Krita/Release/Checklist Krita Release Checklist
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Release Checklist
Krita releases follow semantic versioning, more or less.
Platforms
- Windows: x86, x64 (boud)
- OSX: x64 (boud)
- Linux:
- Ubuntu (Dmitry)
- OpenSUSE (Leinir)
- CentOS (Boud)
- AppImage (Boud)
Major Release
A major release is an increase of the major or minor version number: 2.9 to 3.0 or 3.0 to 3.1. A major release contains a large chunk of functionality and happens about once a year, just before the yearly fundraising campaign, which means a March release.
Checklist
- Three months before
- Start preparing the release booklet
- Two months before
- Send out the booklet to journalists
- One month
- Give the translation teams a heads-up
- Prepare the release announcement
- One week
- Mail the people on the pre-release announcement list (boud)
- Just before the release
- Write Dmitry to make a post for Russian Community (http://vk.com/ilovefreeart)
- Add the new version to Bugzilla, disable the previous version. On releasing 3.0, 2.9 is no longer supported and should be disabled.
- Create the translations tarball to integrate in the binary builds
- Update the krita.rc version number
- Add a tag to git
- Change the version number (CMakeLists.txt)
- Create the release branch
- After the release
- Update the version number (CMakeLists.txt)
- Change to the new splash when avaialable
Minor Release
A minor release is an increase of the patch-level number: 2.9.1 to 2.9.2. A minor release can contain not just bug fixes but also new features. A minor release happens once every month.
Checklist
- Two weeks
- Feature freeze
- One week
- String freeze
- Prepare the release announcement
- Give the translation teams a heads-up
- Just before the release:
- Create the translations tarball to integrate in the binary builds
- Add the new version to Bugzilla version
- Update the krita.rc version number
- Add a tag to git
- Change the version number (CMakeLists.txt)
- After the release