The document is available here:
https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/METRON/Release+Process

and is also pasted in this email for your convenience


Please vote +1, -1, or 0 for neutral.  The vote will be open for 72 hours

Metron Release Types
There are two types of Metron releases:
Feature Release (FR) - this is a release that has a significant step forward in 
feature capability and is denoted by an upgrade of the second digit
Maintenance Release (MR) - this is a set of patches and fixes that are issued 
following the FR and is denoted by an upgrade of the third digit
Release Naming Convention
Metron build naming convention is as follows: 0.[FR].[MR].  We keep the 0. 
notation to signify that the project is still under active development and we 
will hold a community vote to go to 1.x at a future time
Initiating a New Metron Release
Create the MR branch for the previous Metron release by incrementing the 
*third* digit of the previous release like so 0.[FR].[*MR++*].  All patches to 
the previous Metron release will be checked in under the MR branch and where it 
makes sense also under the FR branch.  All new features will be checked in 
under the FR branch.
Creating a Feature Release
Step 1 - Initiate a discuss thread
Prior to the release The Release manager should do the following (preferably a 
month before the release):
Make sure that the list of JIRAs slated for the release accurately reflects to 
reflects the pull requests that are currently in master
Construct an email to the Metron dev board (dev@metron.incubator.apache.org) 
which discusses with the community the desire to do a release. This email 
should contain the following:
The list of JIRAs slated for the release with descriptions (use the output of 
git log and remove all the JIRAs from the last release’s changelog)
A solicitation of JIRAs that should be included with the next release. Users 
should rate them as must/need/good to have as well as volunteering.
A release email template is provided here.
Step 2 - Monitor and Verify JIRAs
Once the community votes for additional JIRAs they want included in the release 
verify that the pull requests are in before the release, close these JIRAs and 
tag them with the release name. All pull requests and JIRAs that were not 
slated for this release will go into the next releases.  The release manager 
should continue to monitor the JIRA to ensure that the timetable is on track 
until the release date.  On the release date the release manager should message 
the Metron dev board (dev@metron.incubator.apache.org) announcing the code 
freeze for the release. 
Step 3 - Create the Release Branch and Increment Metron version
Create an branch for the release (from a repo cloned from 
https://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/incubator-metron.git). (assuming the 
release is 0.[FR++].0 and working from master):
git checkout -b Metron_0.[FR++].0
git push --set-upstream origin Metron_0.[FR++].0
File a JIRA to increment the Metron version to 0.[FR++].0.  Either do it 
yourself or have a community member increment the build version for you.  You 
can look at a pull request for a previous build to see how this is done.   
METRON-533 - Up the version for release DONE
Also, the release manager should have a couple of things set up:
A SVN clone of the repo at 
https://dist.apache.org/repos/dist/dev/incubator/metron, We will refer to this 
as the dev repo.  It will hold the release candidate artifacts
A SVN clone of the repo at 
https://dist.apache.org/repos/dist/release/incubator/metron, We will refer to 
this as the release repo.  It will hold the release artifacts.
Step 4 - Create the Release Candidate

Now, for each release candidate, we will tag from that branch. Assuming that 
this is RC1:
git checkout Metron_0.[FR++].0 && git pull
git tag apache-metron-0.[FR++].0-rc1-incubating
git push origin —tags
Now we must create the release candidate tarball. From the apache repo, you 
should run:
 
 git archive --prefix=apache-metron-0.[FR++].0-rc1-incubating/
 apache-metron-0.[FR++].0-rc1-incubating | gzip >
 apache-metron-0.[FR++].0-rc-incubating.tar.gz
 
We will refer to this as the release candidate tarball. *Note: Per Apache 
policy, the hardware used to create the candidate tarball must be owned by the 
release manager.
The artifacts for a release (or a release candidate, for that matter) are as 
follows:
Release (candidate) Tarball
 MD5 hash of the release tarball.  We will refer to this as the release 
candidate tarball.-rc1-incubating.tar.gz > 
apache-metron-0.[FR++].0-rc1-incubating.tar.gz.md5)
 SHA1 hash of the release tarball (gpg --print-md SHA1 
apache-metron-0.[FR++].0-rc1-incubating.tar.gz > 
apache-metron-0.[FR++].0-rc1-incubating.tar.gz.sha)
GPG signature of release tarball by the release manager
 Assuming your public code signing key is 0xDEADBEEF, so signing for me would 
be: gpg -u 0xDEADBEEF --armor --output 
apache-metron-0.[FR++].0-rc1-incubating.tar.gz.asc --detach-sig 
apache-metron-0.[FR++].0-rc1-incubating.tar.gz
If you do not know your code signing key as release manager, you must follow 
the instructions at https://www.apache.org/dev/release-signing.html#generate
Note: You only need the -u arg if you have more than one public/private key 
pair generated.  If you have forgotten it, you can find it from the output of 
gpg —fingerprint.  It’s the last 4 bytes from the key fingerprint.
The LICENSE file from the release tarball
The KEYS file from the release tarball
The DISCLAIMER file from the release tarball
A CHANGES file denoting the changes
We usually construct this by taking the output of git log | grep METRON | sed 
's/\[//g' | sed 's/\]//g' | grep -v “http” and removing the JIRAs from the 
previous releases (it’s in time sorted order so this is easy).
 
Create a directory named ${VERSION}-RC${RC_NUM}-incubating (in our case, it’s 
0.[FR++].0-RC1-incubating) in the dev repo.  Place the artifacts from above 
into this directory, add the directory and commit via the subversion client:
svn add 0.[FR++].0-RC1-incubating
svn commit -m "Adding artifacts for Metron 0.[FR++].0-RC1 (incubating)”
Step 5 - Verify the build
Go through the build verification checklist to verify that everything works.  
These instructions can be found here: Verifying Builds
Step 6 - Verify licensing
Make sure the release complies with the following Apache licensing guidelines: 
http://www.apache.org/foundation/license-faq.html
Step 7 - Call for a community release vote
Next initiate a [VOTE] thread on the dev list to announce the build vote.  The 
vote email template can be found here: Build Vote Template.  Allow at least 72 
hours for the community to vote on the release.  When you get enough votes 
close the vote by replying [RESULT][VOTE] to the email thread with the tally of 
all the votes
Step 8 - Call for a incubator release vote
Once the community has successfully voted on a release, we must escalate the 
vote to the incubator general. The same VOTE thread original email is sent to 
gene...@incubator.apache.org
 
If issues are found with the release and the vote fails, then the vote thread 
is closed with a synopsis of the voting results and a new RC is worked on in 
the community
If issues are found with the release and the vote succeeds, then we proceed to 
cut the release, but should notify the community of the issues via an email on 
the dev list with the accompanying JIRA(s) required to correct the issue(s).
 
If no issues are found, then we can cut a release
Again, wait for at least 72 hours and then close the vote.
Step 9 - Stage the finished release
A directory with the name of the version (i.e. 0.3.0) should be made in the 
release svn repository

Collateral from the release candidate in the dev repo should be moved to the 
above directory and renamed to remove the rc (e.g. mv 
apache-metron-0.3.0-rc1-incubating.tar.gz.sha 
apache-metron-0.3.0-incubating.tar.gz.sha)

Add the directory and commit via the subversion client:

svn add 0.3.0-RC1-incubating
svn commit -m "Adding artifacts for Metron 0.3.0 (incubating)”

Remove the old releases from the release repo (only the current version and the 
KEYS file should exist there).
Step 14 - Announce build
Send an email out to user@ and dev@ to announce the release along with the 
changelog and a word of thanks/praise.
Creating a Maintenance Release
Creation of the Maintenance Release should follow exactly the same set of steps 
as creating the Feature Release as outlined above, but with two exception.  
First, the version incremented on the maintenance release should be the MR++ so 
that the release is named 0.[FR].[MR++].  Second, if a critical JIRA comes in 
that requires an immediate patch, the votes with three binding +1's are still 
required, but Step 1 (discussion) and Step 2 (Jira collecting and tracking), 
and the 72 hour waiting periods in Steps 7 and 8 can be waived.  A critical 
JIRA is something that is either a security vulnerability or a functional show 
stopper.
Now, we must grab the release candidate binary from
Ensuring Consistency between Feature and Maintenance releases
Being able to maintain the previous release train, with only critical or 
important bug fixes and security fixes (generally not new features) for users 
who are averse to frequent large changes is very important for production use.  
They get stability, while the feature code proceeds as fast as the community 
wishes.  It is important to assure that all commits to the maintenance release 
also get made in the feature branch (if relevant), to avoid the appearance of 
regressions in the maintenance branch.  The formal process for assuring this is 
as follows:
Every maintenance release JIRA should have a corresponding feature JIRA to make 
sure that the patch is applied consistently to both branches.  The maintenance 
JIRA should be cloned and appropriate fix version for the feature release 
should be applied.  If the fix is not relevant to the feature or maintenance 
branch then the submitter must explicitly state this.  In general reviewers 
should refuse a patch PR unless both feature and maintenance JIRAs have been 
created.
The release manager has a responsibility to review all commits to the 
maintenance line since last release, and make sure they were duplicated to the 
feature branch (unless not relevant, which must also be determined).

------------------- 
Thank you,

James Sirota
PPMC- Apache Metron (Incubating)
jsirota AT apache DOT org

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