I'm no expert but here's what i had to do on my rebuild (according to the builder who is a racer).
Keep it under 4krpm as much as possible.
Avoid straining it in high gears i.e. always pick a gear that results in unstressed running between 2000 - 4000 RPM whilst on the road.
We also gave it some absolute thrashings in the first few days winding it all the way up to 6750 but only at short bursts.
We ran it for 30 mins at a 2500-3000 on the first start. This is tricky because unless everything is perfect you may not even be reliable enough to get that continued 30min run.
I had running in oil - don't know the grade - but I was told it was very thin and did not offer much protection to the cam etc. at high revs - hence the warning to avoid high revs for long periods until the change to normal oil.
I seem to remember that the 30 min running on first start up was to gaurantee hardening of the cam faces and lifters etc.
I've heard from plenty of people that the process of winding all the way up and then coasting back down over and over on a long stretch of highway is the best way to seat the rings.
I was also warned to avoid any high revs under a no-load situation. i.e do not sit there and wind it out to redline in neutral. Can't remember the reason though.
The guy that built my motor goes straight out on new engines and races them - all he does is the standard 30 min first go. But - he always drives the car to its first event rather than trailer it. I guess that way he gets an hour or so of real road driving before the first use.
I guess though that a motor built for race v's a motor built for street is quite different as the life expectancy of a race motor is a lot less + the cylinder fit can be a bit sloppy on purpose if aiming for a high revving motor.
Just my personal experience - not opinions stated here