This introduces a 'minimum chain work' chainparam which is intended to be the known amount of work in the chain for the network at the time of software release. If you don't have this much work, you're not yet caught up. This is used instead of the count of blocks test from checkpoints. This criteria is trivial to keep updated as there is no element of subjectivity, trust, or position dependence to it. It is also a more reliable metric of sync status than a block count.
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Release Process
Before every release candidate:
-
Update translations (ping wumpus on IRC) see translation_process.md.
-
Update manpages, see gen-manpages.sh.
Before every minor and major release:
- Update bips.md to account for changes since the last release.
- Update version in sources (see below)
- Write release notes (see below)
- Update
src/chainparams.cpp
nMinimumChainWork with information from the getblockchaininfo rpc.
Before every major release:
- Update hardcoded seeds, see this pull request for an example.
- Update
BLOCK_CHAIN_SIZE
to the current size plus some overhead.
First time / New builders
If you're using the automated script (found in contrib/gitian-build.sh), then at this point you should run it with the "--setup" command. Otherwise ignore this.
Check out the source code in the following directory hierarchy.
cd /path/to/your/toplevel/build
git clone https://github.com/bitcoin-core/gitian.sigs.git
git clone https://github.com/bitcoin-core/bitcoin-detached-sigs.git
git clone https://github.com/devrandom/gitian-builder.git
git clone https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin.git
Bitcoin maintainers/release engineers, update version in sources
Update the following:
configure.ac
:_CLIENT_VERSION_MAJOR
_CLIENT_VERSION_MINOR
_CLIENT_VERSION_REVISION
- Don't forget to set
_CLIENT_VERSION_IS_RELEASE
totrue
src/clientversion.h
: (this mirrorsconfigure.ac
- see issue #3539)CLIENT_VERSION_MAJOR
CLIENT_VERSION_MINOR
CLIENT_VERSION_REVISION
- Don't forget to set
CLIENT_VERSION_IS_RELEASE
totrue
doc/README.md
anddoc/README_windows.txt
doc/Doxyfile
:PROJECT_NUMBER
contains the full versioncontrib/gitian-descriptors/*.yml
: usually one'd want to do this on master after branching off the release - but be sure to at least do it before a new major release
Write release notes. git shortlog helps a lot, for example:
git shortlog --no-merges v(current version, e.g. 0.7.2)..v(new version, e.g. 0.8.0)
(or ping @wumpus on IRC, he has specific tooling to generate the list of merged pulls and sort them into categories based on labels)
Generate list of authors:
git log --format='%aN' "$*" | sort -ui | sed -e 's/^/- /'
Tag version (or release candidate) in git
git tag -s v(new version, e.g. 0.8.0)
Setup and perform Gitian builds
If you're using the automated script (found in contrib/gitian-build.sh), then at this point you should run it with the "--build" command. Otherwise ignore this.
Setup Gitian descriptors:
pushd ./bitcoin
export SIGNER=(your Gitian key, ie bluematt, sipa, etc)
export VERSION=(new version, e.g. 0.8.0)
git fetch
git checkout v${VERSION}
popd
Ensure your gitian.sigs are up-to-date if you wish to gverify your builds against other Gitian signatures.
pushd ./gitian.sigs
git pull
popd
Ensure gitian-builder is up-to-date:
pushd ./gitian-builder
git pull
popd
Fetch and create inputs: (first time, or when dependency versions change)
pushd ./gitian-builder
mkdir -p inputs
wget -P inputs https://bitcoincore.org/cfields/osslsigncode-Backports-to-1.7.1.patch
wget -P inputs http://downloads.sourceforge.net/project/osslsigncode/osslsigncode/osslsigncode-1.7.1.tar.gz
popd
Create the OS X SDK tarball, see the OS X readme for details, and copy it into the inputs directory.
Optional: Seed the Gitian sources cache and offline git repositories
By default, Gitian will fetch source files as needed. To cache them ahead of time:
pushd ./gitian-builder
make -C ../bitcoin/depends download SOURCES_PATH=`pwd`/cache/common
popd
Only missing files will be fetched, so this is safe to re-run for each build.
NOTE: Offline builds must use the --url flag to ensure Gitian fetches only from local URLs. For example:
pushd ./gitian-builder
./bin/gbuild --url bitcoin=/path/to/bitcoin,signature=/path/to/sigs {rest of arguments}
popd
The gbuild invocations below DO NOT DO THIS by default.
Build and sign Bitcoin Core for Linux, Windows, and OS X:
pushd ./gitian-builder
./bin/gbuild --memory 3000 --commit bitcoin=v${VERSION} ../bitcoin/contrib/gitian-descriptors/gitian-linux.yml
./bin/gsign --signer $SIGNER --release ${VERSION}-linux --destination ../gitian.sigs/ ../bitcoin/contrib/gitian-descriptors/gitian-linux.yml
mv build/out/bitcoin-*.tar.gz build/out/src/bitcoin-*.tar.gz ../
./bin/gbuild --memory 3000 --commit bitcoin=v${VERSION} ../bitcoin/contrib/gitian-descriptors/gitian-win.yml
./bin/gsign --signer $SIGNER --release ${VERSION}-win-unsigned --destination ../gitian.sigs/ ../bitcoin/contrib/gitian-descriptors/gitian-win.yml
mv build/out/bitcoin-*-win-unsigned.tar.gz inputs/bitcoin-win-unsigned.tar.gz
mv build/out/bitcoin-*.zip build/out/bitcoin-*.exe ../
./bin/gbuild --memory 3000 --commit bitcoin=v${VERSION} ../bitcoin/contrib/gitian-descriptors/gitian-osx.yml
./bin/gsign --signer $SIGNER --release ${VERSION}-osx-unsigned --destination ../gitian.sigs/ ../bitcoin/contrib/gitian-descriptors/gitian-osx.yml
mv build/out/bitcoin-*-osx-unsigned.tar.gz inputs/bitcoin-osx-unsigned.tar.gz
mv build/out/bitcoin-*.tar.gz build/out/bitcoin-*.dmg ../
popd
Build output expected:
- source tarball (
bitcoin-${VERSION}.tar.gz
) - linux 32-bit and 64-bit dist tarballs (
bitcoin-${VERSION}-linux[32|64].tar.gz
) - windows 32-bit and 64-bit unsigned installers and dist zips (
bitcoin-${VERSION}-win[32|64]-setup-unsigned.exe
,bitcoin-${VERSION}-win[32|64].zip
) - OS X unsigned installer and dist tarball (
bitcoin-${VERSION}-osx-unsigned.dmg
,bitcoin-${VERSION}-osx64.tar.gz
) - Gitian signatures (in
gitian.sigs/${VERSION}-<linux|{win,osx}-unsigned>/(your Gitian key)/
)
Verify other gitian builders signatures to your own. (Optional)
Add other gitian builders keys to your gpg keyring, and/or refresh keys.
gpg --import bitcoin/contrib/gitian-keys/*.pgp
gpg --refresh-keys
Verify the signatures
pushd ./gitian-builder
./bin/gverify -v -d ../gitian.sigs/ -r ${VERSION}-linux ../bitcoin/contrib/gitian-descriptors/gitian-linux.yml
./bin/gverify -v -d ../gitian.sigs/ -r ${VERSION}-win-unsigned ../bitcoin/contrib/gitian-descriptors/gitian-win.yml
./bin/gverify -v -d ../gitian.sigs/ -r ${VERSION}-osx-unsigned ../bitcoin/contrib/gitian-descriptors/gitian-osx.yml
popd
Next steps:
Commit your signature to gitian.sigs:
pushd gitian.sigs
git add ${VERSION}-linux/${SIGNER}
git add ${VERSION}-win-unsigned/${SIGNER}
git add ${VERSION}-osx-unsigned/${SIGNER}
git commit -a
git push # Assuming you can push to the gitian.sigs tree
popd
Wait for Windows/OS X detached signatures:
- Once the Windows/OS X builds each have 3 matching signatures, they will be signed with their respective release keys.
- Detached signatures will then be committed to the bitcoin-detached-sigs repository, which can be combined with the unsigned apps to create signed binaries.
Create (and optionally verify) the signed OS X binary:
pushd ./gitian-builder
./bin/gbuild -i --commit signature=v${VERSION} ../bitcoin/contrib/gitian-descriptors/gitian-osx-signer.yml
./bin/gsign --signer $SIGNER --release ${VERSION}-osx-signed --destination ../gitian.sigs/ ../bitcoin/contrib/gitian-descriptors/gitian-osx-signer.yml
./bin/gverify -v -d ../gitian.sigs/ -r ${VERSION}-osx-signed ../bitcoin/contrib/gitian-descriptors/gitian-osx-signer.yml
mv build/out/bitcoin-osx-signed.dmg ../bitcoin-${VERSION}-osx.dmg
popd
Create (and optionally verify) the signed Windows binaries:
pushd ./gitian-builder
./bin/gbuild -i --commit signature=v${VERSION} ../bitcoin/contrib/gitian-descriptors/gitian-win-signer.yml
./bin/gsign --signer $SIGNER --release ${VERSION}-win-signed --destination ../gitian.sigs/ ../bitcoin/contrib/gitian-descriptors/gitian-win-signer.yml
./bin/gverify -v -d ../gitian.sigs/ -r ${VERSION}-win-signed ../bitcoin/contrib/gitian-descriptors/gitian-win-signer.yml
mv build/out/bitcoin-*win64-setup.exe ../bitcoin-${VERSION}-win64-setup.exe
mv build/out/bitcoin-*win32-setup.exe ../bitcoin-${VERSION}-win32-setup.exe
popd
Commit your signature for the signed OS X/Windows binaries:
pushd gitian.sigs
git add ${VERSION}-osx-signed/${SIGNER}
git add ${VERSION}-win-signed/${SIGNER}
git commit -a
git push # Assuming you can push to the gitian.sigs tree
popd
After 3 or more people have gitian-built and their results match:
- Create
SHA256SUMS.asc
for the builds, and GPG-sign it:
sha256sum * > SHA256SUMS
The list of files should be:
bitcoin-${VERSION}-aarch64-linux-gnu.tar.gz
bitcoin-${VERSION}-arm-linux-gnueabihf.tar.gz
bitcoin-${VERSION}-i686-pc-linux-gnu.tar.gz
bitcoin-${VERSION}-x86_64-linux-gnu.tar.gz
bitcoin-${VERSION}-osx64.tar.gz
bitcoin-${VERSION}-osx.dmg
bitcoin-${VERSION}.tar.gz
bitcoin-${VERSION}-win32-setup.exe
bitcoin-${VERSION}-win32.zip
bitcoin-${VERSION}-win64-setup.exe
bitcoin-${VERSION}-win64.zip
The *-debug*
files generated by the gitian build contain debug symbols
for troubleshooting by developers. It is assumed that anyone that is interested
in debugging can run gitian to generate the files for themselves. To avoid
end-user confusion about which file to pick, as well as save storage
space do not upload these to the bitcoin.org server, nor put them in the torrent.
- GPG-sign it, delete the unsigned file:
gpg --digest-algo sha256 --clearsign SHA256SUMS # outputs SHA256SUMS.asc
rm SHA256SUMS
(the digest algorithm is forced to sha256 to avoid confusion of the Hash:
header that GPG adds with the SHA256 used for the files)
Note: check that SHA256SUMS itself doesn't end up in SHA256SUMS, which is a spurious/nonsensical entry.
-
Upload zips and installers, as well as
SHA256SUMS.asc
from last step, to the bitcoin.org server into/var/www/bin/bitcoin-core-${VERSION}
-
A
.torrent
will appear in the directory after a few minutes. Optionally help seed this torrent. To get themagnet:
URI use:
transmission-show -m <torrent file>
Insert the magnet URI into the announcement sent to mailing lists. This permits
people without access to bitcoin.org
to download the binary distribution.
Also put it into the optional_magnetlink:
slot in the YAML file for
bitcoin.org (see below for bitcoin.org update instructions).
-
Update bitcoin.org version
-
First, check to see if the Bitcoin.org maintainers have prepared a release: https://github.com/bitcoin-dot-org/bitcoin.org/labels/Releases
- If they have, it will have previously failed their Travis CI checks because the final release files weren't uploaded. Trigger a Travis CI rebuild---if it passes, merge.
-
If they have not prepared a release, follow the Bitcoin.org release instructions: https://github.com/bitcoin-dot-org/bitcoin.org#release-notes
-
After the pull request is merged, the website will automatically show the newest version within 15 minutes, as well as update the OS download links. Ping @saivann/@harding (saivann/harding on Freenode) in case anything goes wrong
-
-
Announce the release:
-
bitcoin-dev and bitcoin-core-dev mailing list
-
Bitcoin Core announcements list https://bitcoincore.org/en/list/announcements/join/
-
bitcoincore.org blog post
-
Update title of #bitcoin on Freenode IRC
-
Optionally twitter, reddit /r/Bitcoin, ... but this will usually sort out itself
-
Notify BlueMatt so that he can start building the PPAs
-
Add release notes for the new version to the directory
doc/release-notes
in git master -
Celebrate
-