Lwood-20161009

Introduction

Welcome to Last week on OpenStack Dev (“Lwood”) for the week just past. For more background on Lwood, please refer here.

Basic Stats for the week 3 to 9 October for openstack-dev:

  • ~392 Messages (down about 7% relative to last week)
  • ~134 Unique threads (down about 31% relative to last week)

Message count down a little, thread count down quite a lot – mostly a side effect I think of a couple of longer (25+ message) threads during the week.

Notable Discussions – openstack-dev

TC Election Results

On behalf of the electoral team, Tony Breeds announced the TC Elections results late in the week – our new TC members are Sean Dague, Doug Hellmann, Emilien Macchi, Steve Martinelli, Jeremy Stanley and Monty Taylor.

Call for Mentors at Barcelona Events

Emily Kate Hugenbruch notes there are a couple of great volunteer mentoring opportunities at the Barcelona Summit.  First one is assisting with the Upstream University program, the second being involved in the Speed Mentoring Breakfast that Intel are sponsoring on Tuesday morning.  Full details in Emily Kate’s post.

TC Election process discussions

An interesting thread cropped up early in the week about the TC election process, kicked off by this email from Ed Leafe.  Ed proposes some tweaks to timing so that the Candidate statements be available for a bit longer so that folk have more time to read and digest them before voting starts.  He additionally suggests considering making the statements anonymous so that there is less bias on the basis of the extent to which a candidate is known or popular.
As parts of the the subsequent discussion point out, this latter has the difficulty that sometimes people do, naturally, rely on those personal connections and associations to make voting decisions.  An interesting thread and worth a read if you’re interested in the governance side of OpenStack.

Deprecating the Ceilometer API

Julien Danjou suggested deprecating the Ceilometer API as much of the functionality it provides has now devolved into other projects under the Telemetry banner, Aodh and Panko among them.

A brief thread but if metrics or alarms/autoscale are up your alley worth a read – my take is the Telemetry project over all still wants to do all these things but the approach is changing somewhat.

Architecture Working Group propose APAC friendly meeting time

Clint Byrum notes that the Architecture Working Group are proposing an alternating odd/even schedule for meetings such that every second session will be an APAC friendly time (proposed as 0100 UTC Thursdays).  Woohoo, no more 6am meetings ;)

End of Cycle Retrospectives / Postmortems

With Newton all but done, projects are doing retrospectives, this week Sridhar Ramaswamy posted one for Tacker.

Notable Discussions – other OpenStack lists

Nothing that leapt out from the other lists this week, other than the small matter of the OpenStack Newton release officially being announced in this post from Doug Hellman!  Congratulations to all involved, a great accomplishment.

People and Projects

Core nominations & changes

Miscellanea

Further reading

Don’t forget these excellent sources of OpenStack news – most recent ones linked in each case

Credits

No tunes this week as your humble correspondent was, alas, somewhat distracted by other matters and not in a tune kinda a mood :/  On a brighter note – looking forward to giving this a spin later in the week.

Last but by no means least, thanks, as always, to Rackspace :)

Comments

Lwood-20161002

Introduction

Welcome to Last week on OpenStack Dev (“Lwood”) for the week just past. For more background on Lwood, please refer here.

Basic Stats for week 26 September to 2 October for openstack-dev:

  • ~422 Messages (down about 23% relative to last week)
  • ~193 Unique threads (up about 13% relative to last week)

Quite a bit of pre-summit logistics and TC election related traffic this week, a fairly quiet week for Lwood though.

Notable Discussions – openstack-dev

Blog post on Secure Development in Python

Travis McPeak flagged a post he put up on the OpenStack Security Project (OSSP) blog which discusses resources and tools to help developers write secure Python code.  While written with OpenStack developers in mind it has some good material in there for people doing Python development in just about any setting.

Call for Mentors and Mentees

From Kendall Nelson a piece on the mentoring program sponsored by the Women of OpenStack.  An invitation for folk to get involved in either capacity – worth considering :)

Community Contributor Awards nominations close soon

Tom Fifield wrote a quick reminder that nominations close soon for the Community Contributor Awards that Kendall Nelson announced last week.  A great way to recognise people, projects and other endeavours that further OpenStack.

TC Elections Underway

The selection of six new OpenStack Technical Committee (TC) members is underway – these new members will have a one year term.  I’ve noted the candidates below in the People and Projects section, if you’re eligible to vote you should have received an automated email to vote by now.

One thing that became clear to me in reading the various candidacy statements is that to a person we have a very capable bunch putting their names forward, we’re spoilt for choice even. My vote for the most amusing candidacy statement would have to go to this nomination from Clint Byrum though – his post quite possibly one of the funniest things I’ve read on openstack-dev :)

End of Cycle Retrospectives / Postmortems

With Newton all but done, projects are starting to do retrospectives, this week one from Jim Rollenhagen for Ironic.

Notable Discussions – other OpenStack lists

Nothing that leapt out from the other lists this week.

People and Projects

TC Nominations

Twenty one people put their names forward for the TC Elections which as noted above are now underway: Clark Boylan, Clint Byrum, Sean Dague, Steven Dake, John Davidge, Chris Dent, John Dickinson, John Griffith, Joshua Harlow, Doug Hellman, Anita Kuno, Amrith Kumar, Ed Leafe, Emilien Macchi, Steve Martinelli, Dolph Mathews, Sean McGinnis, Jim Rollenhagen, Ben Schwarzlander, Jeremy Stanley and Monty Taylor.

Core nominations & changes

  • [Puppet] Proposing David Moreau Simard part of Puppet OpenStack CI core team – Emilien Macchi
  • [Solum] Nominating Zhu Rong for core – Devdatta Kulkarni

Further Reading & Miscellanea

Don’t forget these excellent sources of OpenStack news – most recent ones linked in each case

This weeks edition of Lwood brought to you by Trevor Rabin (Can’t Look Away), The Dave Brubeck Quartet (The Essential), Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble (Soul to Soul), Toto (Toto IV) and Yes (90125)

Last but by no means least, thanks, as always, to Rackspace :)

 

Comments

Lwood-20160925

Introduction

Welcome to Last week on OpenStack Dev (“Lwood”) for the week just past. For more background on Lwood, please refer here.

Basic Stats for week 19 to 25 September for openstack-dev:

  • ~547 Messages (up bit over 9.5% relative to last week)
  • ~170 Unique threads (down about 21% relative to last week)

Yet another pretty typical week on the list :)

Notable Discussions – openstack-dev

Architecture Working Group Process

Dean Troyer gives a concise update on where things are up to with the Architecture WG – this important initiative looks to be making good progress

Removing OpenStackSalt and Security project teams from the Big Tent ?

Thierry Carrez started what proved to be a longish thread this week with an email noting that as there were no PTL candidates within the election deadline for a number of official project teams – Astara, UX, OpenStackSalt and Security.

Turns out that the Astara project team wish to abandon the project anyway and the current PTL (Piet) quickly reacted to explain his error and confirm his willingness to continue in the role.

The thread then dealt a bit more specifically with OpenStackSalt – a newer project that seeming had some misunderstandings about the process and Security which has of course been around much longer.

The conclusion by the end of the thread looks to be that both Security and OpenStackSalt will stay within the tent after some satisfactory email and IRC discussions.  Rob Clark’s blog post regarding the situation for the Security project is worth a read too.

Community Contributor Awards nominations open

Kendall Nelson notes that nominations are open for the Community Contributor Awards and will remain so until October 7.

As Kendall puts it: “There are so many people out there who do invaluable work that should be recognized. People that hold the community together, people that make working on OpenStack fun, people that do a lot but aren’t called out for their work, people that speak their mind and aren’t afraid to challenge the norm.”  He continues “Like last time, we won’t have a defined set of awards so we take extra note of what you say about the nominee in your submission to pick the winners.”

Please give some thought to nominating your favour person or their endeavour for the awards, it’s an easy process and a nice way to give recognition to fellow community members.

PTL Election Concludes, TC Positions Open

Tony Breeds noted that the PTL Election has concluded and the results are detailed in his email.

Next up, as pointed out by Tristan Cacqueray in his email are TC elections with Candidate nominations open now through to 1 October 23:45 UTC.

How do -you- handle the openstack-dev Mailing List

Is the question posed by Josh Harlow in his email to the list from late last week – he’s heard it a few times over the years (I dare say many people have) – and is keen for people to share their own work practices.

If you’re reading this -and- contribute to/read the ML please chuck your thoughts in the etherpad :)

Operators Meetup Feedback

So far just the one from Sean Dague as the ops-summit related to Nova, but worth a read and hopefully will inspire more to come :)

More Beautiful Music in Barcelona

Last week’s Lwood made mention of Amrith Kumar’s post seeking instrument wielding musicians – this in turn prompted Neil Jerram to note that there’s a singing group together too :)

Notable Discussions – other OpenStack lists

Nothing that leapt out from the other lists this week.

People and Projects

Core nominations & changes

  • [Searchlight] Matt Borland Core Nomination – Travis Tripp
  • [QA] resigning from Tempest core – Marc Koderer
  • [QA] tempest-cores update – Ken Ohmichi

Further Reading & Miscellanea

Don’t forget these excellent sources of OpenStack news – most recent ones linked in each case

This weeks edition of Lwood brought to you by Pink Floyd (A Momentary Lapse of Reason), Bruce Hornsby (Hot House, Levitate) and Bruce Springsteen (High Hopes)

Last but by no means least, thanks, as always, to Rackspace :)

Comments

Lwood-20160918

Introduction

Welcome to Last week on OpenStack Dev (“Lwood”) for the week just past. For more background on Lwood, please refer here.

Basic Stats for week 12 to 18 September for openstack-dev:

  • ~499 Messages (down about 10% relative to last week)
  • ~216 Unique threads (up about 35% relative to last week)

Another pretty typical week on the list message count down a bit from last week but the thread count up as there weren’t any particularly long threads to jiggle the metrics (a single message is counted as a thread).

Notable Discussions – openstack-dev

New OpenStack Security Notices

MongoDB guest instance allows any user to connect [OSSN-0066]

From the summary “When creating a new MongoDB single instance or cluster the default setting in MongoDB `security.authorization` was set as disabled. This resulted in no need to provide user credentials to connect to the mongo instance and perform read / write operations from any network that is attached on instance create.”  The original email or the SSN itself has more information.

Deleted Glance image IDs may be reassigned [OSSN-0075]

From the summary (paraphrase and so errors mine) “It is possible for image IDs from deleted images to be reassigned to other images.  This creates the possibility that by creating a nefarious image that shares the ID with a previously deleted but trusted image, the nefarious image can be booted without the user realising it was quietly changed.”  The original post and/or the SSN has more information.

Writing down OpenStack Principles – thread continues and a great quote

The thread that started last week with this a post from Chris Dent trundled along a bit more this week with a few more messages.  Most of the substantive commentary seems to have moved to the review that Thierry Carrez created, the last message in the thread being that Thierry has now posted a revised version which seeks to incorporate the various bits of feedback.

A brief side discussion on the thread popped up between Clay Gerrard and Thierry where they both acknowledged somewhat different views but also an appreciation for the others willingness to embrace new information and change their outlook as appropriate.  Collaborative Open Source development at its best there I reckon.

I’ll close this item with a quote from Thierry’s email which is, I think, one of the most eloquent summaries of the relationship between governance and code in an Open Source project I’ve read.

“It is important for open source projects to have a strong governance model, but it is only the frame that holds the canvas and defines the space. The important part is the painting.”

Nicely put :)

 

Stewardship Working Group (SWG) meeting report

The SWG was mentioned in Lwood-20160717 – as Amrith Kumar noted in the post in question, the group was set up by the Technical Commitee (TC) with the intent that this small group would “review the leadership, communication, and decision making processes of the TC and OpenStack projects as a whole, and propose a set of improvements to the TC.”

During the week past Colette Alexander posted with an update on recent activities.  Of note is that there is work under way to refine the vision for what the SWG will accomplish in Barcelona and feedback is sought from the community.

Election Season Continues

This week marked the end of the PTL nomination period as Tristan Cacqueray notes here – there were four projects (Astara, OpenStack Salt, OpenStack UX and Security) that were without candidates and so the TC will appoint the PTL.  Six projects had more than one PTL nominate and so will have an election: Freezer, Ironic, Keystone, Kolla, Magnum and Quality Assurance. There’s a full list of candidates below or on the official site here.

At the time of writing the election itself has just kicked off and will run until 23:45 September 25, 2016 (UTC)  If you’re eligible, please vote! :)

End of Cycle Retrospectives / Postmortems

As Newton draws to an end, projects are starting to do retrospectives.  Three I spotted were for Keystone (Steve Martinelli) Neutron (Armando Migliaccio) and Nova (Matt Riedemann) with more likely over the next few weeks.  These are all works in progress so if you’ve something constructive to contribute please do!

Beautiful Music in Barcelona

While the gathering proposed may not quite reach the vocal, choral and orchestral grandeur of this if you’re a musician and will be at the Barcelona Summit, please read Amrith Kumar’s post here.

Amrith asks “would y’all musicians who plan to bring your gear to Barcelona please start a little thread here on the ML and let’s get a band going?”.  While I won’t alas be in Barcelona I’ve had the good fortune to be involved in these sorts of FOSS meets music gatherings in the past back in the Canonical days – it’s a ton of fun and I commend it to you :)

Notable Discussions – other OpenStack lists

Nothing that leapt out from the other lists this week.

Upcoming OpenStack Events

Best I can tell no OpenStack related events mentioned this week.  Don’t forget the OpenStack Foundation’s Events Page for a list of general events that is frequently updated.

People and Projects

PTL’s stepping down

PTL Candidates

Core nominations & changes

Further Reading & Miscellanea

Don’t forget these excellent sources of OpenStack news – most recent ones linked in each case

This weeks edition of Lwood brought to you by the background noise of Brunswick, Victoria.  Not as tuneful as Weather Report last week, but a pleasant hum and bustle none the less :)  Oh and a quick reprise of Barcelona featuring Freddie Mercury and Montserrat Caballé.

Last but by no means least, thanks, as always, to Rackspace :)

Comments

Lwood-20160911

Introduction

Welcome to Last week on OpenStack Dev (“Lwood”) for the week just past. For more background on Lwood, please refer here.

Basic Stats for week 5 to 11 September for openstack-dev:

  • ~556 Messages (up about 13% relative to last week)
  • ~160 Unique threads (down about 11% relative to last week)

A pretty typical week on the list, two new and quite long threads (~28 and ~60 messages each) contributing significantly to the Messages up/Threads down result.  A nice moment of levity in the middle of the 60 message thread too…

Notable Discussions – openstack-dev

New OpenStack Security Notices

Host machine exposed to tenant networks via IPv6 [OSSN-0069]

From the summary “New interfaces created by Neutron in the default namespace, were done so without disabling IPv6 link-local addresses. This resulted in instances gaining the ability to directly access the host OS, therefore breaking guest isolation.” More in the original post or SSN itself.

Horizon dashboard leaks internal information through cookies [OSSN-0073]

From the summary (slightly paraphrased) “When horizon is configured, its URL contains the IP address of the internal URL of keystone, as the default value for the identity service is “internalURL”.  This has the effect of exposing the internal IP address to the outside world”. The original post or the SSN has more informatio.

The first Project Teams Gathering (PTG)

Thierry Carrez’s email gives a handy summary of the upcoming Project Teams Gathering (PTG) meeting in Atlanta on February 20-24 next year.

The PTG meetings are in essence the “Design Summit” part of the OpenStack Summit separated off into a standalone event.  There will continue to be a link to the Summit attendees through a “Forum” for community wide discussions.

There is more detail on the what’s changed and the rationale on the Foundation website here as well as a FAQ.  It’s worth a bit of a read as this is one of the more fundamental changes to the way OpenStack development is undertaken for some time.

Ocata Schedule Approved

Doug Hellmann notes that the schedule for Ocata has been approved.  There’s more information in a nice table here or in the original review – release week is February 20, 2017.

Writing down OpenStack Principles

One of the longer threads this week and ongoing at the time of writing was one that Chris Dent kicked off.  In his initial post he draws attention to a review that Thierry Carrez created in concert with other TC members to try and translate some of the “assumed knowledge” that the TC has accumulated over the years into a written form.

The thread has been a little contentious in places (about 5 out of 10 on my newly created lwood-fuss-o-meter) but based on my read that is more about the approach taken than any fundamental disagreement about the end result.  You can view the document in its current form here – it’s worth a quick read.

Future election timing and “Release Stewards”

The longest thread of the week, the conversation kicked off by Thierry Carrez in this post flags some side effects of the change in Summit/PTG arrangements and the timing of release cycles.  As currently defined the timing of elections is reference to the Summit – this would have the effect of meaning PTL and TC positions being renewed mid-cycle.  At first blush this seems a bit suboptimal but Thierry makes the point that it might not necessarily be so.

He goes on to make the case for the creation of a new role – a “Release Steward” who would oversee the complete release “from requirements gathering to post-release-bugfix-backport phase”  This would in practice last longer than the release cycle of six months as many aspects of the release precede and follow the cycle proper.

Thierry suggests that the PTL could elect to be Release Steward as well, or (more likely) someone else in the team.  Having someone doing this important work would free the PTL to continue with strategic pieces knowing the minutiae of the release was in good hands.

The thread goes on to tweak and debate the idea, an alternative first suggested by Sean Dague but with some virtual nods from others along the lines of “yes I was wondering about that”, would instead run the PTL elections early and have the “PTL-next” doing the pre-work for the next release while the PTL took care of landing the current release.

At the time of writing the discussion is continuing – it’s a pretty accessible thread if you want to dig in, if not I’ll endeavour to summarise the eventual outcome when the dust settles :)

Oh and the funny little exchange starting here is worth a few clicks to read as it unfolds :)

Election Season Continues

Following on from his post last week, Tristan Cacqueray advised that nominations are now open for OpenStack PTLs.  Nominations remain open until September 18, 23:45 UTC.  The elections begin 15 minutes later at 00:00 September 19, 2016 (UTC) and run until 23:45 September 25, 2016 (UTC)  If you’re curious the candidates will be listed here as they’re approved.

Subteam and Mid-Cycle Reports

None this week.

Notable Discussions – other OpenStack lists

Nothing that leapt out from the other lists this week.

Upcoming OpenStack Events

Best I can tell no OpenStack related events mentioned this week.  Don’t forget the OpenStack Foundation’s Events Page for a list of general events that is frequently updated.

People and Projects

Core nominations & changes

New, Proposed and Changed OpenStack Projects

Joe Huang noted that the Tricircle project has voted to on the name Trio2o for their api-gateway efforts.

Further Reading & Miscellanea

Don’t forget these excellent sources of OpenStack news – most recent ones linked in each case

This weeks edition of Lwood brought to you by Weather Report (Forecast Tomorrow) and Marillion (Holidays in Eden)

Last but by no means least, thanks, as always, to Rackspace :)

Comments

Lwood-20160904

Introduction

Welcome to Last week on OpenStack Dev (“Lwood”) for the week just past. For more background on Lwood, please refer here.

Basic Stats for week 29 August to 4 September for openstack-dev:

  • ~491 Messages (up about 35% relative to last week)
  • ~181 Unique threads (up adbout 12% relative to last week)

After a quiet couple of weeks list traffic was back in force, traffic starting to build ahead of the next release and summit.  Emails about Summit room/space assignment and end of release Feature Freeze Request exceptions contributed as did a couple of longer technically oriented threads.

Notable Discussions – openstack-dev

Election Season

Tristan Cacqueray reminded the list that September and October are the period over which OTL and TC elections are held.  More details to follow of course, in the meantime he invited questions back to the thread if more general/public in nature or to Tony Breeds, Nate Johnston or himself if more private in nature.

OpenStack Summit App Beta testers sought

Jimmy McArthur from the OpenStack Foundation put out a call for people to beta test the app for the upcoming summit. They’re after both iOS and Android users.

An update on the InfraCloud

Ricardo Carrillo Cruz posted an update on the status of the InfraCloud – as he neatly describes it “…essentially a bunch of hardware donated by HPE to the project to run an OpenStack cloud for CI testing…”  More information in Ricardo’s post or here.

Subteam and Mid-Cycle Reports

Just the one this week for Ironic, courtesy of Ruby Loo.

Notable Discussions – other OpenStack lists

Call for participants in Horizon/Searchlight UX study

On the Openstack-Operators list Danielle Mundle announced that the next UX project is a usability evaluation for an proposed search function in Horizon (aka Searchlight).  Please consider getting involved if you’d make use of such functionaliy.

Upcoming OpenStack Events

Best I can tell no OpenStack related events mentioned this week.  Don’t forget the OpenStack Foundation’s Events Page for a list of general events that is frequently updated.

People and Projects

Core nominations & changes

  • [Keystone] New core reviewer Ron De Rose (rderose) – Steve Martinelli
  • [Packaging-rpm] Javier Peña as additonal core reviewer – Dirk Müller

Further Reading & Miscellanea

Don’t forget these excellent sources of OpenStack news – most recent ones linked in each case

This weeks edition of Lwood brought to you by Billy Joel (Piano Man: The Very Best of Billy Joel), Boston (Boston), Catfish (Unlimited Address), Daft Punk (Random Access Memories), Dire Straits (Love over Gold, Making Movies)

Last but by no means least, thanks, as always, to Rackspace :)

Comments

Lwood-20160828

Introduction

Welcome to Last week on OpenStack Dev (“Lwood”) for the week just past. For more background on Lwood, please refer here.

Basic Stats for week 22 to 28 – August 2016 for openstack-dev:

  • ~363 Messages (down about 8.5% relative to last week)
  • ~161 Unique threads (down about 5% relative to last week)

Traffic down again this week, some 37% below the long term average from starting Lwood in June 2015. Paraphrasing an OpenStack savvy friend of mine “More typey typey and reviewy reviewy, less talky talky” – feature finalisation time so less conversations :)

Notable Discussions – openstack-dev

Gerrit Storyboard integration live

Zara Zaimeche penned an update on Storyboard, one of the coolest things mentioned was that the integration with Gerrit is now live.  She even gives an example of how you can tinker with this new functionality in a test instance if you don’t have any pressing patches to send.

New API landing page for API docs collection

Anne Gentle’s post notes that some further work has been done towards having a single landing page for all API related docs – a key part of making OpenStack a bit more user friendly for (technical!) consumers.

Subteam and Mid-Cycle Reports

A subteam report this week for Ironic, courtesy of Ruby Loo and a Mid-Cycle summary report for Neutron from Armando M.

Notable Discussions – other OpenStack lists

Summit schedule and talks announced

Over on Openstack-Operators Erin Disney announced that the schedule for the Barcelona Summit is up.  Woo!!

Upcoming OpenStack Events

Best I can tell no OpenStack related events mentioned this week.  Don’t forget the OpenStack Foundation’s Events Page for a list of general events that is frequently updated.

People and Projects

Core nominations & changes

Further Reading & Miscellanea

Don’t forget these excellent sources of OpenStack news – most recent ones linked in each case

This weeks edition of Lwood brought to you by Chick Corea Elektric Band (Beneath The Mask) and Cold Chisel (various tunes from Chisel).

Last but by no means least, thanks, as always, to Rackspace :)

Comments

Lwood-20160821

Introduction

Welcome to Last week on OpenStack Dev (“Lwood”) for the week just past. For more background on Lwood, please refer here.

Basic Stats for week 15 to 21 – August 2016 for openstack-dev:

  • ~397 Messages (down about 32% relative to last week)
  • ~170 Unique threads (about the same as last week)

Frankly – stats have me a little baffled today, I think I’ll claim jetlag :) – message count down dramatically, thread count steady.

Notable Discussions – openstack-dev

All Hail Pike and Queens!

As Monty Taylor put it – yes the naming process is complete, the next two OpenStack releases will be Pike and Queens!

Tentative Ocata Schedule up for Review

Doug Hellmann noted that there is a tentative schedule up for Ocata here

Video presentation of findings from recent UX research

Danielle Mundle emailed to note that there is a video presenting the findings of the recent UX research on operator needs up on YouTube.  It will also be discussed at the Ops Summit this week in New York.

Notable Discussions – other OpenStack lists

Over on OpenStack-Operators the UX Project Team have asked the for volunteers to provide feedback around quota management.

Upcoming OpenStack Events

Best I can tell no OpenStack related events mentioned this week.  Don’t forget the OpenStack Foundation’s Events Page for a list of general events that is frequently updated.

People and Projects

Core nominations & changes

New, Proposed and Changed OpenStack Projects

Nothing new that I saw on the New/Proposed/Changed Projects front.

Further Reading & Miscellanea

Don’t forget these excellent sources of OpenStack news – most recent ones linked in each case

No particular tunes involved in this edition of Lwood but I will note it was prepared in a few different locations – airports, aircraft and now, pleasingly, my home office :)
Last but by no means least, thanks, as always, to Rackspace :)

Comments

Lwood-20160814

Introduction

Welcome to Last week on OpenStack Dev (“Lwood”) for the week just past. For more background on Lwood, please refer here.

Basic Stats for week 8 to 14 – August 2016 for openstack-dev:

  • ~581 Messages (up about 7% relative to last week)
  • ~169 Unique threads (down about 5% compared last week)

Traffic and threads pretty much steady this week relative to last – a little quieter threads wise, a few more messages.

Notable Discussions – openstack-dev

Update on the API Reference and Guide Publishing process

Anne Gentle provided an update on this important effort – in short it’s going well, but more to be done.  There are a few projects she specifically notes have some further work required, I believe this needs to be done within the project code base or websites themselves.

So if you’re involved in one of Astara, Ceilometer, Cinder, Cloudkitty, Congress, Designate, Glance, Heat, Magnum, Mistral, Monasca, Sahara, Senlin, Solum, Swift, Tacker or Trove, please take a look at Anne’s email and see if you’re able to do what is required.

OS-Capabilities Library – Continued

As mentioned last week, Jay Pipes penned a rather low key email announcing some work he’s done on creating a new os-capabilities Python library.  The thread picked up a little this week with various positive comments, a question confirming its applicability across projects (Yes) and some design discussions.

The code is here, please get consider getting involved in this important endeavour.

Extra ATCs for Newton

Doug Hellman writes that it’s time to ensure we have all active technical contributors (ATCs) identified for Newton.  As he explains “…Project teams should identify contributors who have had a significant impact this cycle but who would not qualify for ATC status using the regular process because they have not submitted a patch.  Contributions might include, but aren’t limited to, bug triage, design work, and documentation — there is a lot of leeway in how teams define contribution for ATC status.”

The ATC list is approved by the TC on/around 25 August and in order to make the agenda for that meeting proposals need to be submitted by 16 August – later this week.  Please take a look at Doug’s email for more details on this process if you believe you, or someone you know should be considered.

Midcycle Summaries & Minutes

No new summaries this week that I could see – in case you missed them here is the list so far collated from the last few editions of Lwood – Cinder (Kendall Nelson), Freezer (Pierre Mathieu), Glance (Nikhil Komawar), Horizon (Rob Cresswell), Keystone (Steve Martinelli), Monasca (Fabio Giannetti) and Nova Pt.I and Pt.II (Matt Riedemann)

Notable Discussions – other OpenStack lists

Nothing particularly lept out of the other lists this week :)

Upcoming OpenStack Events

Best I can tell no OpenStack related events mentioned this week.  Don’t forget the OpenStack Foundation’s Events Page for a list of general events that is frequently updated.

People and Projects

Requirements PTL Election result

  • Anita Kuno confirmed the results of the Requirements PTL Election welcoming Tony Breeds into the role and noting an impressive participation rate in this poll.  Full results are available here.

Core nominations & changes

New, Proposed and Changed OpenStack Projects

A new section I’m trying out this edition – a list of projects that are seeking formal OpenStack project status, projects that have been confirmed as such and/or projects that are changing names (!)

  • Proposed new project – [Storlets] – Eran Rom.  This follows Eran’s email from last week nominating for PTL of same
  • Project name change – [Smaug] is now [Karbor] – Saggi Mizrahi

Further Reading & Miscellanea

Don’t forget these excellent sources of OpenStack news – most recent ones linked in each case

No particular tunes involved in this edition of Lwood I’m afraid, though was fortunate enough to see both REO Speedwagon and Def Leppard live last night – a cracker of a show it was too :)

Last but by no means least, thanks, as always, to Rackspace :)

Comments

Lwood-20160807

Introduction

Welcome to Last week on OpenStack Dev (“Lwood”) for the week just past. For more background on Lwood, please refer here.

Basic Stats for week 1 to 7 August 2016 for openstack-dev:

  • ~544 Messages (down about 7% relative to last week)
  • ~178 Unique threads (down about 3% compared last week)

Traffic and threads down a wee bit, but still felt like a busy week on the list, a couple of long and in places slightly contentious threads perhaps contributing to this.

Notable Discussions – openstack-dev

OS-Capabilities Library for Nova (and anyone else!)

Jay Pipes wrote a rather low key email announcing some work he’s done on creating a new os-capabilities Python library.  He’d like “os-capabilities to be the place where the OpenStack community catalogs and collates standardized features for hardware, devices, networks, storage, hypervisors, etc.”  Nothing complex then :)

In my view this is an important bit of work for us as a community to get right as while hardware is mostly (and usefully) abstracted away – there are any number of legitimate cases when you really do want to know what’s under the hood.  Jay is soliciting feedback from the community on this important effort, code is here.

Introducing DON – Diagnosing OpenStack Networking

Amit Saha sent a brief email introducing a new project Diagnosing OpenStack Networking (aka DON) – a Python based tool that a provides network analysis and diagnostic system dashboard in Horizon.

Code is on GitHub here and feedback welcomed :)

Glare API work now moving to be separate project from Glance

Mikal Fedosin notes that Glare is moving from being a separate API for Glance to a standalone project in its own right, citing various reasons.  In essence it looks like Glance will be the default implementation of the OpenStack Images API and Glare of the Artifacts API.

Quite a long thread ensues, I suggest reading it if Glance/Glare are on your radar as it’s pretty nuanced, my general take is the split seems “good” to folk looking at it from a development standpoint and “not so good” for folk looking at it from an operator/end user standpoint.  Think that’s a debate I’ll stay clear of :)

Project Mascots Update

Heidi Joy Tretheway posted with the latest of the Project Mascots work.  There’s more info on the openstack.org here including a list of projects and their mascots – graphics will follow closer to Barcelona.

Midcycle Summaries & Minutes

Just the one midcycle summary this week as far as I could see – an epic in two parts (I and II) for Nova from Matt Riedemann.

This joins those mentioned previously – Cinder (Kendall Nelson), Freezer (Pierre Mathieu), Glance (Nikhil Komawar), Horizon (Rob Cresswell), Keystone (Steve Martinelli) and Monasca (Fabio Giannetti).

Notable Discussions – other OpenStack lists

Application Development-Centric eBook Sprint

Yih Leong Sun noted over on the enterprise-wg and product-wg mailing lists that the Enterprise Working Group are planning another book sprint.  This one will be at Barcelona and will be focussed on writing a book tentatively titled “Moving Enterprise Applications to OpenStack Cloud”.

The intent is that “the ebook will be AppDev-centric and focus more on developing/migrating applications that run atop of OpenStack.” Yih’s email outlines how to get involved – they’re keen to get a good range of contributors – please consider helping out.

Upcoming OpenStack Events

Best I can tell, the Face to Face meeting for the Gluon project (August 18 & 19, Silicon Valley) announced by Bin Hu was the only new event announced this week on OpenStack-dev.

Some logistics information for the Ops Meetup in New York city later this month courtesy of Allison Price over on the OpenStack Operators list.

Don’t forget the OpenStack Foundation’s Events Page for a list of general events that is frequently updated.

People and Projects

TC Changes

Morgan Fainberg advised that he will be stepping down from the Technical Committee with effect the next election.

PTL nominations for Requirements and Storlets

  • In her capacity as primary election official, Anita Kuno posted details of how to participate in the election for the PTL of the Requirements project.  She also confirmed the three nominees as Tony Breeds, Swapnil Kulkarni and Matthew Thode.
  • A brief note from Eran proposing to be PTL for the Storlets project and to guide it towards becoming an official OpenStack project.

Core nominations & changes

  • [Fuel] Nominate Vladimir Khlyunev for fuel-qa core – Andrey Sledzinskiy
  • [Manila] Nominate Tom Barron for core reviewer team – Ben Swartzlander
  • [Watcher] Stepping down from core – Taylor Peoples
  • [Watcher] Promote Alexchadin to the core team – Jean-Émile Dartois

Further Reading & Miscellanea

Don’t forget these excellent sources of OpenStack news – most recent ones linked in each case

A little plug – as I’ve mentioned previously, I’ve submitted a talk proposal for the Barcelona OpenStack summit titled “Finding your way around the OpenStack-Dev mailing list”.

You can read about it a bit more by heading over to the voting page here, putting “Finding your way” into the Search box and (optionally!) rating the talk as you see fit :)

Voting closes Tuesday, August 9 at 6:59AM UTC – please take a moment to browse and vote for the other excellent sessions too :)

Apologies for the absence of a direct link – the decision was taken not to allow direct linking for voting this time around – a good call I think.

This edition of Lwood brought to you by The Eagles (Hotel California), Eric Clapton (Journeyman) along with a few other tunes.  On this particular occasion was listening on decent headphones – well worth doing if you haven’t already, both albums reward close listening :)

 

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