## Checklist Helix releases are versioned in the Calendar Versioning scheme: `YY.0M(.MICRO)`, for example, `22.05` for May of 2022. In these instructions we'll use `` as a placeholder for the tag being published. * Merge the changelog PR * Add new `` entry in `contrib/Helix.appdata.xml` with release information according to the [AppStream spec](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/appstream/docs/sect-Metadata-Releases.html) * Tag and push * `git tag -s -m "" -a && git push` * Make sure to switch to master and pull first * Edit the `VERSION` file and change the date to the next planned release * Releases are planned to happen every two months, so `22.05` would change to `22.07` * Wait for the Release CI to finish * It will automatically turn the git tag into a GitHub release when it uploads artifacts * Edit the new release * Use `` as the title * Link to the changelog and release notes * Merge the release notes PR * Download the macos and linux binaries and update the `sha256`s in the [homebrew formula] * Use `sha256sum` on the downloaded `.tar.xz` files to determine the hash * Link to the release notes in this-week-in-rust * [Example PR](https://github.com/rust-lang/this-week-in-rust/pull/3300) * Post to reddit * [Example post](https://www.reddit.com/r/rust/comments/uzp5ze/helix_editor_2205_released/) [homebrew formula]: https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/blob/master/Formula/helix.rb ## Changelog Curation The changelog is currently created manually by reading through commits in the log since the last release. GitHub's compare view is a nice way to approach this. For example, when creating the 22.07 release notes, this compare link may be used ``` https://github.com/helix-editor/helix/compare/22.05...master ``` Either side of the triple-dot may be replaced with an exact revision, so if you wish to incrementally compile the changelog, you can tackle a weeks worth or so, record the revision where you stopped, and use that as a starting point next week: ``` https://github.com/helix-editor/helix/compare/7706a4a0d8b67b943c31d0c5f7b00d357b5d838d...master ``` A work-in-progress commit for a changelog might look like [this example](https://github.com/helix-editor/helix/commit/831adfd4c709ca16b248799bfef19698d5175e55). Not every PR or commit needs a blurb in the changelog. Each release section tends to have a blurb that links to a GitHub comparison between release versions for convenience: > As usual, the following is a summary of each of the changes since the last > release. For the full log, check out the git log. Typically, small changes like dependencies or documentation updates, refactors, or meta changes like GitHub Actions work are left out.