How To Release LLVM To The Public

  1. Introduction
  2. Qualification Criteria
  3. Release Timeline
  4. Release Process

Written by Tanya Lattner, Reid Spencer, John Criswell, & Bill Wendling

Introduction

This document contains information about successfully releasing LLVM — including subprojects: e.g., llvm-gcc and clang — to the public. It is the Release Manager's responsibility to ensure that a high quality build of LLVM is released.

Release Timeline

LLVM is released on a time based schedule — roughly every 6 months. We do not normally have dot releases because of the nature of LLVM's incremental development philosophy. That said, the only thing preventing dot releases for critical bug fixes from happening is a lack of resources — testers, machines, time, etc. And, because of the high quality we desire for LLVM releases, we cannot allow for a truncated form of release qualification.

The release process is roughly as follows:

Release Process

  1. Release Administrative Tasks
    1. Create Release Branch
    2. Update Version Numbers
  2. Building the Release
    1. Build the LLVM Source Distributions
    2. Build LLVM
    3. Build the LLVM-GCC Binary Distribution
    4. Build the Clang Binary Distribution
    5. Target Specific Build Details
  3. Release Qualification Criteria
    1. Qualify LLVM
    2. Qualify LLVM-GCC
    3. Qualify Clang
    4. Specific Target Qualification Details
  4. Community Testing
  5. Release Patch Rules
  6. Release final tasks
    1. Update Documentation
    2. Tag the LLVM Final Release
    3. Update the LLVM Demo Page
    4. Update the LLVM Website
    5. Announce the Release

Release Administrative Tasks

This section describes a few administrative tasks that need to be done for the release process to begin. Specifically, it involves:

Create Release Branch

Branch the Subversion trunk using the following procedure:

  1. Remind developers that the release branching is imminent and to refrain from committing patches that might break the build. E.g., new features, large patches for works in progress, an overhaul of the type system, an exciting new TableGen feature, etc.

  2. Verify that the current Subversion trunk is in decent shape by examining nightly tester and buildbot results.

  3. Create the release branch for llvm, llvm-gcc-4.2, clang, and the test-suite from the last known good revision. The branch's name is release_XY, where X is the major and Y the minor release numbers. The branches should be created using the following commands:

    $ svn copy https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk \
               https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/branches/release_XY
    
    $ 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_XY
    
    $ svn copy https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/test-suite/trunk \
               https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/test-suite/branches/release_XY
    
    $ svn copy https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk \
               https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/branches/release_XY
    
  4. Advise developers that they may now check their patches into the Subversion tree again.

  5. The Release Manager should switch to the release branch, because all changes to the release will now be done in the branch. The easiest way to do this is to grab a working copy using the following commands:

    $ svn co https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/branches/release_XY llvm-X.Y
    
    $ svn co https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm-gcc-4.2/branches/release_XY llvm-gcc-4.2-X.Y
    
    $ svn co https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/test-suite/branches/release_XY test-suite-X.Y
    
    $ svn co https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/branches/release_XY clang-X.Y
    

Update LLVM Version

After creating the LLVM release branch, update the release branches' autoconf and configure.ac versions from 'X.Ysvn' to 'X.Y'. Update it on mainline as well to be the next version ('X.Y+1svn'). Regenerate the configure scripts for both llvm and the test-suite.

In addition, the version numbers of all the Bugzilla components must be updated for the next release.

Build the LLVM Release Candidates

Create release candidates for llvm, llvm-gcc, clang, and the LLVM test-suite by tagging the branch with the respective release candidate number. For instance, to create Release Candidate 1 you would issue the following commands:

$ svn mkdir https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/tags/RELEASE_XY
$ svn copy https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/branches/release_XY \
           https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/tags/RELEASE_XY/rc1

$ svn mkdir https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm-gcc-4.2/tags/RELEASE_XY
$ svn copy https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm-gcc-4.2/branches/release_XY \
           https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm-gcc-4.2/tags/RELEASE_XY/rc1

$ svn mkdir https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/test-suite/tags/RELEASE_XY
$ svn copy https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/test-suite/branches/release_XY \
           https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/test-suite/tags/RELEASE_XY/rc1

$ svn mkdir https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/tags/RELEASE_XY
$ svn copy https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/branches/release_XY \
           https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/tags/RELEASE_XY/rc1

Similarly, Release Candidate 2 would be named RC2 and so on. This keeps a permanent copy of the release candidate around for people to export and build as they wish. The final released sources will be tagged in the RELEASE_XY directory as Final (c.f. Tag the LLVM Final Release).

The Release Manager may supply pre-packaged source tarballs for users. This can be done with the following commands:

$ svn export https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/tags/RELEASE_XY/rc1 llvm-X.Yrc1
$ svn export https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm-gcc-4.2/tags/RELEASE_XY/rc1 llvm-gcc4.2-X.Yrc1
$ svn export https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/test-suite/tags/RELEASE_XY/rc1 llvm-test-X.Yrc1
$ svn export https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/tags/RELEASE_XY/rc1 clang-X.Yrc1

$ tar -cvf - llvm-X.Yrc1        | gzip > llvm-X.Yrc1.src.tar.gz
$ tar -cvf - llvm-test-X.Yrc1   | gzip > llvm-test-X.Yrc1.src.tar.gz
$ tar -cvf - llvm-gcc4.2-X.Yrc1 | gzip > llvm-gcc-4.2-X.Yrc1.src.tar.gz
$ tar -cvf - clang-X.Yrc1       | gzip > clang-X.Yrc1.src.tar.gz

Building the Release

The builds of llvm, llvm-gcc, and clang must be free of errors and warnings in Debug, Release+Asserts, and Release builds. If all builds are clean, then the release passes Build Qualification.

The make options for building the different modes:

ModeOptions
DebugENABLE_OPTIMIZED=0
Release+AssertsENABLE_OPTIMIZED=1
ReleaseENABLE_OPTIMIZED=1 DISABLE_ASSERTIONS=1

Build LLVM

Build Debug, Release+Asserts, and Release versions of llvm on all supported platforms. Directions to build llvm are here.

Build the LLVM GCC Binary Distribution

Creating the llvm-gcc binary distribution (Release/Optimized) requires performing the following steps for each supported platform:

  1. Build the llvm-gcc front-end by following the directions in the README.LLVM file. The front-end must be compiled with C, C++, Objective-C (Mac only), Objective-C++ (Mac only), and Fortran support.

  2. Boostrapping must be enabled.

  3. Be sure to build with LLVM_VERSION_INFO=X.Y, where X is the major and Y is the minor release numbers.

  4. Copy the installation directory to a directory named for the specific target. For example on Red Hat Enterprise Linux, the directory would be named llvm-gcc4.2-2.6-x86-linux-RHEL4. Archive and compress the new directory.

Build Clang Binary Distribution

Creating the clang binary distribution (Debug/Release+Asserts/Release) requires performing the following steps for each supported platform:

  1. Build clang according to the directions here.
  2. Build both a debug and release version of clang. The binary will be the release build.
  3. Package clang (details to follow).

Target Specific Build Details

The table below specifies which compilers are used for each Arch/OS combination when qualifying the build of llvm, llvm-gcc, and clang.

ArchitectureOScompiler
x86-32Mac OS 10.5gcc 4.0.1
x86-32Linuxgcc 4.2.X, gcc 4.3.X
x86-32FreeBSDgcc 4.2.X
x86-32mingwgcc 3.4.5
x86-64Mac OS 10.5gcc 4.0.1
x86-64Linuxgcc 4.2.X, gcc 4.3.X
x86-64FreeBSDgcc 4.2.X

Building the Release

A release is qualified when it has no regressions from the previous release (or baseline). Regressions are related to correctness first and performance second. (We may tolerate some minor performance regressions if they are deemed necessary for the general quality of the compiler.)

Regressions are new failures in the set of tests that are used to qualify each product and only include things on the list. Every release will have some bugs in it. It is the reality of developing a complex piece of software. We need a very concrete and definitive release criteria that ensures we have monotonically improving quality on some metric. The metric we use is described below. This doesn't mean that we don't care about other criteria, but these are the criteria which we found to be most important and which must be satisfied before a release can go out

Qualify LLVM

LLVM is qualified when it has a clean test run without a front-end. And it has no regressions when using either llvm-gcc or clang with the test-suite from the previous release.

Qualify LLVM-GCC

LLVM-GCC is qualified when front-end specific tests in the llvm regression test suite all pass and there are no regressions in the test-suite.

We do not use the GCC DejaGNU test suite as release criteria.

Qualify Clang

Clang is qualified when front-end specific tests in the llvm dejagnu test suite all pass, clang's own test suite passes cleanly, and there are no regressions in the test-suite.

Specific Target Qualification Details

ArchitectureOSllvm-gcc baselineclang baselinetests
x86-32Linuxlast releaselast releasellvm dejagnu, clang tests, test-suite (including spec)
x86-32FreeBSDnonelast releasellvm dejagnu, clang tests, test-suite
x86-32mingwlast releasenoneQT
x86-64Mac OS 10.Xlast releaselast releasellvm dejagnu, clang tests, test-suite (including spec)
x86-64Linuxlast releaselast releasellvm dejagnu, clang tests, test-suite (including spec)
x86-64FreeBSDnonelast releasellvm dejagnu, clang tests, test-suite

Community Testing

Once all testing has been completed and appropriate bugs filed, the release candidate tarballs are put on the website and the LLVM community is notified. Ask that all LLVM developers test the release in 2 ways:

  1. Download llvm-X.Y, llvm-test-X.Y, and the appropriate llvm-gcc and/or clang binary. Build LLVM. Run make check and the full LLVM test suite (make TEST=nightly report).
  2. Download llvm-X.Y, llvm-test-X.Y, and the llvm-gcc and/or clang source. Compile everything. Run make check and the full LLVM test suite (make TEST=nightly report).

Ask LLVM developers to submit the test suite report and make check results to the list. Verify that there are no regressions from the previous release. The results are not used to qualify a release, but to spot other potential problems. For unsupported targets, verify that make check is at least clean.

During the first round of testing, all regressions must be fixed before the second release candidate is tagged.

If this is the second round of testing, the testing is only to ensure that 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 stage.

Release Patch Rules

Below are the rules regarding patching the release branch:

  1. Patches applied to the release branch may only be applied by the release manager.

  2. During the first round of testing, patches that fix regressions or that are small and relatively risk free (verified by the appropriate code owner) are applied to the branch. Code owners are asked to be very conservative in approving patches for the branch. We reserve the right to reject any patch that does not fix a regression as previously defined.

  3. During the remaining rounds of testing, only patches that fix critical regressions may be applied.

Release Final Tasks

The final stages of the release process involves tagging the "final" release branch, updating documentation that refers to the release, and updating the demo page.

Update Documentation

Review the documentation and ensure that it is up to date. The "Release Notes" must be updated to reflect new features, 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.

Tag the LLVM Final Release

Tag the final release sources using the following procedure:

$ svn copy https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/branches/release_XY \
           https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/tags/RELEASE_XY/Final

$ svn copy https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm-gcc-4.2/branches/release_XY \
           https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm-gcc-4.2/tags/RELEASE_XY/Final

$ svn copy https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/test-suite/branches/release_XY \
           https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/test-suite/tags/RELEASE_XY/Final

$ svn copy https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/branches/release_XY \
           https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/tags/RELEASE_XY/Final

Update the LLVM Demo Page

The LLVM demo page must be updated to use the new release. This consists of using the new llvm-gcc binary and building LLVM.

Update the LLVM Website

The website must be updated before the release announcement is sent out. Here is what to do:

  1. Check out the www module from Subversion.
  2. Create a new subdirectory X.Y in the releases directory.
  3. Commit the llvm, test-suite, llvm-gcc source, clang source, clang binaries, and llvm-gcc binaries in this new directory.
  4. Copy and commit the llvm/docs and LICENSE.txt files into this new directory. The docs should be built with BUILD_FOR_WEBSITE=1.
  5. Commit the index.html to the release/X.Y directory to redirect (use from previous release.
  6. Update the releases/download.html file with the new release.
  7. Update the releases/index.html with the new release and link to release documentation.
  8. Finally, update the main page (index.html and sidebar) to point to the new release and release announcement. Make sure this all gets committed back into Subversion.

Announce the Release

Have Chris send out the release announcement when everything is finished.


Valid CSS Valid HTML 4.01 The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
Last modified: $Date$