Release Process

The Zephyr project releases on a time-based cycle, rather than a feature-driven one. Zephyr releases represent an aggregation of the work of many contributors, companies, and individuals from the community.

A time-based release process enables the Zephyr project to provide users with a balance of the latest technologies and features and excellent overall quality. A roughly 3-month release cycle allows the project to coordinate development of the features that have actually been implemented, allowing the project to maintain the quality of the overall release without delays because of one or two features that are not ready yet.

The Zephyr release model is loosely based on the Linux kernel model:

  • Release tagging procedure:

    • linear mode on master,

    • release branches for maintenance after release tagging.

  • Each release period will consist of a merge window period followed by one or more release candidates on which only stabilization changes, bug fixes, and documentation can be merged in.

    • Merge window mode: all changes are accepted (subject to approval from the respective maintainers.)

    • When the merge window is closed, the release owner lays a vN-rc1 tag and the tree enters the release candidate phase

    • CI sees the tag, builds and runs tests; QA analyses the report from the build and test run and gives an ACK/NAK to the build

    • The release owner, with QA and any other needed input, determines if the release candidate is a go for release

    • If it is a go for a release, the release owner lays a tag release vN at the same point

  • Development on new features continues in topic branches. Once features are ready, they are submitted to mainline during the merge window period and after the release is tagged.

Release Cycle

Release Cycle

Merge Window

A relatively straightforward discipline is followed with regard to the merging of patches for each release. At the beginning of each development cycle, the “merge window” is said to be open. At that time, code which is deemed to be sufficiently stable (and which is accepted by the development community) is merged into the mainline tree. The bulk of changes for a new development cycle (and all of the major changes) will be merged during this time.

The merge window lasts for approximately two months. At the end of this time, the release owner will declare that the window is closed and release the first of the release candidates. For the codebase release which is destined to be 0.4.0, for example, the release which happens at the end of the merge window will be called 0.4.0-rc1. The -rc1 release is the signal that the time to merge new features has passed, and that the time to stabilize the next release of the code base has begun.

Over the next weeks, only patches which fix problems should be submitted to the mainline. On occasion, a more significant change will be allowed, but such occasions are rare and require a TSC approval (Change Control Board). As a general rule, if you miss the merge window for a given feature, the best thing to do is to wait for the next development cycle. (An occasional exception is made for drivers for previously unsupported hardware; if they do not touch any other in-tree code, they cannot cause regressions and should be safe to add at any time).

As fixes make their way into the mainline, the patch rate will slow over time. The mainline release owner releases new -rc drops once or twice a week; a normal series will get up to somewhere between -rc4 and -rc6 before the code base is considered to be sufficiently stable and the quality metrics have been achieved at which point the final 0.4.x release is made.

At that point, the whole process starts over again.

Here is the description of the various moderation levels:

  • Low:

    • Major New Features

    • Bug Fixes

    • Refactoring

    • Structure/Directory Changes

  • Medium:

    • Bug Fixes, all priorities

    • Enhancements

    • Minor “self-contained” New Features

  • High:

    • Bug Fixes: P1 and P2

    • Documentation + Test Coverage

Release Quality Criteria

The current backlog of prioritized bugs shall be used as a quality metric to gate the final release. The following counts shall be used:

Bug Count Release Thresholds

High

Medium

Low

0

<20

<50

Note

The “low” bug count target of <50 will be a phased appoach starting with 150 for release 2.4.0, 100 for release 2.5.0, and 50 for release 2.6.0

Releases

The following syntax should be used for releases and tags in Git:

  • Release [Major].[Minor].[Patch Level]

  • Release Candidate [Major].[Minor].[Patch Level]-rc[RC Number]

  • Tagging:

    • v[Major].[Minor].[Patch Level]-rc[RC Number]

    • v[Major].[Minor].[Patch Level]

    • v[Major].[Minor].99 - A tag applied to master branch to signify that work on v[Major].[Minor+1] has started. For example, v1.7.99 will be tagged at the start of v1.8 process. The tag corresponds to VERSION_MAJOR/VERSION_MINOR/PATCHLEVEL macros as defined for a work-in-progress master version. Presence of this tag allows generation of sensible output for “git describe” on master, as typically used for automated builds and CI tools.

Releases

Zephyr Code and Releases

Long Term Support (LTS)

Long-term support releases are designed to be supported for a longer than normal period and will be the basis for products and certification for various usages.

An LTS release is made every 2 years and is branched and maintained independently from the mainline tree.

An LTS release will be branched and maintained independently of the mainline tree.

Long Term Support Release

Long Term Support Release

Changes and fixes flow in both directions. However, changes from master to an LTS branch will be limited to fixes that apply to both branches and for existing features only.

All fixes for an LTS branch that apply to the mainline tree are pushed to mainline as well.

Auditable Code Base

An auditable code base is to be established from a defined subset of Zephyr OS features and will be limited in scope. The LTS, development tree, and the auditable code bases shall be kept in sync after the audit branch is created, but with a more rigorous process in place for adding new features into the audit branch used for certification.

This process will be applied before new features move into the auditable code base.

The initial and subsequent certification targets will be decided by the Zephyr project governing board.

Processes to achieve selected certification will be determined by the Security and Safety Working Groups and coordinated with the TSC.

Release Procedure

This section documents the Release manager responsibilities so that it serves as a knowledge repository for Release managers.

Milestones

The following graphic shows the timeline of phases and milestones associated with each release:

Release Milestones

Release milestones

This shows how the phases and milestones of one release overlap with those of the next release:

Release Milestones

Release milestones with planning

Milestone Description

Milestone

Description

Definition

P0

Planning Kickoff

Start Entering Requirements

P1

TSC Agrees on Major Features and Schedule

M0

Merge Window Open

All features, Sized, and AssignedMerge Window Is Opened

M1

M1 Checkpoint

Major Features Ready for Code Reviews
Test Plans Reviewed and Approved

M2

Feature Merge Window Close

Feature Freeze
Feature Development Complete (including Code Reviews and Unit Tests Passing)
P1 Stories Implemented
Feature Merge Window Is Closed
Test Development Complete
Technical Documentation Created/Updated and Ready for Review
CCB Control Starts

M3

Code Freeze

Code Freeze
RC3 Tagged and Built

M4

Release

TSC Reviews the Release Criteria Report and Approves Release
Final RC Tagged
Make the Release

Release Checklist

Each release has a GitHub issue associated with it that contains the full checklist. After a release is complete, a checklist for the next release is created.

Tagging

The final release and each release candidate shall be tagged using the following steps:

Note

Tagging needs to be done via explicit git commands and not via GitHub’s release interface. The GitHub release interface does not generate annotated tags (it generates ‘lightweight’ tags regardless of release or pre-release). You should also upload your gpg public key to your GitHub account, since the instructions below involve creating signed tags. However, if you do not have a gpg public key you can opt to remove the -s option from the commands below.

Note

This section uses tagging 1.11.0-rc1 as an example, replace with the appropriate release candidate version.

  1. Update the version variables in the VERSION file located in the root of the Git repository to match the version for this release candidate. The EXTRAVERSION variable is used to identify the rc[RC Number] value for this candidate:

    EXTRAVERSION = rc1
    
  2. Post a PR with the updated VERSION file using release: Zephyr 1.11.0-rc1 as the commit subject. Merge the PR after successful CI.

  3. Tag and push the version, using an annotated tag:

    $ git pull
    $ git tag -s -m "Zephyr 1.11.0-rc1" v1.11.0-rc1
    $ git push [email protected]:zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr.git v1.11.0-rc1
    
  4. Create a shortlog of changes between the previous release (use rc1..rc2 between release candidates):

    $ git shortlog v1.10.0..v1.11.0-rc1
    
  5. Find the new tag at the top of the releases page and edit the release with the Edit tag button with the following:

    • Name it Zephyr 1.11.0-rc1

    • Copy the shortlog into the release notes textbox (don’t forget to quote it properly so it shows as unformatted text in Markdown)

    • Check the “This is a pre-release” checkbox

  6. Send an email to the mailing lists (announce and devel) with a link to the release

Note

This section uses tagging 1.11.0 as an example, replace with the appropriate final release version.

When all final release criteria has been met and the final release notes have been approved and merged into the repository, the final release version will be set and repository tagged using the following procedure:

  1. Update the version variables in the VERSION file located in the root of the Git repository. Set EXTRAVERSION variable to an empty string to indicate final release:

    EXTRAVERSION =
    
  2. Post a PR with the updated VERSION file using release: Zephyr 1.11.0 as the commit subject. Merge the PR after successful CI.

  3. Tag and push the version, using two annotated tags:

    $ git pull
    $ git tag -s -m "Zephyr 1.11.0" v1.11.0
    $ git push [email protected]:zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr.git v1.11.0
    
    # This is the tag that will represent the release on GitHub, so that
    # the file you can download is named ``zephyr-v1.11.0.zip`` and not
    # just ``v1.11.0.zip``
    $ git tag -s -m "Zephyr 1.11.0" zephyr-v1.11.0
    $ git push [email protected]:zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr.git zephyr-v1.11.0
    
  4. Find the new zephyr-v1.11.0 tag at the top of the releases page and edit the release with the Edit tag button with the following:

    • Name it Zephyr 1.11.0

    • Copy the full content of docs/releases/release-notes-1.11.rst into the release notes textbox

  5. Send an email to the mailing lists (announce and devel) with a link to the release

Listing all closed GitHub issues

The release notes for a final release contain the list of GitHub issues that have been closed during the development process of that release.

In order to obtain the list of issues closed during the release development cycle you can do the following:

  1. Look for the last release before the current one and find the day it was tagged:

    $ git show -s --format=%ci zephyr-v1.10.0
    tag zephyr-v1.10.0
    Tagger: Kumar Gala <[email protected]>
    
    Zephyr 1.10.0
    2017-12-08 13:32:22 -0600
    
  2. Use available release tools to list all the issues that have been closed between that date and the day of the release.