[[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc."]] [[!meta license="""[[!toggle id="license" text="GFDL 1.2+"]][[!toggleable id="license" text="Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled [[GNU Free Documentation License|/fdl]]."]]"""]] [[!meta title="""How to prepare and publish "a month of the Hurd" for the last month"""]] We prepare *a month of the Hurd* in a public git branch (`master-news_next`), and merge that one into `master` once we want to publish the news. The idea is to record to-be-published changes on that branch at they time they arise, and then publish them en bloc at the end of the month. As this is done on a separate branch, there are two options: you can have separate repositories (*clones*, or *checkouts*; what you get from `git clone`) for the `master` and `master-news_next` branches, or you can deal with both in the same repository. Having separate repositories you don't have to remember which branch you're on, and don't have to switch between branches before beginning to edit files, and it doesn't matter -- as no switching between branches is needed -- if you have uncomitted changes to some files. On the other hand, you may want to keep it all in one repository, to save disk space, and for shuffling different branches' commits being (a bit) easier. For practical work that means to use the following commands: * create a local branch for `master-news_next` $ git fetch $ git checkout -b master-news_next origin/master-news_next * if you already have created a local branch `master-news_next`: update to the latest version of it $ git checkout master-news_next $ git pull --rebase * edit Always do check which branch you're on (asterisk in the first column of `git branch`'s output), and only then begin to do your changes and commit them. We should not update news items that have already been published (that is, on ; no problem for the [[staging area|web_pages#staging_area]]), as the system will always also update the RSS feeds, etc., causing the old news item to reappear on feeds, which is a bit of a nuisance. * at the beginning of a month: create a new news entry $ cp news/2009-06-30.mdwn news/YYYY-MM-DD.mdwn $ # edit the new file $ git add news/YYYY-MM-DD.mdwn $ git commit -m "Begun the news entry for YYYY-MM-DD." That is, use the *2009-06-30* news snippet as a template for the new one. * check the outgoing changes $ git log --reverse -p -C origin/master-news_next..master-news_next * push the changes $ git push origin master-news_next * if push fails, pull and rebase the local changes on top of the remote changes $ git pull --rebase This will only happen if someone else has been installing commits into `origin`'s `master-news_next` branch since the last time you synchronized to it. Note that this might cause some conflicts to arise -- if the remote repository contains commits that conflict with any that you've been recording in your local repository. For this reason, you might want to already do this *rebase* before beginning you local edits, simply to shorten the time frame in which such conflicts can arise. (Theoretically, in the very rare case of very much concurrent editing going on, you'd have to repeat this again (and again...) before succeeding to push your changes.) * at the end of the month: publish the news $ git checkout master $ git pull --rebase $ git merge master-news_next $ git push origin master That means, for publishing we merge `master-news_next` into `master`. After that merge, work for the next month's news item can continue on `master-news_next`.