SupportedVersions: Difference between revisions
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| style="background:#ccc" | End of support | | style="background:#ccc" | End of support | ||
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| 16.04 | | 16.10 | ||
| April 2016 | | October 2016 | ||
| October 2017 | | April 2018 | ||
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| style="background:lightgreen" | 16.04 | |||
| style="background:lightgreen" | April 2016 | |||
| style="background:lightgreen" | October 2017 | |||
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| style="background:lightgreen" | 15.10 | | style="background:lightgreen" | 15.10 | ||
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| style="background:lightgreen" | October 2017 ('''extended support release''' due to 15.10 theme overhaul) | | style="background:lightgreen" | October 2017 ('''extended support release''' due to 15.10 theme overhaul) | ||
|- | |- | ||
| style="background: | | style="background:IndianRed" | 1.10 | ||
| style="background: | | style="background:IndianRed" | October 2014 | ||
| style="background: | | style="background:IndianRed" | April 2016 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| style="background:IndianRed" | 1.9 | | style="background:IndianRed" | 1.9 |
Revision as of 11:29, 18 October 2016
Current and upcoming releases
Unsupported | Currently in support | Not yet released |
A new major version of Mahara is released every 6 months, around April and October. From Mahara 1.0 to 1.10, these were numbered using a type of semantic versioning. Starting with the 15.04 release (after 1.10), they are numbered to reflect the date the release is scheduled (so "15.04" means "2015, April"). See Version Numbering Policy for more details.
The standard support lifetime of a major version is 18 months (3 release cycles):
- Receives bug fixes and security fixes for the first 6 months
- Receives security fixes only, for an additional 12 months
In the event that a major release substantially breaks backwards compatibility, we may declare the previous release to be an extended support release which will receive security fixes for 30 months (5 release cycles), in order to give sites more time to upgrade. 15.04 is our first extended support release, due to a complete overhaul of the Mahara theme system in 15.10 breaking compatibility for existing custom themes.
Release number | Release date | End of support |
16.10 | October 2016 | April 2018 |
16.04 | April 2016 | October 2017 |
15.10 | October 2015 | April 2017 |
15.04 | April 2015 | October 2017 (extended support release due to 15.10 theme overhaul) |
1.10 | October 2014 | April 2016 |
1.9 | April 2014 | October 2015 |
1.8 | October 2013 | April 2015 |
1.7 | April 2013 | October 2014 |
1.6 | October 2012 | April 2014 |
Older releases (pre Mahara 1.6)
Prior to Mahara 1.6, Mahara major versions were released as needed, according to no particular schedule. During the transition period to the 6 month release cycle, support for the older releases was provided for 2 release cycles.
Release number | Release date | End of support |
1.5 | April 2012 | October 2013 |
1.4 | June 2011 | October 2012 |
1.3 | Sept 2010 | April 2012 |
Definition of support
Being "supported" means:
- The release team is committed to making available updates to Mahara that are security related.
- (See Security to find out how to report security bugs to us.)
- Occasionally, some other serious bug fixes will be included, but these are not guaranteed.
- (If you find another type of bug, please let us know by reporting it on the mahara.org forums or directly on Launchpad: https://bugs.launchpad.net/mahara/+filebug)
Specific backporting rules
When deciding which bugs to backport to supported branches, these are the general principles:
- Security bugs
- All Critical and High priority security bugs should be backported
- Nearly all Medium and Low priority security bugs should be backported
- At the developers' discretion, these might not be backported if:
- Backporting would be technically difficult due to differences between Mahara versions
- The bug fix requires database upgrades or dataroot manipulations
- The bug fix otherwise introduces a high risk of regressions.
- At the developers' discretion, these might not be backported if:
- Non-security bugs
- All Critical bugs should be backported
- Most High priority bugs should be backported
- At the developers' discretion, these might not be backported if:
- Backporting would be technically difficult due to differences between Mahara versions
- The bug fix requires database upgrades or dataroot manipulations
- The bug fix otherwise introduces a high risk of regressions.
- At the developers' discretion, these might not be backported if:
- No Medium or Low priority non-security bugs are backported
- No Wishlist bugs are backported
- Not even to the current stable release. Wishlist items are only added to the current development branch.
See Bug Status:Importance for the guidelines on how we decide whether a bug is Critical, High, Medium, or Low.