Hi Willem,

I can explain a bit from my experience as a user of Camel and CXF at my former employer regarding patch releases.

We updated our stack every 6 to 8 months. With CXF this mostly simply worked. When some bug was detected we could create an issue and help fix it. It went into the next patch release and we could
update to this one instead of the feature release.

With Camel it was different. Every new release had a lot of new features and changes. So we almost every time found a bug in the release that prevented us to switch or that was a problem in production that needed to be addressed. What went very well in Camel was reporting and fixing bugs. I think Camel is probably the project I used where fixes to bugs were made fastest. The problem was that the fix was only on trunk. Then later it was incorporated into the new version. So my first strategy was to update to the most current camel release when a bug was found and fixed. The problem was that we almost every time found another problem in the new release. So what I did in the end was building our own release with the patches to the bugs we had. This worked very well but not every customer wants to do this.

Patch releases like 2.7.3 give the customer the fixes they need without the breaking changes that cause new bugs. So from a customer standpoint patch releases are very valueable. Of course they make life for us more complicated so I think we should mostly only support one patch release and one feature release at the same time. Of course a company like Fuse or Talend can also do patch releases on their own but I think it is better to have these releases at apache so it is transparent to the customer what is in each release and he has no fear of vendor lock in.

Christian




Am 06.07.2011 04:09, schrieb Willem Jiang:
Hi Hadrian,

I think we are ready for the Camel 2.8.0 release.
But I'm not sure why you are still planing to do the patch release for the 2.7.x as we never do this kind small patch release unless it relates to a serious security issue before.

Can we just let the people move on to Camel 2.8.0 instead of confusing about what's difference between the Camel 2.8.0 and Camel 2.7.3 ?

On 7/5/11 12:11 PM, Hadrian Zbarcea wrote:
Karaf 2.2.2 is now available and Willem did the upgrade. I think we can
get ready to start the release. Are there any other issues that must go
into 2.8.0?

I would also build a 2.7.3 at the same time, there are a few fixes and
improvements, including some around xmlsecurity.

Thoughts?
Hadrian


On 06/30/2011 11:07 PM, Willem Jiang wrote:
Hi,

I just applied the patch into trunk.

On 7/1/11 12:36 AM, Donald Whytock wrote:
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CAMEL-3948

On Thu, Jun 30, 2011 at 12:35 PM, Donald Whytock<dwhyt...@gmail.com>
wrote:
Just a reminder...CAMEL-3948 is marked as fixed, but the current trunk
still needs my final patch.

Don

On Thu, Jun 30, 2011 at 2:46 AM, Jean-Baptiste
Onofré<j...@nanthrax.net> wrote:
Hi Claus,

Regarding Karaf 2.2.2, I've released OPS4J dependencies yesterday.
Jamie
will cut off the release this afternoon.

Regards
JB

On 06/30/2011 08:31 AM, Claus Ibsen wrote:

Hi

Okay the JIRA roadmap for Camel 2.8 seems good now. There is 2 open
tickets.
- https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CAMEL-3774
- https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CAMEL-4144

CAMEL-3774 is about generating the manual and is assigned to Hadrian.

CAMEL-4144 is about upgrading to Karaf 2.2.2. That release is in
progress.
So by good chance we should be able to pickup that version when its
released.
Alternatively we can stick to Karaf 2.2.1 which works fine.
(CAMEL-4144 is about some maven validate goal that would require
Karaf
2.2.2 to pickup a fix in Karaf, but running Camel in Karaf is
absolutely fine)

The CI servers also seems good. Although they tend to run out of
memory at the end, such as when testing the examples. But those are
the last piece of the build, and thus all components tests fine.

I suggest that when Karaf 2.2.2 is out we git it a few spins on
the CI
servers and then start cutting the Camel 2.8 release. Would be
good to
get it out before the summer vacation starts. As well its more than 3
months since Camel 2.7 was released.



On Mon, Jun 27, 2011 at 9:35 AM, Claus Ibsen<claus.ib...@gmail.com>
wrote:

Hi

Okay we should really start focusing on getting the last tickets
which
has been assigned for 2.8 release done now.
There is about 350 tickets on the roadmap, so its going to be the
biggest release, since 2.0 went GA.

So please take a look at your assigned tickets and get them done, or
move them for 2.9.
Then keep eyes on CI servers and help fix any test failures, so we
have green builds.

The summer vacation period is approaching so we should IMHO get the
2.8 release out early next month if possible.


On Thu, Jun 9, 2011 at 2:47 PM, Hadrian Zbarcea<hzbar...@gmail.com>
wrote:

Hi,

I would propose starting to close down and prepare for the 2.8.0
release
in
2-3 weeks. There are already 282 issues for 2.8.0 and chances are
will
be
over 300 by the release time, probably setting a new record.

As of now there are 17 issues unresolved, a few of them almost
done, so
by
next week I assume there'll be significantly less. I would suggest
shifting
the focus from adding new features to stabilizing the build. If
there
are
any issues you know of that you think absolutely must be in 2.8.0
please
shout and ask for help if needed (especially non committers
subscribing
to
this list).

Thoughts?

Hadrian




--
Claus Ibsen
-----------------
FuseSource
Email: cib...@fusesource.com
Web: http://fusesource.com
Twitter: davsclaus, fusenews
Blog: http://davsclaus.blogspot.com/
Author of Camel in Action: http://www.manning.com/ibsen/













--
Christian Schneider
http://www.liquid-reality.de

Open Source Architect
http://www.talend.com

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