Release Cycle Observations
Jay Bryant
jungleboyj at gmail.com
Thu Sep 26 23:21:33 UTC 2019
On 9/26/2019 3:34 PM, Ben Nemec wrote:
>
>
> On 9/26/19 11:29 AM, Donny Davis wrote:
>> So would a longer release cycle help or hurt that? Would having two
>> trains make it better or worse?
>
> My prediction is that the shorter release cycle train would be largely
> ignored, and the feature freeze madness for the longer cycle would be
> even worse. That's nothing more than an educated guess on my part though.
>
I agree with Ben. I think it is admirable to want to find a better way
to do things but we have tried numerous different approaches in Cinder
to try and avoid the crunch at the end but the fact is that it appears
that everyone procrastinates until the last minute. It seems to be one
of the problems of being an open community where people don't always
have full time to work on development.
> It also may still be worth it to move to the longer cycle. On some
> level, the feature freeze crunch is going to happen anyway. At least
> that way it happens less often.
>
>>
>> Just want to make things clear that I am only curious and wanted to
>> share what I see.
>>
>> ~/D
>>
>> On Thu, Sep 26, 2019 at 12:17 PM Ben Nemec <openstack at nemebean.com
>> <mailto:openstack at nemebean.com>> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> On 9/26/19 9:42 AM, Matt Riedemann wrote:
>> > In last week's nova meeting we also talked about some of this
>> [1]. If
>> > you change the release cycle to do major and minor versions,
>> that's
>> > going to be pretty complicated for testing upgrades, because
>> grenade
>> > goes from major to major based on branches. We could probably
>> make it
>> > work (and maybe it's already possible, I don't know to go from
>> tag
>> > (minor release) to master, but the point is you're going to blow
>> up the
>> > upgrade test matrix and it's not clear anyone is even going to be
>> > consuming those minor intermediate releases. I think this is
>> partly why
>> > the release team stopped doing a cycle-with-milestone [2] release
>> > because no one was consuming the milestone releases.
>>
>> We've even found that since we started supporting FFU between
>> certain
>> releases that many customers won't touch the intervening
>> releases, even
>> with six months between them. They're basically on a year-and-a-half
>> cycle. This actually makes things worse for the FFU releases because
>> having a feature miss one means waiting that much longer for it
>> to show
>> up (or we have to carry downstream backports, which sucks).
>>
>> I know we'd like to have everyone CD'ing master, but for the
>> foreseeable
>> future I think it's more likely that we're going to have a
>> non-trivial
>> number of deployers who stick to the longest release cycle that
>> can be
>> supported, and that's going to create added pressure during feature
>> freeze for whatever that release is.
>>
>
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