Merge "Update doc on stable release frequency"

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Zuul 2018-06-18 07:23:25 +00:00 committed by Gerrit Code Review
commit c9b99ae1e1
1 changed files with 17 additions and 13 deletions

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