RFC: Long Term Stability

This RFC contains proposals and clarifications regarding the maintenance and release processes of Avocado.

We understand there are multiple teams currently depending on the stability of Avocado and we don’t want their work to be disrupted by incompatibilities nor instabilities in new releases.

This version is a minor update to previous versions of the same RFC (see Changelog) which drove the release of Avocado 36.0 LTS. The Avocado team has plans for a new LTS release in the near future, so please consider reading and providing feedback on the proposals here.

TL;DR

We plan to keep the current approach of sprint releases every 3-4 weeks, but we’re introducing “Long Term Stability” releases which should be adopted in production environments where users can’t keep up with frequent upgrades.

Introduction

We make new releases of Avocado every 3-4 weeks on average. In theory at least, we’re very careful with backwards compatibility. We test Avocado for regressions and we try to document any issues, so upgrading to a new version should be (again, in theory) safe.

But in practice both intended and unintended changes are introduced during development, and both can be frustrating for conservative users. We also understand it’s not feasible for users to upgrade Avocado very frequently in a production environment.

The objective of this RFC is to clarify our maintenance practices and introduce Long Term Stability (LTS) releases, which are intended to solve, or at least mitigate, these problems.

Our definition of maintained, or stable

First of all, Avocado and its sub-projects are provided ‘AS IS’ and WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY, as described in the LICENSE file.

The process described here doesn’t imply any commitments or promises. It’s just a set of best practices and recommendations.

When something is identified as “stable” or “maintained”, it means the development community makes a conscious effort to keep it working and consider reports of bugs and issues as high priorities. Fixes submitted for these issues will also be considered high priorities, although they will be accepted only if they pass the general acceptance criteria for new contributions (design, quality, documentation, testing, etc), at the development team discretion.

Maintained projects and platforms

The only maintained project as of today is the Avocado Test Runner, including its APIs and core plugins (the contents of the main avocado git repository).

Other projects kept under the “Avocado Umbrella” in github may be maintained by different teams (e.g.: Avocado-VT) or be considered experimental (e.g.: avocado-server and avocado-virt).

More about Avocado-VT in its own section further down.

As a general rule, fixes and bug reports for Avocado when running in any modern Linux distribution are welcome.

But given the limited capacity of the development team, packaged versions of Avocado will be tested and maintained only for the following Linux distributions:

  • RHEL 7.x (latest)
  • Fedora (stable releases from the Fedora projects)

Currently all packages produced by the Avocado projects are “noarch”. That means that they could be installable on any hardware platform. Still, the development team will currently attempt to provide versions that are stable for the following platforms:

  • x86
  • ppc64le

Contributions from the community to maintain other platforms and operating systems are very welcome.

The lists above may change without prior notice.

Avocado Releases

The proposal is to have two different types of Avocado releases:

Sprint Releases

(This is the model we currently adopt in Avocado)

They happen every 3-4 weeks (the schedule is not fixed) and their versions are numbered serially, with decimal digits in the format <major>.<minor>. Examples: 47.0, 48.0, 49.0. Minor releases are rare, but necessary to correct some major issue with the original release (47.1, 47.2, etc).

Only the latest Sprint Release is maintained.

In Sprint Releases we make a conscious effort to keep backwards compatibility with the previous version (APIs and behavior) and as a general rule and best practice, incompatible changes in Sprint Releases should be documented in the release notes and if possible deprecated slowly, to give users time to adapt their environments.

But we understand changes are inevitable as the software evolves and therefore there’s no absolute promise for API and behavioral stability.

Long Term Stability (LTS) Releases

LTS releases should happen whenever the team feels the code is stable enough to be maintained for a longer period of time, ideally once or twice per year (no fixed schedule).

They should be maintained for 18 months, receiving fixes for major bugs in the form of minor (sub-)releases. With the exception of these fixes, no API or behavior should change in a minor LTS release.

They will be versioned just like Sprint Releases, so looking at the version number alone will not reveal the differentiate release process and stability characteristics.

In practice each major LTS release will imply in the creation of a git branch where only important issues affecting users will be fixed, usually as a backport of a fix initially applied upstream. The code in a LTS branch is stable, frozen for new features.

Notice that although within a LTS release there’s a expectation of stability because the code is frozen, different (major) LTS releases may include changes in behavior, API incompatibilities and new features. The development team will make a considerable effort to minimize and properly document these changes (changes when comparing it to the last major LTS release).

Sprint Releases are replaced by LTS releases. I.e., in the cycle when 52.0 (LTS) is released, that’s also the version used as a Sprint Release (there’s no 52.0 – non LTS – in this case).

New LTS releases should be done carefully, with ample time for announcements, testing and documentation. It’s recommended that one or two sprints are dedicated as preparations for a LTS release, with a Sprint Release serving as a “LTS beta” release.

Similarly, there should be announcements about the end-of-life (EOL) of a LTS release once it approaches its 18 months of life.

Deployment details

Sprint and LTS releases, when packaged, whenever possible, will be preferably distributed through different package channels (repositories).

This is possible for repository types such as YUM/DNF repos. In such cases, users can disable the regular channel, and enable the LTS version. A request for the installation of Avocado packages will fetch the latest version available in the enabled repository. If the LTS repository channel is enabled, the packages will receive minor updates (bugfixes only), until a new LTS version is released (roughly every 12 months).

If the non-LTS channel is enabled, users will receive updates every 3-4 weeks.

On other types of repos such as PyPI which have no concept of “sub-repos” or “channels”, users can request a version smaller than the version that succeeds the current LTS to get the latest LTS (including minor releases). Suppose the current LTS major version is 52, but there have been minor releases 52.1 and 52.2. By running:

pip install 'avocado-framework<53.0'

pip provide LTS version 52.2. If 52.3 gets released, they will be automatically deployed instead. When a new LTS is released, users would still get the latest minor release from the 52.0 series, unless they update the version specification.

The existence of LTS releases should never be used as an excuse to break a Sprint Release or to introduce gratuitous incompatibilities there. In other words, Sprint Releases should still be taken seriously, just as they are today.

Timeline example

Consider the release numbers as date markers. The bullet points beneath them are information about the release itself or events that can happen anytime between one release and the other. Assume each sprint is taking 3 weeks.

36.0
  • LTS release (the only LTS release available at the time of writing)
37.0 .. 49.0
  • sprint releases
  • 36.1 LTS release
  • 36.2 LTS release
  • 36.3 LTS release
  • 36.4 LTS release
50.0
  • sprint release
  • start preparing a LTS release, so 51.0 will be a beta LTS
51.0
  • sprint release
  • beta LTS release
52.0
  • LTS release
  • 52lts branch is created
  • packages go into LTS repo
  • both 36.x LTS and 52.x LTS maintained from this point on
53.0
  • sprint release
  • minor bug that affects 52.0 is found, fix gets added to master and 52lts branches
  • bug does not affect 36.x LTS, so a backport is not added to the 36lts branch
54.0
  • sprint release 54.0
  • LTS release 52.1
  • minor bug that also affects 52.x LTS and 36.x LTS is found, fix gets added to master, 52lts and 36lts branches
55.0
  • sprint release
  • LTS release 36.5
  • LTS release 52.2
  • critical bug that affects 52.2 only is found, fix gets added to 52lts and 52.3 LTS is immediately released
56.0
  • sprint release
57.0
  • sprint release
58.0
  • sprint release
59.0
  • sprint release
  • EOL for 36.x LTS (18 months since the release of 36.0), 36lts branch is frozen permanently.

A few points are worth taking notice here:

  • Multiple LTS releases can co-exist before EOL
  • Bug discovery can happen at any time
  • The bugfix occurs ASAP after its discovery
  • The severity of the defect determines the timing of the release
    • moderate and minor bugfixes to lts branches are held until the next sprint release
    • critical bugs are released asynchronously, without waiting for the next sprint release

Avocado-VT

Avocado-VT is an Avocado plugin that allows “VT tests” to be run inside Avocado. It’s a third-party project maintained mostly by Engineers from Red Hat QE with assistance from the Avocado team and other community members.

It’s a general consensus that QE teams use Avocado-VT directly from git, usually following the master branch, which they control.

There’s no official maintenance or stability statement for Avocado-VT. Even though the upstream community is quite friendly and open to both contributions and bug reports, Avocado-VT is made available without any promises for compatibility or supportability.

When packaged and versioned, Avocado-VT rpms should be considered just snapshots, available in packaged form as a convenience to users outside of the Avocado-VT development community. Again, they are made available without any promises of compatibility or stability.

  • Which Avocado version should be used by Avocado-VT?

    This is up to the Avocado-VT community to decide, but the current consensus is that to guarantee some stability in production environments, Avocado-VT should stick to a specific LTS release of Avocado. In other words, the Avocado team recommends production users of Avocado-VT not to install Avocado from its master branch or upgrade it from Sprint Releases.

    Given each LTS release will be maintained for 18 months, it should be reasonable to expect Avocado-VT to upgrade to a new LTS release once a year or so. This process will be done with support from the Avocado team to avoid disruptions, with proper coordination via the avocado mailing lists.

    In practice the Avocado development team will keep watching Avocado-VT to detect and document incompatibilities, so when the time comes to do an upgrade in production, it’s expected that it should happen smoothly.

  • Will it be possible to use the latest Avocado and Avocado-VT together?

    Users are welcome to try this combination. The Avocado development team itself will do it internally as a way to monitor incompatibilities and regressions.

    Whenever Avocado is released, a matching versioned snapshot of Avocado-VT will be made. Packages containing those Avocado-VT snapshots, for convenience only, will be made available in the regular Avocado repository.

Changelog

Changes from Version 4:

  • Moved changelog to the bottom of the document
  • Changed wording on bug handling for LTS releases (“important issues”)
  • Removed ppc64 (big endian) from list of platforms
  • If bugs also affect older LTS release during the transition period, a backport will also be added to the corresponding branch
  • Further work on the Timeline example, adding summary of important points and more release examples, such as the whole list of 36.x releases and the (fictional) 36.5 and 52.3

Changes from Version 3:

  • Converted formatting to REStructuredText
  • Replaced “me” mentions on version 1 changelog with proper name (Ademar Reis)
  • Renamed section “Misc Details” to Deployment Details
  • Renamed “avocado-vt” to “Avocado-VT”
  • Start the timeline example with version 36.0
  • Be explicit on timeline example that a minor bug did not generate an immediate release

Changes from Version 2:

  • Wording changes on second paragraph (“… nor instabilities…”)
  • Clarified on “Introduction” that change of behavior is introduced between regular releases
  • Updated distro versions for which official packages are built
  • Add more clear explanation on official packages on the various hardware platforms
  • Used more recent version numbers as examples, and the planned new LTS version too
  • Explain how users can get the LTS version when using tools such as pip
  • Simplified the timeline example, with examples that will possibly match the future versions and releases
  • Documented current status of Avocado-VT releases and packages

Changes from Version 1:

  • Changed “Support” to “Stability” and “supported” to “maintained” [Jeff Nelson]
  • Misc improvements and clarifications in the supportability/stability statements [Jeff Nelson, Ademar Reis]
  • Fixed a few typos [Jeff Nelson, Ademar Reis]