/brz/remove-bazaar

To get this branch, use:
bzr branch http://gegoxaren.bato24.eu/bzr/brz/remove-bazaar
4584.2.1 by Martin Pool
Update release cycle doc for 6m cycles
1
*********************
2
Bazaar Release Cycles
3
*********************
4
5
:status: Current policy, as of 2009-08. 
6
:blueprint: <https://blueprints.launchpad.net/bzr/+spec/6m-cycle>
7
8
9
Our users want easy access to bug fixes without other changes to the
10
core product. They also want a Just Works experience across the full
11
Bazaar ecosystem. To deliver the first and enable the second, we're
12
adopting some standard process patterns: a 6 monthly release cycle and a
13
stable branch. These changes will also have other benefits, including
14
better availability of bug fixes in OS distributions, more freedom to
15
remove old code, and less work for in packaging.
4439.1.4 by Martin Pool
Start cleaning up docs on bugs and release process
16
17
See also:
18
19
* `Bazaar Developer Document Catalog <index.html>`_
20
21
* `Releasing Bazaar <releasing.html>`_ -- the process for actually making 
22
  a release or release candidate.
23
4584.2.1 by Martin Pool
Update release cycle doc for 6m cycles
24
The Problem Situation
25
*********************
26
27
Bazaar makes a release every month, preceded by a one-week
28
release-candidate test.  
29
30
In any release we may fix bugs, add formats, change the default format,
31
improve performance, add new commands or change command line behaviour,
32
change the network protocol, or deprecate APIs.  We sometimes also
33
introduce new bugs, regress existing behaviour or performance, remove
34
existing features or formats, or break behaviour or APIs depended upon by
35
plugins, external programs or users.
36
37
Some users are happy upgrading every month and consider the overall
38
positive balance of changes is worth some amount of churn.  But there are
39
some serious problems:
40
41
* You cannot get bug fixes without also getting disruptive changes.
42
43
* Bazaar is seen as unstable.
44
45
* Many releases cause some plugin breakage.
46
47
* One month is not a very long window for dependent programs or systems
48
  to catch up to changes in Bazaar before the release goes out of date.
49
50
* There's no clear indication to distributions which version they should
51
  package.
52
53
* If people (or their distributions) just pick an arbitrary version, they
54
  may all be on different arbitrary versions, therefore they will have
55
  different behaviour and different bugs, and sometimes interoperation
56
  problems.
57
58
* Any effort we, or distributors, wanted to put into backporting fixes
59
  would be dissipated across many possible backport target releases.
60
61
* When in the past we've tried either stalling releases for particular
62
  features, or having trunk frozen for some weeks, it causes churn and
63
  waste.  People rush features in, or already landed features wait a long
64
  time to be released, or branches go out of date because they cannot
65
  land.
66
67
68
The Process
69
************
70
71
Bazaar will make a major release every six months, which will be supported
72
at least until the time of the next major release.  During this support
73
period, we'll make incremental releases which fix bugs, but which do not
74
change network or disk formats or command syntax, and which do not require
75
updates to plugins.
76
77
We will also run a development series, which will become the next major
78
release.  We'll make a beta release from this every four weeks.  The
79
beta releases will be as stable as our current monthly releases and
80
completely suitable for everyday use by users who can tolerate changes
81
from month to month.
82
83
Having the stable series isn't a reason to cut back on QA or to make the
84
trunk or development releases unstable, which would only make our job
85
harder.  We keep our trunk in an always-releasable state, and that should
86
continue: any beta release could potentially be supported in the long
87
term, but we identify particular releases that actually will be supported.
88
89
The trunk will never be frozen: changes that pass review, other quality
90
checks and that are agreed amongst the developers can always be landed
91
into trunk.  The only restrictions will be on branches specifically
92
targeted at a release.
93
94
95
Schedule
96
--------
97
98
::
99
100
 2.0 --- 2.0.1 -- 2.0.2 -- ...
101
  \
102
   +--2.1beta1 -- 2.1beta2 -- ... -- 2.1rc1 -- 2.1 -- 2.1.1 -- ...
103
                                                \
104
                                                 \
105
                                                  +-- 3.0beta1 ...
106
107
108
Starting from the date of a major release: 
109
110
At four-week intervals we make a new beta release.  There will be no
111
separate release candidate, but if a serious problem is discovered we may
112
do the next beta ahead of schedule or make a point release.  There will be
113
about five or six releases in that series.
114
115
In parallel with this, bugs targeted to the previous major release are
116
merged into its branch.  We will make bugfix releases from that branch as
117
appropriate to the accumulation of changes, perhaps monthly, perhaps more
118
often if there are serious bugs, perhaps much less often if no new changes
119
have landed.
120
121
We will then make a release candidate for the next major release, and at
122
this point create a release branch for it.  We will iterate release
123
candidates at approximately weekly intervals until there are no bugs
124
blocking the final major release. 
125
126
Compared to the current process this has approximately the same amount of
127
release-related work, because the extra releases from the stable branch
128
are "paid for" by not doing RCs for the development series.
129
130
We will synchronize our major releases with Ubuntu, so that they come out
131
in sufficient time for some testing and margin of error before Ubuntu's
132
upstream freeze.
133
134
135
Regularity
136
----------
137
138
We value regular releases.  We prefer to slip a feature or fix to
139
a later release rather than to make a release late.  We will normally only
140
slip a release to fix a critical bug.
141
142
143
Numbering
144
---------
145
146
The number for a six-month cycle is chosen at the start, with an increment
147
to either the first field (3.0) or second field (3.1) depending on what we
148
expect to be the user impact of the release.  We expect releases that
149
culminate in a new disk format or that require changes in how people use
150
the tool will get a new major number.  We can change (forward only) if it
151
turns out that we land larger changes than were expected.
152
153
154
Terminology
155
-----------
156
157
Major releases (2.0 or 2.1)
158
    The big ones, every six months, intended to ship in distributions and
159
    to be used by stability-oriented users.
160
161
Release candidate (2.0rc1)
162
    A preview of a major release, made one or a few weeks beforehand at
163
    the time the release branch is created.  There should be few if any
164
    changes from the rc to the stable release.  We should avoid the
165
    confusing phrasing "release candidate 2.0rc1 is released"; instead use
166
    "available."
167
168
Bugfix releases (2.0.1)
169
    Based on the previous major release or bugfix; contains only bugfixes
170
    and perhaps documentation or translation corrections.
171
172
Stable series
173
    A major release and its descendant bugfix releases.
174
175
Stable release
176
    Either a major release or a bugfix release.
177
178
Beta release (3.0beta1)
179
    Made from trunk every month, except for the month there's a major
180
    release.  Stable and suitable for users who want the latest code and
181
    can live with some changes from month to month.
182
183
Development series
184
    The development releases leading up to a stable release.
185
186
Bug Work
187
--------
188
189
Bug fixes should normally be done first against the stable branch, 
190
reviewed against that branch, and then merged forward to trunk.
191
192
It may not always be easy to do this, if fixing the bug requires large
193
changes or the affected code is different in the stable and development
194
branches.  If the tradeoff does not seem worthwhile the bug can be fixed
195
only in the development branch, at least in the first instance.  If users
196
later want the fix backported we can discuss it.
197
198
Developers can merge the release branch into trunk as often as they like,
199
only asking for review if they're making nontrivial changes or feel review
200
is needed.
201
202
203
Feature and Performance Work
204
----------------------------
205
206
Features can be landed to the development branch at any time, and they'll
207
be released for testing within a month.
208
209
Performance bugs, although important, will generally not be landed in a
210
stable series.  Fixing performance bugs well often requires nontrivial
211
code changes or new formats.  These are not suitable for a stable series.
212
213
Performance bugs that can be fixed with a small safe patch can be
214
considered for the stable series.
215
216
217
Plugins
218
-------
219
220
Plugins that want to cooperate with this should make a series and a branch
221
that matches each bzr stable series, and follow similar rules in making
222
releases from their stable branch.  We'd expect that plugins will make a
223
release between the last development release of a series and the major
224
release candidate.
225
226
Within a stable series, anything that breaks any known plugin is
227
considered an API break and will be avoided.  Before
228
making each bugfix release, we'll test that code against important
229
plugins.
230
231
Within a development series, the focus is on helping plugin authors keep
232
up to date by giving clear error messages when an interface is removed.
233
We will no longer focus on letting old plugin code work with new versions
234
of bzrlib, which is an elusive target in Python.
235
236
This may mean that in cases where today a plugin would keep running but
237
give warnings, it will now fail altogether with an error.   
238
239
In return we expect more freedom to change and cleanup bzrlib code without
240
needing to keep old code around, or write extra compatibility shims, or
241
have review turnarounds related to compatibility.  Some changes, such as
242
removing module-global variables, that are hard to do now, will be
243
possible to do safely.
244
245
Discussion of plugins here includes programs that import and use bzrlib
246
but that aren't technically plugins.  The same approach, though the
247
technical considerations are different, should apply to other extensions
248
such as programs that use bzr through the shell interface.
249
  
250
251
252
Data and Network Formats
253
------------------------
254
255
Any development release should be able to interoperate with the previous
256
stable release, and any stable release should be able to interoperate with
257
the previous stable release.  This is a minimum and normally releases will be
258
able to interoperate with all previous releases as at present.
259
260
Each major release will have one recommended data format which will be the
261
default.  The name of the format will indicate which release series (not
262
specific release) it comes from: '2a' is the first supported format for
4584.2.2 by Martin Pool
Bit of clarification about format names
263
the 2.0 series, '2b' the second, etc.  We don't mention the particular
264
release that introduced it so as to avoid problems predicting precisely
265
when it will land.
4584.2.1 by Martin Pool
Update release cycle doc for 6m cycles
266
267
During a development series we may have a series of experimental formats.
268
We will not leave people stranded if they test these formats, but we also
269
won't guarantee to keep supporting them in a future release.  If something
270
inserted in one development release turns out to be bad it can just be
4584.2.2 by Martin Pool
Bit of clarification about format names
271
removed in the next.
4584.2.1 by Martin Pool
Update release cycle doc for 6m cycles
272
273
274
Hosting Services
275
-----------------
276
277
The guarantees made above about format and network interoperation
278
mean that hosting services such as Launchpad, Savannah, FedoraHosted,
279
and Sourceforge could choose to run either the stable or beta versions.
280
They might find it useful to run the beta version on their own beta
281
server.
282
283
284
Simultaneous Installation
285
-------------------------
286
287
Some people may want to simultaneously install and use both a stable
288
release and development release.
289
290
This can be handled in various ways either at the OS packaging or the
291
Python level.  We don't propose to directly address it in the upstream
292
source.  (For example, we will not change the bzrlib library name from one
293
release to the next.)  
294
295
The issue already exists with people who may want to use for example the
296
previous bzr release and the trunk.  There is a related issue that plugins
297
may be compatible with only some of the Bazaar versions people want to use
298
at the same time, and again that is something that can be handled
299
separately.
300
301
302
OS Distributions
303
----------------
304
305
OS distributors will be recommended to ship the bzr stable release that
306
fits their schedule, the betas leading up to that release during their own
307
beta period, and the bugfix releases following on from it.  They might
308
also choose to offer the beta releases as an alternative package.
309
310
311
Packaging
312
---------
313
314
At present we have three upstream-maintained PPAs containing Ubuntu
315
packages of Bazaar: ``~bzr-nightly-ppa``, ``~bzr-beta-ppa`` (rcs and
316
releases) and ``~bzr`` (ie stable).  We will keep these PPAs, and reorient
317
beta to contain the monthly beta releases, and the stable PPA to contain
318
stable releases, their release candidates, and bugfixes to those releases.
319
320
Some platforms with relatively less active packagers may choose to ship
321
only the stable releases.  This is probably better than having them only
322
intermittently or slowly ship the monthly releases.
323
324
Binary installers should use a version number like '2.0-1' or '2.0beta1-1'
325
so that the last component just reflects the packaging version, and can be
326
incremented if a new installer is made with no upstream source changes.
327
328
329
Code Freeze vs Announcement
330
---------------------------
331
332
We will separate the code freeze for a particular release from its actual
333
announcement, allowing a window of approximately one week for plugins to
334
be released and binary installers to be built.  On the date the
335
announcement is published, people will be able to easily install it.
3778.2.1 by Martin Pool
Updated release process documentation.
336
337
338
Weekly Metronome Mail
339
---------------------
340
341
Every week the release manager should send a mail to the Bazaar list
342
covering these points (as appropriate):
343
344
* Early communication about changing dependencies or defaults
345
346
* Reminder re lifecycle and where we're up to right now, in particular the 
347
  dates for the next release and/or candidate.
348
349
* Summary of recent successes and pending work.
350
351
* Reminder re release objectives
352
353
* Reminder re things needing attention, e.g. bug triage, reviews, testing
354
  of certain things, etc.
355
356
4584.2.1 by Martin Pool
Update release cycle doc for 6m cycles
357
Questions
358
*********
359
360
Do users actually want this?  
361
    Apparently yes, because it's often requested and often raised as a
362
    problem.
363
364
Would this confuse users?  
365
    It shouldn't, because it's a fairly standard scheme.
366
367
Won't it take more time to fix bugs in multiple places?
368
    It shouldn't, because we'll only do this when the stable bugfix seems
369
    economical.  When we fix bugs today in both trunk and release branches
370
    it normally does not take much more time.
371
372
What about bzr in Ubuntu LTS, with a five-year support life?
373
    Most bugs are either fixed within six months, or not fixed at all, or
374
    not very important, or fixed as part of a large rework of the code
375
    that would be too large to backport.  However, if there are fixes that
376
    are especially desired in an old release and feasible to do, we can do
377
    them without making a general commitment.
378
379
Will anyone test the beta releases?
380
    Probably yes, our most active users will run them, but if people would
381
    really rather not test them, forcing them is not helpful.
382
383
Isn't this a step backwards to a slower, less-agile process?
384
    No, our trunk stays releasable, and we ship every month.  We're just 
385
    cutting out things that hold us back (continuous rather than episodic
386
    API stability; RCs every month) and giving users what they demand.
387
388
How about calling the monthly releases "milestone" or "next" not "beta"?
389
    Those words are less scary but they also have less clear meanings.
390
391
392
Expected Benefits
393
*****************
394
395
If this plan works, we'll expect to see the following changes.  If they
396
don't occur, we'll think again:
397
398
* We see a distribution curve of users and bug reports across nightly, monthly
399
  and stable releases, indicating that each has value.
400
401
* API changes are easier or safer to make during beta periods, without
402
  being held back by fears of compatibility or 
403
404
* The stable releases are actually stable and don't introduce regressions
405
  or break plugins.
406
407
* Many bugs are fixed in stable branches, without developers feeling this
408
  is a waste of time.
409
410
* Distributions ship the stable releases in their stable releases and the
411
  bugfix releases in their bugfix releases.
412
413
* Plugin authors follow this policy, making their own bugfix releases.
414
415
* Users like it.
416
417
References
418
**********
419
420
#. List thread "[rfc] six-month stable release cycles", July 2009.
3778.2.1 by Martin Pool
Updated release process documentation.
421
422
..
423
   vim: filetype=rst textwidth=74 ai shiftwidth=4
4584.2.1 by Martin Pool
Update release cycle doc for 6m cycles
424