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+=====================
+Development workflows
+=====================
+
+This page explains the workflows a developer is expected to follow to
+implement the goals that are part of the Ceph release cycle. It does not
+go into technical details and is designed to provide a high level view
+instead. Each chapter is about a given goal such as ``Merging bug
+fixes or features`` or ``Publishing point releases and backporting``.
+
+A key aspect of all workflows is that none of them blocks another. For
+instance, a bug fix can be backported and merged to a stable branch
+while the next point release is being published. For that specific
+example to work, a branch should be created to avoid any
+interference. In practice it is not necessary for Ceph because:
+
+* there are few people involved
+* the frequency of backports is not too high
+* the reviewers, who know a release is being published, are unlikely
+ to merge anything that may cause issues
+
+This ad-hoc approach implies the workflows are changed on a regular
+basis to adapt. For instance, ``quality engineers`` were not involved
+in the workflow to publish ``dumpling`` point releases. The number of
+commits being backported to ``firefly`` made it impractical for developers
+tasked to write code or fix bugs to also run and verify the full suite
+of integration tests. Inserting ``quality engineers`` makes it
+possible for someone to participate in the workflow by analyzing test
+results.
+
+The workflows are not enforced when they impose an overhead that does
+not make sense. For instance, if the release notes for a point release
+were not written prior to checking all integration tests, they can be
+commited to the stable branch and the result sent for publication
+without going through another run of integration tests.
+
+Release Cycle
+=============
+
+::
+
+ Ceph hammer infernalis
+ Developer CDS CDS
+ Summit | |
+ | |
+ development | |
+ release | v0.88 v0.89 v0.90 ... | v9.0.0
+ --v--^----^--v---^------^--v- ---v----^----^--- 2015
+ | | | |
+ stable giant | | hammer
+ release v0.87 | | v0.94
+ | |
+ point firefly dumpling
+ release v0.80.8 v0.67.12
+
+
+Four times a year, the development roadmap is discussed online during
+the `Ceph Developer Summit <http://tracker.ceph.com/projects/ceph/wiki/Planning#Ceph-Developer-Summit>`_. A
+new stable release (hammer, infernalis, jewel ...) is published at the same
+frequency. Every other release (firefly, hammer, jewel...) is a `Long Term
+Stable (LTS) <../../releases>`_. See `Understanding the release cycle
+<../../releases#understanding-the-release-cycle>`_ for more information.
+
+Merging bug fixes or features
+=============================
+
+The development branch is ``master`` and the workflow followed by all
+developers can be summarized as follows:
+
+* The developer prepares a series of commits
+* The developer submits the series of commits via a pull request
+* A reviewer is assigned the pull request
+* When the pull request looks good to the reviewer, it is merged into
+ an integration branch by the tester
+* After a successful run of integration tests, the pull request is
+ merged by the tester
+
+The ``developer`` is the author of a series of commits. The
+``reviewer`` is responsible for providing feedback to the developer on
+a regular basis and the developer is invited to ping the reviewer if
+nothing happened after a week. After the ``reviewer`` is satisfied
+with the pull request, (s)he passes it to the ``tester``. The
+``tester`` is responsible for running teuthology integration tests on
+the pull request. If nothing happens within a month the ``reviewer`` is
+invited to ping the ``tester``.
+
+Resolving bug reports and implementing features
+===============================================
+
+All bug reports and feature requests are in the `issue tracker
+<http://tracker.ceph.com>`_ and the workflow can be summarized as
+follows:
+
+* The reporter creates the issue with priority ``Normal``
+* A developer may pick the issue right away
+* During a bi-weekly bug scrub, the team goes over all new issue and
+ assign them a priority
+* The bugs with higher priority are worked on first
+
+Each ``team`` is responsible for a project, managed by leads_.
+
+.. _leads: index#Leads
+
+The ``developer`` assigned to an issue is responsible for it. The
+status of an open issue can be:
+
+* ``New``: it is unclear if the issue needs work.
+* ``Verified``: the bug can be reproduced or showed up multiple times
+* ``In Progress``: the developer is working on it this week
+* ``Pending Backport``: the fix needs to be backported to the stable
+ releases listed in the backport field
+
+For each ``Pending Backport`` issue, there exists at least one issue
+in the ``Backport`` tracker to record the work done to cherry pick the
+necessary commits from the master branch to the target stable branch.
+See `the backporter manual
+<http://tracker.ceph.com/projects/ceph-releases/wiki/HOWTO>`_ for more
+information.
+
+Running and interpreting teuthology integration tests
+=====================================================
+
+The :doc:`/dev/sepia` runs `teuthology
+<https://github.com/ceph/teuthology/>`_ integration tests `on a regular basis <http://tracker.ceph.com/projects/ceph-releases/wiki/HOWTO_monitor_the_automated_tests_AKA_nightlies#Automated-tests-AKA-nightlies>`_ and the
+results are posted on `pulpito <http://pulpito.ceph.com/>`_ and the
+`ceph-qa mailing list <https://ceph.com/irc/>`_.
+
+* The job failures are `analyzed by quality engineers and developers
+ <http://tracker.ceph.com/projects/ceph-releases/wiki/HOWTO_monitor_the_automated_tests_AKA_nightlies#List-of-suites-and-watchers>`_
+* If the cause is environmental (e.g. network connectivity), an issue
+ is created in the `sepia lab project
+ <http://tracker.ceph.com/projects/lab/issues/new>`_
+* If the bug is known, a pulpito URL to the failed job is added to the issue
+* If the bug is new, an issue is created
+
+The ``quality engineer`` is either a developer or a member of the QE
+team. There is at least one integration test suite per project:
+
+* `rgw <https://github.com/ceph/ceph/tree/master/qa/suites/rgw>`_ suite
+* `CephFS <https://github.com/ceph/ceph/tree/master/qa/suites/fs>`_ suite
+* `rados <https://github.com/ceph/ceph/tree/master/qa/suites/rados>`_ suite
+* `rbd <https://github.com/ceph/ceph/tree/master/qa/suites/rbd>`_ suite
+
+and many others such as
+
+* `upgrade <https://github.com/ceph/ceph/tree/master/qa/suites/upgrade>`_ suites
+* `power-cyle <https://github.com/ceph/ceph/tree/master/qa/suites/powercycle>`_ suite
+* ...
+
+Preparing a new release
+=======================
+
+A release is prepared in a dedicated branch, different from the
+``master`` branch.
+
+* For a stable releases it is the branch matching the release code
+ name (dumpling, firefly, etc.)
+* For a development release it is the ``next`` branch
+
+The workflow expected of all developers to stabilize the release
+candidate is the same as the normal development workflow with the
+following differences:
+
+* The pull requests must target the stable branch or next instead of
+ master
+* The reviewer rejects pull requests that are not bug fixes
+* The ``Backport`` issues matching a teuthology test failure and set
+ with priority ``Urgent`` must be fixed before the release
+
+Cutting a new stable release
+============================
+
+A new stable release can be cut when:
+
+* all ``Backport`` issues with priority ``Urgent`` are fixed
+* integration and upgrade tests run successfully
+
+Publishing a new stable release implies a risk of regression or
+discovering new bugs during the upgrade, no matter how carefully it is
+tested. The decision to cut a release must take this into account: it
+may not be wise to publish a stable release that only fixes a few
+minor bugs. For instance if only one commit has been backported to a
+stable release that is not a LTS, it is better to wait until there are
+more.
+
+When a stable release is to be retired, it may be safer to
+recommend an upgrade to the next LTS release instead of
+proposing a new point release to fix a problem. For instance, the
+``dumpling`` v0.67.11 release has bugs related to backfilling which have
+been fixed in ``firefly`` v0.80.x. A backport fixing these backfilling
+bugs has been tested in the draft point release ``dumpling`` v0.67.12 but
+they are large enough to introduce a risk of regression. As ``dumpling``
+is to be retired, users suffering from this bug can
+upgrade to ``firefly`` to fix it. Unless users manifest themselves and ask
+for ``dumpling`` v0.67.12, this draft release may never be published.
+
+* The ``Ceph lead`` decides a new stable release must be published
+* The ``release master`` gets approval from all leads
+* The ``release master`` writes and commits the release notes
+* The ``release master`` informs the ``quality engineer`` that the
+ branch is ready for testing
+* The ``quality engineer`` runs additional integration tests
+* If the ``quality engineer`` discovers new bugs that require an
+ ``Urgent Backport``, the release goes back to being prepared, it
+ was not ready after all
+* The ``quality engineer`` informs the ``publisher`` that the branch
+ is ready for release
+* The ``publisher`` `creates the packages and sets the release tag
+ <../release-process>`_
+
+The person responsible for each role is:
+
+* Sage Weil is the ``Ceph lead``
+* Sage Weil is the ``release master`` for major stable releases
+ (``firefly`` 0.80, ``hammer`` 0.94 etc.)
+* Loic Dachary is the ``release master`` for stable point releases
+ (``firefly`` 0.80.10, ``hammer`` 0.94.1 etc.)
+* Yuri Weinstein is the ``quality engineer``
+* Alfredo Deza is the ``publisher``
+
+Cutting a new development release
+=================================
+
+The publication workflow of a development release is the same as
+preparing a new release and cutting it, with the following
+differences:
+
+* The ``next`` branch is reset to the tip of ``master`` after
+ publication
+* The ``quality engineer`` is not required to run additional tests,
+ the ``release master`` directly informs the ``publisher`` that the
+ release is ready to be published.
+
+Publishing point releases and backporting
+=========================================
+
+The publication workflow of the point releases is the same as
+preparing a new release and cutting it, with the following
+differences:
+
+* The ``backport`` field of each issue contains the code name of the
+ stable release
+* There is exactly one issue in the ``Backport`` tracker for each
+ stable release to which the issue is backported
+* All commits are cherry-picked with ``git cherry-pick -x`` to
+ reference the original commit
+
+See `the backporter manual
+<http://tracker.ceph.com/projects/ceph-releases/wiki/HOWTO>`_ for more
+information.