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Developer Area/Language Packs/Launchpad Branching: Difference between revisions

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'''To be done by Catalyst'''
'''To be done by Catalyst'''


# In [https://gitlab.wgtn.cat-it.co.nz/mahara/mahara-langpacks the Catalyst-internal Gitlab] add the new branch to mahara-langpacks.conf.
# In the Catalyst-internal Gitlab /mahara/mahara-langpacks add the new branch to mahara-langpacks.conf.
# You may also want to remove old branches that should not be built anymore.
# You may also want to remove old branches that should not be built anymore.
# Commit and push.
# Commit and push.

Revision as of 14:29, 10 October 2019

A word about Bazaar

Because the translation is managed through Launchpad, it's handled by the Bazaar version control system instead of Git. Bazaar has similar functionality to git, but its organizational system is very different. Unlike Git and CVS, in which branches and tags are a kind of "parallel dimension" to the repository's directory structure, Bazaar is more like Subversion, where branches and tags are addressed as directories.

Bazaar (at least the distribution on Ubuntu) also incorporates several Launchpad-specific shortcuts. For instance, prefacing a location with "lp:" is shorthand for the Launchpad Bazaar repository: bzr+ssh://bazaar.launchpad.net/+branch/mahara-lang/mahara. When we create new branches, they're referred to starting with "lp:~mahara-lang/mahara-lang", which means they're owned by the "mahara-lang" group, and placed under their "mahara-lang" directory (named after the "mahara-lang" project). Once we associate a particular branch with the mahara-lang project officially through Launchpad, the address shortens to "lp:mahara-lang/...".

As long as you're not trying to do anything too new and different, the code here should be enough to get you through.

0. Initial setup

If you haven't used the Mahara Bazaar repo before, you'll need to do some setup. (These instructions are taken from the Bazaar manual). First, install the Bazaar command-line tools, and the Debian package maintainer utilities.

sudo apt-get install bzr devscripts

Then, upload your public SSH key into Launchpad, using the Launchpad website: https://help.launchpad.net/YourAccount/CreatingAnSSHKeyPair

Once you've done that, you can set up your bzr credentials on your computer. These are stored at the user level.

bzr whoami "FIRSTNAME LASTNAME <[email protected]>"
bzr launchpad-login YOUR_LAUNCHPAD_USERNAME

Create a new code branch

Create a new code branch in the mahara-lang launchpad project for importing pot templates. This should contain a copy of the latest mahara/mahara.pot from master.

First, get the latest code from master...

cd ~/bazaar # Or wherever you want to store your bazaar branches
# There's probably a better way to keep your master checkout in sync,
# But I find it's just easiest to delete it and do a new checkout
rm -Rf trunk
bzr checkout lp:mahara-lang ./trunk # get a copy of the mahara-lang trunk

Then, create the new code branch, copy the master code into it, and publish it to Launchpad.

cd ~/bazaar
mkdir 16.10_STABLE
cd 16.10_STABLE
bzr init
mkdir mahara
# Copy the mahara.pot from the trunk
cp ~/bazaar/trunk/mahara/mahara.pot mahara/
bzr add mahara/mahara.pot
bzr commit
bzr push lp:~mahara-lang/mahara-lang/16.10_STABLE

Create the new export branch

You'll also need to manually create a new export branch, which can be mostly empty. (Launchpad will fill it with content.)

cd ~/bazaar
mkdir 16.10_STABLE-export
cd 16.10_STABLE-export
bzr init
mkdir mahara
bzr add mahara
bzr commit
bzr push lp:~mahara-lang/mahara-lang/16.10_STABLE-export

Create a new series

Check that the two branches have appeared under https://code.launchpad.net/mahara-lang. The code branch should contain the mahara.pot file.

Create the new series under the mahara-lang project on launchpad at https://launchpad.net/mahara-lang/+addseries

You should set the official series branch to the one you just created (~mahara-lang/mahara-lang/1.5_STABLE). Once that's done, launchpad calls the branch by the abbreviated name lp:mahara-lang/1.5

Set up translation import and export for the new series

Access the translation settings for the new series, like so:

  1. Go to https://translations.launchpad.net/mahara-lang
  2. You'll see a list, "All translatable series". Click on your new series there.
  3. On the page that opens up, under the "Automatic synchronization" subheading, click the link Set up branch synchronization
  4. This should take you to a page titled "Translations synchronization settings". Or you can try to get there by munging the URL: https://translations.launchpad.net/mahara-lang/16.04/+translations-settings

In the "Import translations from branch" column of the synchronization settings page, set the translation to Import template files (on the trunk series, we "Import template and translation files", but it can potentially overwrite translations, so we don't do that for a stable branch).

In the "Export translations to branch" column of the synchronization settings page, click the link at the bottom that reads Choose a target branch. Then paste in the name of the next export branch (e.g. lp:~mahara-lang/mahara-lang/1.5_STABLE-export), and click "Update". If you get an error message about how that branch doesn't exist, then you didn't create and publish the next export branch properly. Go back to this step and try again.

Once these are setup, the langpacks for the new series should be should be automatically populated in a day or so, once there are translations to export. The export branch is where the langpacks.mahara.org tarballs come from.

Update the scripts

Update the langpack scripts. In the mahara-scripts repo, there are two files that need to be updated with the new branch name:

mahara-langpacks/langpacks.pl (which generates langpack tarballs from lp:~mahara-lang/mahara-lang/1.5_STABLE-export)
mahara-langpacks/update-pot.sh (which pushes new changes to English strings to lp:mahara-lang/1.5 to be translated)

Just edit these files, look for the other branch names, and add 1.5_STABLE. You should also remove the old no-longer-supported branches at the same time. (See Developer Area/Language Pack Generation if you want to know more about how these scripts work.)

Once the scripts are committed, deploy the scripts by generating a new custom-site-mahara-langpacks debian package.

cd path/to/mahara-scripts
dch -i --no-auto-nmu # And then update the changelog to indicate what you're doing, e.g. "16.04 release"
fakeroot debian/rules binary
git add debian/changelog
git commit -m "16.04 release"
git push

If done correctly, this will generate a file called "custom-site-mahara-langpacks_X.YY_all.deb". If you get a strange version number with something like "-ubuntu" or "-nmu1" on the end, then remove your local changes and try manually specifying the incremented version with "dch -v 1.29", or just edit the debian/changelog file by hand.

The resulting .deb will need to need to be installed on the Catalyst servers where langpacks.mahara.org are installed. You may ask the Catalyst Sysadmins to deploy it by creating a WR and attaching the .deb file. They will upload it to the correct internal repository and deploy it.

Update the pipeline in Gitlab

To be done by Catalyst

  1. In the Catalyst-internal Gitlab /mahara/mahara-langpacks add the new branch to mahara-langpacks.conf.
  2. You may also want to remove old branches that should not be built anymore.
  3. Commit and push.
  4. Run the pipeline “update pot” to push to Launchpad and run it manually.

Note: It is set to run at 8 p.m. NZ, which is after the EOB for that day.

If you change anything in the “templates” folder, you need to run the template pipeline manually to push the changes to the server. That job does not run on a cron though as updates are minimal.

The scripts themselves have not been updated. They are still in need of some love. Right now it can happen that jobs are marked as succeeding when they are failing under certain circumstances.

Send reminder to owners of language string repos

The language string translations for most languages are managed by launchpad. But some of them have their own repo. We can see which ones in this file language-repos.txt. As we can't create the release branch in that repo, we have to send a reminder to the owner to create it. The language pack for the latest release won't be available until they do.