zulip/docs/overview/release-lifecycle.md

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# Release lifecycle
This page details the release lifecycle for the Zulip server and
client-apps, well as our policies around backwards-compatibility and
security support policies. In short:
- We recommend always running the latest releases of the Zulip clients
and servers. Server upgrades are designed to Just Work; mobile and
desktop client apps update automatically.
- The server and client apps are backwards and forwards compatible
across a wide range of versions. So while it's important to upgrade
the server to get security updates, bug fixes, and new features, the
mobile and desktop apps will continue working for at least 18 months
if you don't do so.
- New server releases are announced via the low-traffic
[zulip-announce email
list](https://groups.google.com/g/zulip-announce). We
highly recommend subscribing so that you are notified about new
security releases.
- Zulip Cloud runs the branch that will become the next major
server/web app release, so it is always "newer" than the latest
stable release.
## Server and web app
The Zulip server and web app are developed together in the [Zulip
server repository][zulip-server].
### Stable releases
- Zulip Server **stable releases**, such as Zulip 7.4.
Organizations self-hosting Zulip primarily use stable releases.
- The numbering scheme is simple: the first digit indicates the major
release series (which we'll refer to as "7.x"). (Before Zulip 3.0,
Zulip versions had another digit, e.g., 1.9.2 was a bug fix release
in the Zulip 1.9.x major release series).
- [New major releases][blog-major-releases], like Zulip 7.0, are
published every 3-6 months, and contain hundreds of features, bug
fixes, and improvements to Zulip's internals.
- New maintenance releases, like 7.4, are published roughly once a
month. Maintenance releases are designed to have no risky changes
and be easy to reverse, to minimize stress for administrators. When
upgrading to a new major release series, We recommend always
upgrading to the latest maintenance release in that series, so that
you use the latest version of the upgrade code.
docs: Consistently say "18 months" on compatibility, no specific version numbers. Previously I've wanted to have this page spell out the concrete version number that our clients support, rather than the policy we use for determining that version number, because that's the sort of question that I feel like as a user I'd want a straight answer to and would be annoyed if I couldn't get one. But as the text stands, it's come to look more like it's the policy (something that's heavyweight to change) than like the value that the policy currently happens to work out to. Also, because this page is kind of chaotically organized (and fixing that is a bigger yak than I want to shave right now), it repeats the 18-month rule in three separate places and the current value (version 4.0) is in a fourth separate place, so it looks internally inconsistent. Let's therefore take a different tack: like in those other three spots on this page, state just the policy instead of the value it currently works out to; but also add a link to help the reader pin down for themselves what value that does work out to. This also means we no longer need to update this page as old releases age and that value advances. Also fix a typo, and cut the reference to working degraded on older releases. Starting earlier this year we finally started hard-refusing such connections: https://github.com/zulip/zulip-mobile/issues/5102 https://github.com/zulip/zulip-mobile/pull/5633 (which was because there were some swathes of compatibility code that we could only cut if we completely broke the handling of ancient servers, and so we preferred to have the app communicate that break clearly up front.)
2023-08-18 02:44:31 +02:00
- For the dates of past stable releases,
[see the Zulip blog][blog-releases].
Starting with Zulip 4.0, the Zulip web app displays the current server version
[in the gear menu](https://zulip.com/help/view-zulip-version). With older
releases, the server version is available [via the
API](https://zulip.com/api/get-server-settings).
This ReadTheDocs documentation has a widget in the lower-left corner
that lets you view the documentation for other versions. Other
documentation, like our [Help Center](https://zulip.com/help/), [API
documentation](https://zulip.com/api/), and [Integrations
documentation](https://zulip.com/integrations/), are distributed with
the Zulip server itself (e.g., `https://zulip.example.com/help/`).
docs: Consistently say "18 months" on compatibility, no specific version numbers. Previously I've wanted to have this page spell out the concrete version number that our clients support, rather than the policy we use for determining that version number, because that's the sort of question that I feel like as a user I'd want a straight answer to and would be annoyed if I couldn't get one. But as the text stands, it's come to look more like it's the policy (something that's heavyweight to change) than like the value that the policy currently happens to work out to. Also, because this page is kind of chaotically organized (and fixing that is a bigger yak than I want to shave right now), it repeats the 18-month rule in three separate places and the current value (version 4.0) is in a fourth separate place, so it looks internally inconsistent. Let's therefore take a different tack: like in those other three spots on this page, state just the policy instead of the value it currently works out to; but also add a link to help the reader pin down for themselves what value that does work out to. This also means we no longer need to update this page as old releases age and that value advances. Also fix a typo, and cut the reference to working degraded on older releases. Starting earlier this year we finally started hard-refusing such connections: https://github.com/zulip/zulip-mobile/issues/5102 https://github.com/zulip/zulip-mobile/pull/5633 (which was because there were some swathes of compatibility code that we could only cut if we completely broke the handling of ancient servers, and so we preferred to have the app communicate that break clearly up front.)
2023-08-18 02:44:31 +02:00
[blog-major-releases]: https://blog.zulip.com/tag/major-releases/
[blog-releases]: https://blog.zulip.com/tag/release-announcements/
### Git versions
Many Zulip servers run versions from Git that have not been published
in a stable release.
- [Zulip Cloud](https://zulip.com) runs the `zulip-cloud-current`
branch; this the `main` branch, with some cherry-picked bug fixes,
but delayed somewhat. It is usually one to two weeks behind `main`,
depending on the complexity of recent major UI or internals changes
that we'd like to bake longer on chat.zulip.org before exposing them
to the full Zulip Cloud userbase.
- [chat.zulip.org][chat-zulip-org], the bleeding-edge server for the
Zulip development community, is upgraded to `main` several times
every week. We also often "test deploy" changes not yet in `main`
to chat.zulip.org to facilitate design feedback.
- We maintain Git branches with names like `7.x` containing backported
commits from `main` that we plan to include in the next maintenance
release. Self-hosters can [upgrade][upgrade-from-git] to these
stable release branches to get bug fixes staged for the next stable
release (which is very useful when you reported a bug whose fix we
choose to backport). We support these branches as though they were a
stable release.
- Self-hosters who want new features not yet present in a major
release can [upgrade to `main`][upgrading-to-main] or run [a fork
of Zulip][fork-zulip].
### Compatibility and upgrading
A Zulip design goal is for there never to be a reason to run an old
version of Zulip. We work extremely hard to make sure Zulip is stable
for self-hosters, has no regressions, and that the [Zulip upgrade
process](../production/upgrade.md) Just Works.
docs: Consistently say "18 months" on compatibility, no specific version numbers. Previously I've wanted to have this page spell out the concrete version number that our clients support, rather than the policy we use for determining that version number, because that's the sort of question that I feel like as a user I'd want a straight answer to and would be annoyed if I couldn't get one. But as the text stands, it's come to look more like it's the policy (something that's heavyweight to change) than like the value that the policy currently happens to work out to. Also, because this page is kind of chaotically organized (and fixing that is a bigger yak than I want to shave right now), it repeats the 18-month rule in three separate places and the current value (version 4.0) is in a fourth separate place, so it looks internally inconsistent. Let's therefore take a different tack: like in those other three spots on this page, state just the policy instead of the value it currently works out to; but also add a link to help the reader pin down for themselves what value that does work out to. This also means we no longer need to update this page as old releases age and that value advances. Also fix a typo, and cut the reference to working degraded on older releases. Starting earlier this year we finally started hard-refusing such connections: https://github.com/zulip/zulip-mobile/issues/5102 https://github.com/zulip/zulip-mobile/pull/5633 (which was because there were some swathes of compatibility code that we could only cut if we completely broke the handling of ancient servers, and so we preferred to have the app communicate that break clearly up front.)
2023-08-18 02:44:31 +02:00
The Zulip server and client apps are all carefully engineered to
ensure compatibility with old versions. In particular:
- The Zulip mobile and desktop apps maintain backwards-compatibility
docs: Consistently say "18 months" on compatibility, no specific version numbers. Previously I've wanted to have this page spell out the concrete version number that our clients support, rather than the policy we use for determining that version number, because that's the sort of question that I feel like as a user I'd want a straight answer to and would be annoyed if I couldn't get one. But as the text stands, it's come to look more like it's the policy (something that's heavyweight to change) than like the value that the policy currently happens to work out to. Also, because this page is kind of chaotically organized (and fixing that is a bigger yak than I want to shave right now), it repeats the 18-month rule in three separate places and the current value (version 4.0) is in a fourth separate place, so it looks internally inconsistent. Let's therefore take a different tack: like in those other three spots on this page, state just the policy instead of the value it currently works out to; but also add a link to help the reader pin down for themselves what value that does work out to. This also means we no longer need to update this page as old releases age and that value advances. Also fix a typo, and cut the reference to working degraded on older releases. Starting earlier this year we finally started hard-refusing such connections: https://github.com/zulip/zulip-mobile/issues/5102 https://github.com/zulip/zulip-mobile/pull/5633 (which was because there were some swathes of compatibility code that we could only cut if we completely broke the handling of ancient servers, and so we preferred to have the app communicate that break clearly up front.)
2023-08-18 02:44:31 +02:00
code to support any Zulip server version from the last 18 months.
- Zulip maintains an [API changelog](https://zulip.com/api/changelog)
detailing all changes to the API to make it easy for client
developers to do this correctly.
- The Zulip server preserves backwards-compatibility in its API to
support versions of the mobile and desktop apps released in roughly
the last year. Because these clients auto-update, generally there
are only a handful of active clients left by the time we desupport a
version.
As a result, we generally do not backport changes to previous stable
release series except in rare cases involving a security issue or
critical bug just after publishing a major release.
[upgrade-from-git]: ../production/upgrade.md#upgrading-from-a-git-repository
### Security releases
When we discover a security issue in Zulip, we publish a security and
bug fix release, transparently documenting the issue(s) using the
industry-standard [CVE advisory process](https://cve.mitre.org/).
When new security releases are published, we simultaneously publish
the fixes to the `main` and stable release branches (e.g., `4.x`), so
that anyone using those branches can immediately upgrade as well.
See also our [security model][security-model] documentation.
[security-model]: ../production/security-model.md
### Upgrade nag
Starting with Zulip 4.0, the Zulip web app will display a banner
warning users of a server running a Zulip release that is more than 18
months old. We do this for a few reasons:
- It is unlikely that a server of that age is not vulnerable to
a security bug in Zulip or one of its dependencies.
- The Zulip mobile and desktop apps are only guaranteed to support
server versions less than 18 months old.
The nag will appear only to organization administrators starting a
month before the deadline; after that, it will appear for all users on
the server.
You can adjust the deadline for your installation by setting e.g.,
`SERVER_UPGRADE_NAG_DEADLINE_DAYS = 30 * 21` in
`/etc/zulip/settings.py` and then [restarting the server](../production/settings.md).
### Operating system support
For platforms we support, like Debian and Ubuntu, Zulip aims to
support all versions of the upstream operating systems that are fully
supported by the vendor. We document how to correctly [upgrade the
operating system][os-upgrade] for a Zulip server, including how to
correctly chain upgrades when the latest Zulip release no longer
supports your OS.
Note that we consider [Ubuntu interim releases][ubuntu-release-cycle],
which only have 8 months of security support, to be betas, not
releases, and do not support them in production.
[ubuntu-release-cycle]: https://ubuntu.com/about/release-cycle
### Server roadmap
The Zulip server project uses GitHub projects and labels to structure
communication about priorities:
- We use GitHub projects to track goals for major releases (e.g., [Zulip 9.0
priorities](https://github.com/orgs/zulip/projects/9/)). The project board
should be seen a list of priorities being _considered_ for the release, not a
guarantee that features will be included. As the release date approaches,
features that will not make it into the release are dropped from the project
board on an ongoing basis.
- The [high priority][label-high] label tags issues that we consider important.
It is reviewed in the planning stage of the release cycle to identify
priorities for the next release.
- The [help wanted][label-help-wanted] label tags issues that are open for
contributions.
The Zulip community feels strongly that all the little issues are, in
aggregate, just as important as the big things. Many resolved issues
are never explicitly tagged as release goals.
We welcome participation from our user community in influencing the Zulip
roadmap. If a bug or missing feature is causing significant pain for you, we'd
love to hear from you, either in
[chat.zulip.org](https://zulip.com/development-community/) or on the relevant
GitHub issue. Please an include an explanation of your use case: such details
can be extremely helpful in designing appropriately general solutions, and also
helps us identify cases where an existing solution can solve your problem. See
our guides for [reporting bugs](../contributing/reporting-bugs.md) and [giving
feedback](../contributing/contributing.md#user-feedback) for more details.
## Client apps
Zulip's client apps officially support all Zulip server versions (and
Git commits) released in the previous 18 months, matching the behavior
of our [upgrade nag](#upgrade-nag).
- The Zulip mobile apps release new versions from the development
branch frequently (usually every couple weeks). Except when fixing a
critical bug, releases are first published to our [beta
channels][mobile-beta].
- The Zulip desktop apps are implemented in [Electron][electron], the
browser-based desktop application framework used by essentially all
modern chat applications. The Zulip UI in these apps is served from
the Zulip server (and thus can vary between tabs when it is
connected to organizations hosted by different servers).
The desktop apps automatically update soon after each new
release. Because Zulip's desktop apps are implemented in Electron
and thus contain a Chromium browser, security-conscious users should
leave automatic updates enabled or otherwise arrange to promptly
upgrade all users after a new security release.
New desktop app releases rarely contain new features, because the
desktop app tab inherits its features from the Zulip server/web app.
However, it is important to upgrade because they often contain
important security or OS compatibility fixes from the upstream
Chromium project.
The Zulip server supports blocking access or displaying a warning to
users attempting to access the server with extremely old or known
insecure versions of the Zulip desktop and mobile apps, with an error
message telling the user to upgrade.
## API bindings
The Zulip API bindings and related projects maintained by the Zulip
core community, like the Python and JavaScript bindings, are released
independently as needed.
[electron]: https://www.electronjs.org/
[upgrading-to-main]: ../production/modify.md#upgrading-to-main
[os-upgrade]: ../production/upgrade.md#upgrading-the-operating-system
[chat-zulip-org]: https://zulip.com/development-community/
[fork-zulip]: ../production/modify.md
[zulip-server]: https://github.com/zulip/zulip
[mobile-beta]: https://github.com/zulip/zulip-mobile#using-the-beta
[label-blocker]: https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+label%3A%22priority%3A+blocker%22
[label-high]: https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+label%3A%22priority%3A+high%22
[label-help-wanted]: https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3A%22help+wanted%22