Today we are happy to announce the general availability of CFEngine 3.12.0 LTS! This release has a lot of new features, and we are very excited about all the new possibilities you get with CFEngine 3.12.0 LTS. If you are using the previous LTS, 3.10 you will also benefit from all the new features, improvements and testing of the 3.11 release, which you can read more about in the CFEngine 3.11 release post.
Today we are happy to announce the general availability of CFEngine 3.12.0 LTS beta. The release of 3.12.0 beta took longer than expected. As a result we have decided to adjust our release schedule, and we releasing 3.12.0 beta now and later this year 3.12.0 will be the next official LTS release. If you are planning to contribute features or fixes to the next set of releases (we warmly welcome that !), we are always accepting those. The window for features is not closed for 3.12, but we appreciate help with fixing potential bugs in the beta, improving the performance if there are any identified issues, or generally implementations of suggestions moving forwards. If you want to start contributing but are unsure how? - Send documentation updates as pull requests to cfengine/documentation. - Search for issues labeled easy that are good candidates for new contributors to cfengine/core.
We’re happy to announce the maintenance releases 3.7.8 LTS and 3.10.4 LTS today! 3.7.8 LTS and 3.10.4 LTS, being maintenance (aka patch) releases, the goal is to increase stability and reliability for CFEngine users and enable a safe upgrade-path. As such, these releases primarily includes bugfixes and low-risk changes that do not impact the compatibility between previous patch releases. Looking at the CFEngine release schedule, we can see that
3.7 LTS is maintained (and supported for Enterprise customers) until August 31st 2018 3.10 LTS is maintained (and supported for Enterprise customers) until December 27th 2019 Want to start contributing but unsure how?
We’re happy to announce the maintenance releases 3.7.7 LTS and 3.10.3 LTS today! 3.7.7 LTS and 3.10.3 LTS, being maintenance (aka patch) releases, the goal is to increase stability and reliability for CFEngine users and enable a safe upgrade-path. As such, these releases primarily includes bugfixes and low-risk changes that do not impact the compatibility between previous patch releases. Looking at the CFEngine release schedule, we can see that
3.7 LTS is maintained (and supported for Enterprise customers) until July 17th 2018 3.10 LTS is maintained (and supported for Enterprise customers) until December 27th 2019 If you are planning to contribute features or fixes to the next minor release 3.12.0 (thank you!), please note that we would need the pull requests ready for merging by the end of February 2018. Want to start contributing but unsure how?
We’re happy to announce that CFEngine 3.7.6 is released! With 3.7 being a stable LTS branch, 3.7.6 brings bug fixes and stability enhancements to the CFEngine customers and community. Looking at the CFEngine release schedule, we can see:
3.7 LTS is maintained (and supported for enterprise customers) until July 17th 2018. 3.10 LTS is maintained (and supported for enterprise customers) until December 27th 2019. If you are planning to contribute feature to the next feature release (thank you!), please note that we wold need the pull requests ready for merging by the end of September for incorporation into 3.12. If you are planning to contribute fixes to 3.10 or 3.7 LTS please note that we would need the pull requests ready for merging by the end of September for incorporation into 3.7.7 and 3.10.3. RPM packages now respect the chkconfig specified state when stopping a service. Now if the cfengine3 service is off for runlevel 2 the CFEngine services are stopped when you switch to runlevel 2. cf-monitord now correctly detects the usernames for processes on AIX. Classification when running under the Xen Hypervisor was also fixed. Masterfiles got fixes to the apt_get package module so that it works correctly when more than one source repository contains the package. Masterfiles also saw the addition of oslevel (on AIX), mailx (on Linux, Darwin, OpenBSD, NetBSD, and FreeBSD) to the paths bundle. The prunetree bundle was added to the standard library making it easier to recursively delete files and directories up to a specified depth older than a specified number of days. Enterprise gets bug fixes related to exporting reports and sharing host categorization views and reports. Additionally when hostnames are displayed in reports they now link to the individual host info page and usernames are now allowed to contain dots (.). Masterfiles now ensures the postrgres log file is rotated. The verbosity of some maintenance policy was increased and the policy to clear a build up of unreported data now includes previous_state and untracked reports. Some Enterprise dependencies were updated:
We’re happy to announce the maintenance release 3.10.2 LTS and the new 3.11.0 non-LTS release today! 3.10.2 LTS, being a maintenance (aka patch) release, the goal is to increase stability and reliability for CFEngine users and enable a safe upgrade-path. As such, the release primarily includes bugfixes and low-risk changes that do not impact the compatibility between previous patch releases. 3.11.0 non-LTS includes new features and is not covered under the CFEngine Enterprise support contract. Looking at the CFEngine release schedule, we can see that
We’re happy to announce that CFEngine 3.11.0 Beta (non-LTS) is now ready. Thanks to everyone for all of the contributions! Please test extensively and submit bug reports. 3.11.x introduces some new features and deprecates some underutilized functionality. Please note that 3.11.0 will be a non-LTS release, which means that it will be maintained only for 6 months from the release date and not supported for CFEngine Enterprise customers (but Enterprise packages will be available). Looking at the CFEngine release schedule, we can see:
We’re happy to announce maintenance releases for both supported CFEngine release branches today! Being maintenance (aka patch) releases, the goal is to increase stability and reliability for CFEngine users and enable a safe upgrade-path. As such, the releases primarily include bugfixes and low-risk changes that do not impact the compatibility between previous patch releases. Looking at the CFEngine release schedule, we can see that
3.7 LTS is maintained (and supported for Enterprise customers) until July 17th 2018 3.9 non-LTS is no longer maintained 3.10 LTS is maintained (and supported for Enterprise customers) until December 27th 2019 If you are planning to contribute features to the next feature release (thank you!), please note that we would need the pull requests ready for merging by early-April in order to have time to incorporate them into 3.11. If you are planning to contribute fixes to 3.10 LTS please note that we would need the pull requests ready for merging by early-May in order to have time to incorporate them into 3.10.2 LTS.
We’re happy to announce that CFEngine 3.10.0 LTS now is released! One of the key advantages of CFEngine is its unparalleled performance, and this has received further attention in 3.10.0! A big thanks to everyone testing the 3.10.0 beta release! Being an LTS release, 3.10 will be supported until December 2019. If you are using the previous LTS, 3.7, you will also benefit from all the new features, improvements and testing of all 3.8 and 3.9 releases, which you can read more about in the CFEngine 3.8.0 and 3.9.0 release posts.
We’re happy to announce that CFEngine 3.10.0 LTS beta is now ready for testing! The established CFEngine release schedule shows that the 3.10.0 final version is due in December 2016, so it is time to test and fix any remaining issues! Being an LTS release, 3.10 will be supported until December 2019.
New variable expansion engine A high-demand improvement included in the 3.10 beta relates to speeding up variable expansion over large data structures. This means that working with large JSON-files or nested “classic” arrays is now much more efficient. We can let the numbers speak for themselves. In this simple test, we are using a JSON file with about 2 KB of size (locations.json