Release Guide

These steps describe how to conduct a release of the operator-sdk repo using example versions. Replace these versions with the current and new version you are releasing, respectively.

Table of contents:

Prerequisites

MacOS users

Install GNU sed and make which may not be by default:

  1. brew install gnu-sed make

Verify that the version of make is higher than 4.2 using command make --version.

Add the gnubin directory to your PATH from your ~/.bashrc:

  1. echo 'export PATH="/usr/local/opt/make/libexec/gnubin:$PATH"' >> ~/.bashrc

Verify that the version of sed is higher than 4.3 using command gnu-sed --version.

Add the gnubin directory to your PATH from your ~/.bashrc:

  1. echo 'export PATH="/usr/local/opt/gnu-sed/libexec/gnubin:$PATH"' >> ~/.bashrc

Major and Minor releases

We will use the v1.3.0 release version in this example.

Before starting

  1. Before creating a new branch, a Netlify admin must add v1.13.x to Branch Deploys. This will watch for this branch when there are changes on Github (creating the branch, or adding a commit).
  2. Kick off a new build of the ansible-operator-base image by running the deploy-manual GitHub action. After the image is built, check the security scan results under Child Manifests.
  3. A release branch must be created. If you have the proper permissions, you can do this by running the following, assuming the upstream SDK is the upstream remote repo:
  1. git checkout master
  2. git pull
  3. git checkout -b v1.3.x
  4. git push -u upstream v1.3.x
  1. Make sure that the list of supported OLM versions stated in the Overview section of SDK docs is updated. If a new version of OLM needs to be officially supported, follow the steps in updating OLM bindata section.
  2. Create and merge a commit that updates the top-level Makefile variable IMAGE_VERSION to the upcoming release tag v1.3.0. This variable ensures sample projects have been tagged correctly prior to the release commit.
  1. sed -i -E 's/(IMAGE_VERSION = ).+/\1v1\.3\.0/g' Makefile
  1. Lock down the master branch to prevent further commits before the release completes:
  2. Go to Settings -> Branches in the SDK repo.
  3. Under Branch protection rules, click Edit on the master branch rule.
  4. In section Protect matching branches of the Rule settings box, increase the number of required approving reviewers to 6.

1. Create and push a release commit

Create a new branch to push the release commit:

  1. export RELEASE_VERSION=v1.3.0
  2. git checkout master
  3. git pull
  4. git checkout -b release-$RELEASE_VERSION

Run the pre-release make target:

  1. make prerelease

The following changes should be present:

  • changelog/generated/v1.3.0.md: commit changes (created by changelog generation).
  • changelog/fragments/*: commit deleted fragment files (deleted by changelog generation).
  • website/content/en/docs/upgrading-sdk-version/v1.3.0.md: commit changes (created by changelog generation).
  • website/config.toml: commit changes (modified by release script).

Commit these changes and push to your remote (assuming your remote is named origin):

  1. git add --all
  2. git commit -m "Release $RELEASE_VERSION"
  3. git push -u origin release-$RELEASE_VERSION

2. Create and merge a new PR

Create and merge a new PR for the commit created in step 1. You can force-merge your PR to the locked-down master if you have admin access to the operator-sdk repo, or ask an administrator to do so.

3. Unlock the master branch

Unlock the branch by changing the number of required approving reviewers in the master branch rule back to 1.

4. Create and push a release tag on master

Refresh your local master branch, tag the release PR commit, and push to the main operator-sdk repo (assumes the remote’s name is upstream):

  1. git checkout master
  2. git pull
  3. make tag
  4. git push upstream refs/tags/$RELEASE_VERSION

5. Fast-forward the latest and release branches

The latest branch points to the latest release tag to keep the main website subdomain up-to-date. Run the following commands to do so:

  1. git checkout latest
  2. git reset --hard refs/tags/$RELEASE_VERSION
  3. git push -f upstream latest

Similarly, to update the release branch, run:

  1. git checkout v1.3.x
  2. git reset --hard refs/tags/$RELEASE_VERSION
  3. git push -f upstream v1.3.x

6. Post release steps

  • Publish the new Netlify subdomain. Assuming that the Netlify prestep was done before the new branch was created, a new branch option should be visible to Netlify Admins and can be mapped to a subdomain. Please test that this subdomain works before announcing.
  • Make an operator-framework Google Group post.
  • Post to Kubernetes slack in #kubernetes-operators and #operator-sdk-dev.
  • In the GitHub milestone, bump any open issues to the following release.

Patch releases

We will use the v1.3.1 release version in this example.

Before starting

  1. Kick off a new build of the ansible-operator-base image by running the deploy-manual GitHub action. After the image is built, check the security scan results under Child Manifests.

0. Lock down release branches on GitHub

Lock down the v1.3.x branch to prevent further merges/commits.

To do this, edit the Branch protection rules: https://github.com/operator-framework/operator-sdk/settings/branches

  • click Edit on the v.* branch rule.
  • In section Protect matching branches of the Rule settings box, set “Required approving reviewers” to 6.

1. Branch

Create a new branch from the release branch (v1.3.x in this example). This branch should already exist prior to cutting a patch release.

  1. export RELEASE_VERSION=v1.3.1
  2. git checkout v1.3.x
  3. git pull
  4. git checkout -b release-$RELEASE_VERSION

2. Prepare the release commit

Using the version for your release as the IMAGE_VERSION, execute the following commands from the root of the project.

  1. # Update the IMAGE_VERSION in the Makefile
  2. sed -i -E 's/(IMAGE_VERSION = ).+/\1v1\.3\.1/g' Makefile
  3. # Run the pre-release `make` target:
  4. make prerelease
  5. # Regenerate testdata (samples).
  6. # NOTE: The sanity test will fail but scaffolding should complete.
  7. make test-sanity

All of the following changes should be present (and no others).

  • Makefile: IMAGE_VERSION should be modified to the upcoming release tag. (This variable ensures sampleprojects have been tagged correctpy priror to the release commit.)
  • changelog/: all fragments should be deleted and consolidated into the new file changelog/generated/v1.3.1.md
  • docs: If there are migration steps, a new migration doc will be created. The installation docs should also contain a link update.
  • testdata/: Generated samples and tests should have version bumps

Commit these changes and push these changes to your fork:

  1. git add --all
  2. git commit -sm "Release $RELEASE_VERSION"
  3. git push -u origin release-$RELEASE_VERSION

3. Create and merge Pull Request

  • Create a pull request against the v1.3.x branch.
  • Once approving review is given, merge. You may have to unlock the branch by setting “required approving reviewers” to back to 1. (See step 0).

4. Create a release tag

Pull down v1.3.x and tag it.

  1. git checkout v1.3.x
  2. git pull upstream v1.3.x
  3. make tag
  4. git push upstream refs/tags/$RELEASE_VERSION

5. Fast-forward the latest branch

If the patch release is on the latest y-stream (in the example you would not ff latest if there was a y-stream for v1.4.x), you will need to fast-forward the latest git branch.

(The latest branch points to the latest release tag to keep the main website subdomain up-to-date.)

  1. git checkout latest
  2. git reset --hard tags/$RELEASE_VERSION
  3. git push -f upstream latest

6. Post release steps

Note In case there are non-transient errors while building the release job, you must:

  1. Revert the release PR. To do so, create a PR which reverts step 2.
  2. Fix what broke in the release branch.
  3. Re-run the release with an incremented minor version to avoid Go module errors (ex. if v1.3.1 broke, then re-run the release as v1.3.2). Patch versions are cheap so this is not a big deal.

scorecard-test-kuttl image releases

The quay.io/operator-framework/scorecard-test-kuttl image is released separately from other images because it contains the kudobuilder/kuttl image, which is subject to breaking changes.

Release tags of this image are of the form: scorecard-kuttl/vX.Y.Z, where X.Y.Z is not the current operator-sdk version. For the latest version, query the operator-sdk repo tags for scorecard-kuttl/v.

The only step required is to create and push a tag. This example uses version v2.0.0, the first independent release version of this image:

  1. export RELEASE_VERSION=scorecard-kuttl/v2.0.0
  2. make tag
  3. git push upstream refs/tags/$RELEASE_VERSION

The deploy/image-scorecard-test-kuttl Action workflow will build and push this image.

Helpful tips and information

Binaries and signatures

Binaries will be signed using our CI system’s GPG key. Both binary and signature will be uploaded to the release.

Release branches

Each minor release has a corresponding release branch of the form vX.Y.x, where X and Y are the major and minor release version numbers and the x is literal. This branch accepts bug fixes according to our backport policy.

Cherry-picking

Once a minor release is complete, bug fixes can be merged into the release branch for the next patch release. Fixes can be added automatically by posting a /cherry-pick v1.3.x comment in the master PR, or manually by running:

  1. git checkout v1.3.x
  2. git checkout -b cherrypick/some-bug
  3. git cherry-pick <commit>
  4. git push upstream cherrypick/some-bug

Create and merge a PR from your branch to v1.3.x.

GitHub release information

GitHub releases live under the Releases tab in the operator-sdk repo.

Updating OLM bindata

Prior to an Operator SDK release, add bindata (if required) for a new OLM version by following these steps:

  1. Add the new version to the OLM_VERSIONS variable in the Makefile.
  2. Remove the lowest version from that variable, as operator-sdk only supports 3 versions at a time.
  3. Run make bindata.
  4. Update the list of supported OLM versions stated in the Overview section of SDK documentation is updated.

Patch releases in parallel:

  • Releasing in order is nice but not worth the inconvenience. Release order affects the order on GitHub releases, and which is labeled “latest release”.
  • Do not unlock v.* branches while other releases are in progress. Instead, have an admin do the merges.
  • Release announcements should be consolidated.

Last modified September 29, 2021: Document ansible-operator-base image update (#5261) (096ea83f)