edit RELEASE-NOTES
to be accurate
update docs/THANKS
make sure all relevant changes are committed on the master branch
tag the git repo in this style: git tag -a curl-7_34_0
. -a annotates the
tag and we use underscores instead of dots in the version number. Make sure
the tag is GPG signed (using -s).
run ./scripts/dmaketgz 7.34.0
to build the release tarballs.
push the git commits and the new tag
GPG sign the 4 tarballs as maketgz
suggests
upload the 8 resulting files to the primary download directory
edit Makefile
(version number and date),
edit _newslog.html
(announce the new release) and
edit _changes.html
(insert changes+bugfixes from RELEASE-NOTES)
commit all local changes
tag the repo with the same name as used for the source repo.
make sure all relevant changes are committed and pushed on the master branch
(the website then updates its contents automatically)
We normally do releases every 8 weeks on Wednesdays. If important problems arise, we can insert releases outside the schedule or we can move the release date.
Each 8 week (56 days) release cycle is divided into three distinct periods:
During the first 10 calendar days after a release, we are in "cool down". We do not merge features but only bug-fixes. If a regression is reported, we might do a follow-up patch release.
During the following 3 weeks (21 days) there is a feature window: we allow new features and changes to curl and libcurl. If we accept any such changes, we bump the minor number used for the next release.
During the next 25 days we are in feature freeze. We do not merge any features or changes, and we only focus on fixing bugs and polishing things to make the pending release a solid one.
If a future release date happens to end up on a "bad date", like in the middle of common public holidays or when the lead release manager is unavailable, the release date can be moved forwards or backwards a full week. This is then advertised well in advance.
We can break the release cycle and do a patch release at any point if a critical enough problem is reported. There is no exact definition of how to assess such criticality, but if an issue is highly disturbing or has a security impact on a large enough share of the user population it might qualify.
If you think an issue qualifies, bring it to the curl-library mailing list and push for it.
Based on the description above, here are some planned release dates (at the time of this writing):