Helix releases are versioned in the Calendar Versioning scheme:
YY.0M(.MICRO)
, for example 22.05
for May of 2022. In these instructions
we'll use <tag>
as a placeholder for the tag being published.
- Merge the changelog PR
- Add new
<release>
entry incontrib/Helix.appdata.xml
with release information according to the AppStream spec - Tag and push
git tag -s -m "<tag>" -a <tag> && git push
- Make sure to switch to master and pull first
- Edit the
VERSION
file and change the date to the next planned release- Releases are planned to happen every two months, so
22.05
would change to22.07
- Releases are planned to happen every two months, so
- Wait for the Release CI to finish
- It will automatically turn the git tag into a GitHub release when it uploads artifacts
- Edit the new release
- Use
<tag>
as the title - Link to the changelog and release notes
- Use
- Merge the release notes PR
- Download the macos and linux binaries and update the
sha256
s in the homebrew formula- Use
sha256sum
on the downloaded.tar.xz
files to determine the hash
- Use
- Link to the release notes in this-week-in-rust
- Post to reddit
The changelog is currently created manually by reading through commits in the log since the last release. GitHub's compare view is a nice way to approach this. For example when creating the 22.07 release notes, this compare link may be used
https://github.com/helix-editor/helix/compare/22.05...master
Either side of the triple-dot may be replaced with an exact revision, so if you wish to incrementally compile the changelog, you can tackle a weeks worth or so, record the revision where you stopped, and use that as a starting point next week:
https://github.com/helix-editor/helix/compare/7706a4a0d8b67b943c31d0c5f7b00d357b5d838d...master
A work-in-progress commit for a changelog might look like this example.
Not every PR or commit needs a blurb in the changelog. Each release section tends to have a blurb that links to a GitHub comparison between release versions for convenience:
As usual, the following is a summary of each of the changes since the last release. For the full log, check out the git log.
Typically, small changes like dependencies or documentation updates, refactors, or meta changes like GitHub Actions work are left out.