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First, though, note that the very word “version” is overloaded here. It can refer either to a completely separate branch of some module, or to a single specific instance or compose of a module. To keep terminology straight, we need to distinguish between:
{{admon/important|This page is deprecated| All Fedora Modularity Documentation has moved to the new [https://docs.pagure.org/modularity/ Fedora Modularity Documentation website] with source hosted along side the code in the [https://pagure.io/modularity Fedora Modularity website git repository]}}
* A '''version branch''': or more simply just a '''branch''': a completely new, carefully planned version stream for a module. This might correspond to a major Fedora release, or a new Fedora SCL release. Creating a new branch should come with a new '''release''' target for the branch (or branches if we’re releasing multiple modules simultaneously.)
 
: A version branch '''may''' correspond to a new '''major version''' of the module, but there may be exceptions: for example, when we add specific features as a side-branch of an existing major version. The new branch may differ by SLA (eg. EUS branches off an existing RHEL version branch) or by feature (eg. the RHEV-H / RHOSP version of the RHEL virt stack, or an “f-stream” branch giving early access to a specific new feature planned to be released in a subsequent update to RHEL.
 
: Users must opt into a new version branch. By definition here, creating a new version branch '''must''' have no impact on users who have already enabled an existing branch of a module. If a user provisions a new environment and asks for the most recent version branch, then they may get the new version branch automatically; but no existing environments will transparently receive content for the new version branch.
 
* A '''point-in-time version '''or '''instance '''representing a single compose of a module on a single version branch, built by and identifiable by the '''compose ID '''of the task used to compose the module within the build system.
 
: Such a point-in-time update may be just a scratch build, or may be internal-only and not released to the user. But once it is released, it forms a new '''update''' for that version branch of the module. Multiple released point-in-time updates therefore form an '''update stream''' over time for that branch.

Latest revision as of 07:51, 20 February 2017

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This page is deprecated
All Fedora Modularity Documentation has moved to the new Fedora Modularity Documentation website with source hosted along side the code in the Fedora Modularity website git repository