Merge "Update doc on stable release frequency"
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@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ Server
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Major release
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Major release is cut off once per development cycle and has an assigned name
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A Major release is cut off once per development cycle and has an assigned name
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(Liberty, Mitaka, ...)
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Prior to major release,
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@ -19,20 +19,20 @@ Prior to major release,
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#. consider blocking trivial patches to keep the gate clean;
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#. revise the current list of blueprints and bugs targeted for the release;
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roll over anything that does not fit there, or won't make it (note that no
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new features land master after so called feature freeze is claimed by
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new features land in master after so called feature freeze is claimed by
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release team; there is a feature freeze exception (FFE) process described in
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release engineering documentation in more details:
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http://docs.openstack.org/project-team-guide/release-management.html);
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#. start collecting state for targeted features from the team. For example,
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propose a postmortem patch for neutron-specs as in:
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propose a post-mortem patch for neutron-specs as in:
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https://review.openstack.org/#/c/286413/
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#. revise deprecation warnings collected in latest Jenkins runs: some of them
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may indicate a problem that should be fixed prior to release (see
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deprecations.txt file in those log directories); also, check whether any
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Launchpad bugs with the 'deprecation' tag need a clean-up or a follow-up in
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the context of the release planned;
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the context of the release being planned;
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#. check that release notes and sample configuration files render correctly,
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arrange clean-up if needed.
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arrange clean-up if needed;
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#. ensure all doc links are valid by running ``tox -e linkcheck`` and
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addressing any broken links.
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@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ New major release process contains several phases:
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#. once the team is ready to release the first release candidate (RC1), either
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PTL or one of release liaisons proposes a patch for openstack/releases repo.
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For example, see: https://review.openstack.org/#/c/292445/
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#. once the openstack/releases patch land, release team creates a new stable
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#. once the openstack/releases patch lands, release team creates a new stable
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branch using hash values specified in the patch;
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#. at this point, master branch is open for patches targeted to the next
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release; PTL unblocks all patches that were blocked in step 1;
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@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ New major release process contains several phases:
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master branch, and are then backported to the newly created stable branch;
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#. if patches landed in the release stable branch as per the previous step, a
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new release candidate that would include those patches should be requested
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by PTL in openstack/releases repo.
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by PTL in openstack/releases repo;
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#. eventually, the latest release candidate requested by PTL becomes the final
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major release of the project.
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@ -72,11 +72,11 @@ In the new stable branch, you should make sure that:
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#. if the branch uses constraints to manage gated dependency versions, the
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default constraints file name points to corresponding stable branch in
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openstack/requirements repo;
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#. if the branch fetches any other projects as dependencies, f.e. by using
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#. if the branch fetches any other projects as dependencies, e.g. by using
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tox_install.sh as an install_command in tox.ini, git repository links point
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to corresponding stable branches of those dependency projects.
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Note that some of those steps may be covered by OpenStack release team.
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Note that some of those steps may be covered by the OpenStack release team.
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In the opened master branch, you should:
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@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ In the opened master branch, you should:
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release name.
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While preparing the next release and even in the middle of development, it's
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worth keeping the infrastructure clean. Consider using those tools to declutter
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worth keeping the infrastructure clean. Consider using these tools to declutter
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the project infrastructure:
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#. declutter Gerrit::
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@ -99,9 +99,13 @@ the project infrastructure:
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Minor release
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Minor release is a release created from existing stable branch after the
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initial major release, and that usually contains bug fixes and small
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improvements only.
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A Minor release is created from an existing stable branch after the initial
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major release, and usually contains bug fixes and small improvements only.
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The minor release frequency should follow the release schedule for the current
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series. For example, assuming the current release is Rocky, stable branch
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releases should coincide with milestones R1, R2, R3 and the final release.
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Stable branches can be also released more frequently if needed, for example,
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if there is a major bug fix that has merged recently
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The following steps should be taken before claiming a successful minor release:
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