Hi, Yesterday I completed the 14.2.4 release by jumping a few procedures that should've been followed, mainly communicating with the release manager and the team involved in sending out the release announcement.
There was a sense of urgency since the 14.2.3 release introduced issues with the ceph-volume tool which breaks deployment tools that capture stderr/stdout (see https://tracker.ceph.com/issues/41660) The release process started on Friday (!) and finished late yesterday. I'm following up with the release manager to get the proper notes out, like I mentioned he was unaware of the ongoing release (my fault). Let me know if you have any questions (or complaints!) while we try to get this sorted out. -Alfredo On Tue, Sep 17, 2019 at 7:49 AM Janne Johansson <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > Den tis 17 sep. 2019 kl 12:52 skrev Yoann Moulin <[email protected]>: >> >> Hello, >> >> >>> Never install packages until there is an announcement. >> >>> >> >> My reaction was not on this specific release but with this sentence : « >> Never install packages until there is an announcement. » And also with >> this one : « If you need to do installs all the time, and can not postpone >> until the repo settle. Consider rsyncing the repo after a release, >> and use that for installs. » This sound crazy to me. > > > I would have to agree with this. If these statements are true: > 1) devs say: don't install unless there is an announcement out > 2) devs have previously dropped new releases before posting the announcement > and told people it was a mistake to "yum upgrade"/"apt upgrade" before > announcement > > then the solution seems very simple, do NOT populate the repos with packages > that your users shouldn't install until release notes are out. > > I am well aware of that 100s of things around packaging and testing a release > is hard, times the amount of platforms and arches you support, but to the > untrained eye, not pushing packages out seems like quite a binary thing. > Either you press whatever button there is that pushes the files out, or you > don't press it. > > If there is a reason for people to not run packages until a certain condition > is true, then don't press that hypothetical button until you get convinced > that the condition is. > > Among all other things that are hard about releases, that can't be the worst? > > -- > May the most significant bit of your life be positive. > > > _______________________________________________ > ceph-users mailing list -- [email protected] > To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected] _______________________________________________ ceph-users mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]
