Hey All,

It sounds like the general consensus is in favor of time-based releases. We
can continue the discussion about LTS, but I wanted to go ahead and get
things moving forward by volunteering to manage the next release, which is
currently slated for October. If that sounds OK, I'll draft a release plan
and send it out to the community for feedback and a vote.

Thanks,
Jason

On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 2:03 PM, Ofir Manor <ofir.ma...@equalum.io> wrote:

> I happily agree that Kafka is a solid and the community is great :)
> But I think there is a gap in perception here.
> For me, LTS means that someone is actively taking care of a release -
> actively backporting critical fixes (security, stability, data loss,
> corruption, hangs etc) from trunk to that LTS version periodically for an
> extended period of time, for example 18-36 months... So people can really
> rely on the same Kafka version for a long time.
> Is someone doing it today for 0.9.0? When is 0.9.0.2 expected? When is
> 0.8.2.3 expected? Will they cover all known critical issues for whoever
> relies on them in production?
> In other words, what is the scope of support that the community want to
> commit for older versions? (upgrade compatibility? investigating bug
> reports? proactively backporting fixes?)
> BTW, another legit option is that the Apache Kafka project won't commit to
> LTS releases. It could let commercial vendors compete on supporting very
> old versions. I find that actually quite reasonable as well.
>
> Ofir Manor
>
> Co-Founder & CTO | Equalum
>
> Mobile: +972-54-7801286 | Email: ofir.ma...@equalum.io
>
> On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 8:19 PM, Andrew Schofield <
> andrew_schofield_j...@outlook.com> wrote:
>
> > I agree that the Kafka community has managed to maintain a very high
> > quality level, so I'm not concerned
> > about the quality of non-LTS releases. If the principle is that every
> > release is supported for 2 years, that
> > would be good. I suppose that if the burden of having that many
> in-support
> > releases proves too heavy,
> > as you say we could reconsider.
> >
> > Andrew Schofield
> >
> > ----------------------------------------
> > > From: g...@confluent.io
> > > Date: Thu, 25 Aug 2016 09:57:30 -0700
> > > Subject: Re: [DISCUSS] Time-based releases for Apache Kafka
> > > To: dev@kafka.apache.org
> > >
> > > I prefer Ismael's suggestion for supporting 2-years (6 releases)
> > > rather than have designated LTS releases.
> > >
> > > The LTS model seems to work well when some releases are high quality
> > > (LTS) and the rest are a bit more questionable. It is great for
> > > companies like Redhat, where they have to invest less to support few
> > > releases and let the community deal with everything else.
> > >
> > > Until now the Kafka community has managed to maintain very high
> > > quality level. Not just for releases, our trunk is often of better
> > > quality than other project's releases - we don't think of stability as
> > > something you tuck into a release (and just some releases) but rather
> > > as an on-going concern. There are costs to doing things that way, but
> > > in general, I think it has served us well - allowing even conservative
> > > companies to run on the latest released version.
> > >
> > > I hope we can agree to at least try maintaining last 6 releases as LTS
> > > (i.e. every single release is supported for 2 years) rather than
> > > designate some releases as better than others. Of course, if this
> > > totally fails, we can reconsider.
> > >
> > > Gwen
> > >
> > > On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 9:51 AM, Andrew Schofield
> > > <andrew_schofield_j...@outlook.com> wrote:
> > >> The proposal sounds pretty good, but the main thing currently missing
> > is a proper long-term support release.
> > >>
> > >> Having 3 releases a year sounds OK, but if they're all equivalent and
> > bugfix releases are produced for the most
> > >> recent 2 or 3 releases, anyone wanting to run on an "in support"
> > release of Kafka has to upgrade every 8-12 months.
> > >> If you don't actually want anything specific from the newer releases,
> > it's just unnecessary churn.
> > >>
> > >> Wouldn't it be better to designate one release every 12-18 months as a
> > long-term support release with bugfix releases
> > >> produced for those for a longer period of say 24 months. That halves
> > the upgrade work for people just wanting to keep
> > >> "in support". Now that adoption is increasing, there are plenty of
> > users that just want a dependable messaging system
> > >> without having to be deeply knowledgeable about its innards.
> > >>
> > >> LTS works nicely for plenty of open-source projects. I think it would
> > work well for Kafka too.
> > >>
> > >> Andrew Schofield
> > >>
> > >> ----------------------------------------
> > >>> From: ofir.ma...@equalum.io
> > >>> Date: Thu, 25 Aug 2016 16:07:07 +0300
> > >>> Subject: Re: [DISCUSS] Time-based releases for Apache Kafka
> > >>> To: dev@kafka.apache.org
> > >>>
> > >>> Regarding bug fixes, you may want to consider to have an LTS release
> > once a
> > >>> year - designating it for longer-term support / better for the
> masses.
> > >>> If you like that - then fix bugs in trunk, backport important ones to
> > >>> latest release + the last two LTS releases.
> > >>> Even if you don't - if a downstream distribution picks a Kafka
> version
> > and
> > >>> plans to support it over a few years, it could be nice of them to
> "own"
> > >>> that older release - volunteer to be a release manager for bug
> > backports to
> > >>> that version over a longer period...
> > >>> Just my two cents :)
> > >>>
> > >>> Ofir Manor
> > >>>
> > >>> Co-Founder & CTO | Equalum
> > >>>
> > >>> Mobile: +972-54-7801286 | Email: ofir.ma...@equalum.io
> > >>>
> > >>> On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 12:32 PM, Ismael Juma <ism...@juma.me.uk>
> > wrote:
> > >>>
> > >>>> Thanks for putting this together Gwen. I think it sounds reasonable
> > and
> > >>>> instead of trying to optimise every aspect of it ahead of time
> (which
> > is
> > >>>> hard, subjective and time-consuming), I am happy to try what is
> being
> > >>>> proposed and tweak based on experience. One thing we should pay
> > particular
> > >>>> attention to is how the stabilisation process works out in practice.
> > >>>>
> > >>>> A couple of comments:
> > >>>>
> > >>>> "Given 3 releases a year and the fact that no one upgrades three
> > times a
> > >>>> year, we propose making sure (by testing!) that rolling upgrade can
> > be done
> > >>>> from each release in the past year (i.e. last 3 releases) to the
> > latest
> > >>>> version."
> > >>>>
> > >>>> Because the cost of doing this for a larger number of releases is
> > >>>> relatively low, I still think we should go for 6 here (our code
> > currently
> > >>>> supports 5 versions as I said in a previous message, so we're close
> > to that
> > >>>> target already). I'm generally very keen to make upgrades as easy as
> > >>>> possible so that people have no reason not to upgrade. :)
> > >>>>
> > >>>> "We will also attempt, as a community to do bugfix releases as
> needed
> > for
> > >>>> the last 3 releases."
> > >>>>
> > >>>> I would suggest 2, personally, but since this is a bit fuzzy, I am
> OK
> > with
> > >>>> 3 if people prefer that.
> > >>>>
> > >>>> Ismael
> > >>>>
> > >>>> On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 6:22 AM, Gwen Shapira <g...@confluent.io>
> > wrote:
> > >>>>
> > >>>>> Hi Team Kafka,
> > >>>>>
> > >>>>> As per the KIP meeting, I created a wiki:
> > >>>>> https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/KAFKA/Time+
> > >>>> Based+Release+Plan
> > >>>>> Summarizing most of the discussion so far.
> > >>>>>
> > >>>>> Comments and additional discussion is welcome :)
> > >>>>>
> > >>>>> Gwen
> > >>>>>
> > >>>>> On Wed, Aug 17, 2016 at 12:31 PM, Vahid S Hashemian
> > >>>>> <vahidhashem...@us.ibm.com> wrote:
> > >>>>>> Time-based releases is a good idea and something that has proved
> to
> > be
> > >>>>>> working in a number of open source projects. One successful
> example
> > is
> > >>>>>> Node.js, that goes through two major releases a year. The
> > interesting
> > >>>>> fact
> > >>>>>> about the two releases is that only one (the even-number release)
> > comes
> > >>>>>> with a long term support (LTS) plan (30 months). More can be read
> > here:
> > >>>>>> https://github.com/nodejs/LTS. The odd-number releases still come
> > with
> > >>>>>> major changes and help build the ecosystem, but as far as LTS
> goes,
> > >>>> there
> > >>>>>> is only one per year. This LTS plan makes most enterprises want to
> > >>>> stick
> > >>>>>> to even-number releases, which is okay since frequent upgrades is
> > not
> > >>>>>> something they are normally interested in anyway.
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> There could be several minor releases (non-breaking) in between
> > major
> > >>>>>> releases. A major release contains all the features / bug fixes in
> > the
> > >>>>>> master branch a month before the release date, with the potential
> > >>>>> addition
> > >>>>>> of (non-breaking) bug fixes until the release day. The deprecation
> > >>>> cycle
> > >>>>>> is one major release: any functionality that is decided to be
> > removed
> > >>>> is
> > >>>>>> deprecated in the next major release, and removed in the major
> > release
> > >>>>>> after that.
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> Because of the success of LTS models in this and other open source
> > >>>>>> projects, I would suggest implementing a formal LTS plan for Kafka
> > too.
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> Regards,
> > >>>>>> --Vahid
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> From: Gwen Shapira <g...@confluent.io>
> > >>>>>> To: dev@kafka.apache.org
> > >>>>>> Date: 08/09/2016 04:49 PM
> > >>>>>> Subject: [DISCUSS] Time-based releases for Apache Kafka
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> Dear Kafka Developers and Users,
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> In the past, our releases have been quite unpredictable. We'll
> > notice
> > >>>>>> that a large number of nice features made it in (or are close),
> > >>>>>> someone would suggest a release and we'd do it. This is fun, but
> > makes
> > >>>>>> planning really hard - we saw it during the last release which we
> > >>>>>> decided to delay by a few weeks to allow more features to "land".
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> Many other communities have adopted time-based releases
> successfully
> > >>>>>> (Cassandra, GCC, LLVM, Fedora, Gnome, Ubuntu, etc.). And I thought
> > it
> > >>>>>> will make sense for the Apache Kafka community to try doing the
> > same.
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> The benefits of this approach are:
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> 1. A quicker feedback cycle and users can benefit from features
> > >>>>>> quicker (assuming for reasonably short time between releases - I
> was
> > >>>>>> thinking 4 months)
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> 2. Predictability for contributors and users:
> > >>>>>> * Developers and reviewers can decide in advance what release they
> > are
> > >>>>>> aiming for with specific features.
> > >>>>>> * If a feature misses a release we have a good idea of when it
> will
> > >>>> show
> > >>>>>> up.
> > >>>>>> * Users know when to expect their features
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> 3. Transparency - There will be a published cut-off date (AKA
> > feature
> > >>>>>> freeze) for the release and people will know about it in advance.
> > >>>>>> Hopefully this will remove the contention around which features
> make
> > >>>>>> it.
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> 4. Quality - we've seen issues pop up in release candidates due to
> > >>>>>> last-minute features that didn't have proper time to bake in. More
> > >>>>>> time between feature freeze and release will let us test more,
> > >>>>>> document more and resolve more issues.
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> Since nothing is ever perfect, there will be some downsides:
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> 1. Most notably, features that miss the feature-freeze date for a
> > >>>>>> release will have to wait few month for the next release. Features
> > >>>>>> will reach users faster overall as per benefit #1, but individual
> > >>>>>> features that just miss the cut will lose out
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> 2. More releases a year mean that being a committer is more work -
> > >>>>>> release management is still some headache and we'll have more of
> > >>>>>> those. Hopefully we'll get better at it. Also, the committer list
> is
> > >>>>>> growing and hopefully it will be less than once-a-year effort for
> > each
> > >>>>>> committer.
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> 3. For users, figuring out which release to use and having
> frequent
> > >>>>>> new releases to upgrade to may be a bit confusing.
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> 4. Frequent releases mean we need to do bugfix releases for older
> > >>>>>> branches. Right now we only do bugfix releases to latest release.
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> I think the benefits outweigh the drawbacks. Or at least suggest
> > that
> > >>>>>> its worth trying - we can have another discussion in few releases
> to
> > >>>>>> see if we want to keep it that way or try something else.
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> My suggestion for the process:
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> 1. We decide on a reasonable release cadence
> > >>>>>> 2. We decide on release dates (even rough estimate such as "end of
> > >>>>>> February" or something) and work back feature freeze dates.
> > >>>>>> 3. Committers volunteer to be "release managers" for specific
> > >>>>>> releases. We can coordinate on the list or on a wiki. If no
> > committer
> > >>>>>> volunteers, we assume the community doesn't need a release and
> skip
> > >>>>>> it.
> > >>>>>> 4. At the "feature freeze" date, the release manager announces the
> > >>>>>> contents of the release (which KIPs made it in on time), creates
> the
> > >>>>>> release branch and starts the release process as usual. From this
> > >>>>>> point onwards, only bug fixes should be double-committed to the
> > >>>>>> release branch while trunk can start collecting features for the
> > >>>>>> subsequent release.
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> Comments and improvements are appreciated.
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>> Gwen Shapira
> > >>>>>> Former-release-manager
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>>
> > >>>>>
> > >>>>>
> > >>>>>
> > >>>>> --
> > >>>>> Gwen Shapira
> > >>>>> Product Manager | Confluent
> > >>>>> 650.450.2760 | @gwenshap
> > >>>>> Follow us: Twitter | blog
> > >>>>>
> > >>>>
> > >>
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > --
> > > Gwen Shapira
> > > Product Manager | Confluent
> > > 650.450.2760 | @gwenshap
> > > Follow us: Twitter | blog
> >
> >
>

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