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<h1 style="text-align: center">The Eclipse Simultaneous Release Checklist</h1>
<p align="center">Draft - initial working version.</p>
<p><br />Project: <input type="text" name="projectname" size="30" />
</p>
<p>Date last changed: <input type="text" name="dateLastChanged"
size="20" /><br />
</p>
<p><span style="color: #9e9e9e"><span style="color: #414141">T<span>his
document defines the rules and criteria for participating in the yearly
Simultaneous Release. There are more criteria than when releasing at
other times partially because there are more projects releasing at once,
so the workload needs to streamlined and made more uniform. More
important, the extra criteria are included by mutual agreement between
projects (via their representatives to Planning Council) so that as a
whole, the release will be of better quality, maintainability, and
improved consumability by adopters.</span></span></span></p>
<p><span style="color: #9e9e9e"><span style="color: #414141"><span>The
spirit of this document should not be so much as a "contract" of what
has to be done to release, but instead as an agreement to make the
Yearly Release good, if not great! While each Project does their
individual things to make the Release great, this document and process
describe how we as a group document the achievement of our agreement. We
are always open to better agreements and better documentation of our
achievements so feel free to keep track and make suggestions
year-to-year (preferably through your Planning Council representative)
on how to make our yearly release better. In fact, occasionally changes
may be made to this document for clarity or to improve reference links
throughout the development cycle, but nothing new that would change
work-load will be added after M4.</span></span></span></p>
<p><span style="color: #9e9e9e"><span style="color: #414141"><span>To
foster communication and flexibility where required, any exceptions to
these criteria or deadlines will follow the <a
href="#pcExceptionProcess">Planning Council Exception Process</a>.</span></span></span></p>
<p><span style="color: #9e9e9e"><span style="color: #414141"><span>The
requirements are divided into three categories:</span></span></span></p>
<ol>
<li><span style="color: #9e9e9e"><span style="color: #414141"><span>Requirements
to be released as part of the &quot;yearly release&quot;, normal
release requirements, done earlier than usual.</span></span></span></li>
<li><span style="color: #9e9e9e"><span style="color: #414141"><span>Requirements
to be part of the Common Discovery Site repository and, consequently,
the minimum requirements to be part of EPP packages.</span></span></span></li>
<li><span style="color: #9e9e9e"><span style="color: #414141"><span>Requirements
to demonstrate good Eclipse Citizenship, following &quot;the Eclipse
Way&quot;.</span></span></span></li>
</ol>
<h2><span style="color: #9e9e9e"><span style="color: #414141"><span>Do
the basics ... early</span></span></span></h2>
<p><span style="color: #9e9e9e"><span style="color: #414141"><span>The
requirements and conditions stated in this section are the basic minimum
required for a project to claim they are part of the yearly Simultaneous
Release.</span></span></span></p>
<p>To join a Simultaneous Release, Projects must have stated their
intent to do so, and be in a build for the composite site aggregation by
M4, at the latest. For projects continuing from previous years, the
expectation is they will be in M1, unless they formally withdraw.</p>
<p>The &quot;statement of intent&quot; is done formally by marking
the &quot;Simultaneous Release Flag&quot; in the project's Portal
meta-data.</p>
<p><input type="checkbox" name="inbyM1M4" /> In M1 common repo (M4
for new projects)</p>
<p><input type="checkbox" name="Portal data updated" />Portal
meta-data updated (By M4, at latest)</p>
<h3>Planning</h3>
<p>All projects must have their project plan in the Eclipse
Foundation standard XML Format (a normal Eclipse requirement).
Committing to be in the Simultaneous Release means you commit to having
these plans early: M2, for those projects that already know they will be
in the Simultaneous Release, M4 will be the latest possible time, for
those projects that are new to the Simultaneous Release Train and decide
to join after M2. The plans should be updated periodically as things
change, or as items are completed.</p>
<p><input type="checkbox" name="planningdoc" />Initial Planning
Document done by M4. URL: <input type="text" name="planurl" size="70" /></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333">Also, for long term planning,
remember that being in a Simultaneous Release also means a commitment to
participating the SR1 and SR2 simultaneous maintenance releases.</span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333"><i>[New this year.]</i> Once
in, always in. Once a project joins one year's Simultaneous Release, it
is assumed they will be in the next one, unless they formally withdraw.
So, for example, it is required they will meet the subsequent year's
Milestone Schedule, have plans done by M2 of following year, etc. Put
another way, being part of the Simultaneous Release is not a &quot;one
time&quot; activity, covering only the literal release date and not even
a &quot;part time&quot; activity covering only part of the yearly
development cycle. Instead it is a commitment to stay
&quot;simultaneous&quot; on an on-going basis</span>.</p>
<h3>Communication</h3>
<p>At least one person from each project in a Simultaneous Release
must subscribe to cross-project mailing list, since that is the primary
communication channel for issues related to the Simultaneous Release.
Also, at least one person from each project must subscribe to
cross-project bugzilla inbox, as that is the primary bugzilla components
for bugs that are truly cross-project, or bugs which are not known to be
in one particular component.</p>
<p><input type="checkbox" name="peopleassigned" />People assigned.
Names: <input type="text" name="namesemail" size="73" /> </p>
<p>Your representative to the Planning Council, either from PMC or
Strategic Member, must attend PC meetings and represent you there.
Presumably, of course, after meeting or communicating with you and the
other projects they represent, so they can fairly bring forward concerns
and vote on issue that effect all projects, if required. Put another
way, by committing to be in the Simultaneous Release, you agree to abide
by all the Planning Council decisions and rules, so be sure your
representative understands your project and your situation.</p>
<h3>IP Documentation</h3>
<p>Projects must have their IP Logs approved (a normal Eclipse
requirement) and will follow the Eclipse Legal deadlines to do so. In
addition, drafts of the Projects IP Logs must be available every
milestone, starting with M5. The ones for M5 and M6 will be understood
to be &quot;drafts&quot; but for most projects the IP Logs should be
relatively complete by M7. If Projects have changes come in after M7
they can update until the deadline set by the IP staff (usually RC2).
The purpose of having these early drafts is so that projects get
familiar with what's required, and do not allow work to build up at the
end, also to allow questions to come up, and have time to find answers,
and also to allow time for issues with automatic IP tools to be
addressed.</p>
<p>M5 IP draft URL: <input type="text" name="m5draftURL" size="60" /></p>
<p>M6 IP draft URL: <input type="text" name="m5draftURL0" size="60" /></p>
<p>M7 IP draft URL: <input type="text" name="m5draftURL1" size="60" /></p>
<p>Final IP URL: <input type="text" name="m5draftURL10" size="60" /><br />
</p>
<p><span style="color: #323232">Being in the Simultaneous
Release will give your IP some higher priority in getting evaluated, in
order to make the date. The higher priority treatment is only for the 5
months or so before the release (after the deadline for CQs). The reason
being, of course, is that the rest of the year the IP staff must also
get work done for maintenance releases and projects not on the release
train. During that part of the year (roughly July to February every
year) all CQs are prioritized in a uniform way.</span></p>
<h3 id="pcReleaseReview"><span style="color: #323232">Release
Review</span></h3>
<p><span style="color: #323232">The release review archival
materials must be complete by the date specified by the EMO, which is
usually staged in earlier than for a usual release. (Typically RC2.)</span></p>
<p>A Project's PMC must approve the projects request for review (a
normal Eclipse requirement). In addition, to help organize and
streamline the yearly Simultaneous release, a PMC must provide their
approval in writing, in the form of a short summary of their projects
that are requesting review and summary of the PMC's discussion or method
of approving them. (This is meant to be very brief, such as 1/2 to 1
page). The short summary can be documented in a mailing list, PMC
Meeting notes, or even a wiki document. A pointer (URL) to the document
should be provided to EMO, and will be included in the same notice to
the community that provides pointers to the Project Docuware.</p>
<p>URL to PMC's Executive Summary (by RC2): <input type="text"
name="pmc summary" size="60" /></p>
<p>The public review calls will be organized based on Top Level
Project, and at least one PMC member should be on that call to give very
brief overview of projects that are requesting the release review (not
to exceed 5 minutes, at the very most).</p>
<p>In addition to the ordinarily required Release Review Archival
Materials, all Projects participating in yearly Release agree to provide
a checklist-with-detail form that describes their compliance (or not)
with all of the criteria items described in this document. Note that
this checklist-with-detail must be updated every milestone as things are
completed, or details added, so progress can be reviewed by Planning
Council and potential adopters. The primary report of compliance with
the checklist must be provided at least at the level of a Top Level
Project. In some cases, such as if sub-projects are very independent of
each other, PMCs may decide to document things at a subproject level,
and then &quot;roll-up&quot; to a Top Level document, or, if a Top Level
Project is known to be uniform and &quot;close knit&quot; then they may
provide one summary document that applies to all sub-projects. [This
will likely be automated as web-app, possibly with &quot;automatic&quot;
roll up].</p>
<p>URL to checklists: <input type="text" name="urlchecklist"
size="63" /></p>
<p></p>
<h2>Play well with others ... to be in common repository</h2>
<p>The requirements in this section must be met for a project to be
on the common, central repository (e.g. /releases/helios) for end users
to discover easily and minimum requirements to be included in EPP
Packages. The criteria in this section are designed to make sure
projects work relatively well, and work well together. This is
especially required for adopters who may be using these projects in
complicated, interwoven ways so each piece of the puzzle must fit
together well and be dependable and be maintainable, as well as being on
time and IP clean.</p>
<p><b>Communication</b>: Build team members (or their designated
alternates) from each project may be asked to provide direct
communication channels: phone, mail, IM, IRC and at least one build team
member must be &quot;on call&quot; during the milestone integration
periods.</p>
<p><input type="checkbox" name="relengprovided" />Releng names and
contact data provided. Can send data to Programming Chair ... for
privacy reasons we won't publish it publically.</p>
<p><b>API</b>. Projects should leverage only published APIs of
dependencies. All deviations must be documented in bugzillas. These
bugzillas may be of the type that a dependent project should provide a
required API, or of the type that a consuming project must move to some
API that already exists. Note that technically there is no obligation
for consumed projects to provide API that is requested ... that depends
on many things ... but the main goal of requiring these bugzilla entries
is to provide some documentation and measure of the amount of risk
associated with non-API use.</p>
<p><input type="checkbox" name="apischeckedandbugged" />Bugzillas
open, or can &quot;prove&quot; API clean. Link to API check reports: <input
type="text" name="api check links" size="60" /></p>
<p>List of Bugilla's open for API deviations:</p>
<p><textarea rows="3" cols="38" name="buzilla list"></textarea></p>
<p><b>Message Bundles</b>. Projects must use <a
href="http://help.eclipse.org/galileo/topic/org.eclipse.platform.doc.isv/reference/misc/message_bundles.html">
Eclipse message bundles</a> unless there are technical reasons not to.</p>
<p><input type="checkbox" name="messageBundlesUsed" /> Message
Bundles used throughout.</p>
<p><input type="checkbox" name="messageBundleException" /> Message
Bundle Exception. Give description of technical reasons, and link to
Planning Councils approval.</p>
<p><textarea rows="3" cols="40" name="exceptiondescription"></textarea><br />
</p><p><b>Version Numbering</b>. Projects must use 4-part <a
href="http://wiki.eclipse.org/Version_Numbering">version numbers</a>.</p>
<p><input type="checkbox" name="versionnumbers" />Standard
Versioning Used.</p>
<p><input type="checkbox" name="versioningexceptions" />Exceptions</p>
<p><textarea rows="3" cols="40" name="versioning exceptions"></textarea></p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="osgibundleformat" /> OSGi
bundle format</b>. All plug-ins (bundles) must use the true bundle form.
That is, provide a manifest.mf file, and not rely on the plugin.xml file
being 'translated' into a manifest.mf file at initial startup. With
that, empty plugin.xml files in the presence of a manifest.mf file
should not be included in a bundle. (For some old history, see <a
href="https://bugs.eclipse.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=130598">bug
130598</a>.)</p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="osgibundleformat0" />
Execution Environment</b>. All plug-ins must <a
href="http://wiki.eclipse.org/Execution_Environments">correctly
list their Bundle Required Execution Environment (BREE)</a>.</p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="osgibundleformat1" />
Signing</b>. Projects must use <a href="http://wiki.eclipse.org/JAR_Signing">signed
plugins using the Eclipse certificate</a>.</p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="osgibundleformat2" /> Jarred
Bundles</b>. Projects must use jarred plug-ins (with unpack=false) unless
authorized by the planning council for technical exceptions. Also,
nested jars should be avoided if possible since it creates problems for
projects that has dependencies to such plug-ins. The OSGi runtime is
fine with it but the PDE environment is not able to handle classpaths
that contain nested jars.</p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="osgibundleformat3" /> Re-use
and share</b><b> </b>common third party jars. Any third-party plug-ins that
are common between projects must be consumed via <a
href="http://www.eclipse.org/orbit">Orbit</a>; a Simultaneous Release
will not have duplicate third-party libraries (note that this only
applies to identical versions of the libraries; thus if project A
requires foo.jar 1.6 and project B uses foo.jar 1.7, that's ok, as long
as it is required and has a documented reason).</p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="osgibundleformat4" />
Optimization</b>. Projects must <a
href="http://help.eclipse.org/galileo/topic/org.eclipse.platform.doc.isv/guide/p2_repositorytasks.htm">
optimize their p2 repositories</a> to reduce bandwidth utilization and
provide a better install and update experience for users.</p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="osgibundleformat5" />
Provide p2 repository</b>. Projects must provide their own project p2
repository for their own project and updates. In addition, they must
provide their archives and metadata in a specified format and method to
allow at least parts of their repository to be aggregated and mirrored
to a common repository. The <a
href="http://wiki.eclipse.org/Helios/Contributing_to_Helios_Build">current
process</a> may be modified throughout the year, if improvements can be
made.</p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="osgibundleformat6" />
Capabilities</b>. Each project will provide basic capability/activity
definitions to allow for their UI contributions to be hidden. These may
be provided in a separate plugins and features to facilitate inclusion
and reuse by consumers in product development, or simply well documented
so adopters can reuse via copy/paste. Ideally, projects should also
provide triggers to facilitate progressive discovery of functionality.</p>
<p>URL to a project's description of their capabilities (even if
sample) and/or plugin names adopters can use.</p>
<p><input type="text" name="capability URL" size="40" /></p>
<p>URL to a project's description of their progressive discover
strategy or documentation:</p>
<p><input type="text" name="progressive" size="40" /></p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="osgibundleformat7" />
Support Translations</b>. All strings must be externalized, and Projects
must participate in Babel, meaning it is registered and available for
string translation, etc. Projects must freeze the UI sufficiently early
to allow the Babel project time to translate strings so there can be
simultaneous release of translated versions. The UI should be frozen by
M6 (a "freeze" all major changes and additions are done by M6, and
changes after that are done in a controlled, well documented fashion, so
Babel translators can more easily &quot;keep up&quot; with late
changes).</p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="osgibundleformat8" /> Excel
in NL support</b>. The Project must use <a
href="http://wiki.eclipse.org/ICU4J">ICU4J</a>, where appropriate, to
excel in NL support. (The latest ICU4J bundles will be in Orbit).</p>
<p><input type="checkbox" name="exceptions" /> Exceptions:</p>
<p><textarea rows="3" cols="40"></textarea><br />
</p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="branding" /> Branding</b>. Each
major project (as determined by participating PMCs) must have an 'About'
dialog icon with hover text that displays the provider name. Every
plug-in and feature must specify a descriptive provider-name (for
features), or Bundle-Vendor header (for plug-ins), as determined by the
project's PMC (e.g. "Eclipse Modeling Project" rather than
"Eclipse.org"). Also, Projects must contribute to the welcome page when
appropriate.</p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="donoharm" /> Do No Harm.</b>
Projects must work together in any combination of any install. Put
another way, this means that users can install any subset of the Helios
projects and each of the installed projects will work as well as if it
had been loaded independently. If such a problem is identified, the
affected projects must track down and fix the problem.</p>
<p><i><input type="checkbox" name="licenseConsistency" />[New
this year.]</i> <b>License text consistency</b>. Use standard forms of
license documents so it is displayed in the most usable, and concise way
during install and update. It is a normal requirement to use a standard
<a href="http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl/about.php">Eclipse
Foundation &quot;about&quot; template</a>, but where those templates are
edited by each project, care must be taken to be sure they are edited in
similar ways. You can see an example of the license-consolidating UI in
<a
href="http://download.eclipse.org/eclipse/downloads/drops/S-3.6M1-200908061400/eclipse-news-M1.html#Platform">Eclipse
Platform Helios M1</a>.</p>
<h2>Be a good Eclipse Citizen ... and document it</h2>
<p>Projects should exhibit good Eclipse Citizenship, to Release and
participate in Common Discovery Site and EPP Packages. These are often
&quot;best practices&quot; that some projects have found helpful at
Eclipse. These criteria often speak to the quality of the Project, as an
Eclipse Project, as opposed to their code or architecture. They are a
bit more subjective than some of the other criteria, and the relevancy
to any particular project may not be as universal, so there is no set
number of items to satisfy. But, it is required that each project
document their level of compliance to each item. Especially good Eclipse
Citizens will get a gold star, and especially bad ones might get a
frowny face.</p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="engage" />Engage Community</b>. The Project should actively engage their
community to get feedback on milestone builds, and document how they do
that. One way to do this is to have a <a
href="http://wiki.eclipse.org/Architecture_Council/New_and_Noteworthy">New
&amp; Noteworthy</a> for each milestone. New and Noteworthy documents should
be something readable and usable not just a static list of all the bugs.
Corollary: individual new &amp; noteworthy should be linked in to the
collective New &amp; Noteworthy.</p>
<p>If yes, describe, or provide URL:</p>
<p><textarea rows="3" cols="50" name="engageddescription"></textarea><br />
</p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="engage0" />Usability</b>. Should follow the <a
href="http://wiki.eclipse.org/User_Interface_Guidelines">User
Interface Guidelines</a>. The <a href="http://wiki.eclipse.org/UI_Checklist">UI
Checklist</a> is a good place to start. Also, should participate in a <a
href="http://wiki.eclipse.org/User_Interface_Best_Practices_Working_Group">User
Interface Best Practices Working Group</a> <a
href="http://wiki.eclipse.org/UIBPWG_UI_Walkthrough"> UI
walkthrough</a>.</p>
<p>If yes, describe, or provide URL:</p>
<p><textarea rows="3" cols="50" name="engageddescription0"></textarea></p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="engage1" />Performance</b>. Project should have measurable performance
criteria that are regularly tested against. Projects should devote at
least one milestone to performance and scalability improvements.</p>
<p>If yes, describe, or provide URL:</p>
<p><textarea rows="3" cols="50" name="engageddescription1"></textarea></p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="engage2" />Test Localization</b>. The project should use the <a
href="https://bugs.eclipse.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=217339">Babel
Pseudo Translation Test</a> to verify their translatability. [Need better
reference link.]</p>
<p>If yes, describe, or provide URL:</p>
<p><textarea rows="3" cols="50" name="engageddescription2"></textarea></p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="engage3" />Enable Use with All Languages</b>. Should design and test for
enabling all languages including bidi, unicode characters, etc. This is
different than "translating" the program. For example, while using an
English version of Eclipse Web Tools, someone should be able to create a
Chinese language web application. [Need "how to" reference link.]</p>
<p>If yes, describe, or provide URL:</p>
<p><textarea rows="3" cols="50" name="engageddescription3"></textarea></p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="engage4" />Builds</b>. Projects must have a mature, stable build process:
documented, scripted, repeatable, and executable by others.</p>
<p>If yes, describe, or provide URL:</p>
<p><textarea rows="3" cols="50" name="engageddescription4"></textarea></p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="engage5" />Ramp Down Planned and Defined</b>. Projects must have a
written ramp down policy by M6, at the latest, and provide link. The
plan should describe when the project plans to be feature complete, have
API frozen, and similar. See <a
href="http://www.eclipse.org/eclipse/development/freeze_plan_3.5.php">Platform
3.5 Endgame plan</a> as a guideline. See also <a
href="http://wiki.eclipse.org/heliosPlan/index.php?title=Helios/Final_Daze&amp;action=edit">Helios
Final Daze</a>.)</p>
<p>If yes, describe, or provide URL:</p>
<p><textarea rows="3" cols="50" name="engageddescription5"></textarea></p>
<p><b><input type="checkbox" name="engage6" />Accessibility</b>. Projects should design and test for
accessibility compliance, following established guidelines and Eclipse
fundamental techniques to achieve accessibility. Projects must document
their accessibility work and compliance. Ideally this would be by using
a publicly available checklists, such as</p>
<ul>
<li><a
href="http://www.itic.org/resources/voluntary-product-accessibility-template-vpat/">http://www.itic.org/resources/voluntary-product-accessibility-template-vpat/
</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.section508.gov/">http://www.section508.gov/</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG/">http://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG/</a></li>
</ul>
<p>but, given the <a
href="http://wiki.eclipse.org/Planning_Council/Cross_Project_Teams/Accessibility">advice
of the Accessibility Cross Project Team</a>, for this year's Helios
Simultaneous Release, projects can document their work or compliance as
a negative, such as "we did not do any accessibility work or testing and
do not know the degree of our compliance". But its important to
document, so adopters know. If possible, and appropriate, accessibility
testing tools can be leveraged such as <a
href="http://www.nvda-project.org/">NVDA</a>. The main <a
href="http://www.eclipse.org/articles/article.php?file=Article-Accessibility351/index.html">accessibility
article at Eclipse Corner</a> has been made current (thanks goes to Todd
Creasey).</p>
<p>If yes, describe, or provide URL:</p>
<p><textarea rows="3" cols="50" name="engageddescription6"></textarea></p>
<p><i><input type="checkbox" name="engage7" />[New this year.]</i>. <b>Unit Tests</b>. Projects must have
some unit tests that can verify at least basic functionality of a build
or distribution. The steps to build and run the tests must be documented
and executable by others.</p>
<p>If yes, describe, or provide URL:</p>
<p><textarea rows="3" cols="50" name="engageddescription7"></textarea></p>
<p><i><input type="checkbox" name="engage8" />[New this year.]</i>. <b>API Policy</b> Defined and
Documented. Typically would include how 'APIs' are distinguished from
non-API and 'provisional' API, if any. It is recommended that non-API be
marked with x-internal in the bundles manifest. Also, should include
what the commitment is to API, how long maintained after deprecated,
etc. As one example, see <a
href="http://wiki.eclipse.org/WTP_API_Policy">WTP API Policy</a>.</p>
<p>If yes, describe, or provide URL:</p>
<p><textarea rows="3" cols="50" name="engageddescription8"></textarea></p>
<p><i><input type="checkbox" name="engage9" />[New this year.]. </i><b>Retention Policy.</b> Projects should
define and document their retention policy. This should include both zip
distributions and repositories. For examples, see <a
href="http://wiki.eclipse.org/WTP/Retention_Policy">WTP Retention
Policy</a> and <a
href="http://wiki.eclipse.org/Eclipse_Project_Update_Sites">Eclipse
Project Update Sites</a></p>
<p>If yes, describe, or provide URL:</p>
<p><textarea rows="3" cols="50" name="engageddescription9"></textarea></p>
<p><i><input type="checkbox" name="engage10" />[New this year.]. </i><b>Project Metrics.</b> Projects should
provide some summary metrics, such as number of bundles, number of
committers, lines of code, number of bugs opened and fixed. This is so
some statements can be made and tracked year-to-year about the size of
the simultaneous release.</p>
<p>
<p>If yes, describe, or provide URL:</p>
<p><textarea rows="3" cols="50" name="engageddescription10"></textarea></p>
</p>
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