Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Sep 20, 2024. It is now read-only.

Latest commit

 

History

History
43 lines (33 loc) · 4.77 KB

RELEASES.md

File metadata and controls

43 lines (33 loc) · 4.77 KB

Versioning and Release

This document describes the versioning and release process of Harbor. This document is a living document, contents will be updated according to each releases.

Releases

Harbor releases will be versioned using dotted triples, similar to Semantic Version. For this specific document, we will refer to the respective components of this triple as <major>.<minor>.<patch>. The version number may have additional information, such as "-rc1,-rc2,-rc3" to mark release candidate builds for earlier access. Such releases will be considered as "pre-releases".

Major and Minor Releases

Major and minor releases of Harbor will be branched from master when the release reaches to RC(release candidate) state. The branch format should follow release-<major>.<minor>.0. For example, once the release v1.0.0 reaches to RC, a branch will be created with the format release-1.0.0. When the release reaches to GA(General Available) state, The tag with format v<major>.<minor>.<patch> and should be made with command git tag -s v<major>.<minor>.<patch>. The release cadence is around 3 months, might be adjusted based on open source event, but will communicate it clearly.

Patch releases

Patch releases are based on the major/minor release branch, the release cadence for patch release of recent minor release is one month to solve critical community and security issues. The cadence for patch release of recent minus two minor releases are on-demand driven based on the severity of the issue to be fixed.

Pre-releases

Pre-releases:mainly the different RC builds will be compiled from their corresponding branches. Please note they are done to assist in the stabilization process, no guarantees are provided.

Minor Release Support Matrix

Version Supported
Harbor v2.3.x
Harbor v2.2.x
Harbor v2.1.x

Upgrade path and support policy

The upgrade path for Harbor is (1) 2.2.x patch releases are always compatible with its major and minor version. For example, previous released 2.2.x can be upgraded to most recent 2.2.3 release. (2) Harbor only supports two previous minor releases to upgrade to current minor release. For example, 2.3.0 will only support 2.1.0 and 2.2.0 to upgrade from, 2.0.0 to 2.3.0 is not supported. One should upgrade to 2.2.0 first, then to 2.3.0. The Harbor project maintains release branches for the three most recent minor releases, each minor release will be maintained for approximately 9 months.

Next Release

The activity for next release will be tracked in the up-to-date project board. If your issue is not present in the corresponding release, please reach out to the maintainers to add the issue to the project board.

Publishing a New Release

The following steps outline what to do when its time to plan for and publish a release. Depending on the release (major/minor/patch), not all the following items are needed.

  1. Prepare information about what's new in the release.
  • For every release, update documentation for changes that have happened in the release. See the goharbor/website repo for more details on how to create documentation for a release. All documentation for a release should be published by the time the release is out.
  • For every release, write release notes. See previous releases for examples of what to included in release notes.
  • For a major/minor release, write a blog post that highlights new features in the release. Plan to publish this the same day as the release. Highlight the themes, or areas of focus, for the release. Some examples of themes are security, bug fixes, feature improvements. If there are any new features or workflows introduced in a release, consider writing additional blog posts to help users learn about the new features. Plan to publish these after the release date (all blogs don’t have to be publish all at once).
  1. Release a new version. Make the new version, docs updates, and blog posts available.
  2. Announce the release and thank contributors. We should be doing the following for all releases.
  • In all messages to the community include a brief list of highlights and links to the new release blog, release notes, or download location. Also include shoutouts to community member contribution included in the release.
  • Send an email to the community via the mailing list
  • Post a message in the Harbor slack channel
  • Post to social media. Maintainers are encouraged to also post or repost from the Harbor account to help spread the word.