We are still in a fast development cycle, so the versioning is to keep track of the progress/iteration of the project. When a stable release is reached (2?), then any breaking change would require more proper major version changes
Yes, I understand they have declared that. Their declaration does not, however, negate the common semantic versioning standards, found at semver.org. These common standards are significant for admins running shared systems where they automatic upgrade processes based on common semantic versioning rules. The software will stabilize and they will adopt a more stringent policy. But they should still be releasing 0.x versions since they’ve not yet reached it.
I was going to say you are wrong about semver but you are correct that it should simply not be version 1 yet.
To quote semver.org:
“Major version zero (0.y.z) is for initial development. Anything MAY change at any time. The public API SHOULD NOT be considered stable.”
If they had just done that, their disclaimer would be implied. Once it is 1.0, breaking changes require a major version change. That seems like reasonable policy to me.
I’ve been meaning to give this a try on my Synology.
But breaking changes in a point release? Not cool.
Tbf this is actually version v1.136 .0 and
Disclaimer
Personally I’m waiting for the day it comes out of “under active development” state so that I can migrate from NextCloud to it.
A breaking change should have been 2.0, not a new 1.<minor> release.
It should still be 0.<minor> if they’ve not reached the stability for keeping backwards compatibly in all 1.x releases.
To quote them:
Yes, I understand they have declared that. Their declaration does not, however, negate the common semantic versioning standards, found at semver.org. These common standards are significant for admins running shared systems where they automatic upgrade processes based on common semantic versioning rules. The software will stabilize and they will adopt a more stringent policy. But they should still be releasing 0.x versions since they’ve not yet reached it.
I was going to say you are wrong about semver but you are correct that it should simply not be version 1 yet.
To quote semver.org: “Major version zero (0.y.z) is for initial development. Anything MAY change at any time. The public API SHOULD NOT be considered stable.”
If they had just done that, their disclaimer would be implied. Once it is 1.0, breaking changes require a major version change. That seems like reasonable policy to me.
That said, I upgraded without issue.
🍻
From the release notes:
So you’ll probably want to wait until they do a stable release.
Yes indeed. 🙂
The “breaking change” did not break anything for me. As noted, you have to have a specific and non-default configuration for their to be a problem.