From f72a32a1e45580bdab843fc1b3fb37c5fa7996dc Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Dave Wallace Date: Thu, 6 Jul 2023 16:38:49 -0400 Subject: docs: add api change process from wiki - Move the VPP API Change Process documentation from the wiki page into the in-tree VPP docs Type: docs Change-Id: I42f661618b8632230bebe3aa8fbad455b9a05d01 Signed-off-by: Dave Wallace --- src/tools/vppapigen/VPPAPI.rst | 193 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 193 insertions(+) (limited to 'src/tools') diff --git a/src/tools/vppapigen/VPPAPI.rst b/src/tools/vppapigen/VPPAPI.rst index 5b172a8c758..e8144803a87 100644 --- a/src/tools/vppapigen/VPPAPI.rst +++ b/src/tools/vppapigen/VPPAPI.rst @@ -402,3 +402,196 @@ Future considerations - Embed JSON definitions into the API server, so dynamic languages can download them directly without going via the filesystem and JSON files. + +API Change Process +------------------ + +Purpose +~~~~~~~ + +To minimize the disruptions to the consumers of the VPP API, while permitting +the innovation for the VPP itself. + +Historically, API changes in VPP master branch were allowed at any point in time +outside of a small window between the API freeze milestone and RC1 milestone. +The API changes on the throttle branches were not permitted at all. This model +proved workable, however all the production use cases ended up on throttle +branches, with a lot of forklift activity when it is the time to upgrade to the +next branch. + +This formally structured API change process harmonizes the behavior across all +the VPP branches, and allows more flexibility for the consumer, while permitting +the innovation in the VPP itself. + +The Core Promise +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +"If a user is running a VPP version N and does not use any deprecated APIs, they +should be able to simply upgrade the VPP to version N+1 and there should be no +API breakage". + +In-Progress, Production and Deprecated APIs +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +This proposal adds a classification of stability of an API call: + +- "In-Progress": APIs in the process of the development, experimentation, and + limited testing. + +- "Production": tested as part of the "make test", considered stable for general + usage. + +- "Deprecated": used as a flag on Production APIs which are slated to be + deprecated in the future release. + +The "In-Progress" APIs or the APIs with the semantic version of 0.x.y are not +subject to any stability checks, thus the developers are free to introduce them, +modify their signatures, and as well remove them completely at will. The users +should not use the in-progress APIs without the interactions with its +maintainers, nor base the production code on those APIs. The goal of +"in-progress" APIs to allow rapid iteration and modifications to ensure the API +signature and function is stabilized. These API calls may be used for testing or +experimentation and prototyping. + +When the maintainer is satisfied with the quality of the APIs, and ensures that +they are tested as part of the "Make test" runs, they can transition their +status to "Production". + +The "Production" APIs can *NOT* be changed in any way that modifies their +representation on the wire and the signature (thus CRC). The only change that +they may incur is to be marked as "Deprecated". These are the APIs that the +downstream users can use for production purposes. They exist to fulfill a core +promise of this process: The "Deprecated" APIs are the "Production" APIs that +are about to be deleted. To ensure the above core promise is maintained, if the +API call was marked as deprecated at any point between RC1 of release N and RC1 +of release N+1, it MUST NOT be deleted until the RC1 milestone of the +release N+2. The deprecated API SHOULD specify a replacement API - which MUST +be a Production API, so as not to decrease the level of stability. + + +The time interval between a commit that marks an API as deprecated and a commit +that deletes that API MUST be at least equal the time between the two subsequent +releases (currently 4 months). + + +Doing so allows a for a good heads-up to those who are using the +"one free upgrade" property to proactively catch and test the transition from +the deprecated APIs using the master. + + +Marking an API as deprecated just 1 day before RC1 branch pull and then deleting +that API one day after does *technically* satisfy "one free upgrade" promise, +but is rather hostile to the users that are proactively tracking it. + +Semantic API Versioning +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +VPP APIs use semantic versioning according to semver.org, with the compatibility +logic being applied at the moment the messages are marked as deprecated. + +To discuss: i.e. if message_2 is being introduced which deprecates the +message_1, then that same commit should increase the major version of the API. + +The 0.x.x API versions, by virtue of being in-progress, are exempt from this +treatment. + +Tooling +~~~~~~~ + +See https://gerrit.fd.io/r/c/vpp/+/26881: + +crcchecker.py is a tool to enforce the policy, with a few other bonus uses: + +extras/scripts/crcchecker.py --check-patchset # returns -1 if backwards incompatible extras/scripts/crcchecker.py --dump-manifest extras/scripts/crcchecker.py --git-revision v20.01 extras/scripts/crcchecker.py -- diff + +Notice that you can use this tool to get the list of API changes since a given past release. + +The policy: + +.. highlight:: none + +.. code-block:: + + 1. Production APIs should never change. + The definition of a "production API" is if the major version in + the API file is > 0 that is not marked as "in-progress". + 2. APIs that are experimental / not released are not checked. + An API message can be individually marked as in progress, + by adding the following in the API definition: + option in_progress; + 3. An API can be deprecated in three-to-six steps (the steps + with letters can be combined or split, depending on situation): + Step 1a: A new "in-progress" API new_api_2 is added that + is deemed to be a replacement. + Step 1b: The existing API is marked as "replaced_by" this new API: + option replaced_by="new_api_2"; + Step 2a: The new_api_2 is marked as production by deleting its in-progress status, + provided that this API does have sufficient test coverage to deem it well tested. + Step 2b: the existing API is marked as "deprecated": + option deprecated="optional short message to humans reading it"; + Step 3: the deprecated API is deleted. + +There is a time constraint that the minimum interval between the steps 2 and 3 +must be at least 4 months. The proposal is to have step 2 around a couple of +weeks before the F0 milestone for a release, as triggered by the release manager +(and in the future by an automated means). + +Use Cases +~~~~~~~~~ + +Adding A New Field To A Production API +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +The simplest way to add a new field to a Production API message *foo_message* is +to create a new In-Progress message *foo_message_v2*, and add the field to that +one. Typically it will be an extension - so the API message handlers are +trivially chained. If there are changes/adjustments that are needed, this new +message can be freely altered without bothering the users of the Production API. + +When the maintainer is happy with the quality of the implementation, and the +foo_message_v2 is tested in "make test" to the same extent as the foo_message, +they can make two commits: one, removing the in-progress status for +foo_message_v2, and the second one - deprecating foo_message and pointing the +foo_message_v2 as the replacement. Technically after the next throttle pull, +they can delete the foo_message - the deprecation and the replacement will be +already in the corresponding branch. + +Rapid Experimentation For A New Feature +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Add a message that is in-progress, and keep iterating with this message. This +message is not subject to the change control process. + +An In-progress API Accidentally Marked As "production" +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +This is expected to mainly apply during the initial period of 20.05->20.09, the +proposal is to have it active for 4 weeks from Jun 17 till July 15th, with the +following process. + +If a developer finds that a given API or a set of APIs is not ready for +production due to lack of tests and/or the general API stability, then they: + +- Create a new gerrit change with *just* the marking of the API as + in_progress, subject being: "api: api message downgrade" and + a comment identifying which APIs are being downgraded and why. + +- Add ayourtch@gmail.com or the current Release Manager as a reviewer -- + for help in guiding the process and to ensure that the gerrit change is not + forgotten. + +- Send an email to vpp-dev mailing list with the subject being the same as the + one-liner commit message, reference to the gerrit change, and the reasoning. + +- Wait for the timeout period of two weeks for the feedback. + +- If no feedback received, assume the community agreement and commit the + change to master branch. + +This needs to be highlighted that this process is an *exception* - normally the +transition is always in_progress => production => deprecated. + +API Change Examples +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +https://gerrit.fd.io/r/q/+is:merged+message:%2522%255Eapi:.*%2524%2522 -- cgit 1.2.3-korg