-
Change the version and date in
cfunits/__init__.py
(__version__
and__date__
variables) -
Make sure that
README.md
is up to date. -
Make sure that
Changelog.rst
is up to date. -
Create a link to the new documentation in
docs/source/releases.rst
, including the release date. -
Make sure that the correct path to the cfunits library is in the
PYTHONPATH
environment variable:export PYTHONPATH=$PWD:$PYTHONPATH
-
Build a development copy of the documentation using to check API pages for any new methods are present & correct, & that the overall formatting has not been adversely affected for comprehension by any updates in the latest Sphinx or theme etc. (Do not manually commit the dev build.)
./release_docs dev-clean # E.g. ./release_docs dev-clean
-
Check that no typos or spelling mistakes have been introduced to the documentation:
-
Run a dummy build of the documentation to detect invalid words:
$ cd docs $ make spelling build
-
If there are words raised with 'Spell check' warnings for the dummy build, such as:
/home/sadie/cf-python/docs/source/class/cf.NetCDFArray.rst:18: Spell check: isw: element in the sequence isw the name of the group in which. Writing /home/sadie/cf-python/docs/spelling/class/cf.NetCDFArray.spelling /home/sadie/cf-python/docs/source/class/cf.Query.rst:3: Spell check: encapulates: object encapulates a condition, such as.
they may or may not be typos or mis-spellings. Address all the warnings (except those relating to files under
docs/source/class/
,/attribute
or/function
which will be fixed along with the origin docstrings after a 'latest' build) as follows:- If there are words that are in fact valid, add the valid words to
the list of false positives for the spelling checker extension,
docs/source/spelling_false_positives.txt
. - Correct any words that are not valid in the codebase under
cf
or in thedocs/source
content files.
- If there are words that are in fact valid, add the valid words to
the list of false positives for the spelling checker extension,
-
Note that, in the case there are many words raised as warnings, it helps to automate the above steps. The following commands are a means to do this processing:
- Copy all 'spell check' warnings (there will be 'Writing to ...' lines
interspersed which can be removed by command so can be copied here too)
output to STDOUT during the build to a file (here we use
spellings-file-1
as an example name). - Cut all 'Writing to ...' lines interspersed with the warnings by
running
sed -i '/^Writing/d' spellings-file-1
. - Cut all of the invalid words detected from the warning messages via
cat spellings-file-1 | cut -d':' -f 4 > spellings-file-2
- Sift through these new words and remove any words that are true
positives i.e. typos or mis-spellings. Correct them in the
docstrings or documentation source files. If there are many
instances across the docs, it helps to do a substitution of all
occurences, e.g. via
find . -type f | xargs sed -i 's/<typo>/<correction>/g'
, though take care to have spaces surrounding words which may be part of other words, e.g. usefind . -type f | xargs sed -i 's/ ot / to /g'
to correctot
toto
. - Remove the leading whitespace character on each line and add
all the new words to the current list of false positives:
sed 's/^.//' spellings-file-2 >> docs/source/spelling_false_positives.txt
- Remove duplicate words and sort alphabetically via:
sort -u -o docs/source/spelling_false_positives.txt docs/source/spelling_false_positives.txt
- Copy all 'spell check' warnings (there will be 'Writing to ...' lines
interspersed which can be removed by command so can be copied here too)
output to STDOUT during the build to a file (here we use
-
-
Create an archived copy of the documentation:
./release_docs archive # E.g. ./release_docs archive
-
Update the latest documentation:
./release_docs latest # E.g. ./release_docs latest
-
Create a source tarball:
python setup.py sdist
-
Test the tarball release using
./test_release <vn> # E.g. ./test_release 3.3.5
-
Push recent commits using
git push origin main
-
Tag the release:
./tag <vn> # E.g. ./tag 3.3.5
-
Upload the source tarball to PyPi. Note this requires the
twine
library (which can be installed viapip
) and relevant project privileges on PyPi../upload_to_pypi <vn> # E.g. ./upload_to_pypi 3.3.5