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OpenTelemetry Collector Release Procedure

Collector build and testing is currently fully automated. However there are still certain operations that need to be performed manually in order to make a release.

We release both core and contrib collectors with the same versions where the contrib release uses the core release as a dependency. We’ve divided this process into four sections. A release engineer must release:

  1. The Core collector, including the collector builder CLI tool.
  2. The Contrib collector.
  3. The artifacts

Important Note: You’ll need to be able to sign git commits/tags in order to be able to release a collector version. Follow this guide to set it up.

Release manager

A release manager is the person responsible for a specific release. While the manager might request help from other folks, they are ultimately responsible for the success of a release.

In order to have more people comfortable with the release process, and in order to decrease the burden on a small number of volunteers, all core approvers are release managers from time to time, listed under the Release Schedule section. That table is updated at every release, with the current manager adding themselves to the bottom of the table, removing themselves from the top of the table.

It is possible that a core approver isn't a contrib approver. In that case, the release manager should coordinate with a contrib approver for the steps requiring this role, such as branch creation or tag publishing.

Releasing opentelemetry-collector

  1. Update Contrib to use the latest in development version of Core by running make update-otel in Contrib root directory. This is to ensure that the latest core does not break contrib in any way. If it results in any changes, submit a PR to Contrib. If you are unable to run make update-otel, it is possible to skip this step and resolve conflicts with Contrib after Core is released, but this is generally inadvisable.

    • 🛑 Do not move forward until this PR is merged.
  2. Determine the version number that will be assigned to the release. Usually, we increment the minor version number and set the patch number to 0. In this document, we are using v0.85.0 as the version to be released, following v0.84.0. Check if stable modules have any changes since the last release by running the following:

    • make check-changes PREVIOUS_VERSION=v1.x.x MODSET=stable.

    If there are no changes, there is no need to release new version for stable modules. If there are changes found but .chloggen directory doesn't have any corresponding entries, add missing changelog entries. If the changes are insignificant, consider not releasing a new version for stable modules.

  3. Manually run the action Automation - Prepare Release. This action will create an issue to track the progress of the release and a pull request to update the changelog and version numbers in the repo. While this PR is open all merging in Core should be halted.

    • When prompted, enter the version numbers determined in Step 2, but do not include a leading v.
    • If not intending to release stable modules, do not specify a version for Release candidate version stable.
    • If the PR needs updated in any way you can make the changes in a fork and PR those changes into the prepare-release-prs/x branch. You do not need to wait for the CI to pass in this prep-to-prep PR.
    • 🛑 Do not move forward until this PR is merged. 🛑
  4. Check out main and ensure it has the "Prepare release" commit in your local copy by pulling in the latest from open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector Use this commit to create a branch named release/<release-series> (e.g. release/v0.85.x). Push the new branch to open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector. Assuming your upstream remote is named upstream, you can try the following commands:

    • git checkout main && git fetch upstream && git rebase upstream/main
    • git switch -c release/<release series>
    • git push -u upstream release/<release series>
  5. Make sure you are on release/<release-series>. Tag the module groups with the new release version by running:

    • make push-tags MODSET=beta for the beta modules group,
    • make push-tags MODSET=stable for the stable modules group, only if there were changes since the last release.

    If you set your remote using https you need to include REMOTE=https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector.git in each command.

  6. Wait for the new tag build to pass successfully.

  7. A new v0.85.0 source code release should be automatically created on Github by now. Edit it and use the contents from the CHANGELOG.md and CHANGELOG-API.md as the release's description.

Releasing opentelemetry-collector-contrib

  1. Open a PR to Contrib to use the newly released Core version by doing the following:

    • Manually update dist.version, dist.otelcol_version and core collector module versions in cmd/otelcontribcol/builder-config.yaml
    • Manually update dist.version, dist.otelcol_version and core collector module versions in cmd/oteltestbedcol/builder-config.yaml
    • Run make genotelcontribcol genoteltestbedcol
    • Commit the changes
    • Run make update-otel OTEL_VERSION=v0.85.0 OTEL_STABLE_VERSION=v1.1.0
      • If there is no new stable version released in core collector, use the current stable module version in contrib as OTEL_STABLE_VERSION.
    • If you were unable to run make update-otel before releasing core, fix any errors from breaking changes.
    • Commit the changes
    • Open the PR
    • 🛑 Do not move forward until this PR is merged. 🛑
  2. Manually run the action Automation - Prepare Release. When prompted, enter the version numbers determined in Step 1, but do not include a leading v. This action will create a pull request to update the changelog and version numbers in the repo. While this PR is open all merging in Contrib should be halted.

    • If the PR needs updated in any way you can make the changes in a fork and PR those changes into the prepare-release-prs/x branch. You do not need to wait for the CI to pass in this prep-to-prep PR.
    • 🛑 Do not move forward until this PR is merged. 🛑
  3. Check out main and ensure it has the "Prepare release" commit in your local copy by pulling in the latest from open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector-contrib. Use this commit to create a branch named release/<release-series> (e.g. release/v0.85.x). Push the new branch to open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector-contrib. Assuming your upstream remote is named upstream, you can try the following commands:

    • git checkout main && git fetch upstream && git rebase upstream/main
    • git switch -c release/<release series>
    • git push -u upstream release/<release series>
  4. Make sure you are on release/<release-series>. Tag all the module groups with the new release version by running:

    • make push-tags MODSET=contrib-base

    If you set your remote using https you need to include REMOTE=https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector-contrib.git in each command.

  5. Wait for the new tag build to pass successfully.

  6. A new v0.85.0 release should be automatically created on Github by now. Edit it and use the contents from the CHANGELOG.md as the release's description.

Producing the artifacts

The last step of the release process creates artifacts for the new version of the collector and publishes images to Dockerhub. The steps in this portion of the release are done in the opentelemetry-collector-releases repo.

  1. Update the ./distributions/**/manifest.yaml files to include the new release version.

  2. Update the builder version in OTELCOL_BUILDER_VERSION to the new release in the Makefile. While this might not be strictly necessary for every release, this is a good practice.

  3. Create a pull request with the change and ensure the build completes successfully. See example.

    • 🛑 Do not move forward until this PR is merged. 🛑
  4. Check out main and ensure it has the "Prepare release" commit in your local copy by pulling in the latest from open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector-releases. Assuming your upstream remote is named upstream, you can try running:

    • git checkout main && git fetch upstream && git rebase upstream/main
  5. Create a tag for the new release version by running:

    • make push-tags TAG=v0.85.0

    If you set your remote using https you need to include REMOTE=https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector-releases.git in each command.

  6. Wait for the new tag build to pass successfully.

  7. Ensure the "Release Core", "Release Contrib", "Release k8s", and "Builder - Release" actions pass, this will

    1. push new container images to https://hub.docker.com/repository/docker/otel/opentelemetry-collector, https://hub.docker.com/repository/docker/otel/opentelemetry-collector-contrib and https://hub.docker.com/repository/docker/otel/opentelemetry-collector-k8s

    2. create a Github release for the tag and push all the build artifacts to the Github release. See example.

    3. build and release ocb binaries under a separate tagged Github release, e.g. cmd/builder/v0.85.0

    4. build and push ocb Docker images to https://hub.docker.com/r/otel/opentelemetry-collector-builder and the GitHub Container Registry within the releases repository

Troubleshooting

  1. unknown revision internal/coreinternal/v0.85.0 -- This is typically an indication that there's a dependency on a new module. You can fix it by adding a new replaces entry to the go.mod for the affected module.

  2. commitChangesToNewBranch failed: invalid merge -- This is a known issue with our release tooling. The current workaround is to clone a fresh copy of the repository and try again. Note that you may need to set up a fork remote pointing to your own fork for the release tooling to work properly.

  3. could not run Go Mod Tidy: go mod tidy failed when running multimod -- This is a known issue with our release tooling. The current workaround is to run make gotidy manually after the multimod tool fails and commit the result.

  4. Incorrect version "X" of "go.opentelemetry.io/collector/component" is included in "X" in CI after make update-otel -- It could be because the make target was run too soon after updating Core and the goproxy hasn't updated yet. Try running export GOPROXY=direct and then make update-otel.

  5. error: failed to push some refs to 'https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector-contrib.git' during make push-tags -- If you encounter this error the make push-tags target will terminate without pushing all the tags. Using the output of the make push-tags target, save all the un-pushed the tags in tags.txt and then use this make target to complete the push:

    .PHONY: temp-push-tags
    temp-push-tags:
        for tag in `cat tags.txt`; do \
            echo "pushing tag $${tag}"; \
            git push ${REMOTE} $${tag}; \
        done;
  6. unable to tag modules: git tag failed for v0.112.0: unable to create tag: "error: gpg failed to sign the data:. Make sure you have GPG set up to sign commits. You can run gpg --gen-key to generate a GPG key.

  7. When using a new GitHub Actions workflow in opentelemetry-collector-releases for the first time during a release, a workflow may fail. If it is possible to fix the workflow, you can update the release tag to the commit with the fix and re-run the release; it is safe to re-run the workflows that already succeeded. Publishing container images can be done multiple times, and publishing artifacts to GitHub will fail without any adverse effects.

Bugfix releases

Bugfix release criteria

Both opentelemetry-collector and opentelemetry-collector-contrib have very short 2 week release cycles. Because of this, we put a high bar when considering making a patch release, to avoid wasting engineering time unnecessarily.

When considering making a bugfix release on the v0.N.x release cycle, the bug in question needs to fulfill the following criteria:

  1. The bug has no workaround or the workaround is significantly harder to put in place than updating the version. Examples of simple workarounds are:
    • Reverting a feature gate.
    • Changing the configuration to an easy to find value.
  2. The bug happens in common setups. To gauge this, maintainers can consider the following:
    • If the bug is specific to a certain platform, and if that platform is in Tier 1.
    • The bug happens with the default configuration or with a commonly used one (e.g. has been reported by multiple people)
  3. The bug is sufficiently severe. For example (non-exhaustive list):
    • The bug makes the Collector crash reliably
    • The bug makes the Collector fail to start under an accepted configuration
    • The bug produces significant data loss
    • The bug makes the Collector negatively affect its environment (e.g. significantly affects its host machine)

We aim to provide a release that fixes security-related issues in at most 30 days since they are publicly announced; with the current release schedule this means security issues will typically not warrant a bugfix release. An exception is critical vulnerabilities (CVSSv3 score >= 9.0), which will warrant a release within five business days.

The OpenTelemetry Collector maintainers will ultimately have the responsibility to assess if a given bug or security issue fulfills all the necessary criteria and may grant exceptions in a case-by-case basis.

Bugfix release procedure

The following documents the procedure to release a bugfix

  1. Create a pull request against the release/<release-series> (e.g. release/v0.90.x) branch to apply the fix.
  2. Make sure you are on release/<release-series>. Prepare release commits with prepare-release make target, e.g. make prepare-release PREVIOUS_VERSION=0.90.0 RELEASE_CANDIDATE=0.90.1 MODSET=beta, and create a pull request against the release/<release-series> branch.
  3. Once those changes have been merged, create a pull request to the main branch from the release/<release-series> branch.
  4. If you see merge conflicts when creating the pull request, do the following:
    1. Create a new branch from origin:main.
    2. Merge the release/<release-series> branch into the new branch.
    3. Resolve the conflicts.
    4. Create another pull request to the main branch from the new branch to replace the pull request from the release/<release-series> branch.
  5. Enable the Merge pull request setting in the repository's Settings tab.
  6. Make sure you are on release/<release-series>. Push the new release version tags for a target module set by running make push-tags MODSET=<beta|stable>. Wait for the new tag build to pass successfully.
  7. IMPORTANT: The pull request to bring the changes from the release branch MUST be merged using the Merge pull request method, and NOT squashed using “Squash and merge”. This is important as it allows us to ensure the commit SHA from the release branch is also on the main branch. Not following this step will cause much go dependency sadness.
  8. If the pull request was created from the release/<release-series> branch, it will be auto-deleted. Restore the release branch via GitHub.
  9. Once the patch is released, disable the Merge pull request setting.

1.0 release

Stable modules adhere to our versioning document guarantees, so we need to be careful before releasing. Before adding a module to the stable module set and making a first 1.x release, please open a new stabilization issue and follow the instructions in the issue template.

Once a module is ready to be released under the 1.x version scheme, file a PR to move the module to the stable module set and remove it from the beta module set. Note that we do not make v1.x.y-rc.z style releases for new stable modules; we instead treat the last two beta minor releases as release candidates and the module moves directly from the 0.x to the 1.x release series.

Release schedule

Date Version Release manager
2024-11-04 v0.113.0 @djaglowski
2024-11-18 v0.114.0 @TylerHelmuth
2024-12-02 v0.115.0 @atoulme
2024-12-16 v0.116.0 @songy23
2025-01-06 v0.117.0 @dmitryax
2025-01-20 v0.118.0 @codeboten
2025-02-03 v0.119.0 @bogdandrutu
2025-02-17 v0.120.0 @jpkrohling
2025-03-03 v0.121.0 @mx-psi
2024-03-17 v0.122.0 @evan-bradley