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The Release Management process targets the creation of public releases of API versions, aligned with the Commonalities and ICM release in a given meta-release.

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Technically, an API release is created using GitHub features and requires:

  • A GitHub issue for the release
  • A "release PR" associated to this issue
  • If required (see table below), a GitHub release package (zip file of the whole API Sub Project repository)
  • A GitHub release tag with the release name rx.y

Example of the use of the API release process

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  • copy the API-Readiness-Checklist.md file(s) to the API Sub Project repository in the home/code folder.
  • rename the file to include the prefix <API name> plus a dash ("-") e.g. quality-on-demand-API-Readiness-Checklist.md
  • provide each release asset as indicated in the column corresponding to the release type (alpha, release-candidate, initial public release or stable public release)
  • for an available asset
    • update the Status column with "Y" (yes) if the release asset is available or fulfilled in the current release, or "N" (no) otherwise. Example: an intermediate alpha release or release candidate may not yet provide all mandatory release assets for the release type.
    • update the Comments column with the link to the asset  (if applicable), and any other additional comments as needed
  • NOTE: the checklists of a (final) release candidate of an API version and the checklist of its subsequent public release are the same, while additional release assets are required for a subsequent stable public release of the API version.

Explanations

The following table explains each of the release assets expected to be delivered in the API release.

Nr

API release assets

Explanation

1

API definition

This is the OAS API definition file (following the https://spec.openapis.org/oas/v3.0.3 format). It shall be present in the home/code/API_definition folders of the API Sub Project and validated using the linting rules in point 6. 

2

Design guidelines from Commonalities applied

This refers to the guidelines in the API-Design-Guidelines.md document.

A subset of these design guidelines have been mapped to corresponding linting rules provided by Commonalities, that can be executed against the OAS API definition file if linting is enabled for the Sub Project.

For the design guidelines that cannot (yet) be verified by linting rules, the API Sub Project team shall ensure coverage manually. Ideally, a checklist of such guidelines would be provided by the Commonalities team.  In particular, API Sub Project shall verify data type alignment to the Commonalities/artifacts/CAMARA_common.yaml

3

Guidelines from ICM applied

This refers to the guidelines described in the documents available in the IdentityAndConsentManagement / documents folder corresponds to a set of linting rules provided by ICM that are successfully executed against the OAS API definition file. 

Other guidelines that cannot be verified by linting rules shall be covered manually by the API Sub project team. Ideally, a checklist of such guidelines would be provided by the ICM team.

4

API versioning convention applied

This shall be checked through a linting rule added to the Commonalities rule set on the format of the version field in the OAS API definition file. API versioning is described in the API-Design-Guidelines.md document.

5

API documentation

The API specification shall include all the needed documentation. It shall include the section on security as described in the API Design Guidelines

API documentation beyond the one embedded in the API definition file, shall be located in the home/documentation/API_documentation folder of the API Sub Project. It shall follow the Commonalities/documentation/API-DocumentationTemplate.md 

6

User Stories

User Stories (it is recommended to have at least 2) need to be documented by the API Sub Project team. User Stories shall follow the template: Userstory-template.md and be located in the home/documentation/API_documentation folder of the API Sub Project. Please note that User Stories shall be provided when an API is first submitted to the CAMARA API backlog.

7

Basic API test cases & documentation

At least one Gherkin feature file is provided for the API in the Test_definitions folder of the API Sub Project covering sunny day scenarios and main error cases (of course you may provide more if available). Details can be found in the API Testing Guidelines (in Commonalities GitHub). Basic tests are sufficient for an initial public-release.

8

Enhanced API test cases & documentation

Gherkin feature files are provided for the API in the Test_definitions folder of the API Sub Project covering sunny and rainy day scenarios.  Details can be found in the API Testing Guidelines (in Commonalities GitHub). Enhanced tests are required for a stable public-release.

9

Test result statement

A statement in a discussion issue of the API Sub Project by at least one of the API Sub Project members that the Gherkin feature files have been successfully executed against their (lab) API implementation. 

10

API release numbering conventions applied

This is verified using the information on the release tracker page. The API release numbering is described here: 

11

Change log updated

Change log need to be provided following the template and are located here: link tbd .

12

Previous public release was certified

The previous public API version had at least 1 certified implementation. Reference to at least 1 certification of the API is provided on the GSMA API market launch and certification page.

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Note 2: the addition of a Security review release asset beyond the Commonalities linting rules is for further study.

Release checklist

The following table indicates the assets of the API readiness checklist that need to be provided for the release of an API version depending on 

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Nr

API release assets

alpha release

release candidate

 initial public release

stable public release 

Status

Comments

1

API definition

M

M

M

M


link

2

Design guidelines from Commonalities applied

O

M

M

M



3

Guidelines from ICM applied

O

M

M

M



4

API versioning convention applied

M

M

M

M



5

API documentation

M

M

M

M


link

6

Basic API test cases & documentation

O

M

M

M


link

7

Enhanced API test cases & documentation

O

O

O

M


link

8

Test result statement

O

O

O

M


link

9

API release numbering convention applied

M

M

M

M



10

Change log updated

M

M

M

M


link

11

Previous public-release was certified

O

O

O

M



API releases - details 

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The GitHub release feature

An API release is created using the GitHub PR and release functionality feature (see see Draft/publish a new release).

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  • Create a GitHub issue defining the scope of the targeted API release. Descriptive information in this issue can be reused in the changelog/release notes.
  • Create the API release tracker for the target API version as describer here: API release tracking processtrackers.
  1. On the main branch, develop the API version scope in a "work-in-progress mode" (API version = wip and version in URL is vwip).
    • during development and test, make sure to create and record the required release assets according to the API-Readiness-Checklist.
  2. Once the required stability is reached, create the "release PR" (see details below in the section Create the release PR)
  3. Manage the "release PR" approval, merge the approved "release PR" and create the release.
    • An API release is created using the GitHub release feature.
    • The release tag name shall be the next release number and shall have the following format: rx.y
    • The x.y number shall follow the release numbering scheme as defined in the above section on API Release Numbering.
    • Outside the project, the release shall be referred to by the API name (for definition see the section on API versioning) followed by the release number e.g. quality-on-demand rx.y

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