<body>
<div class="doc_title">How To Release LLVM To The Public</div>
-<p class="doc_warning">NOTE: THIS DOCUMENT IS A WORK IN PROGRESS!</p>
<ol>
<li><a href="#introduction">Introduction</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#introduction">Release Timeline</a></li>
<li><a href="#process">Release Process</a></li>
<li><a href="#dist_targets">Distribution Targets</a></li>
</ol>
<div class="doc_author">
<p>Written by <a href="mailto:rspencer@x10sys.com">Reid Spencer</a>,
- <a href="mailto:criswell@cs.uiuc.edu">John Criswell</a></p>
+ <a href="mailto:criswell@cs.uiuc.edu">John Criswell</a>,
+ <a href="mailto:tonic@nondot.org">Tanya Lattner</a></p>
</div>
<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
<div class="doc_text">
-<p>This document collects information about successfully releasing LLVM to the
-public. It is the release manager's guide to ensuring that a high quality build
-of LLVM is released. Mostly, it's just a bunch of reminders of things to do at
-release time so we don't inadvertently ship something that is utility
-deficient.</p>
-
-<p>
-There are three main tasks for building a release of LLVM:
+ <p>
+ This document collects information about successfully releasing LLVM to the
+ public. It is the release manager's guide to ensuring that a high quality
+ build of LLVM is released.
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ The following is the basic criteria for releasing LLVM:
+ </p>
+
+ <ol>
+ <li>Successful configure and build.</li>
+ <li>Clean 'make check'.</li>
+ <li>No regressions in the testsuite from the previous release. This may
+ include performance regressions for major benchmarks.</li>
+ </ol>
+</div>
+
+<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
+<div class="doc_section"><a name="process">Release Timeline</a></div>
+<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
+<div class="doc_text">
+The release manager should attempt to have a release every 3-4 months because LLVM
+does time based releases (instead of feature based). The release schedule should
+be roughly as follows:
<ol>
- <li>Create the LLVM source distribution.</li>
- <li>Create the LLVM GCC source distribtuion.</li>
- <li>Create a set of LLVM GCC binary distribtuions for each supported
- platform. These binary distributions must include compiled versions
- of the libraries found in <tt>llvm/runtime</tt> from the LLVM
- source distribution created in Step 1.</li>
+<li>Set code freeze and branch creation date for 3 months after last release
+date. Announce release schedule to the LLVM community and update the website.</li>
+<li>Create release branch and begin release process. </li>
+<li>Send out pre-release for first round of testing. Testing will last 7-10 days.
+During the first round of testing, regressions should be found and fixed. Patches
+are merged from mainline to the release branch.</li>
+<li>Generate and send out second pre-release. Bugs found during this time will
+not be fixed unless absolutely critical. Bugs introduce by patches merged in
+will be fixed and if so, a 3rd round of testing is needed.</li>
+<li>The release notes should be updated during the first and second round of
+pre-release testing.</li>
+<li>Finally, release!</li>
</ol>
-</p>
</div>
+
<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
<div class="doc_section"><a name="process">Release Process</a></div>
<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="overview">Process Overview</a></div>
<div class="doc_text">
<ol>
- <li><a href="#updocs">Update Documentation</a></li>
- <li><a href="#merge">Merge Branches</a></li>
- <li><a href="#deps">Make LibDeps.txt</a></li>
- <li><a href="#settle">Settle LLVM HEAD</a></li>
- <li><a href="#tag">Tag LLVM and Create the Release Branch</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#branch">Create Release Branch</a></li>
<li><a href="#verchanges">Update LLVM Version </a></li>
+ <li><a href="#dist">Build the LLVM Source Distributions</a></li>
<li><a href="#build">Build LLVM</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#llvmgccbin">Build the LLVM GCC Binary Distribution</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#rpm">Build RPM Packages (optional)</a></li>
<li><a href="#check">Run 'make check'</a></li>
<li><a href="#test">Run LLVM Test Suite</a></li>
- <li><a href="#dist">Build the LLVM Source Distributions</a></li>
- <li><a href="#llvmgccbin">Build the LLVM GCC Binary Distribution</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#prerelease">Pre-Release Testing</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#tag">Tag the LLVM Release Branch</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#updocs">Update Documentation</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#updemo">Update the LLVM Demo Page</a></li>
<li><a href="#webupdates">Update the LLVM Website</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#announce">Announce the Release</a></li>
+
</ol>
</div>
<!-- ======================================================================= -->
-<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="updocs">Update Documentation</a></div>
+<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="branch">Create Release Branch</a></div>
<div class="doc_text">
- <p>
- Review the documentation and ensure that it is up to date. The Release Notes
- must be updated to reflect bug fixes, new known issues, and changes in the
- list of supported platforms. The Getting Started Guide should be updated to
- reflect the new release version number tag avaiable from CVS and changes in
- basic system requirements.
+<p>Branch the Subversion HEAD using the following procedure:</p>
+ <ol>
+ <li>
+ <p>Verify that the current Subversion HEAD is in decent shape by examining nightly
+ tester results.</p></li>
+ <li>
+ <p>Request all developers to refrain from committing. Offenders get commit
+ rights taken away (temporarily).</p></li>
+ <li>
+ <p> Create the release branch for <tt>llvm</tt>, <tt>llvm-gcc4.2</tt>, and
+ the <tt>test-suite</tt>. The branch name will be <tt>release_XX</tt>,
+ where <tt>XX</tt> is the major and minor release numbers. These branches can
+ be created without checking out anything from subversion.
</p>
-</div>
+
+ <div class="doc_code">
+<pre>
+svn copy https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk \
+ https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/branches/release_<i>XX</i>
+svn copy https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm-gcc-4.2/trunk \
+ https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm-gcc-4.2/branches/release_<i>XX</i>
+svn copy https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/test-suite/trunk \
+ https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/test-suite/branches/release_<i>XX</i>
+</pre>
+ </div>
+
+ <li>
+ <p>Advise developers they can work on Subversion HEAD again.</p></li>
+
+ <li>
+ <p>The Release Manager should switch to the release branch (as all changes
+ to the release will now be done in the branch). The easiest way to do this
+ is to grab another working copy using the following commands:</p>
+
+<div class="doc_code">
+<pre>
+svn co https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/branches/release_<i>XX</i>
+svn co https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm-gcc-4.2/branches/release_<i>XX</i>
+svn co https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/test-suite/branches/release_<i>XX</i>
+</pre>
+</div></li>
-<!-- ======================================================================= -->
-<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="merge">Merge Branches</a></div>
-<div class="doc_text">
-<p>
-Merge any work done on branches intended for release into mainline. Finish and
-commit all new features or bug fixes that are scheduled to go into the release.
-Work that is not to be incorporated into the release should not be merged from
-branchs or commited from developer's working directories.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From this point until the release branch is created, developers should
-<em>not</em>
-commit changes to the llvm and llvm-gcc CVS repositories unless it is a bug
-fix <em>for the release</em>.
-</p>
</div>
-
-<!-- ======================================================================= -->
-<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="deps">Make LibDeps.txt</a></div>
-<div class="doc_text">
- <p>Rebuild the <tt>LibDeps.txt</tt> target in <tt>utils/llvm-config</tt>. This
- makes sure that the <tt>llvm-config</tt> utility remains relevant for the
- release, reflecting any changes in the library dependencies.</p>
+ </ol>
</div>
-
<!-- ======================================================================= -->
-<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="settle">Settle CVS HEAD</a></div>
+<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="verchanges">Update LLVM Version</a></div>
<div class="doc_text">
<p>
- Use the nightly test reports and 'make check' (deja-gnu based tests) to
- ensure that recent changes and merged branches have not destabilized LLVM.
- Platforms which are used less often should be given special attention as they
- are the most likely to break from commits from the previous step.
+ After creating the LLVM release branch, update the release branches'
+ autoconf/configure.ac version from X.Xsvn to just X.X. Update it on mainline
+ as well to be the next version (X.X+1svn). Regenerated the configure script
+ for both. This must be done for both llvm and the test-suite.
+ </p>
+ <p>In addition, the version number of all the Bugzilla components must be
+ updated for the next release.
</p>
</div>
<!-- ======================================================================= -->
-<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="tag">CVS Tag And Branch</a></div>
-<div class="doc_text">
- <p>Tag and branch the CVS HEAD using the following procedure:</p>
- <ol>
- <li>
- Request all developers to refrain from committing. Offenders get commit
- rights taken away (temporarily).
- </li>
-
- <li>
- The Release Manager updates his/her llvm, llvm-test, and llvm-gcc source
- trees with the
- latest sources from mainline CVS. The Release Manage may want to consider
- using a new working directory for this to keep current uncommitted work
- separate from release work.
- </li>
-
- <li>
- The Release Manager tags his/her llvm, llvm-test, and llvm-gcc working
- directories with
- "ROOT_RELEASE_XX" where XX is the major and minor
- release numbers (you can't have . in a cvs tag name). So, for Release 1.2,
- XX=12 and for Release 1.10, XX=110.
-
- <p>
- <tt>cvs tag ROOT_RELEASE_XX</tt><br>
- </p>
- </li>
-
- <li>
- Immediately create cvs branches based on the ROOT_RELEASE_XX tag. The tag
- should be "release_XX" (where XX matches that used for the ROOT_RELEASE_XX
- tag). This is where the release distribution will be created.
-
- <p>
- cvs tag -b -r ROOT_RELEASE_XX release_XX
- </p>
- </li>
-
- <li>
- Advise developers they can work on CVS HEAD again.
- </li>
-
- <li>
- The Release Manager and any developers working on the release should switch
- to the release branch (as all changes to the release will now be done in
- the branch). The easiest way to do this is to grab another working copy
- using the following commands:
-
- <p>
- <tt>cvs -d <CVS Repository> co -r release_XX llvm</tt><br>
- <tt>cvs -d <CVS Repository> co -r release_XX llvm-test</tt><br>
- <tt>cvs -d <CVS Repository> co -r release_XX llvm-gcc</tt><br>
- </p>
- </li>
-</div>
-
-<!-- ======================================================================= -->
-<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="verchanges">Update LLVM Version</a></div>
+<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="dist">Build the LLVM Source Distributions</a></div>
<div class="doc_text">
<p>
- After creating the llvm release branch, update the release branch's autoconf/configure.ac
- version from X.Xcvs to just X.X. Update it on mainline as well to be the next version
- (X.X+1cvs).
+ Create source distributions for LLVM, LLVM GCC, and the LLVM Test Suite by
+ exporting the source from Subversion and archiving it. This can be done with
+ the following commands:
</p>
+<div class="doc_code">
+<pre>
+svn export https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/branches/release_<i>XX</i> llvm-X.X
+svn export https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm-gcc-4.2/branches/release_<i>XX</i> llvm-gcc4.2-X.X.source
+svn export https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/test-suite/branches/release_<i>XX</i> llvm-test-X.X
+tar -cvf - llvm-X.X | gzip > llvm-X.X.tar.gz
+tar -cvf - llvm-test-X.X | gzip > llvm-test-X.X.tar.gz
+tar -cvf - llvm-gcc4.2-X.X.source | gzip > llvm-gcc-4.2-X.X.source.tar.gz
+</pre>
+</div>
</div>
<!-- ======================================================================= -->
<p>
Build both debug and release (optimized) versions of LLVM on all
platforms. Ensure the build is warning and error free on each platform.
+ Note that when building the LLVM GCC Binary, use a release build of LLVM.
</p>
+</div>
+<!-- ======================================================================= -->
+<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="llvmgccbin">Build the LLVM GCC Binary Distribution</a></div>
+<div class="doc_text">
<p>
- Build a new version of the LLVM GCC front-end after building the LLVM tools.
- Once that is complete, go back to the LLVM source tree and build and install
- the <tt>llvm/runtime</tt> libraries.
+ Creating the LLVM GCC binary distribution (release/optimized) requires
+ performing the following steps for each supported platform:
</p>
+
+ <ol>
+ <li>
+ Build the LLVM GCC front-end by following the directions in the README.LLVM
+ file. Be sure to build with LLVM_VERSION_INFO=X.X, where X is the major and
+ minor release numbers.
+ </li>
+
+ <li>
+ Copy the installation directory to a directory named for the specific target.
+ For example on Red Hat Enterprise Linux, the directory would be named
+ <tt>llvm-gcc4.0-2.1-x86-linux-RHEL4</tt>. Archive and compress the new directory.
+ </li>
+ </ol>
</div>
<!-- ======================================================================= -->
<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="check">Run 'make check'</a></div>
<div class="doc_text">
- <p>Run <tt>make check</tt> and ensure there are no unexpected failures. If
- there are, resolve the failures, commit them back into the release branch,
- and restart testing by <a href="#build">re-building LLVM</a>.
+ <p>
+ Using the newly built llvm-gcc and llvm, reconfigure llvm to locate llvm-gcc.
+ Run <tt>make check</tt> and ensure there are no unexpected failures. If there
+ are, resolve the failures or file a bug. If there is a fix commited to mainline,
+ merge back into the release branch, and restart testing by
+ <a href="#build">re-building LLVM</a> and <a href="#build">llvm-gcc</a>. If no
+ fix will be made, XFAIL the test and commit back to the release branch.
</p>
<p>
- Ensure that 'make check' passes on all platforms for all targets. If certain
- failures cannot be resolved before release time, determine if marking them
- XFAIL is appropriate. If not, fix the bug and go back. The test suite must
- complete with "0 unexpected failures" for release.
+ Ensure that '<tt>make check</tt>' passes on all platforms for all targets. The
+ test suite must complete with "0 unexpected failures" before sending out the
+ pre-releases for testing.
</p>
</div>
<!-- ======================================================================= -->
<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="test">LLVM Test Suite</a></div>
<div class="doc_text">
- <p>Run the llvm-test suite and ensure there are no unacceptable failures.
- If there are, resolve the failures and go back to
- <a href="#build">re-building LLVM</a>. The test suite
- should be run in Nightly Test mode. All tests must pass.
+ <p>
+ Run the <tt>llvm-test</tt> suite and ensure there are no unacceptable
+ failures. Unacceptable failures are regression from the previous release
+ and (optionally) major performance regressions from the previous release.
+ If a regression is found a bug is filled, but the pre-releases may still go
+ out.</p>
</div>
<!-- ======================================================================= -->
-<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="dist">Build the LLVM Source Distributions</a></div>
+<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="rpm">Building RPM packages (optional)</a></div>
<div class="doc_text">
<p>
- Create source distributions for LLVM, LLVM GCC, and the LLVM Test Suite by
- exporting the source
- from CVS and archiving it. This can be done with the following commands:
+ You can, optionally, create source and binary RPM packages for LLVM. These may
+ make it easier to get LLVM into a distribution. This can be done with the
+ following commands:
</p>
+<div class="doc_code">
+<pre>
+make dist # Build the distribution source tarball
+make dist-check # Check that the source tarball can build itself.
+cp llvm-M.m.tar.gz /usr/src/redhat/SOURCES # Required by rpmbuild
+make srpm # for source rpm
+make rpm # for binary rpm
+</pre>
+</div>
+
<p>
- <tt>cvs -d <CVS Repository> export -r release_XX llvm</tt><br>
- <tt>cvs -d <CVS Repository> export -r release_XX llvm-test</tt><br>
- <tt>cvs -d <CVS Repository> export -r release_XX llvm-gcc</tt><br>
- <tt>mkdir cfrontend; mv llvm-gcc cfrontend/src</tt><br>
- <tt>tar -cvf - llvm | gzip > llvm-X.X.tar.gz</tt><br>
- <tt>tar -cvf - llvm-test | gzip > llvm-test-X.X.tar.gz</tt><br>
- <tt>tar -cvf - cfrontend/src | gzip > cfrontend-X.X.source.tar.gz</tt><br>
+ First, use <tt>make dist</tt> to simply build the distribution. Any failures
+ need to be corrected (on the branch). Once <tt>make dist</tt> can be
+ successful, do <tt>make dist-check</tt>. This target will do the same thing as
+ the 'dist' target but also test that distribution to make sure it can build
+ itself and runs <tt>make check</tt> as well. This ensures that needed files
+ are not missing and that the src tarball can be successfully unpacked, built,
+ installed, and cleaned. Once you have a reliable tarball, you need to copy it
+ to the <tt>/usr/src/redhat/SOURCES</tt> directory which is a requirement of
+ the rpmbuild tool. The last two <tt>make</tt> invocations just run rpmbuild to
+ build either a source (<tt>srpm</tt>) or binary (<tt>rpm</tt>) RPM package.
</p>
-
- <!-- This is a
- two step process. First, use "make dist" to simply build the distribution. Any
- failures need to be corrected (on the branch). Once "make dist" can be
- successful, do "make dist-check". This target will do the same thing as the
- 'dist' target but also test that distribution to make sure it works. This
- ensures that needed files are not missing and that the src tarball can be
- successfully unbacked, built, installed, and cleaned. This two-level testing
- needs to be done on each target platform.
- -->
</div>
<!-- ======================================================================= -->
-<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="llvmgccbin">Build the LLVM GCC Binary Distribution</a></div>
+<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="prerelease">Pre-Release Testing</a></div>
<div class="doc_text">
<p>
- Creating the LLVM GCC binary distribution requires performing the following
- steps for each supported platform:
- </p>
-
+ Once all testing has been completed and appropriate bugs filed, the pre-release
+ tar balls may be put on the website and the LLVM community is notified. Ask that
+ all LLVM developers test the release in 2 ways:</p>
<ol>
- <li>
- Build the LLVM GCC front-end. The LLVM GCC front-end must be installed in
- a directory named <tt>cfrontend/<platform>/llvm-gcc</tt>. For
- example, the Sparc/Solaris directory is named
- <tt>cfrontend/sparc/llvm-gcc</tt>.
- </li>
-
- <li>
- Build the libraries in <tt>llvm/runtime</tt> and install them into the
- created LLVM GCC installation directory.
- </li>
+ <li>Download llvm-X.X, llvm-test-X.X, and the appropriate llvm-gcc4 binary.
+ Run "make check" and the full llvm-test suite (make TEST=nightly report).<li>
+ <li>Download llvm-X.X, llvm-test-X.X, and the llvm-gcc4 source. Compile
+ everything. Run "make check" and the full llvm-test suite (make TEST=nightly
+ report).</li>
+ </ol>
+ <p>Ask LLVM developers to submit the report and make check results to the list.
+ Verify that there are no regressions from the previous release. For
+ unsupported targets, verify that make check at least is clean.</p>
+
+ <p>The first round of pre-release testing will be the longest. During this time,
+ all regressions must be fixed before the second pre-release is created (repeat
+ steps 4-8).</p>
+
+ <p>If this is the second round of testing, this is only to ensure the bug fixes
+ previously merged in have not created new major problems. This is not the time
+ to solve additional and unrelated bugs. If no patches are merged in, the release
+ is determined to be ready and the release manager may move onto the next step.</p>
+</div>
- <li>
- For systems with non-distributable header files (e.g. Solaris), manually
- remove header files that the GCC build process has "fixed." This process
- is admittedly painful, but not as bad as it looks; these header files are
- almost always easily identifiable with simple grep expressions and are
- installed in only a few directories in the GCC installation directory.
- </li>
- <li>
- Add the copyright files and header file fix script.
- </li>
+<!-- ======================================================================= -->
+<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="tag">Tag the Release Branch</a></div>
+<div class="doc_text">
+ <p>Tag the release branch using the following procedure:</p>
+<div class="doc_code">
+<pre>
+svn copy https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/branches/release_XX \
+ https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/tags/RELEASE_<i>XX</i>
+svn copy https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm-gcc-4.2/branches/release_XX \
+ https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm-gcc-4.2/tags/RELEASE_<i>XX</i>
+svn copy https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/test-suite/branches/release_XX \
+ https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/test-suite/tags/RELEASE_<i>XX</i>
+</pre>
+</div>
+</div>
- <li>
- Archive and compress the installation directory. These can be found in
- previous releases of the LLVM-GCC front-end.
- </li>
- </ol>
+<!-- ======================================================================= -->
+<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="updocs">Update Documentation</a></div>
+<div class="doc_text">
+ <p>
+ Review the documentation and ensure that it is up to date. The Release Notes
+ must be updated to reflect bug fixes, new known issues, and changes in the
+ list of supported platforms. The Getting Started Guide should be updated to
+ reflect the new release version number tag avaiable from Subversion and
+ changes in basic system requirements. Merge both changes from mainline into
+ the release branch.
+ </p>
</div>
+<!-- ======================================================================= -->
+<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="updemo">Update the LLVM Demo Page</a></div>
+<div class="doc_text">
+ <p>
+ The LLVM demo page must be updated to use the new release. This consists of
+ using the llvm-gcc binary and building LLVM. Update the website demo page
+ configuration to use the new release.</p>
+</div>
<!-- ======================================================================= -->
<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="webupdates">Update the LLVM Website</a></div>
<div class="doc_text">
<p>
- Check out the llvm-www module from cvs. Create a new subdirectory X.X in the
- releases directory. Place the llvm, llvm-test, llvm-gcc source, and llvm-gcc
- binaries in this new directory. Copy the llvm/docs and LICENSE.txt files
- into this new directory. Update the releases/download.html file with the new release.
- Update the releases/index.html with the new release. Finally, update the main page (
- index.html and sidebar) to point to the new release and release announcement. Make
- sure this all gets commited back into cvs.
- </p>
+ The website must be updated before the release announcement is sent out. Here is
+ what to do:</p>
+ <ol>
+ <li> Check out the <tt>website</tt> module from CVS. </li>
+ <li> Create a new subdirectory X.X in the releases directory. </li>
+ <li> Commit the <tt>llvm</tt>, <tt>test-suite</tt>, <tt>llvm-gcc</tt> source,
+ and <tt>llvm-gcc</tt> binaries in this new directory. </li>
+ <li> Copy and commit the <tt>llvm/docs</tt> and <tt>LICENSE.txt</tt>
+ files into this new directory. The docs should be built with BUILD_FOR_WEBSITE=1.</li>
+ <li> Commit the index.html to the release/X.X directory to redirect (use from previous
+ release. </li>
+ <li> Update the <tt>releases/download.html</tt> file with the new release. </li>
+ <li>Update the <tt>releases/index.html</tt> with the new release and link to
+ release documentation.</li>
+ <li> Finally, update the main page (<tt>index.html</tt> and sidebar) to
+ point to the new release and release announcement. Make sure this all gets
+ commited back into Subversion.</li>
+ </ol>
</div>
-<!--
-<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="release">Release</a></div>
+<!-- ======================================================================= -->
+<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="announce">Announce the Release</a></div>
<div class="doc_text">
- <p>Release the distribution tarball to the public. This consists of generating
- several tarballs. The first set, the source distributions, are automatically
- generated by the "make dist" and "make dist-check". There are gzip, bzip2, and
- zip versions of these bundles.</p>
- <p>The second set of tarballs is the binary release. When "make dist-check"
- succeeds, it will have created an _install directory into which it installed
- the binary release. You need to rename that directory as "llvm" and then
- create tarballs from the contents of that "llvm" directory.</p>
- <p>Finally, use rpm to make an rpm package based on the llvm.spec file. Don't
- forget to update the version number, documentation, etc. in the llvm.spec
- file.</p>
+ <p>Have Chris send out the release announcement when everything is finished.</p>
</div>
--->
<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
<div class="doc_section"><a name="dist_targets">Distribution Targets</a></div>
<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
+
<!-- ======================================================================= -->
<div class="doc_subsection">Overview</div>
<div class="doc_text">
-<p>The first thing you need to understand is that there are multiple make
-targets to support this feature. Here's an overview, we'll delve into the
-details later.</p>
-<ul>
- <li><b>distdir</b> - builds the distribution directory from which the
- distribution will be packaged</li>
- <li><b>dist</b> - builds each of the distribution tarballs (tar.gz,
- tar.bzip2, .zip). These can be built individually as well, with separate
- targets.</li>
- <li><b>dist-check</b> - this is identical to <tt>dist</tt> but includes a
- check on the distribution that ensures the tarball can: unpack successfully,
- compile correctly, pass 'make check', and pass 'make clean'.</li>
- <li><b>dist-clean</b>- this just does a normal clean but also cleans up the
- stuff generated by the other three <tt>dist</tt> targets (above).</li>
-</ul>
-<p>Okay, that's the basic functionality. When making a release, we want to
-ensure that the tree you build the distribution from passes
-<tt>dist-check</tt>. Beyond fixing the usual bugs, there is generally one
-impediment to making the release in this fashion: missing files. The
-<tt>dist-check</tt> process guards against that possibility. It will either
-fail and that failure will indicate what's missing, or it will succeed
-meaning that it has proved that the tarballs can actually succeed in
-building LLVM correctly and that it passes <tt>make check</tt>.</p>
+ <p>
+ The first thing you need to understand is that there are multiple make targets
+ to support this feature. Here's an overview, we'll delve into the details
+ later.
+ </p>
+
+ <ul>
+ <li><b>distdir</b> - builds the distribution directory from which the
+ distribution will be packaged</li>
+ <li><b>dist</b> - builds each of the distribution tarballs (tar.gz,
+ tar.bzip2, .zip). These can be built individually as well, with separate
+ targets.</li>
+ <li><b>dist-check</b> - this is identical to <tt>dist</tt> but includes a
+ check on the distribution that ensures the tarball can: unpack
+ successfully, compile correctly, pass '<tt>make check</tt>', and pass
+ '<tt>make clean</tt>'.</li>
+ <li><b>dist-clean</b>- this just does a normal clean but also cleans up the
+ stuff generated by the other three <tt>dist</tt> targets (above).</li>
+ </ul>
+
+ <p>
+ Okay, that's the basic functionality. When making a release, we want to ensure
+ that the tree you build the distribution from passes
+ <tt>dist-check</tt>. Beyond fixing the usual bugs, there is generally one
+ impediment to making the release in this fashion: missing files. The
+ <tt>dist-check</tt> process guards against that possibility. It will either
+ fail and that failure will indicate what's missing, or it will succeed meaning
+ that it has proved that the tarballs can actually succeed in building LLVM
+ correctly and that it passes <tt>make check</tt>.
+ </p>
+</div>
+
<!-- ======================================================================= -->
+
<div class="doc_subsection">distdir</div>
-<p>This target builds the distribution directory which is the directory from
-which the tarballs are generated. The distribution directory has the same
-name as the release, e.g. LLVM-1.7). This target goes through the following
-process:
-<ol>
- <li>First, if there was an old distribution directory (for the current
- release), it is removed in its entirety and you see <tt>Removing old
- LLVM-1.7</tt></li>
- <li>Second, it issues a <tt>make all ENABLE_OPTIMIZED=3D1</tt> to ensure
- that the everything in your tree can be built in release mode. Often times
- there are discrepancies in building between debug and release modes so it
- enforces release mode first. If that fails, the <tt>distdir</tt> target
- fails too. This is preceded by the message <tt>Making 'all' to verify
- build</tt>.</li>
- <li>Next, it traverses your source tree and copies it to a new directory
- that has the name of the release (<tt>LLVM-M.m</tt> in our current case).
- This is the directory that will get tar'd. It contains all the software
- that needs to be in the distribution. During the copying process, it omits
- generated files, CVS directories, and any other "cruft" that's in your
- build tree. This is done to eliminate the possibility of huge distribution
- tarballs that include useless or irrelevant stuff in them. This is the
- trickiest part of making the distribution. Done manually you will either
- include stuff that shouldn't be in the distribution or exclude stuff that
- should. This step is preceded by the message <tt>Building Distribution
- Directory LLVM-1.7</tt></li>
- <li>The distribution directory is then traversed and all <tt>CVS</tt> or
- <tt>.svn</tt> directories are removed. You see: <tt>Eliminating CVS/.svn
- directories from distribution</tt></li>
- <li>The recursive <tt>dist-hook</tt> target is executed. This gives each
- directory a chance to modify the distribution in some way (more on this
- below).</li>
- <li>The distribution directory is traversed and the correct file
- permissions and modes are set based on the type of file.</li>
-</ol>
-<p>To control the process of making the distribution directory correctly,
-each Makefile can utilize two features:</p>
-<ol>
- <li><b><tt>EXTRA_DIST</tt></B> - this make variable specifies which files
- it should distribute. By default, all source files are automatically
- included for distribution as well as certain <tt>well known</tt> files
- (see DistAlways variable in Makefile.rules for details). Each Makefile
- specifies, via the <tt>EXTRA_DIST</tt> variable, which additional files
- need to be distributed. Only those files that are needed to build LLVM
- should be added to <tt>EXTRA_DIST</tt>. <tt>EXTRA_DIST</tt> contains a
- list of file or directory names that should be distributed. For example,
- the top level Makefile contains
- <tt>EXTRA_DIST := test llvm.spec include</tt>.
- This means that in addition to regular things that are distributed at the
- top level (<tt>CREDITS.txt, LICENSE.txt</tt>, etc.) the distribution should
- contain the entire <tt>test</tt> and <tt>include</tt> directories as well
- as the <tt>llvm.spec</tt> file.</li>
- <li><b><tt>dist-hook</tt></B> - this make target can be used to alter the
- content of the distribution directory. For example, in the top level
- Makefile there is some logic to eliminate files in the <tt>include</tt>
- subtree that are generated by the configure script. These should not be
- distributed. Similarly, any <tt>dist-hook</tt> target found in any
- directory can add or remove or modify things just before it gets packaged.
- Any transformation is permitted. Generally, not much is needed.
-</ol>
-<p>You will see various messages if things go wrong:</p>
-<ol>
- <li>During the copying process, any files that are missing will be flagged
- with: <tt>===== WARNING: Distribution Source 'dir/file' Not Found!</tt>
- These must be corrected by either adding the file or removing it from
- <tt>EXTRA_DIST</tt>.
- <li>If you build the distribution with <tt>VERBOSE=1</tt>, then you might
- also see: <tt>Skipping non-existent 'dir/file'</tt> in certain cases where
- its okay to skip the file.</li>
- <li>The target can fail if any of the things it does fail. Error messages
- should indicate what went wrong.</li>
-</ol>
+<div class="doc_text">
+ <p>
+ This target builds the distribution directory which is the directory from
+ which the tarballs are generated. The distribution directory has the same
+ name as the release, e.g. LLVM-1.7). This target goes through the following
+ process:
+ </p>
+
+ <ol>
+ <li>First, if there was an old distribution directory (for the current
+ release), it is removed in its entirety and you see <tt>Removing old
+ LLVM-1.7</tt></li>
+ <li>Second, it issues a <tt>make all ENABLE_OPTIMIZED=3D1</tt> to ensure
+ that the everything in your tree can be built in release mode. Often
+ times there are discrepancies in building between debug and release
+ modes so it enforces release mode first. If that fails, the
+ <tt>distdir</tt> target fails too. This is preceded by the message
+ <tt>Making 'all' to verify build</tt>.</li>
+ <li>Next, it traverses your source tree and copies it to a new directory
+ that has the name of the release (<tt>LLVM-M.m</tt> in our current
+ case). This is the directory that will get tar'd. It contains all the
+ software that needs to be in the distribution. During the copying
+ process, it omits generated files, SVN directories, and any other
+ "cruft" that's in your build tree. This is done to eliminate the
+ possibility of huge distribution tarballs that include useless or
+ irrelevant stuff in them. This is the trickiest part of making the
+ distribution. Done manually you will either include stuff that
+ shouldn't be in the distribution or exclude stuff that should. This
+ step is preceded by the message <tt>Building Distribution Directory
+ LLVM-1.7</tt></li>
+ <li>The distribution directory is then traversed and all <tt>CVS</tt> or
+ <tt>.svn</tt> directories are removed. You see: <tt>Eliminating CVS/.svn
+ directories from distribution</tt></li>
+ <li>The recursive <tt>dist-hook</tt> target is executed. This gives each
+ directory a chance to modify the distribution in some way (more on this
+ below).</li>
+ <li>The distribution directory is traversed and the correct file
+ permissions and modes are set based on the type of file.</li>
+ </ol>
+
+ <p>
+ To control the process of making the distribution directory correctly, each
+ Makefile can utilize two features:
+ </p>
+
+ <ol>
+ <li><b><tt>EXTRA_DIST</tt></B> - this make variable specifies which files
+ it should distribute. By default, all source files are automatically
+ included for distribution as well as certain <tt>well known</tt> files
+ (see DistAlways variable in Makefile.rules for details). Each Makefile
+ specifies, via the <tt>EXTRA_DIST</tt> variable, which additional files
+ need to be distributed. Only those files that are needed to build LLVM
+ should be added to <tt>EXTRA_DIST</tt>. <tt>EXTRA_DIST</tt> contains a
+ list of file or directory names that should be distributed. For example,
+ the top level Makefile contains <tt>EXTRA_DIST := test llvm.spec
+ include</tt>. This means that in addition to regular things that are
+ distributed at the top level (<tt>CREDITS.txt, LICENSE.txt</tt>, etc.)
+ the distribution should contain the entire <tt>test</tt> and
+ <tt>include</tt> directories as well as the <tt>llvm.spec</tt> file.</li>
+ <li><b><tt>dist-hook</tt></B> - this make target can be used to alter the
+ content of the distribution directory. For example, in the top level
+ Makefile there is some logic to eliminate files in the <tt>include</tt>
+ subtree that are generated by the configure script. These should not be
+ distributed. Similarly, any <tt>dist-hook</tt> target found in any
+ directory can add or remove or modify things just before it gets
+ packaged. Any transformation is permitted. Generally, not much is
+ needed.</li>
+ </ol>
+
+ <p>
+ You will see various messages if things go wrong:
+ </p>
+
+ <ol>
+ <li>During the copying process, any files that are missing will be flagged
+ with: <tt>===== WARNING: Distribution Source 'dir/file' Not Found!</tt>
+ These must be corrected by either adding the file or removing it from
+ <tt>EXTRA_DIST</tt>.</li>
+ <li>If you build the distribution with <tt>VERBOSE=1</tt>, then you might
+ also see: <tt>Skipping non-existent 'dir/file'</tt> in certain cases
+ where it's okay to skip the file.</li>
+ <li>The target can fail if any of the things it does fail. Error messages
+ should indicate what went wrong.</li>
+ </ol>
+</div>
+
<!-- ======================================================================= -->
<div class="doc_subsection">dist</div>
-<p>This target does exactly what <tt>distdir</tt> target does, but also
-includes assembling the tarballs. There are actually four related targets
-here:<p>
+<div class="doc_text">
+ <p>
+ This target does exactly what <tt>distdir</tt> target does, but also includes
+ assembling the tarballs. There are actually four related targets here:
+ </p>
+
<ul>
<li><b><tt>dist-gzip</tt></b>: package the gzipped distribution tar
- file. The distribution directory is packaged into a single file ending in
- <tt>.tar.gz</tt> which is gzip compressed.</li>
+ file. The distribution directory is packaged into a single file ending
+ in <tt>.tar.gz</tt> which is gzip compressed.</li>
<li><b><tt>dist-bzip2</tt></b>: package the bzip2 distribution tar file.
- The distribution directory is packaged into a single file ending in
- <tt>.tar.bzip2</tt> which is bzip2 compressed.</li>
+ The distribution directory is packaged into a single file ending in
+ <tt>.tar.bzip2</tt> which is bzip2 compressed.</li>
<li><b><tt>dist-zip</tt></b>: package the zip distribution file. The
- distribution directory is packaged into a single file ending in
- <tt>.zip</tt> which is zip compressed.</li>
+ distribution directory is packaged into a single file ending in
+ <tt>.zip</tt> which is zip compressed.</li>
<li><b><tt>dist</tt></b>: does all three, dist-gzip, dist-bzip2,
- dist-zip</li>
+ dist-zip</li>
</ul>
+</div>
+
<!-- ======================================================================= -->
<div class="doc_subsection">dist-check</div>
-<p>This target checks the distribution. The basic idea is that it unpacks the
-distribution tarball and ensures that it can build. It takes the following
-actions:</p>
-<ol>
- <li>It depends on the <tt>dist-gzip</tt> target which, if it hasn't already
- been built, builds the gzip tar bundle (see dist and distdir above).</li>
- <li>removes any pre-existing <tt>_distcheckdir</tt> at the top level.</li>
- <li>creates a new <tt>_distcheckdir</tt> directory at the top level.</li>
- <li>creates a <tt>build</tt> subdirectory and an <tt>install</tt>
- subdirectory under <tt>_distcheckdir</tt>.</li>
- <li>unzips and untars the release tarball into <tt>_distcheckdir</tt>,
- creating <tt>LLVM-1.7</tt> directory (from the tarball).</li>
- <li>in the build subdirectory, it configures with appropriate options to build
- from the unpacked source tarball into the <tt>build</tt> directory with
- installation in the <tt>install</tt> directory.</li>
- <li>runs <tt>make all</tt></li>
- <li>runs <tt>make </tt><tt>check</tt></li>
- <li>runs <tt>make install</tt></li>
- <li>runs <tt>make uninstall</tt></li>
- <li>runs <tt>make dist</tt></li>
- <li>runs <tt>make clean</tt></li>
- <li>runs <tt>make dist-clean</tt></li>
-</ol>
-<p>If it can pass all that, the distribution will be deemed distribution
-worth y and you will see:<p>
-<pre>===== LLVM-1.7.tar.gz Ready For Distribution =====</pre>
-<p>This means the tarball should then be tested on other platforms and have the
-nightly test run against it. If those all pass, THEN it is ready for
-distribution.</p>
-<p>
-A note about disk space: using <tt>dist-check</tt> will easily triple the
-amount of disk space your build tree is using. You might want to check
-available space before you begin.</p>
+<div class="doc_text">
+ <p>
+ This target checks the distribution. The basic idea is that it unpacks the
+ distribution tarball and ensures that it can build. It takes the following
+ actions:
+ </p>
+
+ <ol>
+ <li>It depends on the <tt>dist-gzip</tt> target which, if it hasn't already
+ been built, builds the gzip tar bundle (see dist and distdir
+ above).</li>
+ <li>removes any pre-existing <tt>_distcheckdir</tt> at the top level.</li>
+ <li>creates a new <tt>_distcheckdir</tt> directory at the top level.</li>
+ <li>creates a <tt>build</tt> subdirectory and an <tt>install</tt>
+ subdirectory under <tt>_distcheckdir</tt>.</li>
+ <li>unzips and untars the release tarball into <tt>_distcheckdir</tt>,
+ creating <tt>LLVM-1.7</tt> directory (from the tarball).</li>
+ <li>in the build subdirectory, it configures with appropriate options to
+ build from the unpacked source tarball into the <tt>build</tt> directory
+ with installation in the <tt>install</tt> directory.</li>
+ <li>runs <tt>make all</tt></li>
+ <li>runs <tt>make </tt><tt>check</tt></li>
+ <li>runs <tt>make install</tt></li>
+ <li>runs <tt>make uninstall</tt></li>
+ <li>runs <tt>make dist</tt></li>
+ <li>runs <tt>make clean</tt></li>
+ <li>runs <tt>make dist-clean</tt></li>
+ </ol>
+
+ <p>
+ If it can pass all that, the distribution will be deemed distribution worth y
+ and you will see:
+ </p>
+
+ <pre>===== LLVM-1.7.tar.gz Ready For Distribution =====</pre>
+
+ <p>
+ This means the tarball should then be tested on other platforms and have the
+ nightly test run against it. If those all pass, THEN it is ready for
+ distribution.
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ A note about disk space: using <tt>dist-check</tt> will easily triple the
+ amount of disk space your build tree is using. You might want to check
+ available space before you begin.
+ </p>
+</div>
+
<!-- ======================================================================= -->
<div class="doc_subsection">dist-clean</div>
-<h2>dist-clean</h2>
-<p>In addition to doing a normal <tt>clean</tt>, this target will clean up the
-files and directories created by the distribution targets. In particular the
-distribution directory <tt>(LLVM-X.X</tt>), check directory
-(<tt>_distcheckdir</tt>), and the various tarballs will be removed. You do
-this after the release has shipped and you no longer need this stuff in your
-build tree.</p>
+<div class="doc_text">
+ <p>
+ In addition to doing a normal <tt>clean</tt>, this target will clean up the
+ files and directories created by the distribution targets. In particular the
+ distribution directory (<tt>LLVM-X.X</tt>), check directory
+ (<tt>_distcheckdir</tt>), and the various tarballs will be removed. You do
+ this after the release has shipped and you no longer need this stuff in your
+ build tree.
+ </p>
</div>
<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
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