I don't understand.  We never said that interfaces wouldn't change from 0.9
to 1.0.  What we are committing to is stability going forward from the
1.0.0 baseline.  Nobody is disputing that backward-incompatible behavior or
interface changes would be an issue post-1.0.0.  The question is whether
there is anything apparent now that is expected to require such disruptive
changes if we were to commit to the current release candidate as our
guaranteed 1.0.0 baseline.


On Sat, May 17, 2014 at 2:05 PM, Mridul Muralidharan <mri...@gmail.com>wrote:

> I would make the case for interface stability not just api stability.
> Particularly given that we have significantly changed some of our
> interfaces, I want to ensure developers/users are not seeing red flags.
>
> Bugs and code stability can be addressed in minor releases if found, but
> behavioral change and/or interface changes would be a much more invasive
> issue for our users.
>
> Regards
> Mridul
> On 18-May-2014 2:19 am, "Matei Zaharia" <matei.zaha...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > As others have said, the 1.0 milestone is about API stability, not about
> > saying “we’ve eliminated all bugs”. The sooner you declare 1.0, the
> sooner
> > users can confidently build on Spark, knowing that the application they
> > build today will still run on Spark 1.9.9 three years from now. This is
> > something that I’ve seen done badly (and experienced the effects thereof)
> > in other big data projects, such as MapReduce and even YARN. The result
> is
> > that you annoy users, you end up with a fragmented userbase where
> everyone
> > is building against a different version, and you drastically slow down
> > development.
> >
> > With a project as fast-growing as fast-growing as Spark in particular,
> > there will be new bugs discovered and reported continuously, especially
> in
> > the non-core components. Look at the graph of # of contributors in time
> to
> > Spark: https://www.ohloh.net/p/apache-spark (bottom-most graph;
> “commits”
> > changed when we started merging each patch as a single commit). This is
> not
> > slowing down, and we need to have the culture now that we treat API
> > stability and release numbers at the level expected for a 1.0 project
> > instead of having people come in and randomly change the API.
> >
> > I’ll also note that the issues marked “blocker” were marked so by their
> > reporters, since the reporter can set the priority. I don’t consider
> stuff
> > like parallelize() not partitioning ranges in the same way as other
> > collections a blocker — it’s a bug, it would be good to fix it, but it
> only
> > affects a small number of use cases. Of course if we find a real blocker
> > (in particular a regression from a previous version, or a feature that’s
> > just completely broken), we will delay the release for that, but at some
> > point you have to say “okay, this fix will go into the next maintenance
> > release”. Maybe we need to write a clear policy for what the issue
> > priorities mean.
> >
> > Finally, I believe it’s much better to have a culture where you can make
> > releases on a regular schedule, and have the option to make a maintenance
> > release in 3-4 days if you find new bugs, than one where you pile up
> stuff
> > into each release. This is what much large project than us, like Linux,
> do,
> > and it’s the only way to avoid indefinite stalling with a large
> contributor
> > base. In the worst case, if you find a new bug that warrants immediate
> > release, it goes into 1.0.1 a week after 1.0.0 (we can vote on 1.0.1 in
> > three days with just your bug fix in it). And if you find an API that
> you’d
> > like to improve, just add a new one and maybe deprecate the old one — at
> > some point we have to respect our users and let them know that code they
> > write today will still run tomorrow.
> >
> > Matei
> >
> > On May 17, 2014, at 10:32 AM, Kan Zhang <kzh...@apache.org> wrote:
> >
> > > +1 on the running commentary here, non-binding of course :-)
> > >
> > >
> > > On Sat, May 17, 2014 at 8:44 AM, Andrew Ash <and...@andrewash.com>
> > wrote:
> > >
> > >> +1 on the next release feeling more like a 0.10 than a 1.0
> > >> On May 17, 2014 4:38 AM, "Mridul Muralidharan" <mri...@gmail.com>
> > wrote:
> > >>
> > >>> I had echoed similar sentiments a while back when there was a
> > discussion
> > >>> around 0.10 vs 1.0 ... I would have preferred 0.10 to stabilize the
> api
> > >>> changes, add missing functionality, go through a hardening release
> > before
> > >>> 1.0
> > >>>
> > >>> But the community preferred a 1.0 :-)
> > >>>
> > >>> Regards,
> > >>> Mridul
> > >>>
> > >>> On 17-May-2014 3:19 pm, "Sean Owen" <so...@cloudera.com> wrote:
> > >>>>
> > >>>> On this note, non-binding commentary:
> > >>>>
> > >>>> Releases happen in local minima of change, usually created by
> > >>>> internally enforced code freeze. Spark is incredibly busy now due to
> > >>>> external factors -- recently a TLP, recently discovered by a large
> new
> > >>>> audience, ease of contribution enabled by Github. It's getting like
> > >>>> the first year of mainstream battle-testing in a month. It's been
> very
> > >>>> hard to freeze anything! I see a number of non-trivial issues being
> > >>>> reported, and I don't think it has been possible to triage all of
> > >>>> them, even.
> > >>>>
> > >>>> Given the high rate of change, my instinct would have been to
> release
> > >>>> 0.10.0 now. But won't it always be very busy? I do think the rate of
> > >>>> significant issues will slow down.
> > >>>>
> > >>>> Version ain't nothing but a number, but if it has any meaning it's
> the
> > >>>> semantic versioning meaning. 1.0 imposes extra handicaps around
> > >>>> striving to maintain backwards-compatibility. That may end up being
> > >>>> bent to fit in important changes that are going to be required in
> this
> > >>>> continuing period of change. Hadoop does this all the time
> > >>>> unfortunately and gets away with it, I suppose -- minor version
> > >>>> releases are really major. (On the other extreme, HBase is at 0.98
> and
> > >>>> quite production-ready.)
> > >>>>
> > >>>> Just consider this a second vote for focus on fixes and 1.0.x rather
> > >>>> than new features and 1.x. I think there are a few steps that could
> > >>>> streamline triage of this flood of contributions, and make all of
> this
> > >>>> easier, but that's for another thread.
> > >>>>
> > >>>>
> > >>>> On Fri, May 16, 2014 at 8:50 PM, Mark Hamstra <
> > m...@clearstorydata.com
> > >>>
> > >>> wrote:
> > >>>>> +1, but just barely.  We've got quite a number of outstanding bugs
> > >>>>> identified, and many of them have fixes in progress.  I'd hate to
> see
> > >>> those
> > >>>>> efforts get lost in a post-1.0.0 flood of new features targeted at
> > >>> 1.1.0 --
> > >>>>> in other words, I'd like to see 1.0.1 retain a high priority
> relative
> > >>> to
> > >>>>> 1.1.0.
> > >>>>>
> > >>>>> Looking through the unresolved JIRAs, it doesn't look like any of
> the
> > >>>>> identified bugs are show-stoppers or strictly regressions
> (although I
> > >>> will
> > >>>>> note that one that I have in progress, SPARK-1749, is a bug that we
> > >>>>> introduced with recent work -- it's not strictly a regression
> because
> > >>> we
> > >>>>> had equally bad but different behavior when the DAGScheduler
> > >> exceptions
> > >>>>> weren't previously being handled at all vs. being slightly
> > >> mis-handled
> > >>>>> now), so I'm not currently seeing a reason not to release.
> > >>>
> > >>
> >
> >
>

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