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maturity-matrix.yaml
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maturity-matrix.yaml
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# OpenTelemetry is a complex project with many moving parts. Thankfully, we
# strive to keep those parts loosely coupled where we can (this has been a goal
# since the very announcement of OpenTelemetry, per this blog post:
# https://medium.com/opentracing/merging-opentracing-and-opencensus-f0fe9c7ca6f0)
#
# This file describes the structure of the project and its sub-components,
# definitions of API and stability maturity levels, and finally records the
# current maturity of each component. We maintain this file as YAML in order to
# make it easier to automate scripts (e.g., for the website) that present the
# data to OpenTelemetry end-users.
###############################################################################
# MATURITY LEVELS
#
# OpenTelemetry components advertise their own maturity along two axes:
# - PRODUCTION MATURITY: How reliable is this component from a
# production-readiness standpoint?
# - API MATURITY: How stable is the component's API from a backwards- and
# forwards-compatibility standpoint)?
#
# In some cases, for instance, OpenTelemetry components may be immature from an
# API maturity standpoint, yet be nearly 100% safe from a production standpoint
# – and vice versa. Similarly, end-users may have more tolerance for lost
# development time or software stability depending on their situation, so we
# strive to separate self-reported maturity along these two axes.
#
# Needless to say, representations here are best-effort, and there is no
# substitute for a mature release process. I.e., don't blindly deploy "mature"
# OpenTelemetry components (or any software, for that matter!).
productionMaturityLevels:
# "unknown" maturity is just what it purports to be. It's reasonable to
# assume "unstable", but we separate "unknown" and "unstable" to distinguish
# between a lack of evidence about production maturity and actual evidence of
# immaturity.
- unknown
# "unstable" components are not recommended for production workloads. They
# may crash the process, introduce performance artifacts, or have known
# security issues.
- unstable
# "beta" components have been used successfully in production workloads at
# scale: that is, the component is used in support of well-known product
# functionality at publicly-held companies. Nevertheless, either due to
# the uncertainty introduced by active development or a small number of
# production environments, they should still be used cautiously in new
# deployments. They do not have known security issues.
- beta
# "stable" components are, to the best of the author's knowledge, safe for
# typical production use cases.
- stable
# All OpenTelemetry APIs follow semver conventions (i.e., after v1.x,
# backwards-incompatible changes should bump the major version number).
apiMaturityLevels:
# "unimplemented" APIs do not exist yet for the component/language.
- unimplemented
# "notApplicable" APIs do not and will never exist for the component/language
# because they are, well, not applicable. For instance, a
# zero-code-modification auto-instrumentation agent would be notApplicable
# for C99.
- notApplicable
# "alpha" maturity APIs can change in incompatible ways at any time.
- alpha
# "beta" maturity APIs should not introduce backwards-incompatible changes
# more than once every three months; and when those changes are introduced, the
# authors will make a best effort to provide compatibility bridges.
#
# Also, for an API to be considered "beta", it must be supported by at least
# two complete implementations, and at least one of those must be for a
# well-known OSS project (e.g., Jaeger or Prometheus).
- beta
# "stable" maturity APIs should not introduce backwards-incompatible changes
# more than once every twelve months, and will make every effort to provide
# compatibility bridges if at all possible.
- stable