3.8 KiB
Making a new release of jupyterlab_sandbox_announcement
The extension can be published to PyPI
and npm
manually or using the Jupyter Releaser.
Manual release
Python package
This extension can be distributed as Python packages. All of the Python
packaging instructions are in the pyproject.toml
file to wrap your extension in a
Python package. Before generating a package, you first need to install some tools:
pip install build twine hatch
Bump the version using hatch
. By default this will create a tag.
See the docs on hatch-nodejs-version for details.
hatch version <new-version>
Make sure to clean up all the development files before building the package:
jlpm clean:all
You could also clean up the local git repository:
git clean -dfX
To create a Python source package (.tar.gz
) and the binary package (.whl
) in the dist/
directory, do:
python -m build
python setup.py sdist bdist_wheel
is deprecated and will not work for this package.
Then to upload the package to PyPI, do:
twine upload dist/*
NPM package
To publish the frontend part of the extension as a NPM package, do:
npm login
npm publish --access public
Automated releases with the Jupyter Releaser
The extension repository should already be compatible with the Jupyter Releaser.
Check out the workflow documentation for more information.
Here is a summary of the steps to cut a new release:
- Add tokens to the Github Secrets in the repository:
ADMIN_GITHUB_TOKEN
(with "public_repo" and "repo:status" permissions); see the documentationNPM_TOKEN
(with "automation" permission); see the documentation
- Set up PyPI
Using PyPI trusted publisher (modern way)
- Set up your PyPI project by adding a trusted publisher
- The workflow name is
publish-release.yml
and the environment should be left blank.
- The workflow name is
- Ensure the publish release job as
permissions
:id-token : write
(see the documentation)
Using PyPI token (legacy way)
-
If the repo generates PyPI release(s), create a scoped PyPI token. We recommend using a scoped token for security reasons.
-
You can store the token as
PYPI_TOKEN
in your fork'sSecrets
.-
Advanced usage: if you are releasing multiple repos, you can create a secret named
PYPI_TOKEN_MAP
instead ofPYPI_TOKEN
that is formatted as follows:owner1/repo1,token1 owner2/repo2,token2
If you have multiple Python packages in the same repository, you can point to them as follows:
owner1/repo1/path/to/package1,token1 owner1/repo1/path/to/package2,token2
-
- Go to the Actions panel
- Run the "Step 1: Prep Release" workflow
- Check the draft changelog
- Run the "Step 2: Publish Release" workflow
Publishing to conda-forge
If the package is not on conda forge yet, check the documentation to learn how to add it: https://conda-forge.org/docs/maintainer/adding_pkgs.html
Otherwise a bot should pick up the new version publish to PyPI, and open a new PR on the feedstock repository automatically.