On Fri, Dec 1, 2023 at 10:49 AM Brian Stansberry <
brian.stansberry(a)redhat.com> wrote:
Hi Tomek,
Sorry; I just saw this! You sent it over the long holiday weekend here in
the US and I just now checked this list for older stuff.
I'd like to use this feature, and perhaps similarly-scoped ones, as a way
of progressing on the new process by working on a concrete case. That would
involve two parallel tracks:
Track 1: Working through topics like the questions you ask, and doing
what we can on your PR to have it ready for when the Track 2 is integrated.
Track 2: Getting Paul's work at
https://github.com/wildfly/wildfly-core/pull/5413 merged (hopefully next
week) and integrated into full WF.
Then we could tweak your PR to add the settings that make it appear as
some stability level other than default.
So, for your questions:
1) Deciding stability level: I think the way it would work is the feature
author decides what stability level they want to aim for. So that's you.
Sorry; that's Ivo, in consultation with you. :)
Then when a feature freeze deadline comes the people working the issue
either meet the requirements for that level, or they don't. If
they don't
they can keep working, or they can choose a different level that they can
meet. They of course can also change their mind at any point, not just at
the feature freeze deadline.
We should add a field for this to the wildfly-proposals template as this
is info that should be available to readers of the analysis.
(FWIW this sounds like a Community level feature to me, but it's up to the
feature team.)
2) JIRA: The initial development is a normal Feature Request JIRA in WFLY
or WFCORE. File related issues etc as appropriate/desired to account for
any independent pieces of work. So just normal stuff.
I think for any feature that's not targeting the default stability level,
the JIRA title should state the target level. That makes it prominent in
the release notes, and makes it easy for me to find when I write
release announcements. We should come up with some standard format for how
to express that.
JIRA issues are associated with a Fix Version, so once merged and that
version is released, any further work to get the feature to a higher
stability level would require a follow-up JIRA. I think that would be
another Feature Request "Promote <the feature name> to stability level
<the
level>".
3) Bootstrapping.
What you should do is:
a) Start a discussion -- done, here :)
b) Work with Ivo to choose a target stability level. Use
https://docs.google.com/document/d/15_yKhW74-X9s2zUhs_ZUuZ3h-RlMfH5xWmHHs...
to get a sense of what each level would require.
c) Work to meet the requirements in that doc for your target level. If the
meaning of the requirements are unclear, use this thread or the discussion
channels I mentioned in
https://lists.jboss.org/archives/list/wildfly-dev@lists.jboss.org/thread/...
to get clarification.
I know this work has been around for a long time, so it should be possible
to do those things pretty quickly. Perhaps the biggest aspect is creating
a test plan. What that means is a TODO in the proposed process. I think in
general the idea of the process is to make things more formal in higher
levels. These "expose component feature X via the WF management API" ones
are a bit tricky as the heart of the feature is in the component (IJ), so
there's always the question of how well it's tested at that level, and how
much we want to document that testing.
I think for the basic Stage.MODEL management API testing we should come up
with some standard boilerplate. Same for domain transformation testing. For
this particular issue we can problem just use a placeholder like "standard
subsystem model testing" and "standard subsystem-level domain
transformation testing". I think there's a general understanding of what
that means that's enough until we formally write it down.
HTH,
Brian
On Thu, Nov 23, 2023 at 11:57 AM Tomasz Adamski <tadamski(a)redhat.com>
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> This mail is a follow up to the discussion regarding
> processing WFLY-17180 in the new feature process. I would like to discuss
> what are the steps that I have to take to follow the new process. I have a
> feature that is a model change (adding query-time parameter to datasource
> validation) so it seems to me that it would qualify as either preview or
> community feature: imho it is neither complex nor risky, it is already
> implemented (the implementation is partially done in IronJacamar library,
> so it would require component upgrade), the tests are provided as part of
> implementation PR and analysis as part of other PRs as well.
>
> If we decide that this issue is suitable to be delivered using the new
> process the initial questions that come to my mind are:
> What is the maturity of the issue and how is it going to be decided?
> How is it going to be traced in JIRA?
> What steps do I need to take to bootstrap the process?
>
> Regards,
> Tomek
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--
Brian Stansberry
Principal Architect, Red Hat JBoss EAP
He/Him/His