1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
|
=======================
PHP Release Process
=======================
General notes and tips
----------------------
1. Do not release on Fridays, Saturdays or Sundays
because the sysadmins can not upgrade stuff then.
2. Package two days before a release. So if the release is to be on Thursday,
package on Tuesday. Think about timezones as well.
3. Ensure that the tests on Travis CI are green.
See: https://travis-ci.org/php/php-src/builds
It is recommended to do so a couple of days before the packaging day, to
have enough time to investigate failures, communicate with the authors and
commit the fixes.
The RM for the branch is also responsible for keeping the CI green on
ongoing basis between the releases. Check the CI status for your branch
periodically and resolve the failures ASAP. See more in:
https://wiki.php.net/rfc/travis_ci
4. Ensure that Windows builds will work before packaging
5. Follow all steps to the letter. When unclear ask previous RM's (David/Julien/
Johannes/Stas/Derick/Ilia) before proceeding. Ideally make sure that for the
first releases one of the previous RM's is around to answer questions. For the
steps related to the php/QA/bug websites try to have someone from the webmaster
team (Bjori) on hand.
6. Verify the tags to be extra sure everything was tagged properly.
7. Moving extensions from/to PECL requires write access to the destination.
Most developers should have this.
Moving extensions from php-src to PECL
- Checkout the pecl directory, most likely you want a sparse-root checkout
svn co --depth=empty https://svn.php.net/repository/pecl
- Create an directory for the extension incl. branch and tag structure,
no trunk at this point and commit this to svn
cd pecl; mkdir foo foo/tags foo/branches; svn add foo; svn commit
- Move the extension from php-src to the new location
svn mv https://svn.php.net/repository/php/php-src/trunk/ext/foo \
https://svn.php.net/repository/pecl/foo/trunk
If the extension is still usable or not dead, in cooperation with the extension
maintainers if any:
- create the pecl.php.net/foo package and its content, license, maintainer
- create the package.xml, commit
- release the package
For Moving extensions from PECL to php-src the svn mv has to be tone the other
way round.
Rolling a non stable release (alpha/beta/RC)
--------------------------------------------
1. Check windows snapshot builder logs (http://windows.php.net/downloads/snaps/ the last revision)
2. Check the tests at https://travis-ci.org/php/php-src/builds
3. run the "scripts/dev/credits" script in php-src and commit the changes in the
credits files in ext/standard.
4. Checkout the release branch for this release (e.g., PHP-5.4.2) from the main branch.
5. Bump the version numbers in ``main/php_version.h``, ``configure.ac`` and possibly ``NEWS``.
Do not use abbreviations for alpha and beta. Do not use dashes, you should
``#define PHP_VERSION "5.4.22RC1"`` and not ``#define PHP_VERSION "5.4.22-RC1"``
6. Compile and make test, with and without ZTS, using the right Bison version
(for example, for 5.5, Bison 2.4.1 is used)
7. Check ./sapi/cli/php -v output for version matching.
8. If all is right, commit the changes to the release branch with ``git commit -a``.
9. Tag the repository release branch with the version, e.g.:
``git tag -u YOURKEYID php-5.4.2RC2``
10. Bump the version numbers in ``main/php_version.h``, ``configure.ac`` and ``NEWS``
in the *main* branch (PHP-5.4 for example) to prepare for the **next** version.
F.e. if the RC is "5.4.1RC1" then the new one should be "5.4.2-dev" - regardless if we get
a new RC or not. This is to make sure ``version_compare()`` can correctly work.
Commit the changes to the main branch.
11. Push the changes to the main repo, the tag, the main branch and the release branch :
``git push --tags origin HEAD``
``git push origin {main branch}``
``git push origin {release branch}``
12. run: ``PHPROOT=. ./makedist 5.4.2RC2``, this will export the tree, create configure
and build three tarballs (gz, bz2 and xz).
13. run ``scripts/dev/gen_verify_stub <version> [identity]``, this will sign the tarballs
and output verification information to be included in announcement email
14. Copy those tarballs (scp, rsync) to downloads.php.net, in your homedir there should be a
directory "downloads/". Copy them into there, so that the system can generate
MD5 sums. If you do not have this directory, talk to Derick or Dan.
15. Now the RC can be found on http://downloads.php.net/yourname,
f.e. http://downloads.php.net/derick/
16. Once the release has been tagged, contact the PHP Windows development team
(internals-win@lists.php.net) so that Windows binaries can be created. Once
those are made, they should be placed into the same directory as the source snapshots.
Getting the non stable release (alpha/beta/RC) announced
--------------------------------------------------------
1. Send an email **To** ``internals@lists.php.net`` and ``php-general@lists.php.net``
lists pointing out "the location of the release" and "the possible release date of
either the next RC, or the final release". Include in this information the verification
information output by ``gen_verify_stub``.
2. Send an email (see example here http://news.php.net/php.pear.qa/5201) **To**
``php-qa@lists.php.net`` and ``primary-qa-tester@lists.php.net``.
This email is to notify the selected projects about a new release so that they
can make sure their projects keep working. Make sure that you have been setup
as a moderator for ``primary-qa-tester@lists.php.net`` by having someone (Hannes, Dan,
Derick) run the following commands for you:
``ssh lists.php.net``
``sudo -u ezmlm ezmlm-sub ~ezmlm/primary-qa-tester/mod moderator-email-address``
3. Update ``qa.git/include/release-qa.php`` with the appropriate information.
See the documentation within release-qa.php for more information, but all releases
and RCs are configured here. Only $QA_RELEASES needs to be edited.
Example: When rolling an RC, set the 'rc' with appropriate information for the
given version.
Note: Remember to update the MD5 checksum information.
4. Update ``web/php.git/include/version.inc`` (x=major version number)
a. ``$PHP_x_RC`` = "5.4.0RC1" (should be set to "false" before)
b. ``$PHP_x_RC_DATE`` = "06 September 2007"
5. Commit and push those changes:
a. ``git commit -a && git push origin master``
6. For the first RC, write the doc team (phpdoc@lists.php.net) about updating the
INSTALL and win32/install.txt files which are generated from the PHP manual sources.
Rolling a stable release
------------------------
1. Checkout your release branch, you should have created when releasing previous RC
and bump the version numbers in ``main/php_version.h``, ``configure.ac`` and possibly ``NEWS``.
2. If a CVE commit needs to be merged to the release, then have it committed to
the base branches and merged upwards as usual (f.e commit the CVE fix to 5.3,
merge to 5.4, 5.5 etc...). Then you can cherry-pick it in your release branch.
Don't forget to update NEWS manually in an extra commit then.
3. Commit those changes. Ensure the tests at https://travis-ci.org/php/php-src/builds are
still passing.
4. run the "scripts/dev/credits" script in php-src and commit the changes in the
credits files in ext/standard.
5. Compile and make test, with and without ZTS, using the right Bison version
(for example, for 5.5, Bison 2.4.1 is used)
6. Check ./sapi/cli/php -v output for version matching.
7. tag the repository with the version f.e. "``git tag -u YOURKEYID -s php-5.4.1``"
8. Push the tag f.e. "``git push origin php-5.4.1``"
9. run: ``PHPROOT=. ./makedist php 5.4.1``, this will export the tag, create configure
and build three tarballs (gz, bz2 and xz).
Check if the pear files are updated (phar).
10. Generate the GPG signature files for the archives.
``gpg -u YOUREMAIL --armor --detach-sign php-X.Y.Z.tar.xxx``
11. Commit and push all the tarballs and signature files to web/php-distributions.git,
then update the git submodule reference in web/php.git:
``git submodule init;
git submodule update;
cd distributions;
git pull origin master;
cd ..;
git commit distributions;
git push;``
This is to fetch the last commit id from php-distributions.git and commit this
last commit id to web/php.git, then, mirrors will now sync
12. Once the release has been tagged, contact release managers, windows builders, and package maintainers
so that they can build releases. Do not send this announcement to any public lists.
Getting the stable release announced
------------------------------------
1. Update phpweb/include/releases.inc with the old release info
(updates the download archives)
a. You can run ``php bin/bumpRelease 5`` if you are making a release for the
highest branch, otherwise you have to do this manually, see point 1.b
b. In case multiple PHP minor versions are in active development you have
to manually copy the old information to include/releases.inc
2. Edit ``phpweb/include/version.inc`` and change (X=major release number):
a. ``$PHP_X_VERSION`` to the correct version
b. ``$PHP_X_DATE`` to the release date
c. ``$PHP_X_MD5`` array and update all the md5 sums
d. ``$PHP_X_SHA256`` array and update all the SHA256 sums
e. set ``$PHP_X_RC`` to false!
f. Make sure there are no outdated "notes" or edited "date" keys in the
``$RELEASES[X][$PHP_X_VERSION]["source"]`` array
g. if the windows builds aren't ready yet prefix the "windows" key with a dot (".windows")
3. Create the release file (releases/x_y_z.php)
Usually we use the same content as for point 6, but included in php template
instead of the release xml.
4. Update php-qa/include/release-qa.php and add the next version as an QARELEASE
(prepare for next RC)
5. Update the ChangeLog file for the given major version
f.e. ``ChangeLog-5.php`` from the NEWS file
a. go over the list and put every element on one line
b. check for &, < and > and escape them if necessary
c. remove all the names at the ends of lines
d. for marking up, you can do the following (with VI):
I. ``s/^- /<li>/``
II. ``s/$/<\/li>/``
III. ``s/Fixed bug #\([0-9]\+\)/<?php bugfix(\1); ?>/``
IV. ``s/Fixed PECL bug #\([0-9]\+\)/<?php peclbugfix(\1); ?>/``
V. ``s/FR #\([0-9]\+\)/FR <?php bugl(\1); ?>/``
e. You may want to try php-web/bin/news2html to automate this task
6. Add a short notice to phpweb stating that there is a new release, and
highlight the major important things (security fixes) and when it is important
to upgrade.
a. Call php bin/createNewsEntry in your local phpweb checkout
b. Add the content for the news entry
7. **Check mirrors have been synced before announcing or pushing news**
Try, f.e. http://www.php.net/get/php-5.5.1.tar.bz2/from/a/mirror
Try several mirrors, mirrors may update slowly (may take an hour)
8. Commit all the changes to their respective git repos
9. Please note down the sha256 and the PGP signature (.asc). These *must* be
included in the release mail.
10. Wait an hour or two, then send a mail to php-announce@lists.php.net,
php-general@lists.php.net and internals@lists.php.net with a text similar to
http://news.php.net/php.internals/17222.
Please make sure that the mail to php-announce@ is its own completely separate email.
This is to make sure that replies to the announcement on php-general@ or internals@
will not accidentally hit the php-announce@ mailinglist.
Re-releasing the same version (or -pl)
--------------------------------------
1. Commit the new binaries to ``phpweb/distributions/``
2. Edit ``phpweb/include/version.inc`` and change (X=major release number):
a. If only releasing for one OS, make sure you edit only those variables
b. ``$PHP_X_VERSION`` to the correct version
c. ``$PHP_X_DATE`` to the release date
d. ``$PHP_X_MD5`` array and update all the md5 sums
e. ``$PHP_X_SHA256`` array and update all the SHA256 sums
f. Make sure there are no outdated "notes" or edited "date" keys in the
``$RELEASES[X][$PHP_X_VERSION]["source"]`` array
3. Add a short notice to phpweb stating that there is a new release, and
highlight the major important things (security fixes) and when it is important
to upgrade.
a. Call php bin/createNewsEntry in your local phpweb checkout
b. Add the content for the news entry
4. Commit all the changes (``include/version.inc``, ``archive/archive.xml``,
``archive/entries/YYYY-MM-DD-N.xml``)
5. Wait an hour or two, then send a mail to php-announce@lists.php.net,
php-general@lists.php.net and internals@lists.php.net with a text similar to
the news entry.
Please make sure that the mail to php-announce@ is its own completely separate email.
This is to make sure that replies to the announcement on php-general@ or internals@
will not accidentally hit the php-announce@ mailinglist.
|