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RELEASING.md

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How to release new crate versions

Prerequisites

It is generally best to start with a clean respository dedicated to a release so that no git weirdness happens:

git clone [email protected]:graphql-rust/juniper.git juniper_release;
cd juniper_release;

We use the nightly toolchain when releasing. This is because some of our crates require nightly:

rustup default nightly

We use cargo-make and cargo-release to automate crate releases. You will need to install them locally:

  • cargo install -f cargo-make
  • cargo install -f cargo-release

Preparing for a release

There are two general classes of release and each require running different automation commands:

  1. All public workspace crates should be released and all share the same release level ("patch", "minor", "major"). These commands take the form release-[whatever].

  2. A subset of workspace crates need to be released, or not all crate releases share the same release level. These commands start with release-skip-[whatever].

All release commands must be run from the root directory of the repository.

Determine new release level

For each crate, determine the desired release level (patch, minor, major). Set the RELEASE_LEVEL env variable to the desired release level.

Determine which crates to exclude

If a subset of workspace crates need to be released, or not all crate releases share the same release level, set the CARGO_MAKE_WORKSPACE_SKIP_MEMBERS env variable to filter out specific workspace crates. The value is a list of semicolon-delineated crate names or a regular expression.

Important: You likely want to always exclude integration_tests/*.

Dry run

It is a good idea to do a dry run to sanity check what actions will be performed.

  • For case #1 above, run cargo make release-dry-run.

    If the command finishes super quickly with no output you likely did not set RELEASE_LEVEL.

  • For case #2 above, run cargo make release-some-dry-run.

    If the command finishes super quickly with no output you likely did not set RELEASE_LEVEL or CARGO_MAKE_WORKSPACE_SKIP_MEMBERS.

Local test

Not everything is captured in the dry run. It is a good idea to run a local test. In a local test, all the release actions are performed on your local checkout but nothing is pushed to Github or crates.io.

  • For case #1 above, run cargo make release-local-test.

    If the command finishes super quickly with no output you likely did not set RELEASE_LEVEL.

  • For case #2 above, run cargo make release-some-local-test.

    If the command finishes super quickly with no output you likely did not set RELEASE_LEVEL or CARGO_MAKE_WORKSPACE_SKIP_MEMBERS.

After, your local git repository should have the changes ready to push to Github. Use git rebase -i HEAD~10 and drop the new commits.

Release

After testing locally and via a dry run, it is time to release. A release consists of bumping versions, starting a new changelog section, pushing a tag to Github, and updating crates.io. This should all be handled by running the automated commands.

  • For case #1 above, run cargo make release.

    If the command finishes super quickly with no output you likely did not set RELEASE_LEVEL.

  • For case #2 above, run cargo make release-some.

    If the command finishes super quickly with no output you likely did not set RELEASE_LEVEL or CARGO_MAKE_WORKSPACE_SKIP_MEMBERS.