Channels are an important snap concept. They define which release of a snap is installed and tracked for updates.
A channel consists of, and is subdivided by, tracks, risk-levels and branches:
The complete channel name can be structured as three distinct parts separated by slashes:
<track>/<risk>/<branch>
The tracking value for an installed snap, as shown in the output from the snap list
command, shows which channel is installed and is being followed for that snap.
All snaps have a default track. Without the snap developer specifying otherwise, the default track is called latest. Similarly, when no track is specified, a snap will implicitly install from the latest track. The track can also be specified explicitly:
snap install vlc --channel=latest/edge
Developers can optionally choose whether to supplement the default latest track with additional tracks. The developer is also free to designate one of these as the default track to be installed when no further preference is given.
Microsoft’s Skype snap is a good example of how tracks can be used. It contains two tracks: the default latest track for the majority of users, and an insider track for Microsoft’s QA team and users interested in testing the latest Skype developments ahead of a stable release.
Equally, a track could also be used to track minor updates (2.0.1, 2.0.2), major updates (2.1, 2.2), or releases held for long-term support (3.2, 4.1).
Tracks are listed in the channels section of the output from the snap info
command:
$ snap info skype
[...]
channels:
stable: 8.28.0.41 (51) 148MB classic
candidate: ↑
beta: ↑
edge: ↑
insider/stable: 8.30.76.41 (53) 151MB classic
insider/candidate: ↑
insider/beta: ↑
insider/edge: ↑
[...]
In the above output, the Skype snap includes the custom insider track. You can also see which tracks a snap supports by clicking Other versions from its online Store entry.
To install Skype from its insider track, for example, use the following command:
snap install skype --channel=insider/stable
A user who already has Skype installed can switch channel with the snap refresh
command:
snap refresh skype --channel=insider/stable
Alternatively if using GNOME Software, select the ‘stable’ channel in the store page for Skype, and select a channel to switch to.
Developers must currently make a request for tracks to be added to their snap via the #store-requests forum category. Releases are verified and checked to ensure that reasonable user expectations are being met. For example, only 3.2.* versions are accepted into a 3.2 track.
There are four risk-levels: stable, candidate, beta and edge. These represent decreasing levels of stability for a snap, although that decision is ultimately up to the snap’s publisher.
Installing from a less stable risk-level will typically mean that updates for a snap will be more frequent than for a more stable risk-level.
The risk-levels have the following meaning:
stable: for the vast majority of users running on production environments.
Releases at this risk level are as stable as they will ever get, according to the project’s standards. Important software will only reach this stage once it’s ready for production use and may be used in products. There is an implied promise to avoid any changes that would disrupt those usages.
candidate: for users who need to test updates prior to stable deployment, or those verifying whether a specific issue has been resolved.
Candidate releases are considered almost ready for going into stable, but need some additional real world experimentation before they move forward. Software reaching this stage will typically have passed all available QA and review processes, since users following it expect a high stability level. Should almost never break.
beta: for users wanting to test the latest features, typically outside of a production environment.
Beta is the first level towards the stabilisation of what was before a fast moving stream of changes. Specific projects may have slightly different terminology for such releases (alpha, beta, etc) but all of these are welcome on this risk level. These releases will almost certainly have passed some sort of review and QA, but may still have unfinished parts. Breaking changes are still relatively common here.
edge: for users wanting to closely track development.
Edge releases often include a moving stream of changes without QA or review promises and are typically built automatically by a CI process from an arbitrary source code snapshot. Often the CI will only publish after some sort of automatic QA passed, and code reviews remain a good practice, but these are project specific. Assume edge releases may break often.
Snaps are installed from the stable risk-level by default. For example, the following command installs VLC from its stable channel:
sudo snap install vlc
Use the --channel
option to select a different risk-level. The following command will install the latest beta snap of VLC:
sudo snap install --channel=beta vlc
If the beta snap is not available, a snap will be installed from the closest channel with a more stable risk-level.
For brevity, --stable
, --candidate
, --beta
and --edge
can be used instead of --channel=<risk-level>
After installation, the risk-level being tracked can be changed with the use of the switch
command option:
sudo snap switch --channel=stable vlc
This option will not automatically refresh the snap to force the installation
of a new snap. To switch channels and update the snap with a single command, add the --channel
option to the refresh command:
sudo snap refresh --channel=stable vlc
To check which channel a snap is tracking, look for the tracking field in the output from the snap info
command:
$ snap info vlc
[...]
snap-id: RT9mcUhVsRYrDLG8qnvGiy26NKvv6Qkd
tracking: edge
refresh-date: yesterday at 19:54 BST
[...]
Risk-levels may not match a project’s internal conventions. Some projects may use alpha instead of edge, for instance. However, a project’s own release nomenclature should be close enough to a snap’s risk-levels to allow you to judge the relative stability of the version you’re installing.
A branch is an optional, fine-grained subdivision of a channel for a published snap that allows for the creation of short-lived sequences of snaps that can be pushed on demand by snap developers to help with fixes or temporary experimentation.
Branch names convey their purpose, such as fix-for-bug123
, but the name isn’t exposed in the normal way, such as with the snap info
command. Instead, they can only be installed by someone who knows the branch name, and this is usually only shared by the snap developer to test a specific fix or release.
After 30 days with no further updates, a branch will be closed automatically. The replacement snap will then be chosen as it would be with closed channels (see below). For example, beta/fix-for-bug123 will fall back to beta after the fix-for-bug123 branch is closed.
See Publish to a branch for more details on how snap developers can use branches to publish temporary snap releases.
A channel can be closed by a snap publisher when there is no longer a snap that fits a channel’s original purpose or specification.
For example, when a specific risk-level channel is closed, the snap store will select a snap from a more stable risk-level of the same track. If the original channel is re-opened, snaps will once again be selected from the original channel.
This approach is commonly used for beta testing. If a snap is following a beta channel that is then closed, the store will offer the snap from the candidate channel. If the candidate channel is not available, the snap from the stable channel will be selected. If the beta channel re-opens, the snap will once again be selected from that channel.
Last updated 11 months ago.