A Storybook release process based on Semver. In short:
-
Merge bugfix PRs directly into master automatically release (~daily)
-
Merge feature and breaking PRs into a release branch (e.g.
release/3.2
) and release features in groups along with a marketing push after a preview period (~monthly) -
Consensus on critical infrastructure/bugs that are needed before we can do a minor release, so that we pay down our tech debt as we go.
During the Storybook 3.x transition we've undergone a series of growing pains as we've opened up the development process. We've had questions about:
- how to adhere to semver?
- how to do marketing releases (while adhering to semver)?
- how to introduce significant new features (e.g. vue support, story hierarchy)?
- how to converge on key design decisions (e.g. new addons API)?
- how to schedule releases?
- how to maintain quality/stability through the process?
- how to pay down tech debt as we go?
This process attempts to address all these concerns in one shot.
Semver dictates three types of release:
- MAJOR version when you make incompatible API changes,
- MINOR version when you add functionality in a backwards-compatible manner, and
- PATCH version when you make backwards-compatible bug fixes.
We'll do our best to adhere to Semver, but won't be religious about it. In particular, we may occasionally release small bits of new functionality in PATCH releases. We'll try our best to restrict breaking changes to MAJOR releases.
Every bugfix should go out as soon as we've verified the fix, and based on the
current rate of contribution, we should be issuing PATCH releases multiple times per week.
Soon we'll automate the process so that a release will go out every time a PR is
merged into master
, and we've already laid most of the groundwork for this.
Every new feature, particularly significant ones (e.g. Vue support, deep hierarchy for stories) deserves more attention:
- They should be well-tested by the community before we release.
- They often have architectural implications for the entire Storybook ecosystem, so should be discussed thoroughly before release. Doing
alpha
releases allow us to test in the community without necessarily achieving agreement. For example, currentlyVue
support is inalpha
, although it contains potentially controversial changes to addons. - They often deserve proper marketing treatment (blog posts, release announcement, podcast, etc.)
Therefore we merge these into a release branch of the form release/MAJOR.MINOR
and we create preview releases and get them tested by the community before
merging those branches into master
.
NOTE: it is possible to edit the
base
branch in a PR, so we can expect users to issue PRs tomaster
, but as maintainers as we see feature releases we should set them to merge into the appropriate release branch.
In general we should release 2-3 headline features per minor release for marketing purposes. Each headline feature should get its own blog post on the Storybook medium publication, and the release itself should also get a blog post.
We should avoid major releases, and should try to do these at most 1-2x per year. Ideally each breaking change would have been agreed upon by the maintainers and validated in backwards-compatible feature releases. At some point once a change has been thoroughly vetted, we deprecate the old way and give some time for people to upgrade to the new way. Finally MAJOR releases should have killer features that reward users for upgrading, and should not be used to scratch our own architectural itches -- unless those itches are really killing development in some meaningful way.
Most PATCH releases come from community members, who generously fix problems as they come up. However, there are also bugs that never get picked up and just sit there gathering upvotes and "me too" comments. We need a way to make sure that these bugs get addressed.
For every non-PATCH release, we nominate a small number of bugs that must be addressed before a release can go out by adding them to the milestone. For example, here's a list of blocking bugs for the 3.2 milestone.
Adding bugs to the milestone helps people looking for good ways to contribute,
or to understand what is blocking the release so they can actually do something
about it. Discussion about which bugs are critical happens in the #maintenance
channel in our Slack
If you're experiencing a bug, the best way to make sure that it gets attention is to upvote it by adding a "thumbs-up" reaction in Github. This way important bugs quickly bubble to the top with a search.
And of course, the best way to make sure a bug gets addressed quickly is to fix it yourself and issue a PR. If the fix is good, we'll try to release it quickly in a patch release.
- For PATCH changes, all discussion can occur in issue/PR comments (and random slack chat as needed).
- For MINOR feature changes, there are multiple stages of discussion:
- The feature may be discussed in an issue before it is implemented (ex: #151)
- Once it's implemented, the discussion may be occur on the PR (ex: #1329)
- If people disagree on an implementation and it can't be resolved in discussion, they may issue alternative PR's with different ideas
- Ultimately the maintainers will reach a consensus before merging the changes. There is no set process for this, but we're all adults.
- Since MINOR features are released in alpha before they are fully released, new issues may be created by end users, etc.
- For MAJOR infrastructural changes, the discussion may take place over time, in gists like this one, issues, slack discussions, etc.
- Once the breaking changes have been reduced to an actual implementation, it looks pretty much like a feature release (only with higher stakes and probably a longer stabilization process).
- For PATCH PR's, any maintainer can review, test, approve, and merge it.
- For MINOR/MAJOR PR's, once a maintainer reviews, tests, and approves it, s/he should clear it with the other maintainers before merging it into the release branch.