Collector build and testing is currently fully automated. However there are still certain operations that need to be performed manually in order to make a release.
We release both core and contrib collectors with the same versions where the contrib release uses the core release as a dependency. We’ve divided this process into four sections. A release engineer must release:
Important Note: You’ll need to be able to sign git commits/tags in order to be able to release a collector version. Follow this guide to setup it up.
Important Note: You’ll need to be an approver for both the repos in order to be able to make the release. This is required as you’ll need to push tags and commits directly to the following repositories:
- open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector
- open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector-contrib
- open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector-releases
A release manager is the person responsible for a specific release. While the manager might request help from other folks, they are ultimately responsible for the success of a release.
In order to have more people comfortable with the release process, and in order to decrease the burden on a small number of volunteers, all core approvers are release managers from time to time, listed under the Release Schedule section. That table is updated at every release, with the current manager adding themselves to the bottom of the table, removing themselves from the top of the table.
It is possible that a core approver isn't a contrib approver. In that case, the release manager should coordinate with a contrib approver for the steps requiring such role, like the publishing of tags.
-
Make sure that there are no open issues with
release:blocker
label in Core or Contrib repo. The release has to be delayed until they are resolved. -
Make sure the current
main
branch build successfully passes (Core and Contrib). -
Determine the version number that will be assigned to the release. During the beta phase, we increment the minor version number and set the patch number to 0. In this document, we are using
v0.55.0
as the version to be released, followingv0.54.0
. -
To keep track of the progress, it might be helpful to create a tracking issue similar to #4870. You are responsible for all of them, except the operator one. Once the issue is created, you can create the individual ones by hovering them and clicking the "Convert to issue" button on the right hand side.
-
Update Contrib to use the latest in development version of Core. Run
make update-otel
in Contrib root directory and if it results in any changes, submit a PR. Open this PR as draft. This is to ensure that the latest core does not break contrib in any way. We’ll update it once more to the final release number later. -
Prepare Core for release.
-
Update CHANGELOG.md file and rename the Unreleased section to the new release name. Add a new unreleased section at top. Use commit history feature to get the list of commits since the last release to help understand what should be in the release notes, e.g.: https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector/compare/v0.44.0...main.
-
Run
make prepare-release PREVIOUS_VERSION=0.52.0 RELEASE_CANDIDATE=0.53.0
-
Ensure the
main
branch builds successfully.
-
-
Create a branch named
release/<release-series>
(e.g.release/v0.45.x
) from the changelog update commit and push toopen-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector
. -
Tag all the modules with the new release version by running the
make add-tag
command (e.g.make add-tag TAG=v0.55.0
). Push them toopen-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector
withmake push-tag TAG=v0.55.0
. Wait for the new tag build to pass successfully. -
The release script for the collector builder should create a new GitHub release for the builder. This is a separate release from the core, but we might join them in the future if it makes sense.
-
A new
v0.55.0
release should be automatically created on Github by now. Edit it and use the contents from the CHANGELOG.md as the release's description. At the top of the release's changelog, add a link to the releases repository where the binaries and other artifacts are landing, like:
### Images and binaries here: https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector-releases/releases/tag/v0.55.0
- Prepare Contrib for release.
-
Update CHANGELOG.md file, this is now done via
chloggen
. Run the following command from the root of the opentelemetry-collector-contrib repo:make chlog-update VERSION=v0.55.0
-
Use multimod to update the version of the collector package:
-
Update versions.yaml and commit it
-
Run
make multimod-prerelease
-
-
Update the Core dependency to the Core version we just released with
make update-otel OTEL_VERSION=v0.55.0
command. Create a PR with both the changes, get it approved and merged. -
Create a branch named
release/<release-series>
(e.g.release/v0.45.x
) in Contrib from the changelog update commit and push it toopen-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector-contrib
. -
Tag all the modules with the new release version by running the
make add-tag TAG=v0.55.0
command. Push them toopen-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector-contrib
withmake push-tag TAG=v0.55.0
. Wait for the new tag build to pass successfully. -
A new
v0.55.0
release should be automatically created on Github by now. Edit it and use the contents from the CHANGELOG.md as the release's description. At the top of the description add a link to Core release notes (assuming the previous release of Core and Contrib was also performed simultaneously), e.g. "The OpenTelemetry Collector Contrib contains everything in the opentelemetry-collector release (be sure to check the release notes here as well!)."
The last step of the release process creates artifacts for the new version of the collector and publishes images to Dockerhub. The steps in this portion of the release are done in the opentelemetry-collector-releases repo.
-
Update the
./distribution/**/manifest.yaml
files to include the new release version. -
Update the builder version in
OTELCOL_BUILDER_VERSION
to the new release in theMakefile
. While this might not be strictly necessary for every release, this is a good practice. -
Create a pull request with the change and ensure the build completes successfully. See example.
-
Tag with the new release version by running the
make add-tag TAG=v0.55.0
command. Push them toopen-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector-releases
withmake push-tag TAG=v0.55.0
. Wait for the new tag build to pass successfully. -
Ensure the "Release" action passes, this will
-
push new container images to https://hub.docker.com/repository/docker/otel/opentelemetry-collector
-
create a Github release for the tag and push all the build artifacts to the Github release. See example.
-
unknown revision internal/coreinternal/v0.55.0
-- This is typically an indication that there's a dependency on a new module. You can fix it by adding a newreplaces
entry to thego.mod
for the affected module.
Both opentelemetry-collector
and opentelemetry-collector-contrib
have very short 2 week release cycles. Because of this, we put a high bar when considering making a patch release, to avoid wasting engineering time unnecessarily.
When considering making a bugfix release on the v0.N.x
release cycle, the bug in question needs to fulfill the following criteria:
- The bug was introduced on the
v0.N.x
release cycle. - The bug has been reported within the first 3 working days after the official binaries were released.
- The bug has no workaround or the workaround is significantly harder to put in place than updating the version. Examples of simple workarounds are:
- Reverting a feature gate.
- Changing the configuration to an easy to find value.
- The bug happens in common setups. To gauge this, maintainers can consider the following:
- The bug is not specific to an uncommon platform
- The bug happens with the default configuration or with a commonly used one (e.g. has been reported by multiple people)
- The bug is sufficiently severe. For example (non-exhaustive list):
- The bug makes the Collector crash reliably
- The bug makes the Collector fails to start under an accepted configuration
- The bug produces significant data loss
- The bug makes the Collector negatively affect its environment (e.g. significantly affects its host machine)
The OpenTelemetry Collector maintainers will ultimately have the responsibility to assess if a given bug fulfills all the necessary criteria and may grant exceptions in a case-by-case basis.
Date | Version | Release manager |
---|---|---|
2022-08-03 | v0.57.0 | @jpkrohling |
2022-08-17 | v0.58.0 | @bogdandrutu |
2022-08-31 | v0.59.0 | @codeboten |
2022-09-14 | v0.60.0 | @mx-psi |
2022-09-28 | v0.61.0 | @Aneurysm9 |
2022-10-12 | v0.62.0 | @tigrannajaryan |
2022-10-26 | v0.63.0 | @dmitryax |