Contributing to qutebrowser =========================== The Compiler :icons: :data-uri: :toc: IMPORTANT: Bandwidth for pull request review is currently quite limited. If you want to contribute where it's most needed, please consider reviewing or testing open pull requests. I `<3` footnote:[`<3` in HTML] contributors! This document contains guidelines for contributing to qutebrowser, as well as useful hints when doing so. If anything mentioned here would prevent you from contributing, please let me know, and contribute anyways! The guidelines are meant to make life easier for me, but if you don't follow everything in here, I won't be mad at you. In fact, I will probably change it for you. If you have any problems, I'm more than happy to help! You can get help in several ways: * Send a mail to the mailing list at mailto:qutebrowser@lists.qutebrowser.org[] (optionally https://lists.schokokeks.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/qutebrowser[subscribe] first). * Join the IRC channel link:ircs://irc.libera.chat:6697/#qutebrowser[`#qutebrowser`] on https://libera.chat/[Libera Chat] (https://web.libera.chat/#qutebrowser[webchat], https://matrix.to/#qutebrowser:libera.chat[via Matrix]). Finding something to work on ---------------------------- Chances are you already know something to improve or add when you're reading this. It might be a good idea to ask on the mailing list or IRC channel to make sure nobody else started working on the same thing already. If you want to find something useful to do, check the https://github.com/qutebrowser/qutebrowser/issues[issue tracker]. Some pointers: * https://github.com/qutebrowser/qutebrowser/labels/easy[Issues which should be easy to solve] * https://github.com/qutebrowser/qutebrowser/labels/component%3A%20docs[Documentation issues which require little/no coding] If you prefer C++ or Javascript to Python, see the relevant issues which involve work in those languages: * https://github.com/qutebrowser/qutebrowser/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3A%22language%3A+c%2B%2B%22[C++] (mostly work on Qt, the library behind qutebrowser) * https://github.com/qutebrowser/qutebrowser/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3A%22language%3A+javascript%22[JavaScript] There are also some things to do if you don't want to write code: * Help the community, e.g., on the mailinglist and the IRC channel. * Improve the documentation. * Help on the website and graphics (logo, etc.). Using git --------- qutebrowser uses https://git-scm.com/[git] for its development. You can clone the repo like this: ---- git clone https://github.com/qutebrowser/qutebrowser.git ---- If you don't know git, a https://git-scm.com/[git cheatsheet] might come in handy. Of course, if using git is the issue which prevents you from contributing, feel free to send normal patches instead, e.g., generated via `diff -Nur`. Getting patches ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The preferred way of submitting changes is to https://help.github.com/articles/fork-a-repo/[fork the repository] and to https://help.github.com/articles/creating-a-pull-request/[submit a pull request]. If you prefer to send a patch to the mailinglist, you can generate a patch based on your changes like this: ---- git format-patch origin/master <1> ---- <1> Replace `master` by the branch your work was based on, e.g., `origin/develop`. Running qutebrowser ------------------- After link:install{outfilesuffix}#tox[installing qutebrowser in a virtualenv], you can run `.venv/bin/qutebrowser --debug --temp-basedir` to test your changes with debug logging enabled and without affecting existing running instances. Alternatively, you can install qutebrowser's dependencies system-wide and run `python3 -m qutebrowser --debug --temp-basedir`. Useful utilities ---------------- Checkers ~~~~~~~~ qutebrowser uses https://tox.readthedocs.io/en/latest/[tox] to run its unittests and several linters/checkers. Currently, the following tox environments are available: * Tests using https://www.pytest.org[pytest]: - `py36`, `py37`, ...: Run pytest for python 3.6/3.7/... with the system-wide PyQt. - `py36-pyqt512`, ..., `py36-pyqt515`: Run pytest with the given PyQt version (`py35-*` also works). - `py36-pyqt515-cov`: Run with coverage support (other Python/PyQt versions work too). * `flake8`: Run various linting checks via https://pypi.python.org/pypi/flake8[flake8]. * `vulture`: Run https://pypi.python.org/pypi/vulture[vulture] to find unused code portions. * `pylint`: Run https://pylint.org/[pylint] static code analysis. * `pyroma`: Check packaging practices with https://pypi.python.org/pypi/pyroma/[pyroma]. * `eslint`: Run https://eslint.org/[ESLint] javascript checker. * `check-manifest`: Check MANIFEST.in completeness with https://github.com/mgedmin/check-manifest[check-manifest]. * `mkvenv`: Bootstrap a virtualenv for testing. * `misc`: Run `scripts/misc_checks.py` to check for: - untracked git files - VCS conflict markers - common spelling mistakes The default test suite is run with `tox`; the list of default environments is obtained with `tox -l`. Please make sure the checks run without any warnings on your new contributions. There's always the possibility of false positives; the following techniques are useful to handle these: * Use `_foo` for unused parameters, with `foo` being a descriptive name. Using `_` is discouraged. * If you think you have a good reason to suppress a message, then add the following comment: + ---- # pylint: disable=message-name ---- + Note you can add this per line, per function/class, or per file. Please use the smallest scope which makes sense. Most of the time, this will be line scope. + * If you really think a check shouldn't be done globally as it yields a lot of false-positives, let me know! I'm still tweaking the parameters. Running Specific Tests ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ While you are developing you often don't want to run the full test suite each time. Specific test environments can be run with `tox -e `. Additional parameters can be passed to the test scripts by separating them from `tox` arguments with `--`. Examples: ---- # run only pytest tests which failed in last run: tox -e py35 -- --lf # run only the end2end feature tests: tox -e py35 -- tests/end2end/features # run everything with undo in the generated name, based on the scenario text tox -e py35 -- tests/end2end/features/test_tabs_bdd.py -k undo # run coverage test for specific file (updates htmlcov/index.html) tox -e py35-cov -- tests/unit/browser/test_webelem.py ---- Profiling ~~~~~~~~~ In the _scripts/dev/_ subfolder there's `run_profile.py` which profiles the code and shows a graphical representation of what takes how much time. It uses the built-in Python https://docs.python.org/3/library/profile.html[cProfile] module. It launches a qutebrowser instance, waits for it to exit and then shows the graph. Available methods for visualization are: * https://jiffyclub.github.io/snakeviz/[SnakeViz] (`--profile-tool=snakeviz`, the default) * https://pypi.python.org/pypi/pyprof2calltree/[pyprof2calltree] and https://kcachegrind.github.io/[KCacheGrind] (`--profile-tool=kcachegrind`) * https://github.com/jrfonseca/gprof2dot[gprof2dot] (`--profile-tool=gprof2dot`, needs `dot` from https://graphviz.org/[Graphviz] and https://feh.finalrewind.org/[feh]) * https://github.com/nschloe/tuna[tuna] (`--profile-tool=tuna`) You can also save the binary profile data to a file (`--profile-tool=none`). Debugging ~~~~~~~~~ There are some useful functions for debugging in the `qutebrowser.utils.debug` module. When starting qutebrowser with the `--debug` flag, you also get useful debug logs. You can add +--logfilter _[!]category[,category,...]_+ to restrict logging to the given categories. With `--debug` there are also some additional +debug-_*_+ commands available, for example `:debug-all-objects` and `:debug-all-widgets` which print a list of all Qt objects/widgets to the debug log -- this is very useful for finding memory leaks. Useful websites ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Some resources which might be handy: * https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/classes.html[The Qt5 reference] * https://docs.python.org/3/library/index.html[The Python reference] * https://httpbin.org/[httpbin, a test service for HTTP requests/responses] * https://requestbin.com/[RequestBin, a service to inspect HTTP requests] Documentation of used Python libraries: * https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/[jinja2] * https://pygments.org/docs/[pygments] * https://www.pyinstaller.org/[PyInstaller] * https://pypi.python.org/pypi/colorama[colorama] Related RFCs and standards: HTTP ^^^^ * https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2616[RFC 2616 - Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1] (https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata_search.php?rfc=2616[Errata]) * https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7230[RFC 7230 - Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Message Syntax and Routing] (https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata_search.php?rfc=7230[Errata]) * https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7231[RFC 7231 - Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Semantics and Content] (https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata_search.php?rfc=7231[Errata]) * https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7232[RFC 7232 - Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Conditional Requests] (https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata_search.php?rfc=7232[Errata]) * https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7233[RFC 7233 - Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Range Requests] (https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata_search.php?rfc=7233[Errata]) * https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7234[RFC 7234 - Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Caching] (https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata_search.php?rfc=7234[Errata]) * https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7235[RFC 7235 - Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Authentication] (https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata_search.php?rfc=7235[Errata]) * https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5987[RFC 5987 - Character Set and Language Encoding for Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) Header Field Parameters] (https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata_search.php?rfc=5987[Errata]) * https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6266[RFC 6266 - Use of the Content-Disposition Header Field in the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP)] (https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata_search.php?rfc=6266[Errata]) * https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6265[RFC 6265 - HTTP State Management Mechanism (Cookies)] (https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata_search.php?rfc=6265[Errata]) * http://www.cookiecentral.com/faq/#3.5[Netscape Cookie Format] Other ^^^^^ * https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5646[RFC 5646 - Tags for Identifying Languages] (https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata_search.php?rfc=5646[Errata]) * https://www.w3.org/TR/CSS2/[Cascading Style Sheets Level 2 Revision 1 (CSS 2.1) Specification] * https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/stylesheet-reference.html[Qt Style Sheets Reference] * https://mimesniff.spec.whatwg.org/[MIME Sniffing Standard] * https://spec.whatwg.org/[WHATWG specifications] * https://www.w3.org/html/wg/drafts/html/master/Overview.html[HTML 5.1 Nightly] * https://www.w3.org/TR/webstorage/[Web Storage] * https://bford.info/cachedir/[Cache directory tagging standard] * https://standards.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-latest.html[XDG basedir specification] Hints ----- Python and Qt objects ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ For many tasks, there are solutions available in both Qt and the Python standard library. In qutebrowser, the policy is usually to use the Python libraries, as they provide exceptions and other benefits. There are some exceptions to that: * `QThread` is used instead of Python threads because it provides signals and slots. * `QProcess` is used instead of Python's `subprocess`. * `QUrl` is used instead of storing URLs as string, see the <> section for details. When using Qt objects, two issues must be taken care of: * Methods of Qt objects report their status with their return values, instead of using exceptions. + If a function gets or returns a Qt object which has an `.isValid()` method such as `QUrl` or `QModelIndex`, there's a helper function `ensure_valid` in `qutebrowser.utils.qtutils` which should get called on all such objects. It will raise `qutebrowser.utils.qtutils.QtValueError` if the value is not valid. + If a function returns something else on error, the return value should carefully be checked. * Methods of Qt objects have certain maximum values based on their underlying C++ types. + To avoid passing too large of a numeric parameter to a Qt function, all numbers should be range-checked using `qutebrowser.qtutils.check_overflow`, or by other means (e.g. by setting a maximum value for a config object). [[object-registry]] The object registry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The object registry in `qutebrowser.utils.objreg` is a collection of dictionaries which map object names to the actual long-living objects. There are currently these object registries, also called 'scopes': * The `global` scope, with objects which are used globally (`config`, `cookie-jar`, etc.). * The `tab` scope with objects which are per-tab (`hintmanager`, `webview`, etc.). Passing this scope to `objreg.get()` selects the object in the currently focused tab by default. A tab can be explicitly selected by passing +tab=_tab-id_, window=_win-id_+ to it. A new object can be registered by using +objreg.register(_name_, _object_[, scope=_scope_, window=_win-id_, tab=_tab-id_])+. An object should not be registered twice. To update it, `update=True` has to be given. An object can be retrieved by using +objreg.get(_name_[, scope=_scope_, window=_win-id_, tab=_tab-id_])+. The default scope is `global`. All objects can be printed by starting with the `--debug` flag and using the `:debug-all-objects` command. The registry is mainly used for <>, but it can also be useful in places where using Qt's https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/signalsandslots.html[signals and slots] mechanism would be difficult. Logging ~~~~~~~ Logging is used at various places throughout the qutebrowser code. If you add a new feature, you should also add some strategic debug logging. Unlike other Python projects, qutebrowser doesn't use a logger per file, instead it uses custom-named loggers. The existing loggers are defined in `qutebrowser.utils.log`. If your feature doesn't fit in any of the logging categories, simply add a new line like this: [source,python] ---- foo = getLogger('foo') ---- Then in your source files, do this: [source,python] ---- from qutebrowser.utils import log ... log.foo.debug("Hello World") ---- The following logging levels are available for every logger: [width="75%",cols="25%,75%"] |======================================================================= |critical |Critical issue, qutebrowser can't continue to run. |error |There was an issue and some kind of operation was abandoned. |warning |There was an issue but the operation can continue running. |info |General informational messages. |debug |Verbose debugging information. |======================================================================= [[commands]] Commands ~~~~~~~~ qutebrowser has the concept of functions which are exposed to the user as commands. Creating a new command is straightforward: [source,python] ---- from qutebrowser.api import cmdutils ... @cmdutils.register(...) def foo(): ... ---- The commands arguments are automatically deduced by inspecting your function. If the function is a method of a class, the `@cmdutils.register` decorator needs to have an `instance=...` parameter which points to the (single/main) instance of the class. The `instance` parameter is the name of an object in the object registry, which then gets passed as the `self` parameter to the handler. The `scope` argument selects which object registry (global, per-tab, etc.) to use. See the <> section for details. There are also other arguments to customize the way the command is registered; see the class documentation for `register` in `qutebrowser.api.cmdutils` for details. The types of the function arguments are inferred based on their default values, e.g., an argument `foo=True` will be converted to a flag `-f`/`--foo` in qutebrowser's commandline. The type can be overridden using Python's https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3107/[function annotations]: [source,python] ---- @cmdutils.register(...) def foo(bar: int, baz=True): ... ---- Possible values: - A callable (`int`, `float`, etc.): Gets called to validate/convert the value. - A python enum type: All members of the enum are possible values. - A `typing.Union` of multiple types above: Any of these types are valid values, e.g., `typing.Union[str, int]`. You can customize how an argument is handled using the `@cmdutils.argument` decorator *after* `@cmdutils.register`. This can, for example, be used to customize the flag an argument should get: [source,python] ---- @cmdutils.register(...) @cmdutils.argument('bar', flag='c') def foo(bar): ... ---- For a `str` argument, you can restrict the allowed strings using `choices`: [source,python] ---- @cmdutils.register(...) @cmdutils.argument('bar', choices=['val1', 'val2']) def foo(bar: str): ... ---- For `typing.Union` types, the given `choices` are only checked if other types (like `int`) don't match. The following arguments are supported for `@cmdutils.argument`: - `flag`: Customize the short flag (`-x`) the argument will get. - `value`: Tell qutebrowser to fill the argument with special values: - `value=cmdutils.Value.count`: The `count` given by the user to the command. - `value=cmdutils.Value.win_id`: The window ID of the current window. - `value=cmdutils.Value.cur_tab`: The tab object which is currently focused. - `completion`: A completion function (see `qutebrowser.completions.models.*`) to use when completing arguments for the given command. - `choices`: The allowed string choices for the argument. The name of an argument will always be the parameter name, with any trailing underscores stripped and underscores replaced by dashes. [[handling-urls]] Handling URLs ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ qutebrowser handles two different types of URLs: URLs as a string, and URLs as the Qt `QUrl` type. As this can get confusing quickly, please follow the following guidelines: * Convert a string to a QUrl object as early as possible, i.e., directly after the user did enter it. - Use `utils.urlutils.fuzzy_url` if the URL is entered by the user somewhere. - Be sure you handle `utils.urlutils.FuzzyError` and display an error message to the user. * Convert a `QUrl` object to a string as late as possible, i.e., before displaying it to the user. - If you want to display the URL to the user, use `url.toDisplayString()` so password information is removed. - If you want to get the URL as string for some other reason, you most likely want to add the `QUrl.EncodeFully` and `QUrl.RemovePassword` flags. * Name a string URL something like `urlstr`, and a `QUrl` something like `url`. * Mention in the docstring whether your function needs a URL string or a `QUrl`. * Call `ensure_valid` from `utils.qtutils` whenever getting or creating a `QUrl` and take appropriate action if not. Note the URL of the current page always could be an invalid QUrl (if nothing is loaded yet). Running valgrind on QtWebKit ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If you want to run qutebrowser (and thus QtWebKit) with https://valgrind.org/[valgrind], you'll need to pass `--smc-check=all` to it or recompile QtWebKit with the Javascript JIT disabled. This is needed so valgrind handles self-modifying code correctly: [quote] ____ This option controls Valgrind's detection of self-modifying code. If no checking is done and a program executes some code, overwrites it with new code, and then executes the new code, Valgrind will continue to execute the translations it made for the old code. This will likely lead to incorrect behavior and/or crashes. ... Note that the default option will catch the vast majority of cases. The main case it will not catch is programs such as JIT compilers that dynamically generate code and subsequently overwrite part or all of it. Running with all will slow Valgrind down noticeably. ____ Setting up a Windows Development Environment ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * Install https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-362/[Python 3.6]. * Install PyQt via `pip install PyQt6`. * Create a file at `C:\Windows\system32\python3.bat` with the following content (adjust the path as necessary): `@C:\Python36\python %*`. This will make the Python 3.6 interpreter available as `python3`, which is used by various development scripts. * Install git from the https://git-scm.com/download/win[git-scm downloads page]. Try not to enable `core.autocrlf`, since that will cause `flake8` to complain a lot. Use an editor that can deal with plain line feeds instead. * Clone your favourite qutebrowser repository. * To install tox, open an elevated cmd, enter your working directory and run `pip install -rmisc/requirements/requirements-tox.txt`. Note that the `flake8` tox env might not run due to encoding errors despite having LANG/LC_* set correctly. Rebuilding the website ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If you want to rebuild the website, run `./scripts/asciidoc2html.py --website `. Chrome URLs ~~~~~~~~~~~ With the QtWebEngine backend, qutebrowser supports several chrome:// urls which can be useful for debugging: - chrome://accessibility/ - chrome://appcache-internals/ - chrome://blob-internals/ - chrome://conversion-internals/ (QtWebEngine 5.15.3+) - chrome://crash/ (crashes the current renderer process!) - chrome://gpu/ - chrome://gpuclean/ (crashes the current renderer process!) - chrome://gpucrash/ (crashes qutebrowser!) - chrome://gpuhang/ (hangs qutebrowser!) - chrome://histograms/ - chrome://indexeddb-internals/ - chrome://kill/ (kills the current renderer process!) - chrome://media-internals/ - chrome://net-internals/ (QtWebEngine 5.15.4+) - chrome://network-errors/ - chrome://ppapiflashcrash/ - chrome://ppapiflashhang/ - chrome://process-internals/ - chrome://quota-internals/ - chrome://sandbox/ (Linux only) - chrome://serviceworker-internals/ - chrome://taskscheduler-internals/ (removed in QtWebEngine 5.14) - chrome://tracing/ (QtWebEngine 5.15.3+) - chrome://ukm/ (QtWebEngine 5.15.3+) - chrome://user-actions/ (QtWebEngine 5.15.3+) - chrome://webrtc-internals/ - chrome://webrtc-logs/ (QtWebEngine 5.15.3+) QtWebEngine internals ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This is mostly useful for qutebrowser maintainers to work around issues in Qt - if you don't understand it, don't worry, just ignore it. The hierarchy of widgets when QtWebEngine is involved looks like this: - qutebrowser has a `WebEngineTab` object, which is its abstraction over QtWebKit/QtWebEngine. - The `WebEngineTab` has a `_widget` attribute, which is the https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qwebengineview.html[QWebEngineView] - That view has a https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qwebenginepage.html[QWebEnginePage] for everything which doesn't require rendering. - The view also has a layout with exactly one element (which also is its `focusProxy()`) - That element is the https://code.qt.io/cgit/qt/qtwebengine.git/tree/src/webenginewidgets/render_widget_host_view_qt_delegate_widget.cpp[RenderWidgetHostViewQtDelegateWidget] (it inherits https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qquickwidget.html[QQuickWidget]) - also often referred to as RWHV or RWHVQDW. It can be obtained via `sip.cast(tab._widget.focusProxy(), QQuickWidget)`. - Calling `rootObject()` on that gives us the https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qquickitem.html[QQuickItem] where Chromium renders into (?). With it, we can do things like `.setRotation(20)`. Style conventions ----------------- qutebrowser's coding conventions are based on https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/[PEP8] and the https://google.github.io/styleguide/pyguide.html[Google Python style guidelines] with some additions: * The _Raise:_ section is not added to the docstring. * Methods overriding Qt methods (obviously!) don't follow the naming schemes. * Everything else does though, even slots. * Docstrings should look like described in https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0257/[PEP257] and the google guidelines. * Class docstrings have additional _Attributes:_, _Class attributes:_ and _Signals:_ sections. * In docstrings of command handlers (registered via `@cmdutils.register`), the description should be split into two parts by using `//` - the first part is the description of the command like it will appear in the documentation, the second part is "internal" documentation only relevant to people reading the sourcecode. + Example for a class docstring: + [source,python] ---- """Some object. Attributes: blub: The current thing to handle. Signals: valueChanged: Emitted when a value changed. arg: The new value """ ---- + Example for a method/function docstring: + [source,python] ---- """Do something special. This will do something. // It is based on http://example.com/. Args: foo: ... Return: True if something, False if something else. """ ---- + * The layout of a module should be roughly like this: - Shebang (`#!/usr/bin/python`, if needed) - vim-modeline (`# vim: ft=python fileencoding=utf-8 sts=4 sw=4 et`) - Copyright - GPL boilerplate - Module docstring - Python standard library imports - PyQt imports - qutebrowser imports - functions - classes * The layout of a class should be like this: - docstring - `__magic__` methods - other methods - overrides of Qt methods Checklists ---------- These are mainly intended for myself, but they also fit in here well. New Qt release ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * Run all tests and check nothing is broken. * Check the https://bugreports.qt.io/issues/?jql=reporter%20%3D%20%22The%20Compiler%22%20ORDER%20BY%20fixVersion%20ASC[Qt bugtracker] and make sure all bugs marked as resolved are actually fixed. * Update own PKGBUILDs based on upstream Archlinux updates and rebuild. * Update recommended Qt version in `README`. * Grep for `WORKAROUND` in the code and test if fixed stuff works without the workaround. * Check relevant https://github.com/qutebrowser/qutebrowser/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3Aqt[qutebrowser bugs] and check if they're fixed. New PyQt release ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * See above. * Update `tox.ini`/`.github/workflows/ci.yml` to test new versions. qutebrowser release ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * Make sure there are no unstaged changes and the tests are green. * Make sure all issues with the related milestone are closed. * Consider updating the completions for `content.headers.user_agent` in `configdata.yml`. * Minor release: Consider updating some files from master: - `misc/requirements/` and `requirements.txt` - `scripts/` * Make sure Python is up-to-date on build machines. * Mark the milestone at https://github.com/qutebrowser/qutebrowser/milestones as closed. * Update changelog in master branch * If necessary: Update changelog in release branch from master. * Run `./.venv/bin/python3 scripts/dev/update_version.py {major,minor,patch}`. * Run the printed instructions accordingly. * Update `qutebrowser-git` PKGBUILD if dependencies/install changed. * Add unreleased future versions to changelog * Update IRC topic * Announce to qutebrowser and qutebrowser-announce mailinglist. * Post announcement mail to subreddit