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Update the release cycle
- Align the “frequent” release cycle with the calendar - The 6-month release cycle is hard to keep track of. A monthly release will make it much easier to remember the release date. - Officialise the support for a stable version maintained for as long as NixOS stable - This is already the case in practice, it just happens that the “stable” Nixpkgs version is whichever version was deemed stable-enough at the time of the NixOS release. Officialise that by cutting a new major release alongside each NixOS one. Note that this breaks whatever semver compatibility Nix might pretend to have, but I don't think it makes sense any way.
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- [Experimental Features](contributing/experimental-features.md)
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- [Experimental Features](contributing/experimental-features.md)
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- [CLI guideline](contributing/cli-guideline.md)
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- [CLI guideline](contributing/cli-guideline.md)
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- [C++ style guide](contributing/cxx.md)
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- [C++ style guide](contributing/cxx.md)
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- [Release Notes](release-notes/index.md)
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- [Releases](release-notes/index.md)
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{{#include ./SUMMARY-rl-next.md}}
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{{#include ./SUMMARY-rl-next.md}}
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- [Release 2.21 (2024-03-11)](release-notes/rl-2.21.md)
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- [Release 2.21 (2024-03-11)](release-notes/rl-2.21.md)
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- [Release 2.20 (2024-01-29)](release-notes/rl-2.20.md)
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- [Release 2.20 (2024-01-29)](release-notes/rl-2.20.md)
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# Nix Release Notes
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# Nix Release Notes
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Nix has a release cycle of roughly 6 weeks.
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The Nix release cycle is calendar-based as follows:
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- A new minor version (`XX.YY+1.0`) is published every month and supported for two months;
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- A new major version (`XX+1.1.0`) is published twice a year, in April and October, and supported for eight months.
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The rationale behind that cycle is that
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- Minor versions stay close to master and bring early access to new features for the user who need them;
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- Major versions are aligned with the NixOS releases (released one month before NixOS and supported for as long at it).
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Bugfixes and security issues are backported to every supported version.
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Patch releases are published as needed.
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Notable changes and additions are announced in the release notes for each version.
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Notable changes and additions are announced in the release notes for each version.
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Bugfixes can be backported on request to previous Nix releases.
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We typically backport only as far back as the Nix version used in the latest NixOS release, which is announced in the [NixOS release notes](https://nixos.org/manual/nixos/stable/release-notes.html#ch-release-notes).
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Backports never skip releases.
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If a feature is backported to version `x.y`, it must also be available in version `x.(y+1)`.
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This ensures that upgrading from an older version with backports is still safe and no backported functionality will go missing.
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