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Here are most of the steps we (maintainers) follow when making a release.

* start from a clean, up-to-date git directory.

    git checkout master; git pull

* Run ./configure && make maintainer-clean

* Ensure that the desired versions of autoconf, automake, bison, etc.
  are in your PATH.  See HACKING for the complete list.

* Ensure that you're on "master" with no uncommitted diffs.
  This should produce no output: git checkout master; git diff

* Make sure your local gnulib directory is up to date.

* Run bootstrap: ./bootstrap

FIXME: enable excluded programs like arch? to get their manual pages?

* Pre-release testing:
  On at least one SELinux-enabled (enforcing) and one non-SELinux system,
    run all tests, both root-only and regular.
  Run *all* non-root tests, including expensive and very expensive ones i.e.,
    run this: make -j1 check RUN_VERY_EXPENSIVE_TESTS=yes RUN_EXPENSIVE_TESTS=yes

  Run the root-only tests:
  sudo env PATH="$PATH" NON_ROOT_USERNAME=$USER make -k check-root

* Run "make distcheck"

* Manually set the date, version number, and [stable/alpha/beta] on
  line 3 of NEWS, then do e.g.,:

    v=7.3
    git commit -F <(printf 'version '$v'\n\n* NEWS: Record release date.\n') -a
    git tag -s -m "coreutils $v" v$v HEAD

* Run the following to create release tarballs.  Your choice selects the
  corresponding upload-to destination in the emitted gnupload command.
  The different destinations are specified in cfg.mk.  See the definitions
  of gnu_ftp_host-{alpha,beta,major}.

    # "TYPE" must be major, beta or alpha
    make TYPE

* Test the tarball.  copy it to a few odd-ball systems and ensure that
  it builds and passes all tests.

* While that's happening, write the release announcement that you will
  soon post.

Once all the builds and tests have passed,

* Run the gnupload command that was suggested by your "make major" run above.

* Wait a few minutes (maybe up to 30?) and then use the release URLs to
  download all tarball/signature pairs and use gpg --verify to ensure
  that they're all valid.

* Push the new tag:
  git push origin tag v<JUST_RELEASED_VERSION_NUMBER>

* Send the gpg-signed announcement mail, e.g.,
    To: info-gnu@gnu.org, coreutils-announce@gnu.org
    Cc: coordinator@translationproject.org, bug-coreutils@gnu.org
    Subject: coreutils-7.1 released [stable]

* Approve the announcement here:
  http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/admindb/coreutils-announce

* Announce it on Savannah, too:
  From here:
    https://savannah.gnu.org/projects/coreutils/
  click on the "submit news", then write something like the following:

    Subject: coreutils-7.2 released [stable]
    The announcement is here:
      http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.core-utils.announce/49

  Then go here to approve it:
    https://savannah.gnu.org/news/approve.php?group=coreutils

* For non-alpha releases, update the on-line manual at

    http://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/manual/

  Run `make web-manual', then copy the contents of doc/manual
  into a CVS checkout of the coreutils manual repository.
  Also edit coreutils.html (FIXME? why?) before doing a CVS commit.

    CVS_RSH=ssh \
    cvs -d:ext:$USER@cvs.savannah.gnu.org:/web/coreutils co coreutils

  Be sure to "cvs add -ko" any files that "cvs status" marks with "?".
  That is necessary whenever a new texinfo node is added.  Each becomes
  a new file in html_node that must then be "cvs add"ed.