This document is meant to be a complete end-to-end guide for how to release new versions of software for Crossplane and its related projects.
All the details are available in the sections below, but we'll start this guide with a very high level sequential overview for how to run the release process. These steps apply to all Crossplane projects, all of which utilize Github Actions for pipelines.
- feature freeze: Merge all completed features into main development branch of all repos to begin "feature freeze" period.
- pin dependencies: Update the go module on main development branch to depend on stable versions of dependencies if needed.
- branch repo: Create a new release branch using the GitHub UI for the repo.
- release branch prep: Make any release-specific updates on the release branch (typically documentation).
- tag release: Run the
Tag
action on the release branch with the desired version (e.g.v0.14.0
). - build/publish: Run the
CI
andConfigurations
action on the release branch with the version that was just tagged. - tag next pre-release: Run the
tag
action on the main development branch with therc.0
for the next release (e.g.v0.15.0-rc.0
). - verify: Verify all artifacts have been published successfully, perform sanity testing.
- promote: Run the
Promote
action to promote release to desired channel(s). - release notes: Publish well authored and complete release notes on GitHub.
- announce: Announce the release on Twitter, Slack, etc.
This section will walk through the release process in more fine grained and prescriptive detail.
Feature freeze should be performed on all repos. In order to start the feature freeze period, the following conditions should be met:
- All issues in the milestone should be closed
- Sanity testing has been performed on main development branch
It is a best practice to release Crossplane projects with "pinned" dependencies to specific stable versions. For example, after crossplane-runtime has been released, we want to update the main Crossplane repo to use that specific released version.
To update a dependency to a specific version, simply edit the go.mod
file to
point to the desired version, then run go mod tidy
.
Creating the release branch can be done within the GitHub
UI.
Basically, you just use the branch selector drop down and type in the name of
the new release branch, e.g. release-0.5
. Release branch names always follow
the convention of release-[minor-semver]
.
If this is the first ever release branch being created in a repo (uncommon), you
should also set up branch protection rules for the release-*
pattern. You can
find existing examples in the Crossplane repo
settings.
At this point, the HEAD
commit in the release branch will be our release
candidate. The build pipeline will automatically be started due to the create
branch event, so we can start to perform testing on this build. Note that it
should be the exact same as what is currently in main development branch since
they are using the same commit and have the same tag. Also note that this is not
the official release build since we have not made the official release tag yet
(e.g. v0.5.0
).
Some repos may not require any release branch prep. This is desirable as it reduces the burden of running a new release. If this is the case for the repo being released, you may skip this step.
In the core Crossplane repository, we need to update the release branch docs and examples to point to the new versions that we will be releasing soon.
- Documentation, such as pinning
snippet
links to the current release branch.
- searching for
:v
will help a lot here
- searching for
During our testing of the release candidate, we may find issues or bugs that we triage and decide we want to fix before the release goes out. In order to fix a bug in the release branch, the following process is recommended:
-
Make the bug fix into main development branch first through the normal PR process
- If the applicable code has already been removed from the main development branch then simply fix the bug directly in the release branch by opening a PR directly against the release branch
-
Backport the fix by performing a cherry-pick of the fix's commit hash (not the merge commit) from main development branch into the release branch. For example, to backport a fix from the main development branch to
v0.5.0
, something like the following should be used:git fetch --all git checkout -b release-0.5 upstream/release-0.5 git cherry-pick -x <fix commit hash>
-
Open a PR with the cherry-pick commit targeting the release-branch
After all bugs have been fixed and backported to the release branch, we can move on to tagging the final release commit.
Now it's time to run the Tag
action on the release branch.
Run the tag action by going to the repo's "Actions" tab in the Github UI. You will be prompted for the desired branch and the version you are tagging. The latest commit on the selected branch will be the commit that is tagged.
We're getting close to starting the official release, so you should take this opportunity to draft up the release notes. You can create a new release draft here. Make sure you select "This is a pre-release" and hit "Save draft" when you are ready to share and collect feedback. Do not hit "Publish release" yet.
You can see and follow the template and structure from previous releases.
Run the CI
action on the release branch. This will build and publish the
official release with the correct version tag and all of its release artifacts
will be published.
If there are any Configuration
packages that are built in the repo, you must
also run the Configurations
action on the release branch. This will build,
tag, and publish the Configuration
packages to the configured OCI image
registry.
After the pipeline runs successfully, you should verify that all artifacts have been published to:
For all repos:
For all repos with Helm charts:
For crossplane/crossplane:
The next step is to create the pre-release tag for the HEAD
commit in main
development branch. This tag serves as an indication of when the release was
branched from the main development branch and is also important for generating
future versions of the main development branch builds since that versioning
process
is based on git describe --tags
.
NOTE: the
build
submodule uses the latest tag by timestamp on the branch which the commit it is building resides on. If there were no prep commits made on the release branch, then itsHEAD
is even with the main development branch (i.e. the stable tag and the next pre-release tag will be on the same commit). This means that we must tag the pre-release version after the stable version to ensure subsequent builds use the next pre-release tag as their base. If there are additional commits on the release branch before the stable tag is created, then the pre-release tag could be created first.
To accomplish this, run the Tag
action for the repo on the main development
branch branch. You will be prompted to enter the version
for the tag. Since
this tag will essentially be the start of pre-releases working towards the
next version, the version
should be the next release number, plus a
trailing tag to indicate it is a pre-release. The current convention is to use
*-rc.0
. For example, when we are releasing the v0.9.0
release and we are
ready for the main development branch to start working towards the next
release of v0.10.0
, we would make the tag v0.10.0-rc.0
After the tag action has succeeded, verify in the GitHub UI that the tag was successfully applied to the correct commit.
The main development branch can now be opened for new features since we have a safe release branch to continue bug fixes and improvements for the release itself. Essentially, the main development branch is free to now diverge from the release branch.
If everything looks good with the official versioned release that we just
published, we can go ahead and run the Promote
action on the release branch.
This is a very quick pipeline that doesn't rebuild anything, it simply makes
metadata changes to the published release to also include the release in the
channel of your choice.
Run the Promote
action on the release branch and input the version you would
like to promote (e.g. v0.5.0
) and the channel you'd like to promote it to.
After the Promote
actions have succeeded, verify on DockerHub and the Helm
chart repository that the release has been promoted to the right channels.
Now that the release has been published and verified, you can publish the release notes that you drafted earlier. After incorporating all feedback, you can now click on the "Publish release" button.
This will send an email notification with the release notes to all watchers of the repo.
We have completed the entire release, so it's now time to announce it to the world. Using the @crossplane_io Twitter account, tweet about the new release and blog. You'll see examples from the previous releases, such as this tweet for v0.4.
Post a link to this tweet on the Slack #announcements channel, then copy a link to that and post it in the #general channel.
We also have the ability to run patch releases to update previous releases that have already been published. These patch releases are always run from the last release branch, we do not create a new release branch for a patch release.
The basic flow is very similar to a normal release, but with a few less steps. Please refer to details for each step in the sections above.
- Fix any bugs in the main development branch first and then
cherry-pick -x
to the release branch- If main development branch has already removed the relevant code then make your fix directly in the release branch
- After all testing on the release branch look good and any docs/tests have been
updated with the new version number, run the
Tag
action on the release branch with the new patch version (e.g.v0.5.1
) - Run the normal
CI
action on the release branch to build and publish the release - Publish release notes
- Run
Promote
action to promote the patch release to the appropriate channels