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Contributing to Parse Server

Table of Contents

Contributing

Before you start to code, please open a new issue to describe your idea, or search for and continue the discussion in an existing issue.

⚠️ Please do not post a security vulnerability on GitHub or in the Parse Community Forum. Instead, follow the Parse Community Security Policy.

Please completely fill out any templates to provide essential information about your new feature or the bug you discovered.

Together we will plan out the best conceptual approach for your contribution, so that your and our time is invested in the best possible approach. The discussion often reveals how to leverage existing features of Parse Server to reach your goal with even less effort and in a more sustainable way.

When you are ready to code, you can find more information about opening a pull request in the GitHub docs.

Whether this is your first contribution or you are already an experienced contributor, the Parse Community has your back – don't hesitate to ask for help!

Issue vs. Pull Request

An issue is required to be linked in every pull request. We understand that no-one likes to create an issue for something that appears to be a simple pull request, but here is why this is beneficial for everyone:

  • An issue get more visibility than a pull request as issues can be pinned, receive bounties and it is primarily the issue list that people browse through rather than the more technical pull request list. Visibility is a key aspect so others can weigh in on issues and contribute their opinion.
  • The discussion in the issue is different from the discussion in the pull request. The issue discussion is focused on the issue and how to address it, whereas the discussion in the pull request is focused on a specific implemention. An issue may even have multiple pull requests because either the issue requires multiple implementations or multiple pull requests are opened to compare and test different approaches to later decide for one.
  • High-level conceptual discussions about the issue should be still available, even if a pull request is closed because its appraoch was discarded. If these discussions are in the pull request instead, they can easily become fragmented over multiple pull requests and issues, which can make it very hard to make sense of all aspects of an issue.

Templates

You are required to use and completely fill out the templates for new issues and pull requests. We understand that no-one enjoys filling out forms, but here is why this is beneficial for everyone:

  • It may take you 30 seconds longer, but will save even more time for everyone else trying to understand your issue.
  • It helps to fix issues and merge pull requests faster as reviewers spend less time trying to understand your issue.
  • It makes investigations easier when others try to understand your issue and code changes made even years later.

Why Contributing?

Buy cheap, buy twice. What? No, this is not the Economics 101 class, but the same is true for contributing.

There are two ways of writing a feature or fixing a bug. Sometimes the quick solution is to just write a Cloud Code function that does what you want. Contributing by making the change directly in Parse Server may take a bit longer, but it actually saves you much more time in the long run.

Consider the benefits you get:

  • 🚀 Higher efficiency

    Your code is examined for efficiency and interoperability with existing features by the community.
  • 🛡 Stronger security

    Your code is scrutinized for bugs and vulnerabilities and automated checks help to identify security issues that may arise in the future.
  • 🧬 Continuous improvement

    If your feature is used by others it is likely to be continuously improved and extended by the community.
  • 💝 Giving back

    You give back to the community that contributed to make the Parse Platform become what it is today and for future developers to come.
  • 🧑‍🎓 Improving yourself

    You learn to better understand the inner workings of Parse Server, which will help you to write more efficient and resilient code for your own application.

Most importantly, with every contribution you improve your skills so that future contributions take even less time and you get all the benefits above for free — easy choice, right?

Contribution FAQs

Reviewer Role

Instead of writing review comments back-and-forth, why doesn't the reviewer just write the code themselves?

A reviewer is already helping you to make a code contribution through their review. A reviewer may even help you to write code by actually writing it for you, but is not obliged to do so.

GitHub allows reviewers to suggest and write code changes as part of the review feedback. These code suggestions are likely to contain mistakes due to the lack of code syntax checks when writing code directly on GitHub. You should therefore always review these suggestions before accepting them, ideally in an IDE. If you merge a code suggestion and the CI then fails, take another look at the code change before asking the reviewer for help.

Review Feedback

It takes too much effort to incorporate the review feedback, why why can't you just merge my pull request?

If you are a new contributor, it's naturally a learning experience for you and therefore takes longer. We welcome contributors of any experience levels and gladly support you in getting familiar with the code base and our quality standards and contribution requirements. In return we expect you to be open to and appreciative of the reviewers' feedback.

In a large pull request, it can be a significant effort to bring it over the finish line. Luckily this is a collaborative environment and others are free to jump in to contribute to the pull request to share the effort. You can either give others access to your fork or they can open their own pull request based on your previous work.

If you are out of resources stay calm, explain your personal constraints (expertise or time) and ask for help. Wasting time by complaining about the amount of review comments will neither use your own time in a meaningful way, nor the time of others who read your complaint.

This is a collaborative enviroment in which everyone works on a common goal - to get a pull request ready for merging. Reviewers are working with you to get your pull request ready, not against you.

❗️ Always be mindful that the reviewers' efforts are an integral part of code contribution. Their review is as important as your written code and their review time is a valuable as your coding time.

Merge Readiness

The feature already works, why do you request more changes instead of just merging my pull request?

A feature may work for your own use case or in your own environment, but that doesn't necessarily mean that it's ready for merging. Aside from code quality and code style requirements, reviewers also review based on strategic and architectural considerations. It's often easy to just get a feature to work, but it needs to be also maintained in the future, robust therefore well tested and validated, intuitive for other developers to use, well documented, and not cause a forseeable breaking change in the near future.

Review Validity

The reviewer has never worked on the issue and was never part of any previous discussion, why would I care about their opinion?

It's contrary to an open, collaborative environment to expect others to be involved in an issue or discussion since its beginning. Such a mindset would close out any new views, which are important for a differentiated discussion.

The reviewer doesn't have any expertise in that matter, why would I care about their opinion?

Your arguments must focus on the issue, not on your assumption of someone else's personal experience. We will take immediate and appropriate action in case of personal attacks, regardless of your previous contributions. Personal attacks are not permissible. If you became a victim of personal attacks, you can privately report the GitHub comment to the Parse Platform PMC.

Environment Setup

Recommended Tools

Setting up your local machine

  • Fork this project and clone the fork on your local machine:
$ git clone https://github.com/parse-community/parse-server
$ cd parse-server # go into the clone directory
$ npm install # install all the node dependencies
$ code . # launch vscode
$ npm run watch # run babel watching for local file changes

To launch VS Code from the terminal with the code command you first need to follow the launching from the command line section in the VS Code setup documentation.

Once you have babel running in watch mode, you can start making changes to parse-server.

Good to Know

  • The lib/ folder is not committed, so never make changes in there.
  • Always make changes to files in the src/ folder.
  • All the tests should point to sources in the lib/ folder.
  • The lib/ folder is produced by babel using either the npm run build, npm run watch, or the npm run prepare step.
  • The npm run prepare step is automatically invoked when your package depends on forked parse-server installed via git for example using npm install --save git+https://github.com/[username]/parse-server#[branch/commit].
  • The tests are run against a single server instance. You can change the server configurations using await reconfigureServer({ ... some configuration }) found in spec/helper.js.
  • The tests are ran at random.
  • Caches and Configurations are reset after every test.
  • Users are logged out after every test.
  • Cloud Code hooks are removed after every test.
  • Database is deleted after every test (indexes are not removed for speed)
  • Tests are located in the spec folder
  • For better test reporting enable PARSE_SERVER_LOG_LEVEL=debug

Troubleshooting

Question: I modify the code in the src folder but it doesn't seem to have any effect.
Answer: Check that npm run watch is running

Question: How do I use breakpoints and debug step by step?
Answer: The easiest way is to install Jasmine Test Explorer, it will let you run selectively tests and debug them.

Question: How do I deploy my forked version on my servers?
Answer: In your package.json, update the parse-server dependency to https://github.com/[username]/parse-server#[branch/commit]. Run npm install, commit the changes and deploy to your servers.

Question: How do I deploy my forked version using docker?
Answer: In your package.json, update the parse-server dependency to https://github.com/[username]/parse-server#[branch/commit]. Make sure the npm install step in your Dockerfile is running under non-privileged user for the npm run prepare step to work correctly. For official node images from hub.docker.com that non-privileged user is node with /home/node working directory.

Please Do's

  • Begin by reading the Development Guide to learn how to get started running the parse-server.
  • Take testing seriously! Aim to increase the test coverage with every pull request. To obtain the test coverage of the project, run: npm run coverage
  • Run the tests for the file you are working on with the following command: npm test spec/MyFile.spec.js
  • Run the tests for the whole project to make sure the code passes all tests. This can be done by running the test command for a single file but removing the test file argument. The results can be seen at <PROJECT_ROOT>/coverage/lcov-report/index.html.
  • Lint your code by running npm run lint to make sure the code is not going to be rejected by the CI.
  • Do not publish the lib folder.
  • Mocks belong in the spec/support folder.
  • Please consider if any changes to the docs are needed or add additional sections in the case of an enhancement or feature.

Test against Postgres

If your pull request introduces a change that may affect the storage or retrieval of objects, you may want to make sure it plays nice with Postgres.

  • Run the tests against the postgres database with PARSE_SERVER_TEST_DB=postgres PARSE_SERVER_TEST_DATABASE_URI=postgres://postgres:password@localhost:5432/parse_server_postgres_adapter_test_database npm run testonly. You'll need to have postgres running on your machine and setup appropriately or use Docker.

  • The Postgres adapter has a special debugger that traces all the sql commands. You can enable it with setting the environment variable PARSE_SERVER_LOG_LEVEL=debug

  • If your feature is intended to only work with MongoDB, you should disable PostgreSQL-specific tests with:

    • describe_only_db('mongo') // will create a describe that runs only on mongoDB
    • it_only_db('mongo') // will make a test that only runs on mongo
    • it_exclude_dbs(['postgres']) // will make a test that runs against all DB's but postgres
  • Similarly, if your feature is intended to only work with PostgreSQL, you should disable MongoDB-specific tests with:

    • describe_only_db('postgres') // will create a describe that runs only on postgres
    • it_only_db('postgres') // will make a test that only runs on postgres
    • it_exclude_dbs(['mongo']) // will make a test that runs against all DB's but mongo
  • If your feature is intended to work with MongoDB and PostgreSQL, you can include or exclude tests more granularly with:

    • it_only_mongodb_version('>=4.4') // will test with any version of Postgres but only with version >=4.4 of MongoDB; accepts semver notation to specify a version range
    • it_exclude_mongodb_version('<4.4') // will test with any version of Postgres and MongoDB, excluding version <4.4 of MongoDB; accepts semver notation to specify a version range
    • it_only_postgres_version('>=13') // will test with any version of Mongo but only with version >=13 of Postgres; accepts semver notation to specify a version range
    • it_exclude_postgres_version('<13') // will test with any version of Postgres and MongoDB, excluding version <13 of Postgres; accepts semver notation to specify a version range

Postgres with Docker

PostGIS images (select one with v2.2 or higher) on docker dashboard is based off of the official postgres image and will work out-of-the-box (as long as you create a user with the necessary extensions for each of your Parse databases; see below). To launch the compatible Postgres instance, copy and paste the following line into your shell:

docker run -d --name parse-postgres -p 5432:5432 -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=password --rm postgis/postgis:13-3.2-alpine && sleep 20 && docker exec -it parse-postgres psql -U postgres -c 'CREATE DATABASE parse_server_postgres_adapter_test_database;' && docker exec -it parse-postgres psql -U postgres -c 'CREATE EXTENSION pgcrypto; CREATE EXTENSION postgis;' -d parse_server_postgres_adapter_test_database && docker exec -it parse-postgres psql -U postgres -c 'CREATE EXTENSION postgis_topology;' -d parse_server_postgres_adapter_test_database

To stop the Postgres instance:

docker stop parse-postgres

You can also use the postgis/postgis:13-3.2-alpine image in a Dockerfile and copy this script to the image by adding the following lines:

#Install additional scripts. These are run in abc order during initial start
COPY ./scripts/setup-dbs.sh /docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/setup-dbs.sh
RUN chmod +x /docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/setup-dbs.sh

Note that the script above will ONLY be executed during initialization of the container with no data in the database, see the official Postgres image for details. If you want to use the script to run again be sure there is no data in the /var/lib/postgresql/data of the container.

Breaking Changes

Breaking changes should be avoided whenever possible. For a breaking change to be accepted, the benefits of the change have to clearly outweigh the costs of developers having to adapt their deployments. If a breaking change is only cosmetic it will likely be rejected and preferred to become obsolete organically during the course of further development, unless it is required as part of a larger change. Breaking changes should follow the Deprecation Policy.

Please consider that Parse Server is just one component in a stack that requires attention. A breaking change requires resources and effort to adapt an environment. An unnecessarily high frequency of breaking changes can have detrimental side effects such as:

  • "upgrade fatigue" where developers run old versions of Parse Server because they cannot always attend to every update that contains a breaking change
  • less secure Parse Server deployments that run on old versions which is contrary to the security evangelism Parse Server intends to facilitate for developers
  • less feedback and slower identification of bugs and an overall slow-down of Parse Server development because new versions with breaking changes also include new features we want to get feedback on

Deprecation Policy

If you change or remove an existing feature that would lead to a breaking change, use the following deprecation pattern:

  • Make the new feature or change optional, if necessary with a new Parse Server option parameter.
  • Use a default value that falls back to existing behavior.
  • Add a deprecation definition in Deprecator/Deprecations.js that will output a deprecation warning log message on Parse Server launch, for example:

    DeprecationWarning: The Parse Server option 'example' will be removed in a future release.

For deprecations that can only be determined ad-hoc during runtime, for example Parse Query syntax deprecations, use the Deprecator.logRuntimeDeprecation() method.

Deprecations become breaking changes after notifying developers through deprecation warnings for at least one entire previous major release. For example:

  • 4.5.0 is the current version
  • 4.6.0 adds a new optional feature and a deprecation warning for the existing feature
  • 5.0.0 marks the beginning of logging the deprecation warning for one entire major release
  • 6.0.0 makes the breaking change by removing the deprecation warning and making the new feature replace the existing feature

See the Deprecation Plan for an overview of deprecations and planned breaking changes.

Feature Considerations

Security Checks

The Parse Server security checks feature warns developers about weak security settings in their Parse Server deployment.

A security check needs to be added for every new feature or enhancement that allows the developer to configure it in a way that weakens security mechanisms or exposes functionality which creates a weak spot for malicious attacks. If you are not sure whether your feature or enhancements requires a security check, feel free to ask.

For example, allowing public read and write to a class may be useful to simplify development but should be disallowed in a production environment.

Security checks are added in CheckGroups.

Add Security Check

Adding a new security check for your feature is easy and fast:

  1. Look into CheckGroups whether there is an existing CheckGroup[Category].js file for the category of check to add. For example, a check regarding the database connection is added to CheckGroupDatabase.js.

  2. If you did not find a file, duplicate an existing file and replace the category name in setName() and the checks in setChecks():

    class CheckGroupNewCategory extends CheckGroup {
      setName() {
        return 'House';
      }
      setChecks() {
        return [
          new Check({
            title: 'Door locked',
            warning: 'Anyone can enter your house.',
            solution: 'Lock the door.',
            check: () => {    
              return;     // Example of a passing check
            }
          }),
          new Check({
            title: 'Camera online',
            warning: 'Security camera is offline.',
            solution: 'Check the camera.',
            check: async () => {  
              throw 1;     // Example of a failing check
            }
          }),
        ];
      }
    }
  3. If you added a new file in the previous step, reference the file in CheckGroups.js, which is the collector of all security checks:

    export { default as CheckGroupNewCategory } from './CheckGroupNewCategory';
    
  4. Add a test that covers the new check to SecurityCheckGroups.js for the cases of success and failure.

Wording Guideline

Consider the following when adding a new security check:

  • Group.name: The category name; ends without period as this is a headline.
  • Check.title: Is the positive hypothesis that should be checked, for example "Door locked" instead of "Door unlocked"; ends without period as this is a title.
  • Check.warning: The warning if the test fails; ends with period as this is a description.
  • Check.solution: The recommended solution if the test fails; ends with period as this is an instruction.
  • The wordings must not contain any sensitive information such as keys, as the security report may be exposed in logs.
  • The wordings should be concise and not contain verbose explanations, for example "Door locked" instead of "Door has been locked securely".
  • Do not use pronouns such as "you" or "your" because log files can have various readers with different roles. Do not use pronouns such as "I" or "me" because although we love it dearly, Parse Server is not a human.

Parse Error

Introducing new Parse Errors requires the following steps:

  1. Research whether an existing Parse Error already covers the error scenario. Keep in mind that reusing an already existing Parse Error does not allow to distinguish between scenarios in which the same error is thrown, so it may be necessary to add a new and more specific Parse Error, even though a more general Parse Error already exists. ⚠️ Currently (as of Dec. 2020), there are inconsistencies between the Parse Errors documented in the Parse Guides, coded in the Parse JS SDK and coded in Parse Server, therefore research regarding the availability of error codes has to be conducted in all of these sources.
  2. Add the new Parse Error to /src/ParseError.js in the Parse JavaScript SDK. This is the primary reference for Parse Errors for the Parse JavaScript SDK and Parse Server.
  3. Create a pull request for the Parse JavaScript SDK including the new Parse Errors. The PR needs to be merged and a new Parse JS SDK version needs to be released.
  4. Change the Parse JS SDK dependency in package.json of Parse Server to the newly released Parse JS SDK version, so that the new Parse Error is recognized by Parse Server.
  5. When throwing the new Parse Error in code, do not hard-code the error code but instead reference the error code from the Parse Error. For example:
    throw new Parse.Error(Parse.Error.EXAMPLE_ERROR_CODE, 'Example error message.');
  6. Choose a descriptive error message that provdes more details about the specific error scenario. Different error messages may be used for the same error code. For example:
    throw new Parse.Error(Parse.Error.FILE_SAVE_ERROR, 'The file could not be saved because it exceeded the maximum allowed file size.');
    throw new Parse.Error(Parse.Error.FILE_SAVE_ERROR, 'The file could not be saved because the file format was incorrect.');
  7. Add the new Parse Error to the docs.

Parse Server Configuration

Introducing new Parse Server configuration parameters requires the following steps:

  1. Add parameters definitions in /src/Options/index.js.

  2. If the new parameter does not have one single value but is a parameter group (an object containing multiple sub-parameters):

    For example, take a look at the existing Parse Server security parameter. It is a parameter group, because it has multiple sub-parameter such as checkGroups. Its interface is defined in index.js as export interface SecurityOptions. Therefore, the value to add to nestedOptionTypes would be SecurityOptions, the value to add to nestedOptionEnvPrefix would be PARSE_SERVER_SECURITY_.

  3. Execute npm run definitions to automatically create the definitions in /src/Options/Definitions.js and /src/Options/docs.js.

  4. Add parameter value validation in /src/Config.js.

  5. Add test cases to ensure the correct parameter value validation. Parse Server throws an error at launch if an invalid value is set for any configuration parameter.

  6. Execute npm run docs to generate the documentation in the /out directory. Take a look at the documentation whether the description and formatting of the newly introduced parameters is satisfactory.

Pull Request

Commit Message

For release automation, the title of pull requests needs to be written in a defined syntax. We loosely follow the Conventional Commits specification, which defines this syntax:

<type>: <summary>

The type is the category of change that is made, possible types are:

  • feat - add a new feature or improve an existing feature
  • fix - fix a bug
  • refactor - refactor code without impact on features or performance
  • docs - add or edit code comments, documentation, GitHub pages
  • style - edit code style
  • build - retry failing build and anything build process related
  • perf - performance optimization
  • ci - continuous integration
  • test - tests

The summary is a short change description in present tense, not capitalized, without period at the end. This summary will also be used as the changelog entry.

  • It must be short and self-explanatory for a reader who does not see the details of the full pull request description
  • It must not contain abbreviations, e.g. instead of LQ write LiveQuery
  • It must use the correct product and feature names as referenced in the documentation, e.g. instead of Cloud Validator use Cloud Function validation
  • In case of a breaking change, the summary must not contain duplicate information that is also in the BREAKING CHANGE chapter of the pull request description. It must not contain a note that it is a breaking change, as this will be automatically flagged as such if the pull request description contains the BREAKING CHANGE chapter.

For example:

feat: add handle to door for easy opening

Currently, we are not making use of the commit scope, which would be written as <type>(<scope>): <summary>, that attributes a change to a specific part of the product.

Breaking Change

If a pull request contains a braking change, the description of the pull request must contain a dedicated chapter at the bottom to indicate this. This is to assist the committer of the pull request to avoid merging a breaking change as non-breaking.

Merging

The following guide is for anyone who merges a contributor pull request into the working branch, the working branch into a release branch, a release branch into another release branch, or any other direct commits such as hotfixes into release branches or the working branch.

  • A contributor pull request must be merged into the working branch using Squash and Merge, to create a single commit message that describes the change.
  • A release branch or the default branch must be merged into another release branch using Merge Commit, to preserve each individual commit message that describes its respective change.
  • For changelog generation, only the commit message set when merging the pull request is relevant. The title and description of the GitHub pull request as authored by the contributor have no influence on the changelog generation. However, the title of the GitHub pull request should be used as the commit message. See the following chapters for considerations in special scenarios, e.g. merging a breaking change or reverting a commit.

Breaking Change

If the pull request contains a breaking change, the commit message must contain the phrase BREAKING CHANGE, capitalized and without any formatting, followed by a short description of the breaking change and ideally how the developer should address it, all in a single line. This line should contain more details focusing on the "breaking” aspect of the change and is intended to assist the developer in adapting. Keep it concise, as it will become part of the changelog entry, for example:

fix: remove handle from door

BREAKING CHANGE: You cannot open the door anymore by using a handle. See the [#migration guide](http://example.com) for more details.

Keep in mind that in a repository with release automation, merging such a commit message will trigger a release with a major version increment.

Reverting

If the commit reverts a previous commit, use the prefix revert:, followed by the header of the reverted commit. In the body of the commit message add This reverts commit <hash>., where the hash is the SHA of the commit being reverted. For example:

revert: fix: remove handle from door

This reverts commit 1234567890abcdef.

⚠️ A revert prefix will always trigger a release. Generally, a commit that did not trigger a release when it was initially merged should also not trigger a release when it is reverted. For example, do not use the revert prefix when reverting a commit that has a ci prefix:

ci: add something

is reverted with:

ci: remove something

instead of:

revert: ci: add something

This reverts commit 1234567890abcdef.

Releasing

General Considerations

  • The package-lock.json file has to be deleted and recreated by npm from scratch in regular intervals using the npm i command. It is not enough to only update the file via automated security pull requests (e.g. dependabot, snyk), that can create inconsistencies between sub-dependencies of a dependency and increase the chances of vulnerabilities. The file should be recreated once every release cycle which is usually monthly.

Major Release / Long-Term-Support

While the current major version is published on branch release, a Long-Term-Support (LTS) version is published on branch release-#.x.x, for example release-4.x.x for the Parse Server 4.x LTS branch.

Preparing Release

The following changes are done in the alpha branch, before publishing the last beta version that will eventually become the major release. This way the changes trickle naturally through all branches and code consistency is ensured among branches.

  • Make sure all deprecations are reflected in code, old code is removed and the deprecations table is updated.
  • Add the future LTS branch release-#.x.x to the branch list in release.config.js so that the branch will later be recognized for release automation.

Publishing Release (forward-merge):

  1. Create new temporary branch build on branch beta.
  2. Create PR to merge build into release:
    • PR title: build: release
    • PR description: (leave empty)
  3. Resolve any conflicts:
    • For conflicts regarding the package version in package.json and package-lock.json it doesn't matter which version is chosen, as the version will be set by auto-release in a commit after merging. However, for both files the same version should be chosen when resolving the conflict.
  4. Merge PR with a "merge commit", do not "squash and merge":
    • Commit message: (use PR title)
    • Description: (leave empty)
  5. Wait for GitHub Action release-automated to finish:
    • If GitHub Action fails, investigate why; manual correction may be needed.
  6. Pull all remote branches into local branches.
  7. Delete temporary branch build.
  8. Create new temporary branch build on branch alpha.
  9. Create PR to merge build into beta:
    • PR title: build: release
    • PR description: (leave empty)
  10. Repeat steps 3-7 for PR from step 9.

Publishing Hotfix (back-merge):

  1. Create PR to merge hotfix PR into release:

    • Merge PR following the same rules as any PR would be merged into the working branch alpha.
  2. Wait for GitHub Action release-automated to finish:

    • GitHub Action will fail with error ! [rejected] HEAD -> beta (non-fast-forward); this is expected as auto-release currently cannot fully handle back-merging; docker will not publish the new release, so this has to be done manually using the GitHub workflow release-manual-docker and entering the version tag that has been created by auto-release.
  3. Pull all remote branches into local branches.

  4. Create a new temporary branch backmerge on branch release.

  5. Create PR to merge backmerge into beta:

    • PR title: refactor: <commit-summary> where <commit-summary> is the commit summary of step 1. The commit type needs to be refactor, otherwise the commit will show in the changelog of the release branch, once the beta branch is merged into release; this would a duplicate entry because the same changelog entry has already been generated when the PR was merged into the release branch in step 1.
    • PR description: (leave empty)
  6. Resolve any conflicts:

    • During back-merging, usually all changes are preserved; current changes come from the hotfix in the release branch, the incoming changes come from the beta branch usually being ahead of the release branch. This makes back-merging so complex and bug-prone and is the main reason why it should be avoided if possible.
  7. Merge PR with "squash and merge", do not do a "merge commit":

    • Commit message: (use PR title)
    • Description: (leave empty)

    ℹ️ Merging this PR will not trigger a release; the back-merge will not appear in changelogs of the beta, alpha branches; the back-merged fix will be an undocumented change of these branches' next releases; if necessary, the change needs to be added manually to the pre-release changelogs after the next pre-releases.

  8. Delete temporary branch backmerge.

  9. Create a new temporary branch backmerge on branch beta.

  10. Repeat steps 4-8 to merge PR into alpha.

⚠️ Long-term-support branches are excluded from the processes above and handled individually as they do not have pre-releases branches and are not considered part of the current codebase anymore. It may be necessary to significantly adapt a PR for a LTS branch due to the differences in codebase and CI tests. This adaption should be done in advance before merging any related PR, especially for security fixes, as to not publish a vulnerability while it may still take significant time to adapt the fix for the older codebase of a LTS branch.

Publishing Major Release (Yearly Release)

  1. Create LTS branch release-#.x.x off the latest version tag on release branch.
  2. Create temporary branch build-release off branch beta and create a pull request with release as the base branch.
  3. Merge branch build-release into release. Given that there will be breaking changes, a new major release will be created. In the unlikely case that there have been no breaking changes between the previous major release and the upcoming release, a major version increment has to be triggered manually. See the docs of the release automation framework for how to do that.

Versioning

The following versioning system is applied since Parse Server 5.0.0 and does not necessarily apply to previous releases.

Parse Server follows semantic versioning with a flavor of calendric versioning. Semantic versioning makes Parse Server easy to upgrade because breaking changes only occur in major releases. Calendric versioning gives an additional sense of how old a Parse Server release is and allows for Long-Term Support of previous major releases.

Example version: 5.0.0-alpha.1

Syntax: [major].[minor].[patch]-[pre-release-label].[pre-release-increment]

  • The major version increments with the first release of every year and may include changes that are not backwards compatible.
  • The minor version increments during the year and may include new features or improvements of existing features that are backwards compatible.
  • The patch version increments during the year and may include bug fixes that are backwards compatible.
  • The pre-release-label is optional for pre-release versions such as:
    • -alpha (likely to contain bugs, likely to change in features until release)
    • -beta (likely to contain bugs, no change in features until release)
  • The [pre-release-increment] is a number that increments with every new version of a pre-release

Exceptions:

  • The major version may increment during the year in the unlikely event that a breaking change is so urgent that it cannot wait for the next yearly release. An example would be a vulnerability fix that leads to an unavoidable breaking change. However, security requirements depend on the application and not every vulnerability may affect every deployment, depending on the features used. Therefore we usually prefer to deprecate insecure functionality and introduce the breaking change following our deprecation policy.

Code of Conduct

This project adheres to the Contributor Covenant Code of Conduct. By participating, you are expected to honor this code.