Release Notes¶
What is reno ?¶
Magnum uses reno for providing release notes in-tree. That means that a patch can include a reno file or a series can have a follow-on change containing that file explaining what the impact is.
A reno file is a YAML file written in the releasenotes/notes tree which is generated using the reno tool this way:
$ tox -e venv -- reno new <name-your-file>
where usually <name-your-file>
can be bp-<blueprint_name>
for a
blueprint or bug-XXXXXX
for a bugfix.
Refer to the reno documentation for the full list of sections.
When a release note is needed¶
A release note is required anytime a reno section is needed. Below are some examples for each section. Any sections that would be blank should be left out of the note file entirely. If no section is needed, then you know you don’t need to provide a release note :-)
upgrade
- The patch has an UpgradeImpact tag
- A DB change needs some deployer modification (like a migration)
- A configuration option change (deprecation, removal or modified default)
- some specific changes that have a DocImpact tag but require further action from an deployer perspective
- any patch that requires an action from the deployer in general
security
- If the patch fixes a known vulnerability
features
- If the patch has an APIImpact tag
critical
- Bugfixes categorized as Critical in Launchpad impacting users
fixes
- No clear definition of such bugfixes. Hairy long-standing bugs with high importance that have been fixed are good candidates though.
Three sections are left intentionally unexplained (prelude
, issues
and
other
). Those are targeted to be filled in close to the release time for
providing details about the soon-ish release. Don’t use them unless you know
exactly what you are doing.