[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Xen 4.16 - Last Posting Date - 24th September



As a reminder:

All new features and substantial refactorings, intended for Xen 4.16,
must be posted by xen-devel by the end of this coming Friday, the 24th
of Septebmer.

Patch series first posted after that date will be eligible for
subsequent Xen releases, but not Xen 4.16.


Full release schedule for Xen 4.16 (recap):

  Friday 24th September                 Last posting date

    Patches adding new features should be posted to the mailing list
    by this cate, although perhaps not in their final version.
    (3 weeks)

  Friday 15th October                   Feature freeze
 
    Patches adding new features should be committed by this date.
    Straightforward bugfixes may continue to be accepted by
    maintainers.
    (3 weeks)

  Friday 5th November **tentatve**      Code freeze

    Bugfixes only, all changes to be approved by the Release Manager,
    on the basis of a (progressively stricter[*]) risk assessment.
    (2 weeks)

  Friday 19th November **tentative**    Hard code freeze [*]

    Bugfixes for serious bugs (including regressions), and low-risk
    fixes only.
    (0.5 weeks)

  Tuesday 23rd November **tentative**   Branch off staging-4.16
                                        
    xen-unstable open again - with caveats to avoid release disruption.
    (1.5 weeks)

  Friday 3rd December **tentative**     Final commits (docs/prep only)
  Week of 6th December **tentative**    Release
    (probably Tuesday or Wednesday)

Any patches containing substantial refactoring are to treated as
new features, even if they intent is to fix bugs.

Freeze exceptions will not be routine, but may be granted in
exceptional cases for small changes (on the basis of risk assessment,
like any release-ack).  Large series will not get exceptions.
Contributors *must not* rely on, or expect, a freeze exception, or
release schedule slip.

If as a feature proponent you feel your feature is at risk and there
is something the Xen Project could do to help, please consult me or
ask here on xen-devel.  In such situations please reach out earlier
rather than later.  I will try to put you in touch with people who may
be able to help.

[*] The distinction between Code Freeze and Hard Code Freeze is a
matter of degree, not kind; the Hard Code Freeze data and associated
tighter policy text is indicative rather than normative.

Thanks,
Ian.



 


Rackspace

Lists.xenproject.org is hosted with RackSpace, monitoring our
servers 24x7x365 and backed by RackSpace's Fanatical Support®.