Result:
+1 vincent
+0 caty
+1 marius
+1 thomas
+1 guillaume
The vote is passed.
I’ve now updated our doc at
On 15 Sep 2016, at 11:18, Vincent Massol
<vincent(a)massol.net> wrote:
Hi devs,
Executive summary:
* Replace our 3 month release cycle by a 1 month release cycle.
Needs and advantages:
* Be able to get our changes faster to our users. Importantly, bugfixes are released
faster to users. Note: it’s not because we release faster that our users have to upgrade
as fast. They can skip some versions if they want/need.
* Be able to get more feedback more quickly from users. Right now, most (if not all) of
our users are testing only final versions. They’re not testing milestones or RCs and thus
we usually only know about problems after the final has been released and we incorporate
the change in the next one (to be released 3 months later) or we have to do a bugfix
release.
* Get closer to cloud needs. Nowadays, could offerings happen more and more and operating
a cloud means bringing improvements and fixes as fast as possible. Some software in the
cloud are even updated/patched several times per day. We’re not there yet but we’re trying
to get closer by reducing from 3 months to 1 month
* This also means more marketing for the xwiki project since other site relay the new
whenever a final version is released
Proposal Details:
* 1 month split in: 3 weeks to release a RC + 1 week to release the final version. It’s
very important to keep the RC as a meeting point and ensuring all is going to be ready on
time for the final release (jiras are closed or moved to the next release, CI is passing,
documentation and RN are ready, etc).
* Split large features into smaller chunks. It doesn’t matter if some code is released
but unused for example (provided the build is passing). For larger refactoring that
absolutely cannot be split into 3 weeks chunks (I’m not sure that really exists) then we
can use branches (and create a CI job to ensure integration).
* Less need for bugfix releases of stable versions. For LTS it’s still required though.
* Note that this 1 month release strategy will not generate more releases (and thus more
work) over the year since we’re already releasing every 2-3 weeks ATM (milestones, RCs,
et)
* Version Naming: from N.0 to N.10 where N is the cycle name. The reason for 11 releases
and not 12 is to account for slippages + potential bugfix release at the end of the cycle
for stabilization + holidays. We might even be able to do only 10 releases and not 11 but
I’m suggesting we try with 11 for now.
When:
* I’m proposing to start this process with the 8.4 release (starting on the 10th of
October). Since that version is already supposed to be a stabilization release (and thus a
short 1 month release) it’s not going to change anything. We should also do bugfix
releases after 8.4 is releases: 8.4.1, 8.4.2, etc till the end of the year
* Then starting 9.0 we really start doing 1 month releases.
WDYT?
Here’s my +1 to try this.
Thanks
-Vincent
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