Re: [Rdo-list] Gitnetics and software factory.
by Emilien Macchi
[adding rdo-list for more visibility]
On 02/16/2016 11:20 AM, Gabriele Cerami wrote:
> Hi,
>
> gitnetics was created initially for opm-ci, then partially adapted for
> the broader downstream needs, and for the most part it received some
> degree of approval from you.
> Now that software factory is moving forward, and we are trying to
> integrate gitnetics there, the workflow is changing in a way that, I
> think, conflicts with some of the requirements gathered by me from you
> for the development of gitnetics.
> I've raised some of these concerns in this sf ticket
> http://softwarefactory-project.io/redmine/issues/1233.
> Since I'm not even sure requirements are still current, or if I'm
> interpreting them well, it would be nice to have some comments from you
> in this card
> https://trello.com/c/JuKioaYc/64-determine-and-define-integration-of-opm-...
> to know how much conflict there really is, so I can understand how much
> really we have to port from gitnetics to software factory.
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> Ps. Just to be clear: I'm asking this because, based on your comments,
> the difference in the integration may be huge: without the need of
> pre-upload validation, 90% of gitnetics will conflict with the worflow
> and I will have to create a new tool, porting only some lines of
> code.
>
--
Emilien Macchi
8 years, 10 months
[Rdo-list] RDO blog roundup, 16 Feb 2016
by Rich Bowen
Here's what's hit the RDO blogs in the last few weeks.
RDO Liberty DVR Neutron workflow on CentOS 7.2 by Boris Derzhavets
Per
http://specs.openstack.org/openstack/neutron-specs/specs/juno/neutron-ovs...
DVR is supposed to address following problems which has traditional 3
Node deployment schema
… read more at http://tm3.org/4r
RDO Community Day at FOSDEM by Rich Bowen
On Friday, in Brussels, 45 RDO enthusiasts gathered at the IBM Client
Center in Brussels (Thanks, IBM!) for a full day of RDO content and
discussion.
… read more at http://tm3.org/4s
Python API for "boot from image creates new volume" RDO Liberty by Boris
Derzhavets
Post below addresses several questions been posted at ask.openstack.org
In particular, code bellow doesn't require volume UUID to be hard coded
to start server attached to boot able cinder's LVM, created via glance
image, which is supposed to be passed to script via command line. In the
same way name of cinder volume and instance name may be passed to script
via CLI.
… read more at http://tm3.org/4t
Why does Red Hat contribute to RDO? by Nick Barcet
Red Hat's philosophy is 'Upstream First'. When we participate in an open
source project, our contributions go into the upstream project first, as
a prerequisite to deliver it in the downstream offering. Our continued
focus, over the past years and in the future, is to reduce to a bare
minimum the differences between Upstream, RDO and RHEL OpenStack
Platform at General Availabilty time, as we believe this is the only way
we can maximise our velocity in delivering new features. In doing so,
we, as any successful enterprise would do, need to focus our efforts on
what matters in respect to our "downstream" strategy, and it means that
we do prioritize our efforts accordingly as we are contributing
particular features and fixes.
… read more at http://tm3.org/4u
Keystone Implied roles with CURL by Adam Young
Keystone now has Implied Roles. What does this mean? Lets say we define
the role Admin to imply the Member role. Now, if you assigned someone
Admin on a project they are automatically assigned the Member role on
that project implicitly.
… read more at http://tm3.org/4v
Systemd-nspawn for fun and…well, mostly for fun by Lars Kellogg-Stedman
systemd-nspawn has been called "chroot on steroids", but if you think of
it as Docker with a slightly different target you wouldn't be far wrong,
either. It can be used to spawn containers on your host, and has a
variety of options for configuring the containerized environment through
the use of private networking, bind mounts, capability controls, and a
variety of other facilities that give you flexible container management.
… read more at http://tm3.org/4w
A systemd-nspawn connection driver for Ansible by Lars Kellogg-Stedman
I wrote earlier about systemd-nspawn, and how it can take much of the
fiddly work out of setting up functional chroot environments. I'm a
regular Ansible user, and I wanted to be able to apply some of those
techniques to my playbooks.
… read more at http://tm3.org/4x
A Holla out to the Kolla devs by Adam Young
Devstack uses Pip to install packages, which conflict with the RPM
versions on my Fedora system. Since I still need to get work done, and
want to run tests on Keystone running against a live database, I’ve long
wondered if I should go with container based approach. Last week, I took
the plunge and started messing around with Docker. I got the MySQL
Fedora container to run, then found Lars Keystone container using
Sqlite, and was stumped. I poked around for a way to get the two
containers talking to each other, and realized that we had a project
dedicated to exactly that in OpenStack: Kolla. While it did not work for
me right out of a git-clone, several of the Kolla devs worked with me to
get it up and running. here are my notes, distilled.
… read more at http://tm3.org/4y
Boosting the NFV datapath with RHEL OpenStack Platform by Nir Yechiel
With software-defined networking (SDN) and network functions
virtualization (NFV) gaining traction, more cloud service providers are
looking for open solutions, based on standardized hardware platforms and
open source software. In particular, communication service providers
(CSPs) are undergoing a major shift from specialized hardware-based
network elements to a software based provisioning paradigm where
virtualized network functions (VNFs) are deployed in private or hybrid
clouds of network operators. Increasingly, OpenStack is seen as the
virtual infrastructure platform of choice for NFV, with many of the
world’s largest communications companies implementing solutions with
OpenStack today.
… read more at http://tm3.org/4z
OpenStack Keystone Q and A with the Boston University Distributed
Systems Class Part 1 by Adam Young
Dr. Jonathan Appavoo was kind enough to invite me to be a guest lecturer
in his distributed systems class at Boston University. The students
proved a list of questions, and I only got a chance to address a handful
of them during the class. So, I’ll try to address the rest here.
… read more at http://tm3.org/4-
Setup Swift as Glance backend on RDO Liberty (CentOS 7.2) by Boris
Derzhavets
Post below presumes that your testing Swift storage is located somewhere
on workstation (say /dev/sdb1) is about 25 GB (XFS) and before running
packstack (AIO mode for testing) following steps have been done :-
… read more at http://tm3.org/50
--
Rich Bowen - rbowen(a)redhat.com
OpenStack Community Liaison
http://rdoproject.org/
8 years, 10 months
[Rdo-list] OpenStack Summit RDO brochure, demos
by Rich Bowen
For OpenStack Summit in Austin, we'll once again have a demo pod where
we'll be showing off what we're doing. I know it seems like a long way
off, but it'll be here sooner than we expect.
I have two requests.
1) We're trying, this time, to have our demos be more solution-oriented.
Like, instead of saying "here's this cool software", rather, saying,
"here's something cool that people are doing with it." If you are doing
interesting things with RDO, would you consider putting together a brief
demo - possibly a video or slide deck? - of what you're doing, so that
we can use it in the demo pod?
2) We are going to have a one-page handout for the booth. On the front
it will talk about what RDO is, along with the various related upstream
projects such as ManageIQ, Ceph, NFV, and so on. On the back, we want to
have some user stories or quotes, once again illustrating that this
stuff is actually useful in the real world. Would any of you be willing
to provide a quote, and/or a one-paragraph description of the way that
you're using RDO (or any of these other projects) in your organization?
The deadline for #2 is the end of this week. The deadline for #1 is
still a month or so out.
Thanks!
--
Rich Bowen - rbowen(a)redhat.com
OpenStack Community Liaison
http://rdoproject.org/
8 years, 10 months
Re: [Rdo-list] Deploying Openstack with Packstack
by Marius Cornea
Minimal, packstack does the installation for you. Just make sure you have the repos mentioned in the guide. Thanks.
> On 09 Feb 2016, at 14:26, Ashraf Hassan <asma2103(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> Hi Marius,
> But what the is the perquisite as RHEL/Centos Installation for Packstack to work for both Controller and Compute nodes (i.e. Minimal Install, Compute Node, Infrastructure Server, ...etc.)
>
> Thanks,
>
> Ashraf
>
>
>
>
>
> On Monday, February 8, 2016 10:28 PM, Marius Cornea <marius(a)remote-lab.net> wrote:
>
>
> Hi,
>
> Here is the quickstart link:
> https://www.rdoproject.org/install/quickstart/
>
> You can get started with a minimal CentOS/RHEL. For deploying the 2
> node deployment you can generate an answer file(packstack
> --gen-answer-file) and adjust the IP addresses for
> CONFIG_CONTROLLER_HOST and CONFIG_COMPUTE_HOSTS. Please note that you
> need ssh key-based authentication for those 2 hosts.
>
> Thanks,
> Marius
>
> On Mon, Feb 8, 2016 at 5:38 PM, Ashraf Hassan <asma2103(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
> > Hi Experts,
> > I want to test deploying Openstack using Packstack on 2 nodes using
> > answers file:
> > 1- Node will act as a controller node.
> > 2- Node will act as a compute node.
> > What is the level of installation is needed for RHEL/Centos (Minimum,
> > Hypervisor host, or etc...)
> > Can someone advise please?
> > Thanks,
> >
> > Ashraf
>
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Rdo-list mailing list
> > Rdo-list(a)redhat.com
> > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/rdo-list
> >
> > To unsubscribe: rdo-list-unsubscribe(a)redhat.com
>
>
>
8 years, 10 months
[Rdo-list] Fwd: [OpenStack Marketing] Superuser Awards nominations open!
by Rich Bowen
FYI, if you haven't seen this yet. Here's an opportunity to recognize
some of the people and organizations that are doing interesting and
useful things on top of OpenStack. This doesn't need to be folks that
are using RDO, necessarily, just people that are making the world a
better place, and happen to be using OpenStack in the process.
--Rich
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [OpenStack Marketing] Superuser Awards nominations open!
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2016 13:44:08 -0600
From: Allison Price <allison(a)openstack.org>
To: marketing(a)lists.openstack.org
Hi everyone,
The Austin Summit Superuser Awards nominations are now open
<http://superuser.openstack.org/articles/superuser-awards-nominations-now-...>
and
will be accepted through March 11. Like in previous rounds, the winner
will be chosen by the community at large and announced onstage at
the OpenStack Summit Austin
<https://www.openstack.org/summit/austin-2016/> in April.
The Superuser Awards recognize teams using OpenStack to meaningfully
improve business in an innovative way, while also contributing back to
the community. Teams of all sizes are encouraged to apply! If you fit
the bill, or know a team that does, we encourage you to submit a
nomination here
<https://openstackfoundation.formstack.com/forms/superuserawards>.
Learn more about the awards <http://superuser.openstack.org/awards>, our
previous winners, CERN
<http://superuser.openstack.org/articles/and-the-superuser-award-goes-to>,
Comcast
<http://superuser.openstack.org/articles/and-the-superuser-award-goes-to-0...>
and NTT
Group
<http://superuser.openstack.org/articles/and-the-superuser-award-goes-to-e...>
and
submit your teamâs application before the March 11 deadline.
Please reach out to me directly if you have any questions or would like
to nominate a customerâs team.
Cheers,
Allison
Allison Price
OpenStack Marketing
allison(a)openstack.org <mailto:allison@openstack.org>
8 years, 10 months