We don’t need to block 4.0 on #8110.

What we need is to block those sstable-format related tickets on *either* #8110 
*or* 4.0.

#8110 itself can go anywhere in 3.x or 4.x.

-- 
AY

On 21 July 2016 at 15:38:58, Jason Brown (jasedbr...@gmail.com) wrote:

Sylvain,  

In the large, yes, that is the best "have enough mechanism in place that no  
further ticket _have to_ wait for a major", but many of the tickets we are  
talking about makes changes to things we've all agreed can *only* happen at  
majors, as per the http://wiki.apache.org/cassandra/CompatibilityGuarantees  
(changing the internode protocol, for instance).  

if we're willing to trade on those Guarantees, then sure, majors are just  
bike shedding the version numbers, but I suspect we don't want to do that ;)  

That being said, I completely understand the frustration of "one more week,  
X is almost ready and we don't want to wait a year to get it in". I offer  
two points, though:  
1) This is an open source project, with no real business requirements to  
ship any version by any specific date. We want to ship often enough to be  
relevant as a project/product, of course, but there's no financial or  
business requirement to do so.  
2) We could have better planning as to what we actually want to ship in a  
"version", or at least have some agreed upon mid- to long-term roadmap.  
This would help focus the calendar and the project. Currently, it's largely  
willy-nilly as to what ships when, and while tick-tock has introduced  
regularity wrt release dates, there's not much that shapes what goes in  
those releases.  

My two cents,  

-Jason  



On Thu, Jul 21, 2016 at 7:02 AM, Sylvain Lebresne <sylv...@datastax.com>  
wrote:  

> My very own preference would be to actually focus on making 4.0 the release  
> where have enough mechanism in place that no further ticket _have to_ wait  
> for a major. That means at least making sure CASSANDRA-12042 makes it in,  
> adding some proper versioning of schemas and CASSANDRA-8110.  
>  
> If we had all that in place, I think no other would _have to_ be ready for  
> 4.0 as it could then just be delayed to 4.2 (or whenever it's ready).  
>  
> If we don't do that, I'm willing to take bets that every new major release  
> every year will be delayed cause "one more week, X is almost ready and we  
> don't want to wait a year to get it in".  
>  
> On Wed, Jul 20, 2016 at 4:40 PM, Jonathan Ellis <jbel...@gmail.com> wrote:  
>  
> > The plan of record has been to ship 4.0 in November, 12 months after 3.0.  
> > But, there are a number of features that are going to cause backwards  
> > incompatibility and if they miss 4.0 will need to wait for 5.0. Are any  
> of  
> > these worth delaying 4.0 for?  
> >  
> > (Currently the plan is to have all of these ready for November, but let's  
> > get our backup plan figured out now, just in case. That way we don't  
> have  
> > to make the decision at the last minute when everything feels like an  
> > emergency.)  
> >  
> > Some candidates that might be worth delaying the release for:  
> >  
> > - "Birch" trees for the primary key index  
> > <https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-9754>. Changes the  
> > format of data on disk so automatically in the "dot zero" category.  
> > - Decouple messaging protocol versioning  
> > <https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-12042>. This would  
> > allow us to change the intra-node protocol on a per-message basis,  
> which  
> > gives us more flexibility with compatibility. Currently any change  
> > drops  
> > us into the "no schema changes until everyone is upgraded" world which  
> > effectively rules out making any improvements across tick-tock  
> releases.  
> > - Allow dropping COMPACT STORAGE flag  
> > <https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-10857>. This is  
> what  
> > makes it possible to remove the deprecated Thrift support.  
> > - Schema rearchitecture  
> > <https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-9424>. Can we live  
> > without safe and programatic CREATE and ALTER for another year?  
> >  
> > --  
> > Jonathan Ellis  
> > Project Chair, Apache Cassandra  
> > co-founder, http://www.datastax.com  
> > @spyced  
> >  
>  

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