| ======================== |
| Django's release process |
| ======================== |
| |
| .. _official-releases: |
| |
| Official releases |
| ================= |
| |
| Django's release numbering works as follows: |
| |
| * Versions are numbered in the form ``A.B`` or ``A.B.C``. |
| |
| * ``A`` is the *major version* number, which is only incremented for major |
| changes to Django, and these changes are not necessarily |
| backwards-compatible. That is, code you wrote for Django 6.0 may break |
| when we release Django 7.0. |
| |
| * ``B`` is the *minor version* number, which is incremented for large yet |
| backwards compatible changes. Code written for Django 6.4 will continue |
| to work under Django 6.5. |
| |
| * ``C`` is the *micro version* number which, is incremented for bug and |
| security fixes. A new micro-release will always be 100% |
| backwards-compatible with the previous micro-release. |
| |
| * In some cases, we'll make alpha, beta, or release candidate releases. |
| These are of the form ``A.B alpha/beta/rc N``, which means the ``Nth`` |
| alpha/beta/release candidate of version ``A.B``. |
| |
| An exception to this version numbering scheme is the pre-1.0 Django code. |
| There's no guarantee of backwards-compatibility until the 1.0 release. |
| |
| In Subversion, each Django release will be tagged under ``tags/releases``. If |
| it's necessary to release a bug fix release or a security release that doesn't |
| come from the trunk, we'll copy that tag to ``branches/releases`` to make the |
| bug fix release. |
| |
| Major releases |
| -------------- |
| |
| Major releases (1.0, 2.0, etc.) will happen very infrequently (think "years", |
| not "months"), and will probably represent major, sweeping changes to Django. |
| |
| Minor releases |
| -------------- |
| |
| Minor release (1.1, 1.2, etc.) will happen roughly every nine months -- see |
| `release process`_, below for details. |
| |
| .. _internal-release-deprecation-policy: |
| |
| These releases will contain new features, improvements to existing features, and |
| such. A minor release may deprecate certain features from previous releases. If a |
| feature in version ``A.B`` is deprecated, it will continue to work in version |
| ``A.B+1``. In version ``A.B+2``, use of the feature will raise a |
| ``DeprecationWarning`` but will continue to work. Version ``A.B+3`` will |
| remove the feature entirely. |
| |
| So, for example, if we decided to remove a function that existed in Django 1.0: |
| |
| * Django 1.1 will contain a backwards-compatible replica of the function |
| which will raise a ``PendingDeprecationWarning``. This warning is silent |
| by default; you need to explicitly turn on display of these warnings. |
| |
| * Django 1.2 will contain the backwards-compatible replica, but the warning |
| will be promoted to a full-fledged ``DeprecationWarning``. This warning is |
| *loud* by default, and will likely be quite annoying. |
| |
| * Django 1.3 will remove the feature outright. |
| |
| Micro releases |
| -------------- |
| |
| Micro releases (1.0.1, 1.0.2, 1.1.1, etc.) will be issued at least once half-way |
| between minor releases, and probably more often as needed. |
| |
| These releases will always be 100% compatible with the associated minor release |
| -- the answer to "should I upgrade to the latest micro release?" will always be |
| "yes." |
| |
| Each minor release of Django will have a "release maintainer" appointed. This |
| person will be responsible for making sure that bug fixes are applied to both |
| trunk and the maintained micro-release branch. This person will also work with |
| the release manager to decide when to release the micro releases. |
| |
| Supported versions |
| ================== |
| |
| At any moment in time, Django's developer team will support a set of releases to |
| varying levels: |
| |
| * The current development trunk will get new features and bug fixes |
| requiring major refactoring. |
| |
| * All bug fixes applied to the trunk will also be applied to the last |
| minor release, to be released as the next micro release. |
| |
| * Security fixes will be applied to the current trunk and the previous two |
| minor releases. |
| |
| As a concrete example, consider a moment in time halfway between the release of |
| Django 1.3 and 1.4. At this point in time: |
| |
| * Features will be added to development trunk, to be released as Django 1.4. |
| |
| * Bug fixes will be applied to a ``1.3.X`` branch, and released as 1.3.1, |
| 1.3.2, etc. |
| |
| * Security releases will be applied to trunk, a ``1.3.X`` branch and a |
| ``1.2.X`` branch. Security fixes will trigger the release of ``1.3.1``, |
| ``1.2.1``, etc. |
| |
| .. _release-process: |
| |
| Release process |
| =============== |
| |
| Django uses a time-based release schedule, with minor (i.e. 1.1, 1.2, etc.) |
| releases every nine months, or more, depending on features. |
| |
| After each previous release (and after a suitable cooling-off period of a week |
| or two), the core development team will examine the landscape and announce a |
| timeline for the next release. Most releases will be scheduled in the 6-9 month |
| range, but if we have bigger features to development we might schedule a longer |
| period to allow for more ambitious work. |
| |
| Release cycle |
| ------------- |
| |
| Each release cycle will be split into three periods, each lasting roughly |
| one-third of the cycle: |
| |
| Phase one: feature proposal |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| The first phase of the release process will be devoted to figuring out what |
| features to include in the next version. This should include a good deal of |
| preliminary work on those features -- working code trumps grand design. |
| |
| At the end of part one, the core developers will propose a feature list for the |
| upcoming release. This will be broken into: |
| |
| * "Must-have": critical features that will delay the release if not finished |
| * "Maybe" features: that will be pushed to the next release if not finished |
| * "Not going to happen": features explicitly deferred to a later release. |
| |
| Anything that hasn't got at least some work done by the end of the first third |
| isn't eligible for the next release; a design alone isn't sufficient. |
| |
| Phase two: development |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| The second third of the release schedule is the "heads-down" working period. |
| Using the roadmap produced at the end of phase one, we'll all work very hard to |
| get everything on it done. |
| |
| Longer release schedules will likely spend more than a third of the time in this |
| phase. |
| |
| At the end of phase two, any unfinished "maybe" features will be postponed until |
| the next release. Though it shouldn't happen, any "must-have" features will |
| extend phase two, and thus postpone the final release. |
| |
| Phase two will culminate with an alpha release. |
| |
| Phase three: bugfixes |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| The last third of a release is spent fixing bugs -- no new features will be |
| accepted during this time. We'll release a beta release about halfway through, |
| and an rc complete with string freeze two weeks before the end of the schedule. |
| |
| Bug-fix releases |
| ---------------- |
| |
| After a minor release (i.e 1.1), the previous release will go into bug-fix mode. |
| |
| A branch will be created of the form ``branches/releases/1.0.X`` to track |
| bug-fixes to the previous release. When possible, bugs fixed on trunk must |
| *also* be fixed on the bug-fix branch; this means that commits need to cleanly |
| separate bug fixes from feature additions. The developer who commits a fix to |
| trunk will be responsible for also applying the fix to the current bug-fix |
| branch. Each bug-fix branch will have a maintainer who will work with the |
| committers to keep them honest on backporting bug fixes. |
| |
| How this all fits together |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| Let's look at a hypothetical example for how this all first together. Imagine, |
| if you will, a point about halfway between 1.1 and 1.2. At this point, |
| development will be happening in a bunch of places: |
| |
| * On trunk, development towards 1.2 proceeds with small additions, bugs |
| fixes, etc. being checked in daily. |
| |
| * On the branch "branches/releases/1.1.X", bug fixes found in the 1.1 |
| release are checked in as needed. At some point, this branch will be |
| released as "1.1.1", "1.1.2", etc. |
| |
| * On the branch "branches/releases/1.0.X", security fixes are made if |
| needed and released as "1.0.2", "1.0.3", etc. |
| |
| * On feature branches, development of major features is done. These |
| branches will be merged into trunk before the end of phase two. |