Fixes#2948
So it seems that it's easiest just to use an old-fashioned semver
string. This means we'll need to keep a version matrix in the docs of
which components are supported and for how long, but it's better than
having different version schemes for different Firezone components
altogether.
- Update `CODE_SIGN_STYLE=Manual`. You'll need to make sure to click
`Download manual profiles` in `Settings -> Account` in Xcode to have
them show up and be usable for local development. This is required to do
all this stuff from GitHub Actions.
- Sign the Apple app for distribution on each PR
- Publish the Apple app builds to App Store Connect on merges to `main`
Fixes#2213
This will allow us to fetch the actual Firezone version that's in use
from within the language runtimes themselves without resorting to an
external mechanism to do so. This is useful in connlib for example when
selecting the Portal API to use with `X-Firezone-API-Version`, and
useful in log printing.
Since platforms enforce semantic version, I propose the convention:
`1.20231001.34` where MAJOR is `1` for Firezone 1.0, MINOR is our API
version, and PATCH is the release of that API version that is published
on the repo.
Given this system, publishing a release would consist of:
1. Edit `Makefile` to set the patch and minor versions appropriately
depending on whether there are breaking portal API changes.
2. `make version`
3. `git add .; git commit; git push` -- this opens a PR with the new
version numbers. In this PR we can discuss whether to stop-ship or go.
4. PR merged, release is drafted and deployed to staging with the new
tag and version numbers
5. build artifacts are uploaded to drafted release, everything is tagged
and versioned appropriately without having to introduce another commit
6. If all looks good, publish release