All patches and comments are welcome. Please squash your changes to logical
commits before using git-format-patch and git-send-email to
patches@git.madduck.net.
If you'd read over the Git project's submission guidelines and adhered to them,
I'd be especially grateful.
3 _Black_ has had a lot of work done into standardizing and automating its release
4 process. This document sets out to explain how everything works and how to release
5 _Black_ using said automation.
9 **We aim to release whatever is on `main` every 1-2 months.** This ensures merged
10 improvements and bugfixes are shipped to users reasonably quickly, while not massively
11 fracturing the user-base with too many versions. This also keeps the workload on
12 maintainers consistent and predictable.
14 If there's not much new on `main` to justify a release, it's acceptable to skip a
15 month's release. Ideally January releases should not be skipped because as per our
16 [stability policy](labels/stability-policy), the first release in a new calendar year
17 may make changes to the _stable_ style. While the policy applies to the first release
18 (instead of only January releases), confining changes to the stable style to January
19 will keep things predictable (and nicer) for users.
21 Unless there is a serious regression or bug that requires immediate patching, **there
22 should not be more than one release per month**. While version numbers are cheap,
23 releases require a maintainer to both commit to do the actual cutting of a release, but
24 also to be able to deal with the potential fallout post-release. Releasing more
25 frequently than monthly nets rapidly diminishing returns.
29 **You must have `write` permissions for the _Black_ repository to cut a release.**
31 The 10,000 foot view of the release process is that you prepare a release PR and then
32 publish a [GitHub Release]. This triggers [release automation](#release-workflows) that
33 builds all release artifacts and publishes them to the various platforms we publish to.
37 1. Determine the release's version number
38 - **_Black_ follows the [CalVer] versioning standard using the `YY.M.N` format**
39 - So unless there already has been a release during this month, `N` should be `0`
40 - Example: the first release in January, 2022 → `22.1.0`
41 1. File a PR editing `CHANGES.md` and the docs to version the latest changes
42 1. Replace the `## Unreleased` header with the version number
43 1. Remove any empty sections for the current release
44 1. (_optional_) Read through and copy-edit the changelog (eg. by moving entries,
45 fixing typos, or rephrasing entries)
46 1. Double-check that no changelog entries since the last release were put in the
47 wrong section (e.g., run `git diff <last release> CHANGES.md`)
48 1. Add a new empty template for the next release above
49 ([template below](#changelog-template))
50 1. Update references to the latest version in
51 {doc}`/integrations/source_version_control` and
52 {doc}`/usage_and_configuration/the_basics`
53 - Example PR: [GH-3139]
54 1. Once the release PR is merged, wait until all CI passes
55 - If CI does not pass, **stop** and investigate the failure(s) as generally we'd want
56 to fix failing CI before cutting a release
57 1. [Draft a new GitHub Release][new-release]
58 1. Click `Choose a tag` and type in the version number, then select the
59 `Create new tag: YY.M.N on publish` option that appears
60 1. Verify that the new tag targets the `main` branch
61 1. You can leave the release title blank, GitHub will default to the tag name
62 1. Copy and paste the _raw changelog Markdown_ for the current release into the
64 1. Publish the GitHub Release, triggering [release automation](#release-workflows) that
66 1. At this point, you're basically done. It's good practice to go and [watch and verify
67 that all the release workflows pass][black-actions], although you will receive a
68 GitHub notification should something fail.
69 - If something fails, don't panic. Please go read the respective workflow's logs and
70 configuration file to reverse-engineer your way to a fix/solution.
72 Congratulations! You've successfully cut a new release of _Black_. Go and stand up and
73 take a break, you deserve it.
76 Once the release artifacts reach PyPI, you may see new issues being filed indicating
77 regressions. While regressions are not great, they don't automatically mean a hotfix
78 release is warranted. Unless the regressions are serious and impact many users, a hotfix
79 release is probably unnecessary.
81 In the end, use your best judgement and ask other maintainers for their thoughts.
84 ### Changelog template
86 Use the following template for a clean changelog after the release:
93 <!-- Include any especially major or disruptive changes here -->
97 <!-- Changes that affect Black's stable style -->
101 <!-- Changes that affect Black's preview style -->
105 <!-- Changes to how Black can be configured -->
109 <!-- Changes to how Black is packaged, such as dependency requirements -->
113 <!-- Changes to the parser or to version autodetection -->
117 <!-- Changes that improve Black's performance. -->
121 <!-- Changes to Black's terminal output and error messages -->
125 <!-- Changes to blackd -->
129 <!-- For example, Docker, GitHub Actions, pre-commit, editors -->
133 <!-- Major changes to documentation and policies. Small docs changes
134 don't need a changelog entry. -->
139 All of _Black_'s release automation uses [GitHub Actions]. All workflows are therefore
140 configured using YAML files in the `.github/workflows` directory of the _Black_
143 They are triggered by the publication of a [GitHub Release].
145 Below are descriptions of our release workflows.
149 This is our main workflow. It builds an [sdist] and [wheels] to upload to PyPI where the
150 vast majority of users will download Black from. It's divided into three job groups:
152 #### sdist + pure wheel
154 This single job builds the sdist and pure Python wheel (i.e., a wheel that only contains
155 Python code) using [build] and then uploads them to PyPI using [twine]. These artifacts
156 are general-purpose and can be used on basically any platform supported by Python.
158 #### mypyc wheels (…)
160 We use [mypyc] to compile _Black_ into a CPython C extension for significantly improved
161 performance. Wheels built with mypyc are platform and Python version specific.
162 [Supported platforms are documented in the FAQ](labels/mypyc-support).
164 These matrix jobs use [cibuildwheel] which handles the complicated task of building C
165 extensions for many environments for us. Since building these wheels is slow, there are
166 multiple mypyc wheels jobs (hence the term "matrix") that build for a specific platform
167 (as noted in the job name in parentheses).
169 Like the previous job group, the built wheels are uploaded to PyPI using [twine].
171 #### Update stable branch
173 So this job doesn't _really_ belong here, but updating the `stable` branch after the
174 other PyPI jobs pass (they must pass for this job to start) makes the most sense. This
175 saves us from remembering to update the branch sometime after cutting the release.
177 - _Currently this workflow uses an API token associated with @ambv's PyPI account_
179 ### Publish executables
181 This workflow builds native executables for multiple platforms using [PyInstaller]. This
182 allows people to download the executable for their platform and run _Black_ without a
183 [Python runtime](https://wiki.python.org/moin/PythonImplementations) installed.
185 The created binaries are stored on the associated GitHub Release for download over _IPv4
186 only_ (GitHub still does not have IPv6 access 😢).
190 This workflow uses the QEMU powered `buildx` feature of Docker to upload an `arm64` and
191 `amd64`/`x86_64` build of the official _Black_ Docker image™.
193 - _Currently this workflow uses an API Token associated with @cooperlees account_
196 This also runs on each push to `main`.
199 [black-actions]: https://github.com/psf/black/actions
200 [build]: https://pypa-build.readthedocs.io/
201 [calver]: https://calver.org
202 [cibuildwheel]: https://cibuildwheel.readthedocs.io/
203 [gh-3139]: https://github.com/psf/black/pull/3139
204 [github actions]: https://github.com/features/actions
205 [github release]: https://github.com/psf/black/releases
206 [new-release]: https://github.com/psf/black/releases/new
207 [mypyc]: https://mypyc.readthedocs.io/
208 [mypyc-platform-support]:
209 /faq.html#what-is-compiled-yes-no-all-about-in-the-version-output
210 [pyinstaller]: https://www.pyinstaller.org/
212 https://packaging.python.org/en/latest/glossary/#term-Source-Distribution-or-sdist
213 [twine]: https://github.com/features/actions
214 [wheels]: https://packaging.python.org/en/latest/glossary/#term-Wheel