I would like to clarify some things, a lot of wrong information was related
here on this post, probably due to a bug between sync between GitHub and SF.

* SF is the place used to store packages. It hosts only downloadable
packages. Not sources. So it provides mirrors to download installers
packages (some are large binary packages dedicated to an OS). Sources you
can see on SF are just (should just be) a real time mirror from github.
However it seems a bug between SF and github make sync failed since 13
september 2015. This seems to creates confusion on how release are done.
To avoid confusion, i will try to restore the sync github -> SF. It it
fails (problem seems to be on SF side), I will just completely remove the
mirroring of sources.

* Version .0 are not beta version but they are stable version dedicated to
users. Such stable version are scheduled not only by a date but also by
opened issues. So the date is just an estimated information. In most cases,
it just means "Will be release after this date, when everything is ready".
The real thing that trigger the release is:
Is there any feedback or issue that are critical still opened during or
before the beta period ? If yes, release wait features are stable and
issues are fixed. If no issue are known, if no warning are up, and date of
roadmap is past, release can be done. That's why release are sometimes
late, like it was for 3.7 version because of the critical bug in mysql
5.5.40.

* Release and tagging of version is already done automatically. Packages,
controls and tags of source are done by the same scripted process, so human
error should not happen.


2015-10-15 16:24 GMT+02:00 Sasa Ostrouska <[email protected]>:

>
>
> On Thu, Oct 15, 2015 at 8:11 AM, CF <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> ahahah, i agre with most of your parts.
>>
>> Anyhow, the SF <--> Github differences should be adressed to avoid bad
>> version number (understand: differents). I also understand SF audience is
>> not negligeable so simply closing it seems an harsh option at this time.
>>
>> SF is a good place to host downloads in my opinion, the thing is to make
> a script which would take care of those issues.
> A script should do the tarball, the upload and the git tags. In that way
> we would not have anymore differences between the git tree and the uploaded
> tarball, of course if nobody then commits to the tagged tree. The script
> should also create a new tag+1 branch where all the bug fixes should enter
> until the script is run again. In other words automatization of the process
> is needed. Human make errors.
>
>
> Rgds
> Saxa
>
>
>>
>> Le 14/10/2015 18:13, Doursenaud, Raphaël a écrit :
>>
>> Ok, who's up for a software lifecycle and version numbering schemes
>> thesis? Maybe you can get a PhD out of it!
>>
>> Jokes aside, the thing is that NO software release cycle is perfect
>> because various audiences seek different things.
>>
>> FLOSS developers tend to prefer "release often, release early" and
>> "semantic versioning".
>> Perfectionists are going for "when it's ready" and "I only need to
>> increase one number since every release is just perfect".
>> Traditional corporate vendors usually prefer "Rush it out the door, we
>> need it for yesterday, just try to hide defects under the carpet and
>> colorful design" and "We don't care, give us the biggest number so
>> marketing can show off".
>> Integrators and users want "Something with all the bells and whistles
>> that works out of the box, forever" and "No new releases, they are a pain
>> to deploy, so give me all the features in this one".
>> To which I reply: "Not gonna happen!".
>>
>> The current process is designed around the need to get code out at a
>> regular pace with some predictability to it.
>> It gives a version (N-2) supported roughly 1 and a half year.
>> I don't think it's that great, but at least it's there!
>>
>> IMO The Dolibarr project's lifecyle is missing some key elements to
>> achieve better releases quality before even thinking about changing the
>> release periodicity or version numbering.
>>
>> Here's a non exhaustive list from the top of my head:
>>
>>    - Standardized and enforced good commits content and messages.
>>    - Formal code reviews for everyone including the project maintainers.
>>    - Continuous integration used properly. Ie. no one can bypass it.
>>    Ever.
>>    - The previous two boils down to: no one pushes directly to the main
>>    repository.
>>    - Proper stabilization branches. One example of this is git flow but
>>    other strategies are out there.
>>    - Proper tagging. Having releases in the wild that do not match the
>>    repository tags is a waste of everyone's time.
>>    - Proper pre-release test cycle. With multiple alpha, beta and RC
>>    releases. All properly advertised to get people involved.
>>    - Testing procedures and tooling.
>>    - Automated building for all pre-releases.
>>    - Formal testing both automated (Think unit tests, selenium, test
>>    instances, fuzzing…) and manual.
>>    - Final release should be exactly the same as the last RC.
>>    - Long term commitment to lean toward modern coding practices
>>    (refactoring, objectification, automate everything…)
>>    - Bugs bissecting to fix them at the root, not only in the reported
>>    versions.
>>    - Encourage unit tests for critical bug fixes to prevent regressions.
>>    - Community driven design before coding.
>>    - …
>>
>> As you can see, there's a lot of work and it can't be done by any single
>> individual. The whole community needs to get involved.
>> But for that to happen, there should be a strong commitment from the
>> maintainers and core developers to stick to it and make it happen.
>>
>> We've already made some good progresses since switching to GitHub.
>> Code is reviewed more often and bug reports are all assessed and properly
>> tagged (I devote some of my own time to that weekly).
>>
>> Keep in mind that all of that is a community effort, so the best thing to
>> do is step up to the plate, pick a task and do something ;)
>>
>> Looking forward to your contributions!
>>
>> 2015-10-14 8:23 GMT+02:00 Jean-François Ferry <[email protected]>:
>>
>>> Hi all,
>>>
>>> Le 13/10/2015 18:38, Charles Benke a écrit :
>>>
>>> This is not the right question to ask,
>>>
>>> The right question is "how to ensure that when there is the most
>>> download of dolibarr (September to March) the broadcast version (.2 like)
>>> is as stable as possible for novice users"
>>>
>>> To answer this question we must look at the proposed roadmap with  :
>>>
>>> -  .0 in april,
>>>
>>> -  .1 in june-july
>>>
>>> -  .2 in september
>>>
>>> We are doing wrong since a long time... Versions shouldn't be related to
>>> any date but to software structure. Please see http://semver.org/ :)
>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> Dolibarr-dev mailing list
>>> [email protected]
>>> https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/dolibarr-dev
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> *Raphaël Doursenaud*
>> Directeur technique (CTO)
>> Expert certifié en déploiement Google Apps
>> <https://gpcsolutions.fr/raphael-doursenaud-google-apps-certified-deployment-specialist>
>> +33 (0)5 35 53 97 13 - +33 (0)6 68 48 20 10
>>
>> <http://gpcsolutions.fr>
>> http://gpcsolutions.fr
>> Technopole Hélioparc
>> 2 avenue du Président Pierre Angot
>> 64053 PAU CEDEX 9
>> SARL GPC.solutions au capital de 7 500 € - R.C.S. PAU 528 995 921
>>
>> <http://wiki.dolibarr.org/index.php/Dolibarr_suppliers_France#GPC.solutions>
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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>>
>>
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