[Engine-devel] Jar versions in ovirt-engine

Doron Fediuck dfediuck at redhat.com
Thu Apr 19 14:36:17 UTC 2012


On 19/04/12 17:31, Juan Hernandez wrote:
> On 04/19/2012 04:21 PM, Doron Fediuck wrote:
>> On 19/04/12 17:17, Juan Hernandez wrote:
>>> On 04/19/2012 04:10 PM, Doron Fediuck wrote:
>>>> On 19/04/12 16:53, Juan Hernandez wrote:
>>>>> On 04/19/2012 03:22 PM, Doron Fediuck wrote:
>>>>>> On 19/04/12 13:26, Juan Hernandez wrote:
>>>>>>> On 04/19/2012 12:00 PM, Doron Fediuck wrote:
>>>>>>>> On 18/04/12 14:04, Juan Hernandez wrote:
>>>>>>>>> On 04/18/2012 09:51 AM, Ofer Schreiber wrote:
>>>>>>>>>> Ever wondered why the version of oVirt's first release is 3.0.0_0001?
>>>>>>>>>> The answer is simple - We use ovirt-engine jar's version as our "main" release version.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Personally, I think the current versioning scheme is ugly. Actually, I can't name even one open-source project using "_" in it's version.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> What can we do about it? We have couple of options:
>>>>>>>>>> 1. Leave the engine alone, and use a separate versioning scheme (e.g - use just 3.1.0 as the main version for next release)
>>>>>>>>>> 2. Remove "_" from engine jars
>>>>>>>>>> 3. Do nothing.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> I'd like to hear your thoughts, as well as the reasons to use such an unusual versioning scheme.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> ---
>>>>>>>>>> Ofer Schreiber
>>>>>>>>>> oVirt Release Manager
>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>> Arch mailing list
>>>>>>>>>> Arch at ovirt.org
>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.ovirt.org/mailman/listinfo/arch
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> From my point of view using the 0001 suffix in the names of the jar
>>>>>>>>> files is not a big problem, but I agree that using it in the release
>>>>>>>>> number is ugly, and it produces issues/discussions during packaging. I
>>>>>>>>> vote for option #1: use 3.1.0 for the next main version.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> The original versioning scheme was due to a bug in maven2.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Juan, I've read some of the Java packaging concepts, but didn't see
>>>>>>>> (or missed) thoughts about modular versioning (ie- artifacts).
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Here are the things to consider here;
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> - Current RPM's are using the version declared in the POM files.
>>>>>>>> Should this concept remain?
>>>>>>>> * I think it should remain, as other packaging systems should
>>>>>>>> be able to use it as well and end-up is the similar project version.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I can talk from the Fedora point of view only, as that is what I know a bit.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> In Fedora there can be only one version of a given jar file installed in
>>>>>>> the system, so there is no point in adding a version number to the name
>>>>>>> of that jar file: the version number is already in the package
>>>>>>> containing that jar file. In fact if the build generates jar files with
>>>>>>> version numbers in the name the RPM should remove those jar files. That
>>>>>>> is why I say that having any kind of numbers in the names of the jars is
>>>>>>> not important: we have to remove them anyway.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Packaging guidelines (see [1]) recommend to avoid version numbers in the
>>>>>>> jar files, and I think that makes sense.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>> This would be the easy solution.
>>>>>
>>>>> Again talking only about Fedora:
>>>>>
>>>>> Having just one version of every jar is not simple at all, in fact it
>>>>> requires a lot of work to make sure that the selected versions work
>>>>> properly together.
>>>>>
>>>> See below, we actually share the same view...
>>>>
>>>>>> What happens when you have more than a single Java app, and both
>>>>>> using different versions of the same jar file? This means that one
>>>>>> of the app's will need to bring it along and use it locally, rather
>>>>>> than system-level usage.
>>>>>
>>>>> What happens is that both applications have to be patched so that they
>>>>> work correctly with the same version of that jar file. If possible the
>>>>> patches are pushed upstream, if not they applied as part of the package.
>>>>> Embedding another version of that jar file in one of the applications is
>>>>> not allowed, in fact that is something that packagers have to undo quite
>>>>> often.
>>>>>
>>>> See below... converging into the latest jar is what I figured that
>>>> will happen. Still, as I see it such constraints are not really needed.
>>>>>> I'm guessing if we assume such a constraint the solution will be
>>>>>> to force all app's to use latest jar version, which isn't trivial.
>>>>>
>>>>> I agree completely, it is not trivial at all, that is where packagers
>>>>> expend most of their time.
>>>>>
>>>>>> So some distro's will allow of concept of slotted installation.
>>>>>> This means I currently /have/ 2 working versions of postgres in
>>>>>> my laptop (using Gentoo)-
>>>>>>
>>>>>> equery l postgresql-server
>>>>>>  * Searching for postgresql-server ...
>>>>>> [IP-] [  ] dev-db/postgresql-server-8.4.11:8.4
>>>>>> [IP-] [  ] dev-db/postgresql-server-9.1.3:9.1
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The same works on my laptop for Maven, Java, Python and many others.
>>>>>> If you think about it, Fedora supports slotted installation for
>>>>>> kernels, and then added alternatives to do that with other packages
>>>>>> as well (mta, Java..). So there's a need and a way to handle several
>>>>>> versions of the same library (regardless of the language), and
>>>>>> we should be careful when taking such assumptions. At least try
>>>>>> to be as flexible as possible, to allow others to join in.
>>>>>
>>>>> In Fedora that is allowed only for major versions: java-1.7.0 and
>>>>> java-1.6.0, maven 2 and maven 3, so on, but not usually for minor
>>>>> versions (there are exceptions).
>>>>>
>>>> It's a good start.
>>>>
>>>>>> So learning from Fedora I'd say- let the RPM install in a versioned
>>>>>> folder (ie- /usr/lib/jvm/jre-1.5.0-gcj/..), and leave the jar
>>>>>> files without versions for now. In the future we may need to change it
>>>>>> as some disrto's may use sym links to indicate the latest jar.
>>>>>> In such a case the RPM will stripdown the version from the artifact.
>>>>>
>>>>> What we are currently doing with the Fedora ovirt-engine package is that
>>>>> jar files are installed to /usr/share/java/ovirt-engine, with names like
>>>>> bll.jar, common.jar, compat.jar, etc. The RPM takes care of stripping
>>>>> the version numbers generated by the upstream build. This doesn't
>>>>> preclude other distros from doing it in a different way, using version
>>>>> numbers or symlinks.
>>>>>
>>>> Why not /usr/share/java/ovirt-engine-3/ ? I do not see someone using
>>>> engine3 and engine4 on the same machine, but he may need to have
>>>> engine-config v3 to handle previous instance and engine-config v4
>>>> to handle current instance, so we could have a good infra if we
>>>> keep the major version.
>>>
>>> The only thing I have against ovirt-engine-3 is that the packaging
>>> guidelines recommend to use /usr/share/java/%{name}, where %{name} is
>>> the name of the package, and the package has already been approved with
>>> the name ovirt-engine. Next major version (not 3.1, that is a minor
>>> version) can perfectly be named ovirt-engine4 or ovirt4-engine.
>>
>> Maybe open a bz for it so we'll remember?
>> Make sure to add this thread so we'll know what happened....
> 
> There you go: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/814295
Great, 10x!


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