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* A document for Xen release management, v2
@ 2017-07-25 13:25 Wei Liu
  2017-07-26 14:31 ` Lars Kurth
  2017-07-27 10:30 ` Julien Grall
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Wei Liu @ 2017-07-25 13:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Xen-devel; +Cc: Juergen Gross, Committers, Julien Grall, Wei Liu, Lars Kurth

Hi all

This is v2 of this document.

Lars, please insert your section as you see fit.

Wei.

---8<---
% Xen Release Management
% Wei Liu <<wei.liu2@citrix.com>>
% Revision 1

# Motivation

Over the years we have had different people signing up as the Release Manager
of Xen. It would be rather wasteful if every new Release Manager has to go over
everything and tripped over by the same mistakes again and again.

This file intends to document the process of managing a Xen release. It is
mainly written for Release Manager, but other roles (contributors,
maintainers and committers) are also encouraged to read this document, so
that they can have an idea what to expect from the Release Manager.

# Xen release cycle

The Xen hypervisor project now releases twice a year, at the beginning of
June and the beginning of December. The actual release date depends on a lot
of factors. 

We can roughly divide one release into two periods. The development period
and the freeze period. The former is 4 months long and the latter is about 2
months long.

During development period, contributors submit patches to be reviewed and
committed into xen.git. All feature patches must be committed before a date,
which is normally called the "cut-off date", after which the freeze period
starts. There will be a date before which all patches that wish to be merged
for the release should be posted -- it is normally called the "last posting
date" and it is normally two weeks before the "cut-off date".

During freeze period, the tree is closed for new features. Only bug fixes are
accepted. This period can be shorter or longer than 2 months. If it ends up
longer than 2 months, it eats into the next development period.

Here is a conjured up example (use ````cal 2017```` to get an idea):

* Development period: 2017 June 11 - 2017 September 29
    * the "cut-off date" is 2017 September 29
    * the "last posting date" is 2017 September 15
* Freeze period: 2017 October 2 - 2017 December 7
    * the anticipated release date is 2017 December 7

# The different roles in a Xen release

## Release Manager

A trusted developer in the community that owns the release process. The major
goal of the Release Manager is to make sure a Xen release has high quality
and doesn't slip too much.

The Release Manager will not see much workload during development period, but
expects to see increasing workload during the freeze period until the final
release. He or she is expected to keep track of issues, arrange RCs,
negotiate with relevant stakeholders, balance the need from various parties
and make difficult decisions when necessary.

The Release Manager essentially owns xen-unstable branch during the freeze
period. The committers will act on the wishes of the Release Manager during
that time.

## Maintainers

A group of trusted developers who are responsible for certain components in
xen.git. They are expected to respond to patches / questions with regard to
their components in a timely manner, especially during the freeze period.

## Committers

A group of trusted maintainers who can commit to xen.git. During the
development window they normally push things as they see fit. During the
freeze period they transfer xen-unstable branch ownership and act on the
wishes of the Release Manager. That normally means they need to have an
Release Ack in order to push a patch.

## Contributors

Contributors are also expected to respond quickly to any issues regarding the
code they submitted during development period. Failing that, the Release
Manager might decide to revert the changes, declare feature unsupported or
take any action he / she deems appropriate.

## The Security Team

The Security Team operates independently. The visibility might be rather
limited due to the sensitive nature of security work. The best action the
Release Manager can take is to set aside some time for potential security
issues to be fixed.

## The Release Technician

The Release Technician is the person who tags various trees, prepares tarball
etc. He or she acts on the wishes of the Release Manager. Please make sure
the communication is as clear as it can be.

## The Community Manager

The Community Manager owns xenproject.org infrastructure. He or she is
responsible for updating various web archives, updating wiki pages and
coordinating with the PR Personnel.

## The PR Personnel

They are responsible for coordinating with external reporters to publish Xen
release announcement. The Release Manager should be absolutely sure the
release is going out on a particular date before giving them the signal to
proceed, because there is a point of no return once they schedule a date with
external reporters.

# What happens during a release

## Development period

Send out monthly update email. The email contains the timeline of the
release, the major work items and any other information the Release Manager
sees fit. Reminders should also be sent one week before important dates (see
above, "last posting date" and "cut-off date"). Please consider adding
relevant events to your calendar.

Occasionally check the status of the xen-unstable branch, make sure it gets
timely pushes to master.

## Freeze period

Before or at very early stage of the freeze period, agree with the Community
Manager a schedule for RC test days.

Once the freeze starts, the ownership of xen-unstable branch automatically
transfers to the Release Manager. The Release Manager can say "not releasing
now" because of too many bugs, "until someone fixes these", or "no more
patches until X, Y, and Z happen".

Here is a list of things to do for making RCs:

1. Check the status of the tree. Ask the Release Technician to make an RC if
the tree is good.

2. Send an email to xen-devel, xen-users and xen-announce to announce the RC.

3. Branch and / or reopen the tree for further feature submission if
appropriate.

4. Collect and track any issues reported, determine their severity, prod
relevant developers and maintainers to fix the issues.

5. When patches to fix issues are posted, determine if the patches are good to
be included.

6. Go back to 1.

It is normally OK in the early RCs that you hand back xen-unstable branch to
committers so that they can commit bug fixes at will. As we approach late
RCs, the standard for accepting a patch will get higher and higher. Please
communicate clearly when committers can commit at will and when formal
Release Ack is needed.

At the same time, work with the Community Manager, PR Personnel and
Contributors to gather a list of features for the release. Discuss the
support status of new features with stakeholders. Help prepare the press
release, write a blog post for the release.

When you think all pending issues are fixed and Xen is ready to be released
from the last RC:

1. Send out commit moratorium emails to committers@.

2. Check all the trees (mini-os, qemu-trad, qemu-xen, seabios, ovmf etc).
They have the correct commits and all security patches applied. There will be
tools provided.

3. Select the release date.

4. Check with relevant stake-holders (typically community manager) whether
wiki documentation and PR is in good shape (for an example see
https://wiki.xenproject.org/wiki/Category:Xen_4.9
<https://wiki.xenproject.org/wiki/Category:Xen_4.9>)

5. Obtain a formal go-ahead from

    * the Community Manager
    * the Release Technician

    Ask them to dry-run their checklist and confirm everything is OK. If not,
    arrange another RC and restart this checklist.

6. Give PR Personnel go-ahead, and instruct Release Technician to make
release deliverables (tags and tarballs - will usually be in place the day
before the release).

7. Make the announcement on various mailing list, publish the blog post.

Allow for contingencies. It is not uncommon that some last minute (security or
not) bugs are discovered. To provide a fix takes time, the test of the fix
will also take time. Allow for at least 1 week from getting a fix to getting
a push. For security bugs, coordinate with the Security Team to adjust the
dates according to our security policy.

## Hand over of Release Manager responsibility

If there is a new Release Manager for the next release, make sure the
following things happen for the new Release Manager.

1. A JIRA (xenproject.atlassian.net) is created and proper permissions granted.
2. Access to community test infrastructure is granted.
3. Access to mailing list moderation panel is granted.
4. An account for blog.xenproject.org is created.
5. An account for wiki.xenproject.org is created.

# Email templates and scripts

Note: if you want specific actions from committers, please make sure you CC
committers@.

## RC emails

```
Subject: Xen X.Y rcZ

Hi all,

Xen X.Y rcZ is tagged. You can check that out from xen.git:

git://xenbits.xen.org/xen.git X.Y.0-rcZ

For your convenience there is also a tarball at:
https://downloads.xenproject.org/release/xen/X.Y.0-rcZ/xen-X.Y.0-rcZ.tar.gz

And the signature is at:
https://downloads.xenproject.org/release/xen/X.Y.0-rcZ/xen-X.Y.0-rcZ.tar.gz.sig

Please send bug reports and test reports to xen-devel@lists.xenproject.org.
When sending bug reports, please CC relevant maintainers and me
(abc@xyz.com).

As a reminder, there will be another Xen Test Day.

See instructions on: URL_TO_TEST_INSTRUCTIONS
```

## Forego control of the tree

```
Subject: No Release Ack needed before RcX

Committers,

The tree is in good state. No release ack is needed before RcX. Please commit
bug fixes at will.

$RM
```

## Commit moratorium

```
Subject: Commit moratorium for $REASON

Committers,

Please don't push any new patch to staging because $REASON.

Another email will be sent once the moratorium is lifted.

$RM
```

## Lift commit moratorium

```
Subject: Commit moratorium is lifted for $REASON

Committers,

The commit moratorium is lifted, please commit patches that are already
Release-acked.

$RM
```

## Reminder of last posting date

```
Subject: Last posting date for Xen X.Y is $DATE

Hi all,

The last posting date for Xen X.Y is $DATE. If you want your features to be
included for the release, please make sure they are posted for the first
time before $DATE.

$RM
```

## Reminder of cut-off date

```
Subject: Cut-off date for Xen X.Y is $DATE

Hi all,

The cut-off date for Xen X.Y is $DATE. If you want your features to be
included for the release, please make sure they are committed by $DATE.

$RM
```

## Release announcement

```
 Subject: [ANNOUNCEMENT] Xen X.Y is released

 Dear community members,

 I'm pleased to announce that Xen X.Y.0 is released.

 Please find the tarball and its signature at:

 https://xenproject.org/downloads/xen-archives/xen-project-xy-series/xen-project-xy0.html

 You can also check out the tag in xen.git:

   https://xenbits.xen.org/git-http/xen.git RELEASE-X.Y.0

 Git checkout and build instructions can be found at:

 https://wiki.xenproject.org/wiki/Xen_Project_X.Y_Release_Notes#Build_Requirements

 Release notes can be found at:

   https://wiki.xenproject.org/wiki/Xen_Project_X.Y_Release_Notes

 A summary for X.Y release documents can be found at:

   https://wiki.xenproject.org/wiki/Category:Xen_X.Y

 Technical blog post for X.Y can be found at:

  URL_TO_BLOG

 Thanks everyone who contributed to this release. This release would
 not have happened without all the awesome contributions from around
 the globe.

 Regards,

 $RM (on behalf of the Xen Project Hypervisor team)
```


## Script to generate months update emails

```
#!/bin/bash
# Use ssmtp for simplicity
# ./xen | formail -f -s /usr/sbin/sendmail -bm -t

FILE=`mktemp`
cat << EOF > $FILE

== Hypervisor ==

S: Boot Xen on EFI platforms using GRUB2 (multiboot2 protocol)
O: Daniel Kiper
E: dkiper@net-space.pl

=== x86 ===

=== ARM ===

== Toolstack ==

EOF


AWK_FILE=`mktemp`
cat << EOF > $AWK_FILE
BEGIN { s2_count = 1;score = ""; emails=1; first_time = 1; subject=""}
/== /  {
	if ( subject != "" )  {
		if (score != "")
			print "* ", subject,  "("score")"
		else
			print "* ", subject;
		for (i = 1; i <= s2_count; i++) {
			if (i in s2)
				print " ",s2[i];
		}
		for (i = 1; i <= count; i++) {
			if (i in o)
				print "  -", o[i]
		}
		if (emails)
			print ""
		first_time = 1;
		subject=""
		email=""
		score=""
		count = 1;
		s2_count = 1;
		delete s;
		delete s2;
		delete o;
		delete e;
	}
	print \$0,"\n"
	}
/;/ { };
/S:/	{
	if ( !first_time )  {
		if (score != "")
			print "* ", subject,  "("score")"
		else
			print "* ", subject
		for (i = 1; i <= s2_count; i++) {
			if (i in s2)
				print " ",s2[i];
		}
		for (i = 1; i <= count; i++) {
			if (i in o)
				print "  -", o[i]
		}
		if (emails)
			print ""
	}
	first_time = 0;
	sub(\$1, "");
	sub(/^[ \t]+/, "");
	subject=\$0;
	email=""
	count = 1;
	s2_count = 1;
	delete s;
	delete s2;
	delete o;
	delete e;
	score="";
	}
/O:/	{ sub(\$1, ""); o[count++]=\$0; };
/S2:/	{ sub(\$1, ""); s2[s2_count++]=\$0;};
/E:/	{ sub(\$1, ""); sub(/^[ \t]+/, ""); email=\$0; e[emails++]=\$0;};
/P:/	{ sub(\$1, ""); sub(/^[ \t]+/, ""); score=\$0; };
END	{
	}
// {  }
EOF
AWK_FILE_EMAIL=`mktemp`
cat << EOF > $AWK_FILE_EMAIL
BEGIN { emails=1;}
/E:/	{
	sub(\$1, ""); sub(/^[ \t]+/, "");
	email=\$0;
	for ( i = 1; i <= emails; i++ ) {
		if (i in e) {
			if (e[i] == email) {
				email="";
				break;
			}
		}
	}
	if (email != "")
		e[emails++]=email;
}
END	{
	printf "Bcc: "
	for ( i = 1; i <= emails; i++ )
		if (i in e) {
			if (i == emails - 1)
				printf "<%s>", e[i];
			else
				printf "<%s>,", e[i];
		}
	print ""
	}
// {  }
EOF

echo "From: abc@xyz.com"
echo "To: xen-devel@lists.xenproject.org"
echo "Cc: abc@xyz.com"
cat $FILE | awk -f $AWK_FILE_EMAIL
rm $AWK_FILE_EMAIL

echo "Subject: Xen $XEN_RELEASE Development Update"
PRE=`mktemp`
cat << EOF > $PRE

This email only tracks big items for xen.git tree. Please reply for items you
woulk like to see in $XEN_RELEASE so that people have an idea what is going on and
prioritise accordingly.

You're welcome to provide description and use cases of the feature you're
working on.

= Timeline =

We now adopt a fixed cut-off date scheme. We will release twice a
year. The upcoming $XEN_RELEASE timeline are as followed:

* Last posting date: $LAST_POSTING_DATE
* Hard code freeze: $CUT_OFF_DATE
* RC1: TBD
* Release: $RELEASE_DATE

Note that we don't have freeze exception scheme anymore. All patches
that wish to go into $XEN_RELEASE must be posted no later than the last posting
date. All patches posted after that date will be automatically queued
into next release.

RCs will be arranged immediately after freeze.

= Projects =

EOF

# Preamble
cat $PRE
rm $PRE
# Body
cat $FILE | awk -f $AWK_FILE
rm $AWK_FILE
rm $FILE
````

_______________________________________________
Xen-devel mailing list
Xen-devel@lists.xen.org
https://lists.xen.org/xen-devel

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread

* Re: A document for Xen release management, v2
  2017-07-25 13:25 A document for Xen release management, v2 Wei Liu
@ 2017-07-26 14:31 ` Lars Kurth
  2017-07-26 14:51   ` Wei Liu
  2017-07-27 10:30 ` Julien Grall
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Lars Kurth @ 2017-07-26 14:31 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Wei Liu; +Cc: Juergen Gross, xen-devel, Julien Grall, Committers, Lars Kurth


[-- Attachment #1.1: Type: text/plain, Size: 18370 bytes --]

Hi all,

> On 25 Jul 2017, at 14:25, Wei Liu <wei.liu2@citrix.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi all
> 
> This is v2 of this document.
> 
> Lars, please insert your section as you see fit.

Done + some other minor mods

> ---8<---
> % Xen Release Management
> % Wei Liu <<wei.liu2@citrix.com>>
> % Revision 1
> 
> # Motivation
> 
> Over the years we have had different people signing up as the Release Manager
> of Xen. It would be rather wasteful if every new Release Manager has to go over
> everything and tripped over by the same mistakes again and again.
> 
> This file intends to document the process of managing a Xen release. It is
> mainly written for Release Manager, but other roles (contributors,
> maintainers and committers) are also encouraged to read this document, so
> that they can have an idea what to expect from the Release Manager.
> 
> # Xen release cycle
> 
> The Xen hypervisor project now releases twice a year, at the beginning of
> June and the beginning of December. The actual release date depends on a lot
> of factors.
> 
> We can roughly divide one release into two periods. The development period
> and the freeze period. The former is 4 months long and the latter is about 2
> months long.
> 
> During development period, contributors submit patches to be reviewed and
> committed into xen.git. All feature patches must be committed before a date,
> which is normally called the "cut-off date", after which the freeze period
> starts. There will be a date before which all patches that wish to be merged
> for the release should be posted -- it is normally called the "last posting
> date" and it is normally two weeks before the "cut-off date".
> 
> During freeze period, the tree is closed for new features. Only bug fixes are
> accepted. This period can be shorter or longer than 2 months. If it ends up
> longer than 2 months, it eats into the next development period.
> 
> Here is a conjured up example (use ````cal 2017```` to get an idea):
> 
> * Development period: 2017 June 11 - 2017 September 29
>    * the "cut-off date" is 2017 September 29
>    * the "last posting date" is 2017 September 15
> * Freeze period: 2017 October 2 - 2017 December 7
>    * the anticipated release date is 2017 December 7
> 
> # The different roles in a Xen release
> 
> ## Release Manager
> 
> A trusted developer in the community that owns the release process. The major
> goal of the Release Manager is to make sure a Xen release has high quality
> and doesn't slip too much.
> 
> The Release Manager will not see much workload during development period, but
> expects to see increasing workload during the freeze period until the final
> release. He or she is expected to keep track of issues, arrange RCs,
> negotiate with relevant stakeholders, balance the need from various parties
> and make difficult decisions when necessary.
> 
> The Release Manager essentially owns xen-unstable branch during the freeze
> period. The committers will act on the wishes of the Release Manager during
> that time.
> 
> ## Maintainers
> 
> A group of trusted developers who are responsible for certain components in
> xen.git. They are expected to respond to patches / questions with regard to
> their components in a timely manner, especially during the freeze period.
> 
> ## Committers
> 
> A group of trusted maintainers who can commit to xen.git. During the
> development window they normally push things as they see fit. During the
> freeze period they transfer xen-unstable branch ownership and act on the
> wishes of the Release Manager. That normally means they need to have an
> Release Ack in order to push a patch.
> 
> ## Contributors
> 
> Contributors are also expected to respond quickly to any issues regarding the
> code they submitted during development period. Failing that, the Release
> Manager might decide to revert the changes, declare feature unsupported or
> take any action he / she deems appropriate.
> 
> ## The Security Team
> 
> The Security Team operates independently. The visibility might be rather
> limited due to the sensitive nature of security work. The best action the
> Release Manager can take is to set aside some time for potential security
> issues to be fixed.
> 
> ## The Release Technician
> 
> The Release Technician is the person who tags various trees, prepares tarball
> etc. He or she acts on the wishes of the Release Manager. Please make sure
> the communication is as clear as it can be.
> 
> ## The Community Manager
> 
> The Community Manager owns xenproject.org infrastructure. He or she is
> responsible for updating various web archives, updating wiki pages and
> coordinating with the PR Personnel.
> 
> ## The PR Personnel
> 
> They are responsible for coordinating with external reporters to publish Xen
> release announcement. The Release Manager should be absolutely sure the
> release is going out on a particular date before giving them the signal to
> proceed, because there is a point of no return once they schedule a date with
> external reporters.
> 
> # What happens during a release
> 
> ## Development period
> 
> Send out monthly update email. The email contains the timeline of the
> release, the major work items and any other information the Release Manager
> sees fit. Reminders should also be sent one week before important dates (see
> above, "last posting date" and "cut-off date"). Please consider adding
> relevant events to your calendar.
> 
> Occasionally check the status of the xen-unstable branch, make sure it gets
> timely pushes to master.
> 
> ## Freeze period
> 
> Before or at very early stage of the freeze period, agree with the Community
> Manager a schedule for RC test days.
> 
> Once the freeze starts, the ownership of xen-unstable branch automatically
> transfers to the Release Manager. The Release Manager can say "not releasing
> now" because of too many bugs, "until someone fixes these", or "no more
> patches until X, Y, and Z happen".
> 
> Here is a list of things to do for making RCs:
> 
> 1. Check the status of the tree. Ask the Release Technician to make an RC if
> the tree is good.
> 
> 2. Send an email to xen-devel, xen-users and xen-announce to announce the RC.
> 
> 3. Branch and / or reopen the tree for further feature submission if
> appropriate.
> 
> 4. Collect and track any issues reported, determine their severity, prod
> relevant developers and maintainers to fix the issues.
> 
> 5. When patches to fix issues are posted, determine if the patches are good to
> be included.
> 
> 6. Go back to 1.
> 
> It is normally OK in the early RCs that you hand back xen-unstable branch to
> committers so that they can commit bug fixes at will. As we approach late
> RCs, the standard for accepting a patch will get higher and higher. Please
> communicate clearly when committers can commit at will and when formal
> Release Ack is needed.
> 
> At the same time, work with the Community Manager, PR Personnel and
> Contributors to gather a list of features for the release. Discuss the
> support status of new features with stakeholders. Help prepare the press
> release, write a blog post for the release.

1. Collate a list of major changes: this should be done in collaboration
between Release Manager, PR Personnel and key contributors. This should
*not* be done on a public mailing list, to minimize the risk of release
related media stories being published before the release date.

2. PR Personnel will identify feature highlights, a theme for the press
release, companies providing supporting quotes for the press release and
media outlets we would want to reach out to and will manage the creation
of the press release in private.

3. The Community Manager will also draft blog post with the help of PR
Personnel and Release Manager, which will be published under the name
of the Release Manager.

4. The Community Manager will create release related documentation such
as Acknowledgements, Feature List, Man Pages and Release Notes on the
wiki accessible via a release category. This can be done in public.

5. PR Personnel will get stake-holder and Advisory Board approval for
the press release (1-2 weeks before the release).

> 
> When you think all pending issues are fixed and Xen is ready to be released
> from the last RC:
> 
> 1. Send out commit moratorium emails to committers@.
> 
> 2. Check all the trees (mini-os, qemu-trad, qemu-xen, seabios, ovmf etc).
> They have the correct commits and all security patches applied. There will be
> tools provided.
> 

3. Negotiate release date options with PR personnel. Typically we needs 3-4
days to line up press briefings with reporters under embargo. PR personnel
will also need to consider industry events to ensure that PR is effective.
PR releases typically done mid-week (Tuesday - Thursday).

> 3. Select the release date.

4.

> 
> 4. Check with relevant stake-holders (typically community manager) whether
> wiki documentation and PR is in good shape (for an example see
> https://wiki.xenproject.org/wiki/Category:Xen_4.9
> <https://wiki.xenproject.org/wiki/Category:Xen_4.9>)

5.

> 
> 5. Obtain a formal go-ahead from

6.

> 
>    * the Community Manager
>    * the Release Technician
> 
>    Ask them to dry-run their checklist and confirm everything is OK. If not,
>    arrange another RC and restart this checklist.
> 
> 6. Give PR Personnel go-ahead, and instruct Release Technician to make
> release deliverables (tags and tarballs - will usually be in place the day
> before the release).

7. Give PR Personnel final go-ahead, and instruct Release Technician to make
release deliverables (tags and tarballs - will usually be in place the day
before the release). At this point, PR collateral will be sent to reporters
(typically 2-3 working days before the release date) and we cannot undo
publications without questions being asked and risk of negative PR. It is
acceptable to make a xen-devel@ announcement *before* the PR release date
(blog, xen-announce@, press release).

> 
> 7. Make the announcement on various mailing list, publish the blog post.

8.

> 
> Allow for contingencies. It is not uncommon that some last minute (security or
> not) bugs are discovered. To provide a fix takes time, the test of the fix
> will also take time. Allow for at least 1 week from getting a fix to getting
> a push. For security bugs, coordinate with the Security Team to adjust the
> dates according to our security policy.
> 
> ## Hand over of Release Manager responsibility
> 
> If there is a new Release Manager for the next release, make sure the
> following things happen for the new Release Manager.
> 
> 1. A JIRA (xenproject.atlassian.net) is created and proper permissions granted.
> 2. Access to community test infrastructure is granted.
> 3. Access to mailing list moderation panel is granted.
> 4. An account for blog.xenproject.org is created.
> 5. An account for wiki.xenproject.org is created.
> 
> # Email templates and scripts
> 
> Note: if you want specific actions from committers, please make sure you CC
> committers@.
> 
> ## RC emails
> 
> ```
> Subject: Xen X.Y rcZ
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> Xen X.Y rcZ is tagged. You can check that out from xen.git:
> 
> git://xenbits.xen.org/xen.git X.Y.0-rcZ
> 
> For your convenience there is also a tarball at:
> https://downloads.xenproject.org/release/xen/X.Y.0-rcZ/xen-X.Y.0-rcZ.tar.gz
> 
> And the signature is at:
> https://downloads.xenproject.org/release/xen/X.Y.0-rcZ/xen-X.Y.0-rcZ.tar.gz.sig
> 
> Please send bug reports and test reports to xen-devel@lists.xenproject.org.
> When sending bug reports, please CC relevant maintainers and me
> (abc@xyz.com).
> 
> As a reminder, there will be another Xen Test Day.
> 
> See instructions on: URL_TO_TEST_INSTRUCTIONS
> ```
> 
> ## Forego control of the tree
> 
> ```
> Subject: No Release Ack needed before RcX
> 
> Committers,
> 
> The tree is in good state. No release ack is needed before RcX. Please commit
> bug fixes at will.
> 
> $RM
> ```
> 
> ## Commit moratorium
> 
> ```
> Subject: Commit moratorium for $REASON
> 
> Committers,
> 
> Please don't push any new patch to staging because $REASON.
> 
> Another email will be sent once the moratorium is lifted.
> 
> $RM
> ```
> 
> ## Lift commit moratorium
> 
> ```
> Subject: Commit moratorium is lifted for $REASON
> 
> Committers,
> 
> The commit moratorium is lifted, please commit patches that are already
> Release-acked.
> 
> $RM
> ```
> 
> ## Reminder of last posting date
> 
> ```
> Subject: Last posting date for Xen X.Y is $DATE
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> The last posting date for Xen X.Y is $DATE. If you want your features to be
> included for the release, please make sure they are posted for the first
> time before $DATE.
> 
> $RM
> ```
> 
> ## Reminder of cut-off date
> 
> ```
> Subject: Cut-off date for Xen X.Y is $DATE
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> The cut-off date for Xen X.Y is $DATE. If you want your features to be
> included for the release, please make sure they are committed by $DATE.
> 
> $RM
> ```
> 
> ## Release announcement
> 
> ```
> Subject: [ANNOUNCEMENT] Xen X.Y is released
> 
> Dear community members,
> 
> I'm pleased to announce that Xen X.Y.0 is released.
> 
> Please find the tarball and its signature at:
> 
> https://xenproject.org/downloads/xen-archives/xen-project-xy-series/xen-project-xy0.html
> 
> You can also check out the tag in xen.git:
> 
>   https://xenbits.xen.org/git-http/xen.git RELEASE-X.Y.0
> 
> Git checkout and build instructions can be found at:
> 
> https://wiki.xenproject.org/wiki/Xen_Project_X.Y_Release_Notes#Build_Requirements
> 
> Release notes can be found at:
> 
>   https://wiki.xenproject.org/wiki/Xen_Project_X.Y_Release_Notes
> 
> A summary for X.Y release documents can be found at:
> 
>   https://wiki.xenproject.org/wiki/Category:Xen_X.Y
> 
> Technical blog post for X.Y can be found at:
> 
>  URL_TO_BLOG
> 
> Thanks everyone who contributed to this release. This release would
> not have happened without all the awesome contributions from around
> the globe.
> 
> Regards,
> 
> $RM (on behalf of the Xen Project Hypervisor team)
> ```
> 
> 
> ## Script to generate months update emails
> 
> ```
> #!/bin/bash
> # Use ssmtp for simplicity
> # ./xen | formail -f -s /usr/sbin/sendmail -bm -t
> 
> FILE=`mktemp`
> cat << EOF > $FILE
> 
> == Hypervisor ==
> 
> S: Boot Xen on EFI platforms using GRUB2 (multiboot2 protocol)
> O: Daniel Kiper
> E: dkiper@net-space.pl
> 
> === x86 ===
> 
> === ARM ===
> 
> == Toolstack ==
> 
> EOF
> 
> 
> AWK_FILE=`mktemp`
> cat << EOF > $AWK_FILE
> BEGIN { s2_count = 1;score = ""; emails=1; first_time = 1; subject=""}
> /== /  {
> 	if ( subject != "" )  {
> 		if (score != "")
> 			print "* ", subject,  "("score")"
> 		else
> 			print "* ", subject;
> 		for (i = 1; i <= s2_count; i++) {
> 			if (i in s2)
> 				print " ",s2[i];
> 		}
> 		for (i = 1; i <= count; i++) {
> 			if (i in o)
> 				print "  -", o[i]
> 		}
> 		if (emails)
> 			print ""
> 		first_time = 1;
> 		subject=""
> 		email=""
> 		score=""
> 		count = 1;
> 		s2_count = 1;
> 		delete s;
> 		delete s2;
> 		delete o;
> 		delete e;
> 	}
> 	print \$0,"\n"
> 	}
> /;/ { };
> /S:/	{
> 	if ( !first_time )  {
> 		if (score != "")
> 			print "* ", subject,  "("score")"
> 		else
> 			print "* ", subject
> 		for (i = 1; i <= s2_count; i++) {
> 			if (i in s2)
> 				print " ",s2[i];
> 		}
> 		for (i = 1; i <= count; i++) {
> 			if (i in o)
> 				print "  -", o[i]
> 		}
> 		if (emails)
> 			print ""
> 	}
> 	first_time = 0;
> 	sub(\$1, "");
> 	sub(/^[ \t]+/, "");
> 	subject=\$0;
> 	email=""
> 	count = 1;
> 	s2_count = 1;
> 	delete s;
> 	delete s2;
> 	delete o;
> 	delete e;
> 	score="";
> 	}
> /O:/	{ sub(\$1, ""); o[count++]=\$0; };
> /S2:/	{ sub(\$1, ""); s2[s2_count++]=\$0;};
> /E:/	{ sub(\$1, ""); sub(/^[ \t]+/, ""); email=\$0; e[emails++]=\$0;};
> /P:/	{ sub(\$1, ""); sub(/^[ \t]+/, ""); score=\$0; };
> END	{
> 	}
> // {  }
> EOF
> AWK_FILE_EMAIL=`mktemp`
> cat << EOF > $AWK_FILE_EMAIL
> BEGIN { emails=1;}
> /E:/	{
> 	sub(\$1, ""); sub(/^[ \t]+/, "");
> 	email=\$0;
> 	for ( i = 1; i <= emails; i++ ) {
> 		if (i in e) {
> 			if (e[i] == email) {
> 				email="";
> 				break;
> 			}
> 		}
> 	}
> 	if (email != "")
> 		e[emails++]=email;
> }
> END	{
> 	printf "Bcc: "
> 	for ( i = 1; i <= emails; i++ )
> 		if (i in e) {
> 			if (i == emails - 1)
> 				printf "<%s>", e[i];
> 			else
> 				printf "<%s>,", e[i];
> 		}
> 	print ""
> 	}
> // {  }
> EOF
> 
> echo "From: abc@xyz.com"
> echo "To: xen-devel@lists.xenproject.org"
> echo "Cc: abc@xyz.com"
> cat $FILE | awk -f $AWK_FILE_EMAIL
> rm $AWK_FILE_EMAIL
> 
> echo "Subject: Xen $XEN_RELEASE Development Update"
> PRE=`mktemp`
> cat << EOF > $PRE
> 
> This email only tracks big items for xen.git tree. Please reply for items you
> woulk like to see in $XEN_RELEASE so that people have an idea what is going on and
> prioritise accordingly.
> 
> You're welcome to provide description and use cases of the feature you're
> working on.
> 
> = Timeline =
> 
> We now adopt a fixed cut-off date scheme. We will release twice a
> year. The upcoming $XEN_RELEASE timeline are as followed:
> 
> * Last posting date: $LAST_POSTING_DATE
> * Hard code freeze: $CUT_OFF_DATE
> * RC1: TBD
> * Release: $RELEASE_DATE
> 
> Note that we don't have freeze exception scheme anymore. All patches
> that wish to go into $XEN_RELEASE must be posted no later than the last posting
> date. All patches posted after that date will be automatically queued
> into next release.
> 
> RCs will be arranged immediately after freeze.
> 
> = Projects =
> 
> EOF
> 
> # Preamble
> cat $PRE
> rm $PRE
> # Body
> cat $FILE | awk -f $AWK_FILE
> rm $AWK_FILE
> rm $FILE
> ````
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Xen-devel mailing list
> Xen-devel@lists.xen.org
> https://lists.xen.org/xen-devel


[-- Attachment #1.2: Message signed with OpenPGP --]
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_______________________________________________
Xen-devel mailing list
Xen-devel@lists.xen.org
https://lists.xen.org/xen-devel

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread

* Re: A document for Xen release management, v2
  2017-07-26 14:31 ` Lars Kurth
@ 2017-07-26 14:51   ` Wei Liu
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Wei Liu @ 2017-07-26 14:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Lars Kurth
  Cc: Juergen Gross, Lars Kurth, Wei Liu, Julien Grall, Committers,
	xen-devel

On Wed, Jul 26, 2017 at 03:31:29PM +0100, Lars Kurth wrote:
> Hi all,
> 
> > On 25 Jul 2017, at 14:25, Wei Liu <wei.liu2@citrix.com> wrote:
> > 
> > Hi all
> > 
> > This is v2 of this document.
> > 
> > Lars, please insert your section as you see fit.
> 
> Done + some other minor mods

Merged into my repo.

_______________________________________________
Xen-devel mailing list
Xen-devel@lists.xen.org
https://lists.xen.org/xen-devel

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread

* Re: A document for Xen release management, v2
  2017-07-25 13:25 A document for Xen release management, v2 Wei Liu
  2017-07-26 14:31 ` Lars Kurth
@ 2017-07-27 10:30 ` Julien Grall
  2017-07-27 11:28   ` Wei Liu
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Julien Grall @ 2017-07-27 10:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Wei Liu, Xen-devel; +Cc: Juergen Gross, Lars Kurth, Committers



On 25/07/17 14:25, Wei Liu wrote:
> Hi all

Hi Wei,

Sorry for the late reply.

> ## Script to generate months update emails

I have an updated script on which include jira ticket, version number:

#!/bin/bash
# Use ssmtp for simplicity
# ./status-release.sh | formail -f -s /usr/sbin/ssmtp -bm -t

FILE=`mktemp`
cat << EOF > $FILE

== Hypervisor ==

S: Per-cpu tasklet
O: Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk
E: konrad.wilk@oracle.com
J: XEN-28

=== x86 ===

=== ARM ===

== Completed ==

S:
EOF


AWK_FILE=`mktemp`
cat << EOF > $AWK_FILE
BEGIN { s2_count = 1;score = ""; emails=1; first_time = 1; subject=""}
/== /  {
	if ( subject != "" )  {
		if (score != "")
			print "* ", subject,  "("score")"
        else if (version != "")
            print "* ", subject, "("version")";
        else
            print "* ", subject;
		for (i = 1; i <= s2_count; i++) {
			if (i in s2)
				print " ",s2[i];
		}
		if (bug != "")
			print "  Link: https://bugs.xenproject.org/xen/bug/"bug
		if (jira != "")
            print "  -  "jira
		for (i = 1; i <= count; i++) {
			if (i in o)
				print "  -", o[i]
		}
		if (emails)
			print ""
		first_time = 1;
		subject=""
		email=""
		score=""
		bug=""
        jira=""
        version=""
		count = 1;
		s2_count = 1;
		delete s;
		delete s2;
		delete o;
		delete e;
	}
	print \$0,"\n"
	}
/;/ { };
/S:/	{
	if ( !first_time )  {
		if (score != "")
			print "* ", subject,  "("score")"
        else if (version != "")
            print "* ", subject, "("version")";
		else
			print "* ", subject
		for (i = 1; i <= s2_count; i++) {
			if (i in s2)
				print " ",s2[i];
		}
		if (bug != "")
			print "  Link: https://bug.xenproject.org/xen/bug/"bug
		if (jira != "")
            print "  -  "jira
		for (i = 1; i <= count; i++) {
			if (i in o)
				print "  -", o[i]
		}
		if (emails)
			print ""
	}
	first_time = 0;
	sub(\$1, "");
	sub(/^[ \t]+/, "");
	subject=\$0;
	email=""
	bug=""
    jira=""
	count = 1;
	s2_count = 1;
	delete s;
	delete s2;
	delete o;
	delete e;
	score="";
    version="";
	}
/O:/	{ sub(\$1, ""); o[count++]=\$0; };
/S2:/	{ sub(\$1, ""); s2[s2_count++]=\$0;};
/E:/	{ sub(\$1, ""); sub(/^[ \t]+/, ""); email=\$0; e[emails++]=\$0;};
/P:/	{ sub(\$1, ""); sub(/^[ \t]+/, ""); score=\$0; };
/B:/	{ sub(\$1, ""); sub(/^[ \t]+/, ""); bug=\$0; };
/J:/	{ sub(\$1, ""); sub(/^[ \t]+/, ""); jira=\$0; };
/V:/    { sub(\$1, ""); sub(/^[ \t]+/, ""); version=\$0; };
END	{
	}
// {  }
EOF
AWK_FILE_EMAIL=`mktemp`
cat << EOF > $AWK_FILE_EMAIL
BEGIN { emails=1;}
/E:/	{
	sub(\$1, ""); sub(/^[ \t]+/, "");
	email=\$0;
	for ( i = 1; i <= emails; i++ ) {
		if (i in e) {
			if (e[i] == email) {
				email="";
				break;
			}
		}
	}
	if (email != "")
		e[emails++]=email;
}
END	{
	printf "Bcc: "
	for ( i = 1; i <= emails; i++ )
		if (i in e) {
			if (i == emails - 1)
				printf "<%s>", e[i];
			else
				printf "<%s>,", e[i];
		}
	print ""
	}
// {  }
EOF

echo "From: $RELEASE_MANAGER_NAME <$RELEASE_MANAGER_MAIL>"
echo "To: xen-devel@lists.xenproject.org"
echo "Cc: $RELEASE_MANAGER_MAIL"
cat $FILE | awk -f $AWK_FILE_EMAIL
rm $AWK_FILE_EMAIL

echo "Subject: Xen $RELEASE_VERSION Development Update"
PRE=`mktemp`
cat << EOF > $PRE

This email only tracks big items for xen.git tree. Please reply for items you
woulk like to see in $RELEASE_VERSION so that people have an idea what is going on and
prioritise accordingly.

You're welcome to provide description and use cases of the feature you're
working on.

= Timeline =

We now adopt a fixed cut-off date scheme. We will release twice a
year. The upcoming $RELEASE_VERSION timeline are as followed:

* Last posting date: $RELEASE_CUTOFF
* Hard code freeze: $RELEASE_FREEZE
* RC1: TBD
* Release: $RELEASE_DATE

Note that we don't have freeze exception scheme anymore. All patches
that wish to go into $RELEASE_VERSION must be posted no later than the last posting
date. All patches posted after that date will be automatically queued
into next release.

RCs will be arranged immediately after freeze.

We recently introduced a jira instance to track all the tasks (not only big)
for the project. See: https://xenproject.atlassian.net/projects/XEN/issues.

Most of the tasks tracked by this e-mail also have a corresponding jira task
referred by XEN-N.

I have started to include the version number of series associated to each
feature. Can each owner send an update on the version number if the series
was posted upstream?

= Projects =

EOF

POST=`mktemp`
cat <<EOF > $POST

EOF

# Preamble
cat $PRE
rm $PRE
# Body
cat $FILE | awk -f $AWK_FILE
rm $AWK_FILE
rm $FILE
cat $POST
rm $POST

-- 
Julien Grall

_______________________________________________
Xen-devel mailing list
Xen-devel@lists.xen.org
https://lists.xen.org/xen-devel

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread

* Re: A document for Xen release management, v2
  2017-07-27 10:30 ` Julien Grall
@ 2017-07-27 11:28   ` Wei Liu
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Wei Liu @ 2017-07-27 11:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Julien Grall; +Cc: Juergen Gross, Xen-devel, Lars Kurth, Wei Liu, Committers

On Thu, Jul 27, 2017 at 11:30:11AM +0100, Julien Grall wrote:
> 
> 
> On 25/07/17 14:25, Wei Liu wrote:
> > Hi all
> 
> Hi Wei,
> 
> Sorry for the late reply.
> 
> > ## Script to generate months update emails
> 
> I have an updated script on which include jira ticket, version number:
> 

Merged. Thanks.

_______________________________________________
Xen-devel mailing list
Xen-devel@lists.xen.org
https://lists.xen.org/xen-devel

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2017-07-27 11:28 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 5+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2017-07-25 13:25 A document for Xen release management, v2 Wei Liu
2017-07-26 14:31 ` Lars Kurth
2017-07-26 14:51   ` Wei Liu
2017-07-27 10:30 ` Julien Grall
2017-07-27 11:28   ` Wei Liu

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