Hi - what are the next steps?
Pending changes are pushed and checked that there is no open JIRA targeting 
2.1.2 and 2.2.1

_____________________________
From: Reynold Xin <r...@databricks.com<mailto:r...@databricks.com>>
Sent: Friday, September 8, 2017 9:27 AM
Subject: Re: 2.1.2 maintenance release?
To: Felix Cheung <felixcheun...@hotmail.com<mailto:felixcheun...@hotmail.com>>, 
Holden Karau <hol...@pigscanfly.ca<mailto:hol...@pigscanfly.ca>>, Sean Owen 
<so...@cloudera.com<mailto:so...@cloudera.com>>, dev 
<dev@spark.apache.org<mailto:dev@spark.apache.org>>


+1 as well. We should make a few maintenance releases.

On Fri, Sep 8, 2017 at 6:46 PM Felix Cheung 
<felixcheun...@hotmail.com<mailto:felixcheun...@hotmail.com>> wrote:
+1 on both 2.1.2 and 2.2.1

And would try to help and/or wrangle the release if needed.

(Note: trying to backport a few changes to branch-2.1 right now)

________________________________
From: Sean Owen <so...@cloudera.com<mailto:so...@cloudera.com>>
Sent: Friday, September 8, 2017 12:05:28 AM
To: Holden Karau; dev
Subject: Re: 2.1.2 maintenance release?

Let's look at the standard ASF guidance, which actually surprised me when I 
first read it:

https://www.apache.org/foundation/voting.html

VOTES ON PACKAGE RELEASES
Votes on whether a package is ready to be released use majority approval -- 
i.e. at least three PMC members must vote affirmatively for release, and there 
must be more positive than negative votes. Releases may not be vetoed. 
Generally the community will cancel the release vote if anyone identifies 
serious problems, but in most cases the ultimate decision, lies with the 
individual serving as release manager. The specifics of the process may vary 
from project to project, but the 'minimum quorum of three +1 votes' rule is 
universal.


PMC votes on it, but no vetoes allowed, and the release manager makes the final 
call. Not your usual vote! doesn't say the release manager has to be part of 
the PMC though it's the role with most decision power. In practice I can't 
imagine it's a problem, but we could also just have someone on the PMC 
technically be the release manager even as someone else is really operating the 
release.

The goal is, really, to be able to put out maintenance releases with important 
fixes. Secondly, to ramp up one or more additional people to perform the 
release steps. Maintenance releases ought to be the least controversial 
releases to decide.

Thoughts on kicking off a release for 2.1.2 to see how it goes?

Although someone can just start following the steps, I think it will certainly 
require some help from Michael, who's run the last release, to clarify parts of 
the process or possibly provide an essential credential to upload artifacts.


On Thu, Sep 7, 2017 at 11:59 PM Holden Karau 
<hol...@pigscanfly.ca<mailto:hol...@pigscanfly.ca>> wrote:
I'd be happy to manage the 2.1.2 maintenance release (and 2.2.1 after that) if 
people are ok with a committer / me running the release process rather than a 
full PMC member.


Reply via email to