This page describes the current status of the release process.
Since versions 5.4.5 / 5.5.4 there is an automated release process using travis-ci in place. Since 6.30.0, the automated release process is using Github Actions.
However, there are still a few steps, that need manual examination.
Overview
This page gives an overview which tasks are automated to do a full release of PMD. This knowledge is required in order to verify that the release was successful or in case the automated process fails for some reason. Then individual steps need to be executed manually. Because the build is reproducible, these steps can be repeated again if the same tag is used.
The three main steps are:
- Preparations (which creates the tag) - use
do-release.sh
for that - The actual release (which is automated)
- Prepare the next release (make sure the current main branch is ready for further development)
Preparations
This is the first step. It is always manual and is executed locally. It creates in the end the tag from which the release is created.
Make sure code is up to date and everything is committed and pushed with git:
$ ./mvnw clean
$ git pull
$ git status
As a help for the preparation task, the script do-release.sh
guides you through the preparation tasks
and the whole release process. The script requires a specific source code folder and additional checkouts locally,
e.g. it requires that the repo pmd.github.io
is checked out aside the main pmd repo:
- https://github.com/pmd/pmd ➡️
/home/joe/source/pmd
- https://github.com/pmd/pmd.github.io ➡️
/home/joe/source/pmd.github.io
The script do-release.sh
is called in the directory /home/joe/source/pmd
and searches for ../pmd.github.io
.
Also make sure, that the repo “pmd.github.io” is locally up to date and has no local changes.
The Release Notes and docs
Before the release, you need to verify the release notes: Does it contain all the relevant changes for the release? Is it formatted properly? Are there any typos? Does it render properly?
As the release notes are part of the source code, it is not simple to change it afterwards. While the source code for a tag cannot be changed anymore, the published release notes on the github releases pages or the new posts can be changed afterwards (although that’s an entirely manual process).
You can find the release notes here: docs/pages/release_notes.md
.
The date (date +%d-%B-%Y
) and the version (remove the SNAPSHOT) must be updated in docs/_config.yml
, e.g.
in order to release version “6.34.0”, the configuration should look like this:
pmd:
version: 6.34.0
previous_version: 6.33.0
date: 24-April-2021
release_type: minor
The release type could be one of “bugfix” (e.g. 6.34.x), “minor” (6.x.0), or “major” (x.0.0).
The release notes usual mention any new rules that have been added since the last release.
Please double check the file pmd-core/src/main/resources/rulesets/releases/<version>.xml
, so
that all new rules are listed.
Add the new rules as comments to the quickstart rulesets:
pmd-apex/src/main/resources/rulesets/apex/quickstart.xml
pmd-java/src/main/resources/rulesets/java/quickstart.xml
We maintain a documentation for the next major release. Copy the API
changes from the current release notes to this document: docs/pages/next_major_development.md
.
The designer lives at pmd/pmd-designer.
Update property pmd-designer.version
in pom.xml to reference the latest pmd-designer release.
See https://search.maven.org/search?q=g:net.sourceforge.pmd%20AND%20a:pmd-ui&core=gav for the available releases.
Starting with PMD 6.23.0 we’ll provide small statistics for every release. This needs to be added to the release notes as the last section. To count the closed issues and pull requests, the milestone on github with the title of the new release is searched. Make sure, there is a milestone on https://github.com/pmd/pmd/milestones. The following snippet will create the numbers, that can be attached to the release notes as a last section:
LAST_VERSION=6.33.0
NEW_VERSION=6.34.0
NEW_VERSION_COMMITISH=HEAD
echo "### Stats"
echo "* $(git log pmd_releases/${LAST_VERSION}..${NEW_VERSION_COMMITISH} --oneline --no-merges |wc -l) commits"
echo "* $(curl -s "https://api.github.com/repos/pmd/pmd/milestones?state=all&direction=desc&per_page=5"|jq ".[] | select(.title == \"$NEW_VERSION\") | .closed_issues") closed tickets & PRs"
echo "* Days since last release: $(( ( $(date +%s) - $(git log --max-count=1 --format="%at" pmd_releases/${LAST_VERSION}) ) / 86400))"
Note: this part is also integrated into do-release.sh
.
Check in all (version) changes to branch master or any other branch, from which the release takes place:
$ git commit -a -m "Prepare pmd release <version>"
$ git push
The Homepage
The github repo pmd.github.io
hosts the homepage for https://pmd.github.io.
All the following tasks are to be done in this repo.
The new version needs to be entered into _config.yml
, e.g.:
pmd:
latestVersion: 6.34.0
latestVersionDate: 24-April-2021
Also move the previous version down into the “downloads” section. We usually keep only the last 3 versions in this list, so remove the oldest version.
Then create a new page for the new release, e.g. _posts/2021-04-24-PMD-6.34.0.md
and copy
the release notes into this page. This will appear under the news section.
Check in all (version) changes to branch master:
$ git commit -a -m "Prepare pmd release <version>"
$ git push
The actual release
The actual release starts with one last local command: calling maven-release-plugin.
This plugin changes the version by basically removing the “-SNAPSHOT” suffix, builds the changed project locally, commits the version change, creates a new tag from this commit, changes the version of the project to the next snapshot, commits this change and pushes everything.
RELEASE_VERSION
is the version of the release. It is reused for the tag. DEVELOPMENT_VERSION
is the
next snapshot version after the release.
RELEASE_VERSION=6.34.0
DEVELOPMENT_VERSION=6.35.0-SNAPSHOT
./mvnw -B release:clean release:prepare \
-Dtag=pmd_releases/${RELEASE_VERSION} \
-DreleaseVersion=${RELEASE_VERSION} \
-DdevelopmentVersion=${DEVELOPMENT_VERSION}
Once the maven plugin has pushed the tag, github actions will start and build a new version from this tag. Since
it is a tag build and a released version build, the build script will do a couple of additional stuff.
This is all automated in .ci/build.sh
.
Here is, what happens:
- Deploy and release the build to maven central, so that it can be downloaded from https://repo.maven.apache.org/maven2/net/sourceforge/pmd/pmd/. This is done automatically, if all unit tests pass and the build doesn’t fail for any other reason. The plugin nexus-staging-maven-plugin is used for that.
- Upload the new binaries to github releases under https://github.com/pmd/pmd/releases. It also uploads
the release notes from
docs/pages/release_notes.md
. Note: The during the process, the release is a draft mode and not visible yet. At the end of the process, the release will be published. - Upload the new binaries additionally to sourceforge, so that they can be downloaded from https://sourceforge.net/projects/pmd/files/pmd/, including the release notes.
- Render the documentation in
docs/
withbundle exec jekyll build
and create a zip file from it. - Upload the doc zip file to the current github release under https://github.com/pmd/pmd/releases and to https://sourceforge.net/projects/pmd/files/pmd/.
- Upload the documentation to https://docs.pmd-code.org, e.g. https://docs.pmd-code.org/pmd-doc-6.34.0/ and create a symlink, so that https://docs.pmd-code.org/latest/ points to the new version.
- Remove the old snapshot documentation, e.g. so that https://docs.pmd-code.org/pmd-doc-6.34.0-SNAPSHOT/ is gone. Also create a symlink from pmd-doc-6.34.0-SNAPSHOT to pmd-doc-6.34.0, so that old references still work, e.g. https://docs.pmd-code.org/pmd-doc-6.34.0-SNAPSHOT/ points to the released version.
- Deploy javadoc to “https://docs.pmd-code.org/apidocs/*/RELEASE_VERSION/”, e.g. https://docs.pmd-code.org/apidocs/pmd-core/6.34.0/. This is done for all modules.
- Remove old javadoc for the SNAPSHOT version, e.g. delete https://docs.pmd-code.org/apidocs/pmd-core/6.34.0-SNAPSHOT/.
- Create a draft news post on https://sourceforge.net/p/pmd/news/ for the new release. This contains the rendered release notes.
- Add the documentation of the new release to a subfolder on https://pmd.github.io, also make
this folder available as
latest
, so that https://pmd.github.io/latest/ shows the new version and https://pmd.github.io/pmd-6.34.0/ is the URL for the specific release. - Also copy the documentation to sourceforge’s web space, so that it is available as https://pmd.sourceforge.io/pmd-6.34.0/. All previously copied version are listed under https://pmd.sourceforge.io/archive.phtml.
- After all this is done, the release on github (https://github.com/pmd/pmd/releases) is published and the news post on sourceforge (https://sourceforge.net/p/pmd/news/> is publishes as well.
- The new binary at https://sourceforge.net/projects/pmd/files/pmd/ is selected as the new default for PMD.
- As a last step, a new baseline for the regression tester is created and uploaded to https://pmd-code.org/pmd-regression-tester.
The release on github actions currently takes about 30-45 minutes. Once this is done, you can spread additional news:
-
Write an email to the mailing list
To: PMD Developers List pmd-devel@lists.sourceforge.net Subject: [ANNOUNCE] PMD
released - Downloads: https://github.com/pmd/pmd/releases/tag/pmd_releases%2F
- Documentation: https://pmd.github.io/pmd-
/
And Copy-Paste the release notes
- Downloads: https://github.com/pmd/pmd/releases/tag/pmd_releases%2F
-
Tweet about the new release
Tweet on https://twitter.com/pmd_analyzer, eg.:
PMD 6.34.0 released: https://github.com/pmd/pmd/releases/tag/pmd_releases/6.34.0 #PMD
Checklist
Task | Description | URL | ☐ / ✔ |
---|---|---|---|
maven central | The new version of all artifacts are available in maven central | https://repo.maven.apache.org/maven2/net/sourceforge/pmd/pmd/ | |
github releases | A new release with 3 assets (bin, src, doc) is created | https://github.com/pmd/pmd/releases | |
sourceforge files | The 3 assets (bin, src, doc) are uploaded, the new version is pre-selected as latest | https://sourceforge.net/projects/pmd/files/pmd/ | |
homepage | Main landing page points to new version, doc for new version is available | https://pmd.github.io | |
homepage2 | New blogpost for the new release is posted | https://pmd.github.io/#news | |
docs | New docs are uploaded | https://docs.pmd-code.org/latest/ | |
docs-archive | New docs are also on archive site | https://pmd.sourceforge.io/archive.phtml | |
javadoc | New javadocs are uploaded | https://docs.pmd-code.org/apidocs/ | |
news | New blogpost on sourceforge is posted | https://sourceforge.net/p/pmd/news/ | |
regression-tester | New release baseline is uploaded | https://pmd-code.org/pmd-regression-tester | |
mailing list | announcement on mailing list is sent | https://sourceforge.net/p/pmd/mailman/pmd-devel/ | |
tweet about the new release | https://twitter.com/pmd_analyzer |
Prepare the next release
There are a couple of manual steps needed to prepare the current main branch for further development.
- Move any open issues to the next milestone, close the current milestone on https://github.com/pmd/pmd/milestones and create a new one for the next version (if one doesn’t exist already).
-
Update version in docs/_config.yml. Note - the next version needs to have a SNAPSHOT in it otherwise the javadoc links won’t work during development.
pmd: version: 6.35.0-SNAPSHOT previous_version: 6.34.0 date: ??-??-2021 release_type: minor
- Prepare a new empty release notes. Note, this is done by
do-release.sh
already.- Move version/release info from docs/pages/release_notes.md to docs/pages/release_notes_old.md.
- Update version/release info in docs/pages/release_notes.md. Use the following template:
---
title: PMD Release Notes
permalink: pmd_release_notes.html
keywords: changelog, release notes
---
## {{ site.pmd.date }} - {{ site.pmd.version }}
The PMD team is pleased to announce PMD {{ site.pmd.version }}.
This is a {{ site.pmd.release_type }} release.
{% tocmaker %}
### New and noteworthy
### Fixed Issues
### API Changes
### External Contributions
{% endtocmaker %}
Finally commit and push the changes:
$ git commit -m "Prepare next development version"
$ git push origin master
Branches
Merging
If the release was done on a maintenance branch, such as pmd/5.4.x
, then this branch should be
merged into the next “higher” branches, such as pmd/5.5.x
and master
.
This ensures, that all fixes done on the maintenance branch, finally end up in the other branches. In theory, the fixes should already be there, but you never now.
Multiple releases
If releases from multiple branches are being done, the order matters. You should start from the “oldest” branch,
e.g. pmd/5.4.x
, release from there. Then merge (see above) into the next branch, e.g. pmd/5.5.x
and release
from there. Then merge into the master
branch and release from there. This way, the last release done, becomes
automatically the latest release on https://pmd.github.io/latest/ and on sourceforge.
(Optional) Create a new release branch
At some point, it might be time for a new maintenance branch. Such a branch is usually created from
the master
branch. Here are the steps:
- Create a new branch:
git branch pmd/5.6.x master
- Update the version in both the new branch and master, e.g.
mvn versions:set -DnewVersion=5.6.1-SNAPSHOT
andmvn versions:set -DnewVersion=5.7.0-SNAPSHOT
. - Update the release notes on both the new branch and master
The maintenance or bugfix branch could also be created later when needed from the actual tag. Then only the version on the maintenance branch needs to be set.