be released by their
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maintainers when ready.
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### Master branch
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Master is what's released on the network. Deployment instructions are in the
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next section, but tagged releases should always come from this branch.
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### Feature branches
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Anyone can create feature branches. For those with commit access to
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urbit/urbit, you're welcome to create them in this repo; otherwise, fork the
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repo and create them there.
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Usually, new development should start from master, but if your work depends on
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work in another feature branch or release branch, start from there.
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If, after starting your work, you need changes that are in master, merge it into
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your branch. If you need changes that are in a release branch or feature
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branch, merge it into your branch, but understand that your work now depends on
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that release branch, which means it won't be released until that one is
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released.
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### Release branches
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Release branches are code that is ready to release. All release branch names
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should start with `release/`.
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All code must be reviewed before being pushed to a release branch. Thus,
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feature branches should be PR'd against a release branch, not master.
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Create new release branches as needed. You don't need a new one for every PR,
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since many changes are relatively small and can be merged together with little
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risk. However, once you merge two branches, they're now coupled and will only
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be released together -- unless one of the underlying commits is separately put
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on a release branch.
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Here's a worked example. The rule is to make however many branches are useful,
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and no more. This example is not prescriptive, the developers making the
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changes may add, remove, or rename branches in this flow at will.
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Suppose you (plural, the dev community at large) complete some work in a
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userspace app, and you put it in `release/next-userspace`. Separately, you make
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a small JS change. If you PR it to `release/next-userspace`, then it will only
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be released at the same time as the app changes. Maybe this is fine, or maybe
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you want this change to go out quickly, and the change in
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`release/next-userspace` is relatively risky, so you don't want to push it out
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on Friday afternoon. In this case, put the change in another release branch,
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say `release/next-js`. Now either can be released independently.
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Suppose you do further work that you want to PR to `release/next-userspace`, but
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it depends on your fixes in `release/next-js`. Simply merge `release/next-js`
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into either your feature branch or `release/next-userspace` and PR your finished
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work to `release/next-userspace`. Now there is a one-way coupling:
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`release/next-userspace` contains `release/next-js`, so releasing it will
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implicitly release `release/next-js`. However, you can still release
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`release/next-js` independently.
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This scheme extends to other branches, like `release/next-kernel` or
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`release/os1.1` or `release/ford-fusion`. Some branches may be long-lived and
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represent simply the "next" release of something, while others will have a
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definite lifetime that corresponds to development of a particular feature or
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numbered release.
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Since they are "done", release branches should be considered "public", in the
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sense that others may depend on them at will. Thus, never rebase a release
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branch.
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When cutting a new release, you can filter branches with `git branch --list
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'release/*'` or by typing "release/" in the branch filter on Github. This will
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give you the list of branches which have passed review and may be merged to
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master and released. When choosing which branches to release, make sure you
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understand the risks of releasing them immediately. If merging these produces
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nontrivial conflicts, consider asking the developers on those branches to merge
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between themselves. In many cases a developer can do this directly, but if it's
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sufficiently nontrivial, this may be a reviewed PR of one release branch into
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another.
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### Non-OTAable release branches
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In some cases, work is completed which cannot be OTA'd as written. For example,
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the code may lack state adapters, or it may not properly handle outstanding
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subscriptions. It could also be code which is planned to be released only upon
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a breach (network-wide or rolling).
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In this case, the code may be PR'd to a `na-release/` branch. All rules are the
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same as for release branches, except that the code does not need to apply
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cleanly to an existing ship. If you later write state adapter or otherwise make
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it OTAable, then you may PR it to a release branch.
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### Other cases
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Outside contributors can generally target their PRs against master unless
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specifically instructed. Maintainers should retarget those branches as
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appropriate.
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If a commit is not something that goes into a release (eg changes to README or
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CI), it may be committed straight to master.
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If a hotfix is urgent, it may be PR'd straight to master. This should only be
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done if you reasonably expect that it will be released soon and before anything
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else is released.
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If a series of commits that you want to release is on a release branch, but you
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really don't want to release the whole branch, you must cherry-pick them onto
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another release branch. Cherry-picking isn't ideal because those commits will
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be duplicated in the history, but it won't have any serious side effects.
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## Hotfixes
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Here lies an informal guide for making hotfix releases and deploying them to
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the network.
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Take [this PR][1], as an example. This constituted a great hotfix. It's a
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single commit, targeting a problem that existed on the network at the time.
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Here's how it should be released and deployed OTA.
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[1]: https://github.com/urbit/urbit/pull/2025
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### If the thing is acceptable to merge, merge it to master
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Unless it's very trivial, it should probably have a single "credible looking"
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review from somebody else on it.
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You should avoid merging the PR in GitHub directly. Instead, use the
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`sh/merge-with-custom-msg` script -- it will produce a merge commit with
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message along the lines of:
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```
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Merge branch FOO (#PR_NUM)
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* FOO:
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bar: ...
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baz: ...
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Signed-off-by: SIGNER <signer@example.com>
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```
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We do this as it's nice to have the commit log information in the merge commit,
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which GitHub's "Merge PR" button doesn't do (at least by default).
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`sh/merge-with-custom-msg` performs some useful last-minute urbit-specific
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checks, as well.
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You might want to alias `sh/merge-with-custom-msg` locally, to make it easier
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to use. My .git/config contains the following, for example:
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```
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[alias]
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mu = !sh/merge-with-custom-msg
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```
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so that I can type e.g. `git mu origin/foo 1337`.
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### Prepare a release commit
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If you're making a Vere release, just play it safe and update all the pills.
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For an Urbit OS release, after all the merge commits, make a release with the
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commit message "release: urbit-os-v1.0.xx". This commit should have up-to-date
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artifacts from pkg/interface and a new solid pill. If neither the pill nor the
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JS need to be updated (e.g if the pill was already updated in the previous merge
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commit), consider making the release commit with --allow-empty.
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If anything in `pkg/interface` has changed, ensure it has been built and
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deployed properly. You'll want to do this before making a pill, since you want
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the pill to have the new files/hash. For most things, it is sufficient to run
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`npm install; npm run build:prod` in `pkg/interface`.
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However, if you've made a change to Landscape's JS, then you will need to build
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a "glob" and upload it to bootstrap.urbit.org. To do this, run `npm install;
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npm run build:prod` in `pkg/interface`, and add the resulting
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`pkg/arvo/app/landscape/index.[hash].js` to a fakezod at that path (or just create a
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new fakezod with `urbit -F zod -B bin/solid.pill -A pkg/arvo`). Run
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`:glob|make`, and this will output a file in `fakezod/.urb/put/glob-0vXXX.glob`.
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Upload this file to bootstrap.urbit.org, and modify `+hash` at the top of
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`pkg/arvo/app/glob.hoon` to match the hash in the filename of the `.glob` file.
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Amend `pkg/arvo/app/landscape/index.html` to import the hashed JS bundle, instead
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of the unversioned index.js. Do not commit the produced `index.js` and
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make sure it doesn't end up in your pills (they should be less than 10MB each).
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### Tag the resulting commit
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What you should do here depends on the type of release being made.
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First, for Urbit OS releases:
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If it's a very trivial hotfix that you know isn't going to break
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anything, tag it as `urbit-os-vx.y.z`. Here 'x' refers to the product version
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(e.g. OS1, OS2..), 'y' to the continuity era in that version, and 'z' to an
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OTA patch counter. So for a hotfix version, you'll just want to increment 'z'.
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Use an annotated tag, i.e.
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```
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git tag -a urbit-os-vx.y.z
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```
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The tag format should look something like this:
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```
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urbit-os-vx.y.z
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This release will be pushed to the network as an over-the-air update.
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Release notes:
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[..]
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Contributions:
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[..]
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```
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You can get the "contributions" section by the shortlog between the
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last release and this release:
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```
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git shortlog LAST_RELEASE..
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```
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I originally tried to curate this list somewhat, but now just paste it
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verbatim. If it's too noisy, yell at your colleagues to improve their commit
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messages.
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Try to include a high-level summary of the changes in the "release notes"
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section. You should be able to do this by simply looking at the git log and
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skimming the commit descriptions (or perhaps copying some of them in verbatim).
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If the commit descriptions are too poor to easily do this, then again, yell at
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your fellow contributors to make them better in the future.
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If it's *not* a trivial hotfix, you should probably make any number of release
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candidate tags (e.g. `urbit-os-vx.y.z.rc1`, `urbit-os-vx.y.z.rc2`, ..), test
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them, and after you confirm one of them is good, tag the release as
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`urbit-os-vx.y.z`.
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For Vere releases:
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Tag the release as `urbit-vx.y.z`. The tag format should look something like
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this:
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```
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urbit-vx.y.z
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Note that this Vere release will by default boot fresh ships using an Urbit OS
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va.b.c pill.
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Release binaries:
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(linux64)
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https://bootstrap.urbit.org/urbit-vx.y.z-linux64.tgz
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(macOS)
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https://bootstrap.urbit.org/urbit-vx.y.z-darwin.tgz
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Release notes:
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[..]
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Contributions:
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[..]
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```
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The same schpeel re: release candidates applies here.
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Note that the release notes indicate which version of Urbit OS the Vere release
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will use by default when booting fresh ships. Do not include implicit Urbit OS
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changes in Vere releases; this used to be done, historically, but shouldn't be
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any longer. If there are Urbit OS and Vere changes to be released, make two
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separate releases.
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### Deploy the update
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(**Note**: the following steps are automated by some other Tlon-internal
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tooling. Just ask `~nidsut-tomdun` for details.)
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For Urbit OS updates, this means copying the files into ~zod's %home desk. The
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changes should be merged into /~zod/kids and then propagated through other galaxies
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and stars to the rest of the network.
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For consistency, I create a release tarball and then rsync the files in.
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```
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$ wget https://github.com/urbit/urbit/archive/urbit-os-vx.y.z.tar.gz
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$ tar xzf urbit-os-vx.y.z.tar.gz
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$ herb zod -p hood -d "+hood/mount /=home="
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$ rsync -zr --delete urbit-urbit-os-vx.y.z/pkg/arvo/ zod/home
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$ herb zod -p hood -d "+hood/commit %home"
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$ herb zod -p hood -d "+hood/merge %kids our %home"
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```
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For Vere updates, this means simply shutting down each desired ship, installing
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the new binary, and restarting the pier with it.
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### Announce the update
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Post an announcement to urbit-dev. The tag annotation, basically, is fine here
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-- I usually add the %base hash (for Urbit OS releases) and the release binary
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URLs (for Vere releases). Check the urbit-dev archives for examples of these
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announcements.
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