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author | Dan Callahan <danc@element.io> | 2021-06-08 11:44:50 +0100 |
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committer | GitHub <noreply@github.com> | 2021-06-08 11:44:50 +0100 |
commit | 7dc14730d925a39a885a14ce309d99054f9617d5 (patch) | |
tree | 245c19599fdae8a9e832c3f88e92f8cb8a2d58da /docs/dev/git.md | |
parent | When joining a remote room limit the number of events we concurrently check s... (diff) | |
download | synapse-7dc14730d925a39a885a14ce309d99054f9617d5.tar.xz |
Name release branches just after major.minor (#10013)
With the prior format, 1.33.0 / 1.33.1 / 1.33.2 got separate branches: release-v1.33.0 release-v1.33.1 release-v1.33.2 Under the new model, all three would share a common branch: release-v1.33 As before, RCs and actual releases exist as tags on these branches. This better reflects our support model, e.g., that the "1.33" series had a formal release followed by two patches / updates. Signed-off-by: Dan Callahan <danc@element.io>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/dev/git.md')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/dev/git.md | 8 |
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/docs/dev/git.md b/docs/dev/git.md index b747ff20c9..87950f07b2 100644 --- a/docs/dev/git.md +++ b/docs/dev/git.md @@ -122,15 +122,15 @@ So, what counts as a more- or less-stable branch? A little reflection will show that our active branches are ordered thus, from more-stable to less-stable: * `master` (tracks our last release). - * `release-vX.Y.Z` (the branch where we prepare the next release)<sup + * `release-vX.Y` (the branch where we prepare the next release)<sup id="a3">[3](#f3)</sup>. * PR branches which are targeting the release. * `develop` (our "mainline" branch containing our bleeding-edge). * regular PR branches. The corollary is: if you have a bugfix that needs to land in both -`release-vX.Y.Z` *and* `develop`, then you should base your PR on -`release-vX.Y.Z`, get it merged there, and then merge from `release-vX.Y.Z` to +`release-vX.Y` *and* `develop`, then you should base your PR on +`release-vX.Y`, get it merged there, and then merge from `release-vX.Y` to `develop`. (If a fix lands in `develop` and we later need it in a release-branch, we can of course cherry-pick it, but landing it in the release branch first helps reduce the chance of annoying conflicts.) @@ -145,4 +145,4 @@ most intuitive name. [^](#a1) <b id="f3">[3]</b>: Very, very occasionally (I think this has happened once in the history of Synapse), we've had two releases in flight at once. Obviously, -`release-v1.2.3` is more-stable than `release-v1.3.0`. [^](#a3) +`release-v1.2` is more-stable than `release-v1.3`. [^](#a3) |