doc/development/avoiding_required_stops.md
Required stops are any changes to GitLab components or
dependencies that result in the need to upgrade to and stop at a specific
major.minor version when upgrading GitLab.
While Development maintains a maintenance policy that results in a three-release (3 month) backport window - GitLab maintains a much longer window of version support that includes the current major version, as well as the two previous major versions. Based on the schedule of previous major releases, GitLab customers can lag behind the current release for up to three years and still expect to have support for upgrades.
For example, a GitLab user upgrading from GitLab 14.0.12 to GitLab 16.1,
which is a fully supported upgrade path, may have
the following required stops: 14.3.6, 14.9.5, 14.10.5, 15.0.5, 15.1.6,
15.4.6, and 15.11.11 before upgrading to the latest 16.1.z version.
Past required stops have not been discovered for months after their introduction, often as the result of extensive troubleshooting and assistance from Support Engineers, Customer Success Managers, and Development Engineers as users upgrade across greater than 1-3 minor releases.
Wherever possible, a required stop should be avoided. If it can't be avoided, the required stop should be aligned to a scheduled required stop.
Scheduled required stops are often implemented for the previous major.minor
release just prior to a major version release in order to accommodate multiple
planned deprecations and known
breaking changes.
Additionally, as of GitLab 16, we have introduced
scheduled major.minor required stops:
[!note] During GitLab 16.x, we are scheduling two or three required upgrade stops.
We will give at least two milestones of notice when we schedule a required upgrade stop. The first planned required upgrade stop is scheduled for GitLab 16.3. If nothing is introduced requiring an upgrade stop, GitLab 16.3 will be treated as a regular upgrade.
In cases where we are considering retroactively declaring an unplanned required stop, contact the Distribution team product manager to advise on next steps. If there is uncertainty about whether we should declare a required stop, the Distribution product manager may escalate to GitLab product leadership (VP or Chief Product Officer) to make a final determination. This may happen, for example, if a change might require a stop for a small subset of very large GitLab Self-Managed instances and there are well-defined workarounds if customers run into issues.
The majority of required stops are due to assumptions about the state of the data model in a given release, usually in the form of interdependent database migrations, or code changes that assume that schema changes introduced in prior migrations have completed by the time the code loads.
Designing changes and migrations for backwards compatibility between versions can mitigate stop concerns with continuous or zero-downtime upgrades. However, the contract phase will likely introduce a required stop when a migration/code change is introduced that requires that background migrations have completed before running or loading.
[!warning] If you're considering adding or removing a migration, or introducing code that assumes that migrations have completed in a given release, first review the database-related documentation on required stops.
12.1: Introduced a background migration changing merge_status in
MergeRequests depending on the state value. The state attribute was removed
in 12.10. It took until 13.6 to document the required stop.13.8: Includes a background migration to deal with duplicate service
records. In 13.9, a unique index was applied in another migration that
depended on the background migration completing. Not discovered/documented until
GitLab 14.314.3: Includes a potentially long-running background migration against
merge_request_diff_commits that was foregrounded in 14.5. This change resulted in
extensive downtime for users with large GitLab installations. Not documented
until GitLab 15.114.9: Includes a batched background migration for namespaces and projects
that needs to finish before another batched background migration added in 14.10 executes,
forcing a required stop. The migration can take hours or days to complete on
large GitLab installations.Additional details as well as links to related issues and merge requests can be found in: Issue: Put in place measures to avoid addition/proliferation of GitLab upgrade path stops
Similar to assumptions about the data model/schema/migration state, required
major.minor stops have been introduced due to the intentional removal of
code implemented to workaround previously discovered issues.
13.1: A security fix in Rails 6.0.3.1 introduced a CSRF token change
(causing a canary environment incident). We introduced code to maintain acceptance
of previously generated tokens, and removed the code in 13.2, creating a known
required stop in 13.1.15.4: Introduces a migration to fix an inaccurate expires_at timestamp
for job artifacts that had been mitigated in code since GitLab 14.9. The
workaround was removed in GitLab 15.6, causing 15.4 to be a required stop.Deprecations, particularly breaking changes can also cause required stops if they introduce long migration delays or require manual actions on the part of GitLab administrators.
These are generally accepted as a required stop around a major release, either
stopping at the latest major.minor release immediately proceeding
a new major release, and potentially the latest major.0 patch release, and
to date, discovered required stops related to deprecations have been limited to
these releases.
Not every deprecation is granted a required stop, as in most cases, the user is able to tweak their configuration before they start their upgrade without causing downtime or other major issues.
Examples of deprecations are too numerous to be listed here, but can found in the:
We can't add required stops to every milestone, as this hurts our user experience while upgrading GitLab. The Distribution group is responsible for helping planning and defining when required stops are introduced.
From GitLab 17.5, we will introduce required stops in the X.2, X.5, X.8, and X.11 minor milestones. If you introduce code changes or features that require an upgrade stop, you must align your changes with these milestones in mind.
Before releasing a known required stop, complete these steps. If the required stop is identified after release, the following steps must still be completed:
In the same MR, update the upgrade paths documentation to include the new
required stop, and the upgrade_path.yml.
The upgrade_path.yml is the single source of truth (SSoT) for all our required stops.
Communicate the changes with the customer Support and Release management teams.
File an issue with the Database group to squash migrations to that version in the next release. Use this template for your issue:
Title: `Squash migrations to <Required stop version>`
As a result of the required stop added for <required stop version> we should squash
migrations up to that version, and update the minimum schema version.
Deliverables:
- [ ] Migrations are squashed up to <required stop version>
- [ ] `Gitlab::Database::MIN_SCHEMA_VERSION` matches init_schema version
/label ~"group::database" ~"section::enablement" ~"devops::data_stores" ~"Category:Database" ~"type::maintenance"
/cc @gitlab-org/database-team/triage
charts project, update the
upgrade check hook
to the required stop version.upgrade_path.ymlWe have multiple projects depending on the upgrade_path.yml SSoT. Therefore,
any change to the structure of this file needs to take into consideration that
it might affect one of the following projects: