dash/doc/release-process.md
UdjinM6 f72650d2de
feat: Set client version for non-release binaries and version in guix based on git tags (#5653)
## Issue being fixed or feature implemented
Client version string is inconsistent. Building `v20.0.0-beta.8` tag
locally produces binaries that report `v20.0.0-beta.8` version but
binaries built in guix would report
`v20.0.0rc1-g3e732a952226a20505f907e4fd9b3fdbb14ea5ee` instead. Building
any commit after `v20.0.0-beta.8` locally would result in versions like
`v20.0.0rc1-8c94153d2497` which is close but it's still yet another
format. And both versions with `rc1` in their names are confusing cause
you'd expect them to mention `beta.8` instead maybe (or is it just me?
:D ).

## What was done?
Change it so that the version string would look like this:
on tag: ~`v20.0.0-beta.8-dev` or `v20.0.0-beta.8-gitarc`~
`v20.0.0-beta.8`
post-tag: ~`v20.0.0-beta.8-1-gb837e08164-gitarc`~
`v20.0.0-beta.8-1-gb837e08164`

post-tag format is
`recent tag`-`commits since that tag`-`g+12 chars of commit hash`-`dirty
(optional)` ~-`dev or gitarc`~

~`dev`/`gitarc` suffixes should help avoiding confusion with the release
versions and they also indicate the way non-release binaries were
built.~

Note that release binaries do not use any of this, they still use
`PACKAGE_VERSION` from `configure` like before.

Also, `CLIENT_VERSION_RC` is no longer used in this setup so it was
removed.

Few things aren't clear to me yet:
1. Version bump in `configure.ac` no longer affects the reported version
(unless it's an actual release). Are there any downsides I might be
missing?
2. Which tag should we use on `develop` once we bump version in
configure? `v21.0.0-init`? `v21.0.0-alpha1`?
3. How is it going to behave once `merge master back into develop` kind
of PR is merged? E.g. say `develop` branch is on `v21.0.0-alpha1` tag
and we merge v20.1.0 from `master` back into it. Will this bring
`v20.1.0` release tag into `develop`? Will it become the one that will
be used from that moment? If so we will probably need another tag on
`develop` every time such PR is merged e.g. `v21.0.0-alpha2` (or
whatever the next number is).

Don't think these are blockers but would like to hear thoughts from
others.

## How Has This Been Tested?
Built binaries locally, built them using guix at a specific tag and at
some commit on top of it.

## Breaking Changes
n/a

## Checklist:
- [x] I have performed a self-review of my own code
- [x] I have commented my code, particularly in hard-to-understand areas
- [ ] I have added or updated relevant unit/integration/functional/e2e
tests
- [ ] I have made corresponding changes to the documentation
- [x] I have assigned this pull request to a milestone _(for repository
code-owners and collaborators only)_
2024-01-11 21:43:42 -06:00

12 KiB
Raw Blame History

Release Process

Before every minor and major release:

  • Update bips.md to account for changes since the last release.
  • Update DIPs with any changes introduced by this release (see this pull request for an example)
  • Update version in configure.ac (don't forget to set CLIENT_VERSION_IS_RELEASE to true)
  • Write release notes (see below)
  • Update src/chainparams.cpp nMinimumChainWork with information from the getblockchaininfo rpc.
  • Update src/chainparams.cpp defaultAssumeValid with information from the getblockhash rpc.
    • The selected value must not be orphaned so it may be useful to set the value two blocks back from the tip.
    • Testnet should be set some tens of thousands back from the tip due to reorgs there.
    • This update should be reviewed with a reindex-chainstate with assumevalid=0 to catch any defect that causes rejection of blocks in the past history.
  • Ensure all TODOs are evaluated and resolved if needed
  • Verify Insight works
  • Verify p2pool works (unmaintained; no responsible party)
  • Tag version and push (see below)
  • Validate that CI passes

Before every major release:

  • Update hardcoded seeds, see this pull request for an example.
  • Update src/chainparams.cpp m_assumed_blockchain_size and m_assumed_chain_state_size with the current size plus some overhead (see this for information on how to calculate them).
  • Update src/chainparams.cpp chainTxData with statistics about the transaction count and rate. Use the output of the RPC getchaintxstats, see this pull request for an example. Reviewers can verify the results by running getchaintxstats <window_block_count> <window_last_block_hash> with the window_block_count and window_last_block_hash from your output.

First time / New builders

Install Guix using one of the installation methods detailed in contrib/guix/INSTALL.md.

Check out the source code in the following directory hierarchy.

cd /path/to/your/toplevel/build
git clone https://github.com/dashpay/guix.sigs.git
git clone https://github.com/dashpay/dash-detached-sigs.git
git clone https://github.com/dashpay/dash.git

Dash Core maintainers/release engineers, suggestion for writing release notes

Write release notes. git shortlog helps a lot, for example:

git shortlog --no-merges v(current version, e.g. 19.3.0)..v(new version, e.g. 20.0.0)

Generate list of authors:

git log --format='- %aN' v(current version, e.g. 19.3.0)..v(new version, e.g. 20.0.0) | sort -fiu

Tag version (or release candidate) in git

git tag -s v(new version, e.g. 20.0.0)

Setup and perform Guix builds

Checkout the Dash Core version you'd like to build:

pushd ./dash
export SIGNER='(your builder key, ie udjinm6, pasta, etc)'
export VERSION='(new version, e.g. 20.0.0)'
git fetch "v${VERSION}"
git checkout "v${VERSION}"
popd

Ensure your guix.sigs are up-to-date if you wish to guix-verify your builds against other guix-attest signatures.

git -C ./guix.sigs pull

Create the macOS SDK tarball: (first time, or when SDK version changes)

Note: this step can be skipped if our CI still uses bitcoin's SDK package (see SDK_URL)

Create the macOS SDK tarball, see the macOS build instructions for details.

Build and attest to build outputs:

Follow the relevant Guix README.md sections:

Verify other builders' signatures to your own. (Optional)

Add other builders keys to your gpg keyring, and/or refresh keys: See ../dash/contrib/builder-keys/README.md.

Follow the relevant Guix README.md sections:

Next steps:

Commit your signature to guix.sigs:

pushd guix.sigs
git add "${VERSION}/${SIGNER}/noncodesigned.SHA256SUMS{,.asc}"
git commit -a
git push  # Assuming you can push to the guix.sigs tree
popd

Codesigner only: Create Windows/macOS detached signatures:

  • Only one person handles codesigning. Everyone else should skip to the next step.
  • Only once the Windows/macOS builds each have 3 matching signatures may they be signed with their respective release keys.

Codesigner only: Sign the macOS binary:

  • Transfer dashcore-osx-unsigned.tar.gz to macOS for signing

  • Extract and sign:

    tar xf dashcore-osx-unsigned.tar.gz
    ./detached-sig-create.sh -s "Key ID" -o runtime
    
  • Enter the keychain password and authorize the signature

  • Move signature-osx.tar.gz back to the guix-build host

Codesigner only: Sign the windows binaries:

  • Extract and sign:

    tar xf dashcore-win-unsigned.tar.gz
    ./detached-sig-create.sh -key /path/to/codesign.key
    
  • Enter the passphrase for the key when prompted

  • signature-win.tar.gz will be created

Codesigner only: Commit the detached codesign payloads:

pushd ~/dashcore-detached-sigs
# checkout the appropriate branch for this release series
git checkout "v${VERSION}"
rm -rf *
tar xf signature-osx.tar.gz
tar xf signature-win.tar.gz
git add -A
git commit -m "add detached sigs for win/osx for ${VERSION}"
git push
popd

Non-codesigners: wait for Windows/macOS detached signatures:

  • Once the Windows/macOS builds each have 3 matching signatures, they will be signed with their respective release keys.
  • Detached signatures will then be committed to the dash-detached-sigs repository, which can be combined with the unsigned apps to create signed binaries.

Create (and optionally verify) the codesigned outputs:

Commit your signature for the signed macOS/Windows binaries:

pushd ./guix.sigs
git add "${VERSION}/${SIGNER}"/all.SHA256SUMS{,.asc}
git commit -m "Add ${SIGNER} ${VERSION} signed binaries signatures"
git push  # Assuming you can push to the guix.sigs tree
popd

After 3 or more people have guix-built and their results match:

  • Combine the all.SHA256SUMS.asc file from all signers into SHA256SUMS.asc:
    cat "$VERSION"/*/all.SHA256SUMS.asc > SHA256SUMS.asc
    
  • GPG sign each download / binary
  • Upload zips and installers, as well as SHA256SUMS.asc from last step, to GitHub as GitHub draft release.
    1. The contents of each ./dash/guix-build-${VERSION}/output/${HOST}/ directory, except for *-debug* files.

      Guix will output all of the results into host subdirectories, but the SHA256SUMS file does not include these subdirectories. In order for downloads via torrent to verify without directory structure modification, all of the uploaded files need to be in the same directory as the SHA256SUMS file.

      The *-debug* files generated by the guix build contain debug symbols for troubleshooting by developers. It is assumed that anyone that is interested in debugging can run guix 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 dash.org server.

      find guix-build-${VERSION}/output/ -maxdepth 2 -type f -not -name "SHA256SUMS.part" -and -not -name "*debug*" -exec scp {} user@dash.org:/var/www/bin/dash-core-${VERSION} \;
      
    2. The SHA256SUMS file

    3. The SHA256SUMS.asc combined signature file you just created

  • Validate SHA256SUMS.asc and all binaries attached to GitHub draft release are correct
  • Notarize macOS binaries
  • Publish release on GitHub
  • Fast-forward master branch on GitHub
  • Update the dash.org download links
  • Ensure that docker hub images are up to date

Announce the release:

  • Release on Dash forum: https://www.dash.org/forum/topic/official-announcements.54/ (necessary so we have a permalink to use on twitter, reddit, etc.)
  • Prepare product brief (major versions only)
  • Prepare a release announcement tweet
  • Follow-up tweets with any important block heights for consensus changes
  • Post on Reddit
  • Celebrate

After the release:

MacOS Notarization

Prerequisites

Make sure you have the latest Xcode installed on your macOS device. You can download it from the Apple Developer website. You should have a valid Apple Developer ID under the team you are using which is necessary for the notarization process. To avoid including your password as cleartext in a notarization script, you can provide a reference to a keychain item. You can add a new keychain item named AC_PASSWORD from the command line using the notarytool utility:

xcrun notarytool store-credentials "AC_PASSWORD" --apple-id "AC_USERNAME" --team-id <WWDRTeamID> --password <secret_2FA_password>

Notarization

Open Terminal, and navigate to the location of the .dmg file.

Then, run the following command to notarize the .dmg file:

xcrun notarytool submit dashcore-{version}-{x86_64, arm64}-apple-darwin.dmg --keychain-profile "AC_PASSWORD" --wait

Replace {version} with the version you are notarizing. This command uploads the .dmg file to Apple's notary service.

The --wait option makes the command wait to return until the notarization process is complete.

If the notarization process is successful, the notary service generates a log file URL. Please save this URL, as it contains valuable information regarding the notarization process.

Notarization Validation

After successfully notarizing the .dmg file, extract Dash-Qt.app from the .dmg. To verify that the notarization process was successful, run the following command:

spctl -a -vv -t install Dash-Qt.app

Replace Dash-Qt.app with the path to your .app file. This command checks whether your .app file passes Gatekeepers checks. If the app is successfully notarized, the command line will include a line stating source=<Notarized Developer ID>.

Additional information

How to calculate m_assumed_blockchain_size and m_assumed_chain_state_size

Both variables are used as a guideline for how much space the user needs on their drive in total, not just strictly for the blockchain. Note that all values should be taken from a fully synced node and have an overhead of 5-10% added on top of its base value.

To calculate m_assumed_blockchain_size:

  • For mainnet -> Take the size of the Dash Core data directory, excluding /regtest and /testnet3 directories.
  • For testnet -> Take the size of the /testnet3 directory.

To calculate m_assumed_chain_state_size:

  • For mainnet -> Take the size of the /chainstate directory.
  • For testnet -> Take the size of the /testnet3/chainstate directory.

Notes:

  • When taking the size for m_assumed_blockchain_size, there's no need to exclude the /chainstate directory since it's a guideline value and an overhead will be added anyway.
  • The expected overhead for growth may change over time, so it may not be the same value as last release; pay attention to that when changing the variables.