Take the community feedback survey now.

Magnus Rahl
Aug 4, 2016
  1882
(0 votes)

Episerver updates are released weekly

Every now and then I see the claim that Episerver releases product updates every two weeks. This isn't quite correct, and the truth is even better: We release updates every week!

This is probably nothing new for anyone who updates frequently and sees the new versions pop up on the NuGet feed. But since the two week misconception pops up again and again I wanted to set it straight.

I don't know where this claim originally came from, the article outlining our continuous release process, posted years ago, mentions weekly updates. But with a little detail on how we work you will see where the two weeks are in the process, possibly giving rise to this misconception.

We have a continuously running planning process where we research and design features, triage bugs and reprioritize the development backlog. The dev teams pick features/bugs from the backlog and implement/fix them. Automated builds, tests and metrics continuously run on the code being committed. Our QA teams pick up and verfy the built packages give thumbs up/down for release.

Because of the high level of automation, the cadence of this dev-QA-release pipeline is only limited by the time it takes to develop something, perform any manual verification necessary, and smoke test the package as a whole for side-effects. However, for the sake of completeness and consistency (and frankly, sanity) we do not pass every package built from development to QA. Instead, we aggregate the features and fixes completed within a week and branch off a release candidate (prerelease) which QA go on to verify. With the release window coming up once a week, this on average gives QA one week to verify the package and for dev to fix any issues found by QA.

Here you have the two weeks - it is the "delay" from start of a development cycle to the first possible release window for that code after verification. But of course the dev team isn't idle while while QA are verifying a package. They are already working on the next set of features/fixes to be passed to QA the following week, which is why a new version of the same package can be released every week.

Finally, the delay for fixing a high priority bug can be even shorter as a fix can be developed and included late in the dev week, closing in on a one week round trip time.

Aug 04, 2016

Comments

Please login to comment.
Latest blogs
A day in the life of an Optimizely OMVP - Opticon London 2025

This installment of a day in the life of an Optimizely OMVP gives an in-depth coverage of my trip down to London to attend Opticon London 2025 held...

Graham Carr | Oct 2, 2025

Optimizely Web Experimentation Using Real-Time Segments: A Step-by-Step Guide

  Introduction Personalization has become de facto standard for any digital channel to improve the user's engagement KPI’s.  Personalization uses...

Ratish | Oct 1, 2025 |

Trigger DXP Warmup Locally to Catch Bugs & Performance Issues Early

Here’s our documentation on warmup in DXP : 🔗 https://docs.developers.optimizely.com/digital-experience-platform/docs/warming-up-sites What I didn...

dada | Sep 29, 2025

Creating Opal Tools for Stott Robots Handler

This summer, the Netcel Development team and I took part in Optimizely’s Opal Hackathon. The challenge from Optimizely was to extend Opal’s abiliti...

Mark Stott | Sep 28, 2025

Integrating Commerce Search v3 (Vertex AI) with Optimizely Configured Commerce

Introduction This blog provides a technical guide for integrating Commerce Search v3, which leverages Google Cloud's Vertex AI Search, into an...

Vaibhav | Sep 27, 2025

A day in the life of an Optimizely MVP - Opti Graph Extensions add-on v1.0.0 released

I am pleased to announce that the official v1.0.0 of the Opti Graph Extensions add-on has now been released and is generally available. Refer to my...

Graham Carr | Sep 25, 2025