Hi Rick,
> At that point interested members of the community can beat up the
software in the release branch, looking for bugs.

Maybe you have already thought about this, but I think it will be useful to have two testing cycles.

The release plan could accomodate something like the following:
...
 a) Release candidate -1 (initial jars) for the community to do testing
 b) Testing for 2 or 3 weeks
 c) Resolve/Fix the bugs found in (b)
 d) Release candidate - 2 (potential to be the final release)
 e) Testing for  2 weeks or less (depending on the amount of fixes made in (c), will allow testing of those fixes too)
...


Regards,
Rajesh
 
 

On 2/13/06, Rick Hillegas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi Kathey,

I'm imagining the following chronology:

o April 7 - The last feature-laden patches post to JIRA.

o The community spends a couple weeks vetting those final patches.

o Once the final patches are committed (end of April?), we cut a release
branch. Feature work for 10.3 resumes in the trunk.

o At that point interested members of the community can beat up the
software in the release branch, looking for bugs.

o This goes on for another couple weeks. During this period, bug fixes
are committed against the release branch and ported to the mainline trunk.

o Sometime (mid-May?) we declare victory on the release branch. We
throttle changes to it.

o We spend another couple weeks generating and vetting release candidates.

o Sometime (early June?) we publish the production-quality 10.2 release.

I would define the top two bug priorities as:

Blocker = Intolerable defects which prevent us from publishing a
release. For instance: data corruptions, new problems which have no
workarounds, reintroduced customer-reported bugs which were fixed in
previous releases.
Critical = Serious bugs we intend to fix for 10.2. These include wrong
query results and significant, old, unfixed bugs inherited from previous
releases.

I would like to aim for fixing all Critical bugs. What are your thoughts?

Regards,
-Rick




Kathey Marsden wrote:

>Rick Hillegas wrote:
>
>
>
>>Would the community support an April 7 code-freeze date? If so, could
>>you help me by letting me know what you want to submit for this
>>release by that date?
>>
>>
>>
>Is April 7  feature freeze or should all bugs be fixed by that date? Do
>you have thoughts for what our exit criteria should be for 10.2 in terms
>of quality  and how we should identify  what bugs need to be addressed?
>I tend to think anything Blocker or Critical should be addressed before
>releasing 10.2 .  Next would be to define what goes into those categories.
>
>Kathey
>
>
>
>


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