title: “Release Plan for Gerrit 3.6” tags: news keywords: news permalink: 2022-02-24-gerrit-3.6-release-plan.html summary: “Release Plan for Gerrit 3.6” hide_sidebar: true hide_navtoggle: true toc: true

High Level Release Plan

DateActivity
Apr 11Create stable-3.6 branch, Release ‘3.6.0-rc0’
Apr 18Release 3.6.0-rc1
Apr 25Release 3.6.0-rc2
May 2Release 3.6.0-rc3
May 9Release 3.6.0-rc4
May 9 - May 13Gerrit/JGit London Hackathon (see below)
May 16Release 3.6.0-rc5
May 23Final release of 3.6.0

Change Acceptance Policy for the Stable Branch

We don't expect that all ongoing feature development will be completed before the stable branch is created, so we will allow the completion of existing features on the stable branch to bring features to completion until rc3.

The development of new features is very rarely accepted on the stable branch as it may compromise the stability of the release.

After rc3 only E2E test and associated bug fixes will be accepted on the stable branch.

We would prefer that bug fixes are pushed for review directly onto the stable branch, rather than onto master to be cherry-picked back. The reason for this is to avoid that the release managers need to spend time manually checking which changes need to be backported, which could result in changes being overlooked.

Gerrit/JGit London Hackathon

After 2 years of work from home policy and remote interactions, the Gerrit hackathon is back, sponsored and hosted by GerritForge Ltd in London, White City Place.

This year, GerritForge is focusing on making Gerrit faster for mono-repos and therefore encourages all the JGit contributors and committers to join the event.

We will also ask the community members to allocate some of their time during the hackathon to help with finalizing the release:

  • Test the release candidates.
  • Report issues.
  • Triage and troubleshoot incoming bug reports.
  • Make fixes.
  • Do code reviews.
  • Test the latest head of the stable branch.

To expedite reviews of Library-Compliance and frontend changes, we will ask Google to make some members available in the EU time-zone.

NOTE: for all of those who cannot travel or is still blocked by travelling restrictions GerritForge will setup a remote collaboration channel where anyone around the world could join the hackathon remotely.

End-to-end Testing

We plan to use the Gatling e2e test framework for Git, developed by GerritForge and Ericsson, to test the stability of the release on a production-like setup on AWS automatically provisioned using the aws-gerrit templates.

GerritForge has also offered its own AWS infrastructure to test the scalability of Gerrit v3.6, particularly with medium to large sized projects and in a multi-primary setup.

The Gerrit-CI has also an automated aws-gerrit pipeline that will be pointed to the stable-3.6 branch and run on a daily basis.

UPDATE: The e2e test period has been extended by 1 more week and a new v3.6.0-rc5 is going to be released on the 16th of May. The extra test is necessary to address the Issue 40014797 which is impacting the migration process.

End of Life for Gerrit 3.3.x

Per the support policy mentioned on the project homepage, after 3.6.0 is released 3.3.x will reach end of life and will no longer be actively supported.

Support for 3.5.x and 3.4.x will continue as usual. Users of 3.3.x or earlier are recommended to upgrade to one of these versions.