BigW Consortium Gitlab
Skip to content
Projects
Groups
Snippets
Help
This project
Loading...
Sign in / Register
Toggle navigation
G
gitlab-ce
Project
Overview
Details
Activity
Cycle Analytics
Repository
Repository
Files
Commits
Branches
Tags
Contributors
Graph
Compare
Charts
Issues
0
Issues
0
List
Board
Labels
Milestones
Merge Requests
0
Merge Requests
0
Registry
Registry
Wiki
Wiki
Snippets
Snippets
Members
Members
Collapse sidebar
Close sidebar
Activity
Graph
Charts
Create a new issue
Commits
Issue Boards
Open sidebar
Forest Godfrey
gitlab-ce
Commits
fbd4b7ae
Commit
fbd4b7ae
authored
Jul 31, 2017
by
Douwe Maan
Browse files
Options
Browse Files
Download
Plain Diff
Merge branch 'add-regressions-explanation' into 'master'
Explain what the regression label means Closes #35065 See merge request !13190
parents
0d52e59d
38dc8c0c
Show whitespace changes
Inline
Side-by-side
Showing
1 changed file
with
19 additions
and
1 deletion
+19
-1
PROCESS.md
PROCESS.md
+19
-1
No files found.
PROCESS.md
View file @
fbd4b7ae
...
...
@@ -128,7 +128,7 @@ information, see
### After the 7th
Once the stable branch is frozen, only fixes for
regressions (bugs introduced in that same release
)
Once the stable branch is frozen, only fixes for
[
regressions
](
#regressions
)
and security issues will be cherry-picked into the stable branch.
Any merge requests cherry-picked into the stable branch for a previous release will also be picked into the latest stable branch.
These fixes will be shipped in the next RC for that release if it is before the 22nd.
...
...
@@ -158,6 +158,24 @@ release should have the correct milestone assigned _and_ have the label
Merge requests without a milestone and this label will
not be merged into any stable branches.
### Regressions
A regression for a particular monthly release is a bug that exists in that
release, but wasn't present in the release before. This includes bugs in
features that were only added in that monthly release. Every regression
**must**
have the milestone of the release it was introduced in - if a regression doesn't
have a milestone, it might be 'just' a bug!
For instance, if 10.5.0 adds a feature, and that feature doesn't work correctly,
then this is a regression in 10.5. If 10.5.1 then fixes that, but 10.5.3 somehow
reintroduces the bug, then this bug is still a regression in 10.5.
Because GitLab.com runs release candidates of new releases, a regression can be
reported in a release before its 'official' release date on the 22nd of the
month. When we say 'the most recent monthly release', this can refer to either
the version currently running on GitLab.com, or the most recent version
available in the package repositories.
## Release retrospective and kickoff
### Retrospective
...
...
Write
Preview
Markdown
is supported
0%
Try again
or
attach a new file
Attach a file
Cancel
You are about to add
0
people
to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Cancel
Please
register
or
sign in
to comment