The content below is taken from the original (OpenStack Developer Mailing List Digest March 11-17), to continue reading please visit the site. Remember to respect the Author & Copyright.
SuccessBot Says
- Dims [1]: Nova now has a python35 based CI job in check queue running Tempest tests (everything running on py35)
- jaypipes [2]: Finally got a good functional test created that stresses the Ironic and Nova integration and migration from Newton to Ocata.
- Lbragstad [3]: the OpenStack-Ansible project has a test environment that automates rolling upgrade performance testing
- annegentle [4]: Craig Sterrett and the App Dev Enablement WG: New links to more content for the appdev docs [5]
- jlvillal [6]: Ironic team completed the multi-node grenade CI job
- Tell us yours via OpenStack IRC channels with message “#success <message>”
- All: [7]
Pike Release Management Communication
- The release liaison is responsible for:
- Coordinating with the release management team.
- Validating your team release team requests.
- Ensure release cycle deadlines are met.
- It’s encouraged to nominate a release liaison. Otherwise this tasks falls back to the PTL.
- Ensure the releaase liaison has time and ability to handle the communication necessary.
- Failing to follow through on a needed process step may block you from meeting deadlines or releasing as our milestones are date-based, not feature-based.
- Three primary communication tools:
- Email for announcements and asynchronous communication
- “[release]” topic tag on the openstack-dev mailing list.
- This includes the weekly release countdown emails with details on focus, tasks, and upcoming dates.
- IRC for time sensitive interactions
- With more than 50 teams, the release team relies on your presence in the freenode #openstack-release channel.
- Written documentation for relatively stable information
- Email for announcements and asynchronous communication
- Things to do right now:
- Update your mail filters to look for “[release]” in the subject line.
- Full thread [12]
OpenStack Summit Boston Schedule Now Live!
- Main conference schedule [13]
- Register now [14]
- Hotel discount rates for attendees [15]
- Stackcity party [16]
- Take the certified OpenStack Administrator exam [17]
- City guide of restaurants and must see sites [18]
- Full thread [19]
Some Information About the Forum at the Summit in Boston
- “Forum” proper
- 3 medium sized fishbowl rooms for cross-community discussions.
- Selected and scheduled by a committee formed of TC and UC members, facilitated by the Foundation staff members.
- Brainstorming for topics [20]
- “On-boarding” rooms
- Two rooms setup classroom style for projects teams and workgroups who want to on-board new team members.
- Examples include providing introduction to your codebase for prospective new contributors.
- These should not be tradiitonal “project intro” talks.
- Free hacking/meetup spaces
- Four to five rooms populated with roundtables for ad-hoc discussions and hacking.
- Full thread [21]
The Future of the App Catalog
- Created early 2015 as a market place of pre-packaged applications [22] that you can deploy using Murano.
- This has grown to 45 Glance images, 13 Heat templates and 6 Tosca templates. Otherwise did not pick up a lot of steam.
- ~30% are just thin wrappers around Docker containers.
- Traffic stats show 100 visits per week, 75% of which only read the index page.
- In parallel, Docker developed a pretty successful containerized application marketplace (Docker Hub) with hundreds or thousands regularly updated apps.
- Keeping the catalog around makes us look like we are unsuccessfully trying to compete with that ecosystem, while OpenStack is in fact complimentary.
- In the past, we have retired projects that were dead upstream.
- The app catalog is however has an active maintenance team.
- If we retire the app catalog, it would not be a reflection on that team performance, but that the beta was arguably not successful in build an active market place and a great fit from a strategy perspective.
- Two approaches for users today to deploy docker apps in OpenStack:
- Container-native approach using “docker run” after using Nova or K8s cluster using Magnum.
- OpenStack Native approach “zun create nginx”.
- Full thread [23][24]
ZooKeeper vs etcd for Tooz/DLM
- Devstack defaults to ZooKeeper and is opinionated about it.
- Lots of container related projects are using etcd [25], so do we need to avoid both ZooKeeper and etcd?
- For things like databases and message queues, it’s more than time for us to contract on one solution.
- For DLMs ZooKeepers gives us mature/ featureful angle. Etcd covers the Kubernetes cooperation / non-java angle.
- OpenStack interacts with DLM’s via the library Tooz. Tooz today only supports etcd v2, but v3 is planned which would support GRPC.
- The OpenStack gate will begin to default to etcd with Tooz.
- Full thread [26]
Small Steps for Go
- An etherpad [27] has been started to begin tackling the new language requirements [28] for Go.
- An golang-commons repository exists [29]
- Gopher cloud versus having a golang-client project is being discussed in the etherpad. Regardless we need support for os-client-config.
- Full thread [30]
POST /api-wg/news
- Guidelines under review:
- Full thread [35]
Proposal to Rename Castellan to oslo.keymanager
- Castellan is a python abstraction to different keymanager solutions such as Barbican. Implementations like Vault could be supported, but currently is not.
- The rename would emphasize the Castellan is an abstraction layer.
- Similar to oslo.db supporting MySQL and PostgreSQL.
- Instead of oslo.keymanager, it can be rolled into the oslo umbrella without a rename. Tooz sets the precedent of this.
- Full thread [36]
Release Countdown for week R-23 and R-22
- Focus:
- Specification approval and implementation for priority features for this cycle.
- Actions:
- Upcoming Deadlines and Dates
- Boston Forum topic formal submission period: March 20 – April 2
- Pike-1 milestone: April 13 (R-20 week)
- Forum at OpenStack Summit in Boston: May 8-11
- Full thread [40]
Deployment Working Group
- Mission: To collaborate on best practices for deploying and configuring OpenStack in production environments.
- Examples:
- OpenStack Ansible and Puppet OpenStack have been collaborating on Continuous Integration scenarios but also on Nova upgrades orchestration
- TripleO and Kolla share the same tool for container builds.
- TripleO and Fuel share the same Puppet OpenStack modules.
- OpenStack and Kubernetes are interested in collaborating on configuration management.
- Most of tools want to collect OpenStack parameters for configuration management in a common fashion.
- Wiki [41] has been started to document how the group will work together. Also an etherpad [42] for brainstorming.