Each repo needs to have a "dev/latest" branch. Should the component need them,
the pom.xml files in those dev/latest branches can refer to the latest-n-greatest snapshot
versions of components (we can have travis publish the snapshot builds from these
dev/latest branches). Therefore, if you want the latest-n-greatest to test integration,
switch to dev/latest branches and build them locally.
If you want a released version that never changes go to the master branch (which is the
latest release) or go to one of the release tags and build from that.
Once we are getting ready to prepare for a release, we create PRs to merge dev/latest to
master, changing the poms to the release versions that are needed.
How long between merging dev/latest to master and release? I dunno. If we do this right,
we won't need a quick 1-week turnaround time. Every 2-weeks? 3-weeks? keep it a month?
I don't know. Make something up. I vote every 17 days - only because its just as
arbitrary as any other time period we might pick :)
----- Original Message -----
Hello,
There are two issues that get interlaced here and should not be. One is to
release individual components on a schedule, and second is making sure that
all the components integrate nicely. Your proposal with "at least one
release per week" is trying to fix a fix of a fix of previous decision. And
in this mix, the two concepts of release and integration get so interlocked
that we cannot make heads and tail.
Here is the progression of things:
Problem 1: monolithic code is bad, we need to componentize everything.
Solution: create single purpose repositories, which resulted in about 20
repositories.
Problem 2: how do we integrate all those components? Solution: create a
Hawkular repository that depends on all the other repositories.
Problem 3: integrated project idea works, but how do we really really
integrate the code? Solution: publish changes in subcomponents as soon as
possible.
Problem 4: publishing changes in components takes a long time, can we
expedite the process and get changes even faster to integrated project?
Solution: automate SNAPSHOT publication so you have freshly build binaries
on almost every change.
Problem 5: We need consistent builds for the integrated project. Solution:
master branch in the integrated project only depends on released version of
components, feature branches are short lived.
Problem 6: It is almost impossible to align all the release of components and
give enough runaway for the integrated project to ingest all the release
subcomponets, especially since there inter-dependencies on the sub-projects
themselves. Solution: publish sub-components officially at least once per
week.
Problem 7: There are major changes that are needed right-away in the
integrated project. Solution: officially publish components more often than
once per week. Publish as soon as the features makes it in. In fact, let's
publish Alphas (Alphaxx) with every single change.
Problem 8: Too many releases, it takes too much time to administer the
process of releasing. Solution: Automate the release dependency management,
emulate the SNAPSHOT injection concept but with Alpha "moniker".
Problem 9: It is a nightmare to maintain on which version to depend on the
integrate project or components that depend on other components. Solution:
??
Problem 10: It is almost impossible to trace back the code that code that
goes into the integrated project because there are so many Alphas. Solution:
???
We are at level 5; from 6 forward I see them coming, just as I saw the rest
of 5. At what point do we stop and say "wait a second! what we doing here?
can we simplify all this??" From my perspective, we are arbitrarily setting
requirements just to complicate things. There is always a happy medium and
there is always ways to simplify. I would much rather think for 2 months on
how to simplify things and do it once, then stack problems that make our
lives harder for no reason.
That being said, I am not against implementing your proposed solution in
Hawkular Metrics. But I see two possible paths. One, escalate and resolve
problems 6, and 7 at the same time with automation. That is primarily
because we are so thin on resources and so stretched that we do not have
time to not automate this. Two, get a release engineer (or another engineer)
allocated to the team that will take care of these releases. If we are to
proceed with your current proposal please let us know which one of these
paths do you want Hawkular Metrics to take.
At the same time, we can take the reversed path; rather than escalate
problems, remove them from that stack. Why not look to simplify everything,
revert a few problems and try to improve our productivity. We can revert to
the use of SNAPSHOTS. In what capacity? Let's find the path that gives us
the most benefits with the least amount of work.
Thank you,
Stefan
----- Original Message -----
> From: "Heiko W.Rupp" <hrupp(a)redhat.com>
> To: "Discussions around Hawkular development"
> <hawkular-dev(a)lists.jboss.org>
> Sent: Tuesday, July 21, 2015 4:38:58 AM
> Subject: [Hawkular-dev] Release cadence
>
> Hey
>
> I have observed that our current Hawkular cadence of 4 weeks
> with similar cadences of components makes us end up with
> long living integration branches and a larger rush near the
> end to integrate them, get them for the first time tested in CI
> and even for the first time tested in real world.
>
> In one of the last releases there was a changed implementation
> in one component, that basically turned out as a no-op and
> still returned a "200 OK" code, so clients thought everything is
> happy, but it was not. We found the issue (through ppl looking
> at the UI) and solved it, but it was in a rush.
>
> This certainly goes against all the ideas of "release early, release
> often", "cut small slices", "changes go into CI/CD and go live
quickly".
> Remember the coin flipping ?
>
> Ideally we would always be able to integrate changes from
> components into Hawkular (main), but I understand that with the
> way maven and its release process to central works, it is also not
> ideal to release many versions per day.
>
> With all of the above in mind, I propose that we move to a
> "at least once per week" model, where we do a component release
> at least once per week(*), which then in the four week stream form
> a new Alpha release. The smaller releases do not need release notes,
> I don't care if we use the micro number or a .AlphaY designator on
> them, but they should be a release, that is not a (named) snapshot.
> This will allow us to still have less efforts to do releases, but
> keep being (more) agile and have earlier integrations and thus
> less long living integration branches.
>
> On top of that, we need to provide new and/or changed apis(**)
> early on in the 4 weeks cadence so that other components can
> already start calling them, even if they are not yet functionally
> complete.
>
> *) Of course only if a change to the component has been made.
> **) Ideally with changed apis, we keep the old version around for
> a bit and offer the new version on top. Remember, that especially
> with non-compiletime bindings, we can not know which client is
> at what api version.
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