Electron Versioning
As of version 2.0.0, Electron follows the SemVer spec. The following command will install the most recent stable build of Electron:
```sh npm2yarn npm install —save-dev electron
There are several major changes from our 1.x strategy outlined below. Each change is intended to satisfy the needs and priorities of developers/maintainers and app developers.
- Strict use of the the spec
- Introduction of semver-compliant
-beta
tags - Introduction of conventional commit messages
- Well-defined stabilization branches
- The
main
branch is versionless; only stabilization branches contain version information
We will cover in detail how git branching works, how npm tagging works, what developers should expect to see, and how one can backport changes.
SemVer
Below is a table explicitly mapping types of changes to their corresponding category of SemVer (e.g. Major, Minor, Patch).
For more information, see the Semantic Versioning 2.0.0 spec.
Note that most Chromium updates will be considered breaking. Fixes that can be backported will likely be cherry-picked as patches.
Stabilization branches are branches that run parallel to main
, taking in only cherry-picked commits that are related to security or stability. These branches are never merged back to main
.
We allow for multiple stabilization branches to exist simultaneously, one for each supported version. For more details on which versions are supported, see our doc.
Older lines will not be supported by the Electron project, but other groups can take ownership and backport stability and security fixes on their own. We discourage this, but recognize that it makes life easier for many app developers.
Beta releases and bug fixes
Developers want to know which releases are safe to use. Even seemingly innocent features can introduce regressions in complex applications. At the same time, locking to a fixed version is dangerous because you’re ignoring security patches and bug fixes that may have come out since your version. Our goal is to allow the following standard semver ranges in package.json
:
- Use
~2.0.0
to admit only stability or security related fixes to your2.0.0
release.
What’s important about the second point is that apps using ^
should still be able to expect a reasonable level of stability. To accomplish this, SemVer allows for a pre-release identifier to indicate a particular version is not yet safe or stable.
Whatever you choose, you will periodically have to bump the version in your package.json
as breaking changes are a fact of Chromium life.
The process is as follows:
- All new major and minor releases lines begin with a beta series indicated by SemVer prerelease tags of , e.g.
2.0.0-beta.1
. After the first beta, subsequent beta releases must meet all of the following conditions:- The change is backwards API-compatible (deprecations are allowed)
- The risk to meeting our stability timeline must be low.
- If allowed changes need to be made once a release is beta, they are applied and the prerelease tag is incremented, e.g.
2.0.0-beta.2
. - If a particular beta release is generally regarded as stable, it will be re-released as a stable build, changing only the version information. e.g.
2.0.0
. After the first stable, all changes must be backwards-compatible bug or security fixes. - If future bug fixes or security patches need to be made once a release is stable, they are applied and the patch version is incremented
e.g.
2.0.1
.
Specifically, the above means:
- Admitting non-breaking-API changes before Week 3 in the beta cycle is okay, even if those changes have the potential to cause moderate side-effects.
- Admitting feature-flagged changes, that do not otherwise alter existing code paths, at most points in the beta cycle is okay. Users can explicitly enable those flags in their apps.
- Admitting features of any sort after Week 3 in the beta cycle is 👎 without a very good reason.
For each major and minor bump, you should expect to see something like the following:
2.0.0-beta.1
2.0.0-beta.2
2.0.0-beta.3
2.0.0
2.0.1
- A new release branch is created that includes the latest set of features. It is published as
2.0.0-beta.1
. - A bug fix comes into master that can be backported to the release branch. The patch is applied, and a new beta is published as
2.0.0-beta.2
. - The beta is considered generally stable and it is published again as a non-beta under
2.0.0
. - Later, a zero-day exploit is revealed and a fix is applied to master. We backport the fix to the
2-0-x
line and release .
A few examples of how various SemVer ranges will pick up new releases:
Feature flags are a common practice in Chromium, and are well-established in the web-development ecosystem. In the context of Electron, a feature flag or soft branch must have the following properties:
- it is enabled/disabled either at runtime, or build-time; we do not support the concept of a request-scoped feature flag
- it completely segments new and old code paths; refactoring old code to support a new feature violates the feature-flag contract
- feature flags are eventually removed after the feature is released
Semantic commits
All pull requests must adhere to the Conventional Commits spec, which can be summarized as follows:
- Commits that would result in a SemVer major bump must start their body with
BREAKING CHANGE:
. - Commits that would result in a SemVer minor bump must start with
feat:
. - Commits that would result in a SemVer patch bump must start with
fix:
.
The electron/electron
repository also enforces squash merging, so you only need to make sure that your pull request has the correct title prefix.
- The
main
branch will always contain the next major versionX.0.0-nightly.DATE
in itspackage.json
. - Release branches are never merged back to
main
. - Release branches do contain the correct version in their
package.json
. - As soon as a release branch is cut for a major,
main
must be bumped to the next major (i.e.main
is always versioned as the next theoretical release branch).
Historical versioning (Electron 1.X)
Electron versions < 2.0 did not conform to the SemVer spec: major versions corresponded to end-user API changes, minor versions corresponded to Chromium major releases, and patch versions corresponded to new features and bug fixes. While convenient for developers merging features, it creates problems for developers of client-facing applications. The QA testing cycles of major apps like Slack, Teams, Skype, VS Code, and GitHub Desktop can be lengthy and stability is a highly desired outcome. There is a high risk in adopting new features while trying to absorb bug fixes.
Here is an example of the 1.x strategy:
An app developed with 1.8.1
cannot take the 1.8.3
bug fix without either absorbing the feature, or by backporting the fix and maintaining a new release line.