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How to make a release
MNE-BIDS loosely follows semver:
- Versions consist of strings like
0.11.1
, where the components refer tomajor.minor.patch
versions. - On GitHub releases, the versions are prepended with a
v
, that is,0.15.0
becomesv0.15.0
. On PyPI and Conda-Forge, this is not the case. - While we are in the
0
major version, breaking changes are permitted without incrementing the major version (that is, a minor release is okay). - The MNE-BIDS documentation is version-tracked only for major and minor versions. Patch releases get merged into the documentation version of the corresponding major/minor version. For example, for
0.15.1
, no new documentation version is created, but the documentation version of0.15.0
is updated- Note that this means that doc version updates from, for example,
0.15.1
will also occur in the doc version for0.16.0
- Note that this means that doc version updates from, for example,
- Before release
0.15.0
, for versions where thepatch
was0
, that component was omitted from the version, that is,0.11.0
was simplified to0.11
.
NOTE
The instructions below all refer to a major or minor release. For a patch release, see How to make a patch release.
- Make sure all milestones are achieved (closed) or migrated to the next version
- Also check the projects page for open issues and either finish or migrate them to the next version
- Make sure all CI checks pass on
main
- If you are using the "main"/"dev" version for external packages in your CIs (e.g.,
mne
,bids-validator
), you will need to adjust this to point to a specific commit or stable version. - Else this will lead to problems in the future, when an old release of
mne-bids
will still use themain
version in the CIs, for building the docs, etc. - Furthermore, PyPI may reject the dist, if for example GitHub repos at specific commits are pinned as dependencies
- Files to look at are:
.github/workflows/unit_tests.yml
circleci/config.yml
pyproject.toml
- You may also want to check that all tests and building the docs pass locally on your machine
- If you are using the "main"/"dev" version for external packages in your CIs (e.g.,
- Add new lines to the
doc/_static/versions.json
file to reflect a new release- Copy the first dict in the list and paste it right below
- Increment the version value in the first dict in the list dict by a minor step (for name, e.g.,
0.15
-->0.16
) - Edit the second dict in the the list (for name:
devel
-->stable
; for version:dev
-->stable
; and for url:https://mne.tools/mne-bids/dev/
-->https://mne.tools/mne-bids/<version>/
, where you adjust<version>
appropriately) - Edit the third dict in the list (for name: remove
(stable)
; for version: add the version, e.g.,0.14
)
- Edit
whats_new.rst
according to the schema that was used for previous releases- Make sure you add the correct release date
- Make sure that the release specific authors section is accurate and up to date
- Run
git shortlog v0.15.0..HEAD --summary --numbered --email
(replace the version tag to the most recently released version) to find contributor names for this release - If necessary, update the
.mailmap
file at this point, so that each author/contributor has one identity (name+email), instead of several - Manually add authors who have done a lot of work (reviewing, advising, ...) but don't show up in the shortlog because they did not submit PRs
- Then order the names alphabetically and add to the relevant section of the version-to-be-released's changelog
- Merge the PR into main using SQUASH and merge ... the release PR should be a single commit
- Make an annotated tag for the version:
git tag -a -m "v0.15.0" v0.15.0 upstream/main
- Push the tag to GitHub:
git push upstream v0.15.0
- Use the GitHub feature "Releases" to make a new release on the newly pushed tag,
for example,
v0.15.0
. Usev0.15.0
also for the "Release title" field, and feel free to "auto generate" release notes via GitHub- this should push the package to PyPI, see
.github/workflows/release.yml
- this should push the package to PyPI, see
- Wait until the most recent CI runs have completed (those triggered by pushing the tag!), look here: https://github.com/mne-tools/mne-bids/actions/workflows/unit_tests.yml
- Download the corresponding doc build artifacts from the
build_docs
GitHub action step - From main, branch off a
maint/0.15
branch (or whatever the version-to-be-released is; NOTE: skip the patch version!) - Push the
maint/0.15
branch to upstream - On the
gh-pages
branch:- First, have a look at the git log. You will see many commits of the type:
doc updates [skip ci]
. These commits are auto-generated to push the most recent (dev) docs to the branch after every commit. As part of the release of a new version, we squash these commits. Simply find the last meaningful commit hash before a sequence ofdoc updates [skip ci]
, and then callgit rebase -i <hash>
with the hash you found, squashing all meaningless commits. Then commit and force push these updates to the gh-pages branch upstream. - Add a new folder
v0.15
where you put the contents of the doc build artifacts - Replace the contents of the
stable
folder with the same contents - This is effectively duplicating the
doc/_build/html
contents, but that's okay, and we want that (see wiki entry on docs) - Push all of this, so that it's upstream in mne-tools's
gh-pages
branch
- First, have a look at the git log. You will see many commits of the type:
- Close the
v0.15
milestone and project on GitHub ... open new milestone and project for next version, in case you did not do so already - Move the newest changelog to
whats_new_previous_releases.rst
and editwhats_new.rst
to reflect a new development cycle (it's "unreleased", and the subheadings won't have items)
Please be familiar with the usual release protocol (see above) before proceeding.
- First, checkout the
maint/0.15
(or whatever version was most recently released) branch - Then use
git cherry-pick <commit>
to add commits frommain
tomaint/0.15
- Make sure that you only add commits that are bug fixes
- Make sure that the commits you add do not change dependencies or other infrastructure requirements
- You most likely will need to resolve some merge conflicts, in particular with regards to the changelog
- make a new section in the changelog (
whats_new.rst
):Version 0.15.1 (YYYY-MM-DD)
- list all new changes in that section, and add the following intro sentence:
-
Version 0.15.1 is a patch release, all changes are listed below. For more complete information on the 0.15.0 version, see changelog below.
- make a new section in the changelog (
Once you have added all commits that you want to release to the branch, continue as follows:
- From the
maint/0.15
(for example) branch, make an annotated tag for the version:git tag -a -m "v0.15.1" v0.15.1 upstream/main
- Push the tag upstream:
git push upstream v0.15.1
and make a GitHub release of the version, using the new tag- this will build the distribution and push it to PyPI
- Download the appropriate build artifacts for the docs as for a normal release and push the built docs to the
v0.15
andstable
folders on thegh-pages
branch
The conda-forge channel includes a conda
package of mne-bids
.
A dedicated git repository,
which is called a feedstock
in conda-forge
terms, contains the
recipe describing all steps required to build and test the package; it can be
found at recipe/meta.yaml.
Whenever a new version of mne-bids
is published on PyPI, a conda-forge
bot
will automatically open a Pull Request (PR) to update the following parts of
meta.yaml
:
-
version number, e.g.
{% set version = "0.3" %}
-
SHA256 hash of the source archive, e.g.
sha256: 187add419562e3607c161eaf04971863c134febad2e70313260a58238e519ba5
-
build number is reset to zero:
number: 0
Before merging, please check whether the dependencies of mne-bids
have
changed. If that's the case, you have two options, described below.
This is the most straightforward option:
- using your web browser, navigate to the bot's branch of
mne-bids-feedstock
it wants to merge (you can simply follow the link on top of the respective PR page) - navigate to
recipe/meta.yaml
, and click on the edit button - adjust the package dependencies in the
requirements: run
section - commit the changes directly to the bot's branch (all recipe maintainers have write access)
- wait for CI to successfully finish and merge the PR
If you prefer not to use the web interface:
- fork the bot's fork of the
mne-bids-feedstock
repository (or add it as a remote) - checkout the respective branch (it's typically called
vXY
, whereXY
is the version number, e.g.,v0.3
) - adjust the package dependencies in the
requirements: run
section ofrecipe/meta.yaml
- commit and push the changes to the bot's branch
- wait for CI to successfully finish and merge the PR
After the changes have been merged and the package is built, it may take up
to 60 minutes to propagate across all conda-forge
mirrors.
Of course, changes to the recipe are not bound to a new upstream release. You may change any part of the recipe at any time.
It is important to always work on a branch of your fork of mne-bids-feedstock
.
Even if you are a recipe maintainer (which provides you with write access
to the mne-bids-feedstock
repository), do not create branches on that
repository directly (or, even worse, commit to its master
branch).
- increase the
build
number - open a a PR
- rerender the feedstock by posting
@conda-forge-admin, please rerender
as a comment to the PR - merge the PR once all tests have passed
Again, it may take up to 60 minutes for the new package to appear on all mirrors.
See the conda-forge documentation for additional information.