Hi Caleb,
On Mar 28, 2012, at 11:28 PM, Caleb James DeLisle wrote:
On 03/28/2012 02:03 PM, Vincent Massol wrote:
On Mar 28, 2012, at 7:10 PM, Denis Gervalle wrote:
On Wed, Mar 28, 2012 at 12:27, Vincent Massol
<vincent(a)massol.net> wrote:
Hi devs,
I'd like to change our deprecation strategy. Here's what we are currently
supposed to use (we voted it a long time ago):
http://dev.xwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Community/DevelopmentPractices#HDepreca…
"
In addition our rule is to keep @deprecated methods/classes for 2 final
releases after the version where they were first added has been released as
final.
For example if a method is deprecated in, say XE 1.3M2 then the method
will be removed in 1.6M1 or after. Of course any major new release can
deprecate anything. For example a XWiki 2.0 release is allowed to break
backward compatibility (obviously we need to be careful to offer a
migration path for users of previous major versions).
"
Issues:
* This seems a bit harsh to me for some of our users/devs in the community.
* We're not following which proves to me it's not a good rule
* It doesn't say anything about Scripting APIs which require a greater
stability in order not to break all wiki pages
Definition of a Scripting API:
* a Script Service (that's the new way of providing script apis)
* a class in the "api" package in xwiki-platform-oldcore (this is the old
way of providing script apis)
Thus I'd like to propose this new rule:
* Deprecated methods can only be removed in the next Release Cycle. For
example something deprecated in version N.x can be removed in version N+1.y
where x and y can be anything. This is logical since N+1 means a new major
release and it's common to understand that major releases have no guarantee
of API compatibility (See
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_versioningfor example).
* For scripting APIs we can remove deprecated API only after 4 Release
Cycles. For example since we're in 4.x this means we
Why four ? isn't it too much ?
The reason I proposed 4 is because nowadays there still are quite a few XWiki 1.x
instances in the wild so if people have coded apps on 1.x and then upgrade to 4.0 (for ex)
it would be nice if their app still works. However I think it's ok to not support apis
done in 0.9. And next year it would be ok to drop 1.x api support, etc.
It's long but then we can see in the wild that it's important we provide stable
scripting apis for users since they're used a lot while java apis are used by more
savvy user (developers) and thus having a shorter removing cycle for them (1 year) should
be ok.
What would you like to propose instead?
I'd rather we had no hard rules lest dogmatic adherence to the rules becomes an
excuse not to fulfill our obligation to do what's best for the software.
I'm not exactly sure what `break' means since there's no reason I can see for
these functions to be removed from the compatibility aspect.
The reason for having a well-defined rule is:
* I think it's better than having to send a vote every time we want to remove a
deprecated api. It certainly is much simpler.
* Publicly document it so that our users will know about this rule and adapt their
deprecation replacement strategy as a consequence
I really think we ought to publish our deprecation and removal policy.
I propose:
#1 Move remaining deprecated scripting API methods from oldcore into legacy-oldcore
compatibility aspect.
That means these:
http://nexus.xwiki.org/nexus/service/local/repositories/releases/archive/or…
This is *already* our strategy, see the "2-step" strategy defined here:
http://dev.xwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Community/DevelopmentPractices#HDepreca…
Everyone is already supposed to do this and do this regularly. The issue is that before
being able to move a lot of code we need to fix a lot of deprecation usages.
<OT>It could be nice to organize a "deprecation day" where we try to
squash as many deprecation usages as possible</OT>
#2 Get xwiki-enterprise building and testing with
xwiki-platform-oldcore instead of xwiki-platform-legacy-oldcore.
Add an xwiki-enterprise-legacy-jetty-hsql build profile so that we can test in parallel,
with and without legacy-oldcore.
I ran the UI tests and it appears that we have a few dependencies on legacy-oldcore. IMO
this is very bad.
This is very very bad and goes against our current policy indeed.
However it doesn't look like we have too many.
Lets get it running, see the failing tests, report the issues, then fix them.
This is a very good idea and I'm all for it.
#3 Stop shipping legacy-oldcore by default. Users can
always swap platform-oldcore for it on their own.
It's not just oldcore, we have several legacy modules and theoretically we can have as
many as we have modules.
I don't think we cans stop shipping a distribution with legacy modules but what would
be nice is to start shipping a distribution without legacy modules. We could even
highlight this one as first listed to raise awareness.
#4 Aggressively move deprecated internal (non-script
api) code into the compatibility aspect, this will allow us to simplify the oldcore, and
potentially even remove dependencies.
This is already our strategy. Again for some cases it's hard but I'm all for it. A
lot of us introduce new APIs but don't update the code to use the new API creating a
lot of deprecation usages suddenly. I'm all for this too.
If we want to stall, we can stall at #3, having 1, 2,
and some of 4 taken care of will make the final decision the flip of a switch.
This is all great but it doesn't solve the VOTE. It's a different topic and
something we've already VOTED and doing. I agree it would be nice to do it more
aggressively but it's very different from the deprecation policy I'd like to find
an agreement on.
Unless I misunderstood you and your proposal is to NEVER remove deprecated APIs, which is
a solution of course. I'm a bit afraid of the consequences.
BTW I'd like to update our current strategy documentation to a 3-step strategy:
* Step 1: deprecate
* Step 2: move to legacy modules (this means removing our usages of the deprecated apis)
* Step 3: remove from legacy modules <-- This is what we're voting on here
i.e. we could do step3 only when we've done steps 1 and 2 first. This is a good
strategy IMO because it means that we would have done step2 which is required to be able
to remove a deprecated api anyway… ;)
Thanks
-Vincent
Caleb
>
> Thanks
> -Vincent
>
>>> can remove deprecated APIs from 0.x releases. And when we start 5.x we
>>> will be able to remove deprecated scripting apis deprecated in 1.x.
>>>
>>> Here's my +1
>>>
>>> Thanks
>>> -Vincent