Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view RELEASE.txt @ 5132:0142b4fb5a2d
issue2550648 - partial fix for problem in this issue. Ezio Melotti
reported that the expression editor allowed the user to generate an
expression using retired values. To align the expression editor with
the simple dropdown search item, retired values are now removed from
the expression editor.
Do we really want this though? Supposed a keyword is retired and I
want to search for an issue with that retired keyword? Do we have a
best policy document that says to remove retired keywords from all
places it could possibly be used? It could be argued that the simple
search dropdown is wrong and should allow selecting retired values.
| author | John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Fri, 08 Jul 2016 19:31:02 -0400 |
| parents | fdcd7ef5bacf |
| children | de275ca660c5 |
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Building Releases ================= Roundup is a pure Python application with no binary components. This file describes how to build a source release. To find out how to install Roundup, read the doc/installation.txt file. Roundup release checklist: 1. Run unit tests! They should pass successfully. "./run_tests.py" 2. Update version CHANGES.txt roundup/__init__.py 3. Update documentation doc/announcement.txt doc/upgrading.txt 4. Update setup.py info is needed (contacts, classifiers, etc.), and check that metadata is valid and long descriptions is proper reST: python setup.py check --restructuredtext --metadata --strict 5. Clean out all *.orig, *.rej, .#* files from the source. 6. Remove previuos build files python setup.py clean --all 7. Rebuild documentation in "share/doc/roundup/html" python setup.py build_doc 8. python setup.py sdist --manifest-only 9. Check the MANIFEST to make sure that any new files are included. If they are not, edit MANIFEST.in to include them. For format docs see http://docs.python.org/2/distutils/sourcedist.html#manifest-template 10. python setup.py sdist (if you find sdist a little verbose, add "--quiet" to the end of the command) 11. Unpack the new dist file in /tmp then a) run_test.py b) demo.py with all available Python versions. 12. Assuming all is well tag the release in the version-control system. 13. Build binary packages python setup.py bdist_rpm python setup.py bdist_wininst 14. Upload source distributive to PyPI python setup.py sdist upload --sign It should appear on http://pypi.python.org/pypi/roundup in no time. 15. Send doc/announcement.txt to python-announce@python.org and roundup-users@lists.sourceforge.net and roundup-devel@lists.sourceforge.net 16. Refresh website. website/README.txt So, those commands in a nice, cut'n'pasteable form:: find . -name '*.orig' -exec rm {} \; find . -name '*.rej' -exec rm {} \; find . -name '.#*' -exec rm {} \; python setup.py clean --all python setup.py check --restructuredtext --metadata --strict python setup.py build_doc python setup.py sdist --manifest-only python setup.py sdist --quiet python setup.py bdist_rpm python setup.py bdist_wininst python setup.py register python setup.py sdist upload --sign python2.5 setup.py bdist_wininst upload --sign (if the last two fail make sure you're using python2.5+) Note that python2.6 won't correctly create a bdist_wininst install on Linux (it will produce a .exe with "linux" in the name). 2.7 still has this bug (Ralf)
