view RELEASE.txt @ 5272:c6fbd4803eae

If you upgrade to the newer query edit interface but did not allow users full access to search queries, the edit interface displays public queries that the user does not own in the section labeled "Queries I created". Updated upgrading.txt to discuss this problem and link back to the 1.4.17 upgrading instructions. Also included schema.py permissions that can be used to make the edit interface work correctly without allow full search access for queries. Updated the test script in the 1.4.17 upgrading instructions to display protected properties (like creator) to make dignosing this easier.
author John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org>
date Sat, 23 Sep 2017 13:05:48 -0400
parents 71643a839c80
children 534b8bebfb1d
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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 (requires python 2.6 or newer for
    bdist_windist to have the --user-access flag.)
      python setup.py bdist_rpm
      python setup.py bdist_wininst --user-access-control force
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
      http://www.roundup-tracker.org/ should state that the stable
      version is the one that you released.
      http://www.roundup-tracker.org/docs.html should also match the
      released version (or atleast the major 1.x release.

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)


Roundup Issue Tracker: http://roundup-tracker.org/