I made the updates in
https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/AIRFLOW/AIP-44+Airflow+Internal+API
to reflect the above. As I suspected, there were really very few changes
needed, to make it "GRPC/JSON OpenAPI" agnostic. Ir does not change the
"gist" and "purpose" of the AIP and we can easily turn it into
implementation detail after extended POC is complete.

On Thu, Aug 11, 2022 at 9:08 AM Jarek Potiuk <ja...@potiuk.com> wrote:

> Hey Ash, Andrew,
>
> TL;DR; I slept over it to try to understand what just happened, and I have
> a proposal.
>
> * I am happy to extend my POC with the pure JSon/Open API approach -
> providing that Andrew/Ash point me to some good examples where the RPC
> style API has been implemented. If you could point me in the right
> direction, I am a maverick kind of person and just find my ways there.
> * I propose we conclude the vote (with added reservation in it, that final
> choice of the transport will be based on the extended POC) as planned.
> * I am rather curious to try the things that both of you mentioned you are
> concerned about (threading/multiprocessing/load balancing) and see how they
> compare in both approaches - before making final decision and doing first,
> founding PR
>
> More comments (personal feeling):
>
> I really treat your comments - (now that they finally came), seriously.
> And value your expert knowledge and experience. And I personally expect the
> same in return. I always respond to any AIPs/discussions when I am given
> enough time and opportunity to comment, I do - In due time. This time it
> did not happen  - not sure why. I personally feel this is a little
> disrespectful to my work, but I do not hold any grudges. I am happy to put
> that completely aside - now that I have your attention and can use
> your experience, the goal is that we do not make any personal complaints or
> escalations here, we are all here to make Airflow a better product.
> Community is the most important, respect for each other's work is an
> important part of it. And I hope this can improve in the future AIP
> discussions.
>
> But going back to the merit of the discussion:
>
> Just to let everyone know I am not too "vested" in gRPC . I spend a
> little time on implementing the POC with it and after doing the POC and
> reading testimonies of people I feel this is the right choice. But for this
> AIP. I made deliberate decisions in the way that the transport can be
> swapped out if we find reasons we should.
>
> I am reasonably happy with the way proposed by Ash (In fact I am going to
> update the AIP with it in a moment). For me the way how we actually
> implement the "if"  is an implementation detail that will be worked out on
> the first PR. The way proposed is good for me, though I would rather
> experiment a bit with decorators and see if we can make it a bit nicer -
> but  this is not a dealbreaker at all for me. One concern I have is that we
> will have another abstraction layer (possibly needless) and that we will
> have to again repeat all the methods signatures and parameters and keep
> them in sync (they will now be repeated in 4 or 5 places). But again - this
> is something that can be likely done in the first "founding" PR we are
> going to iterate on and work out the best balance between duplication and
> flexibility/maintainability. And we can always update the AIP with this
> implementation detail later - very much like it happend with a number of
> AIPs before - including AIP-39, AIP-40, AIP-42 - all of them went through
> similar rounds of updates and clarifications as implementation was
> progressing. It's hard to work out all the details "on paper" or even in
> "POC". Also I would REALLY love to tap in the experience of people like the
> both of you, but it seems that the only way to get some good and serious
> feedback is to call a vote (or make a PR with the intention of merging it).
>
> But I even can go further than that - I think independently from voting
> whether the whole AIP-44 is a good or bad idea. I think there is no doubt
> we need it, and the "general scope" and approach seems to already reach
> general consensus, so if we can just continue and complete the vote. I am
> happy to continue running the POC on using OpenAPI spec and gRPC in
> parallel and see how they compare. I am always eager to learn and try other
> things, and if you have valid concerns I am happy to address them by trying
> out. I would personally like to compare both from the development
> "friction" point of view, performance, as well as doing some tests trying
> to address and test the operational (process/thread/load balancing)
> concerns you both have and see how they can be solved in both and compare.
> I think there is nothing like "show me the code" and performing
> actual working POC.
>
> And I am super happy to continue with the POC and extend it with a pure
> JSON/OpenAPI based proposal after voting completes and make the final
> decision during the first founding PR. And we can even arrange extra votes
> or lazy consensus before the first PR lands - after seeing all the
> "ins/outs".
> The Founding PR is still quite a bit away - I do not want to make any
> commits before we branch-off the 2.4 - and I don't even want to take too
> much of your time for that other than discussion and raising concerns and
> commenting on my findings. I am happy to do all the ground-work here.
>
> That's all I ask for. Just treating the work I do seriously.
>
> So Ash, Andrew
>
> Can you please point me to some examples where RPC-API like ours has been
> implemented with Open API/JSON? I am curious to learn from those and turn
> them into POC.
>
> And I propose - let's just continue the vote as planned. We already have 3
> binding votes, and more +1s than -1s and the time has already passed, but I
> am happy to let it run till the end of day tomorrow to see if my proposal
> above will be good to conclude the vote with more consent from all the
> people involved.
>
> J.
>
>
>
>
> On Thu, Aug 11, 2022 at 7:49 AM Eugen Kosteev <eu...@kosteev.com> wrote:
>
>> +1 (non-binding)
>>
>> On Thu, Aug 11, 2022 at 12:08 AM Ash Berlin-Taylor <a...@apache.org>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> So my concerns (in addition to the ones Andrew already pointed out) with
>>> gRPC: it uses threads! Threads + python always makes me nervous. Doubly so
>>> when you then couple that with DB access via sqlalchemy - we're heading
>>> down paths less well travelled if we do this.
>>>
>>> From https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/master/doc/fork_support.md
>>>
>>> > gRPC Python wraps gRPC core, which uses multithreading for
>>> performance, and hence doesn't support fork(). Historically, we didn't
>>> support forking in gRPC, but some users seemed to be doing fine until their
>>> code started to break on version 1.6. This was likely caused by the
>>> addition of background c-threads and a background Python thread
>>>
>>> And there's https://github.com/grpc/grpc/issues/16001 which may or may
>>> not be a problem for us, I'm unclear:
>>>
>>> > The main constraint that must be satisified is that your process must
>>> only invoke the fork() syscall *before* you create your gRPC server(s).
>>>
>>>
>>> But anyway, the only change I'd like to see is to make the internal API
>>> more pluggable.
>>>
>>> So instead of something like this:
>>>
>>>     def process_file(
>>>         self,
>>>         file_path: str,
>>>         callback_requests: List[CallbackRequest],
>>>         pickle_dags: bool = False,
>>>     ) -> Tuple[int, int]:
>>>         if self.use_grpc:
>>>             return self.process_file_grpc(
>>>                 file_path=file_path,
>>> callback_requests=callback_requests, pickle_dags=pickle_dags
>>>             )
>>>         return self.process_file_db(
>>>             file_path=file_path, callback_requests=callback_requests,
>>> pickle_dags=pickle_dags
>>>         )
>>>
>>> I'd very much like us to have it be something like this:
>>>
>>>     def process_file(
>>>         self,
>>>         file_path: str,
>>>         callback_requests: List[CallbackRequest],
>>>         pickle_dags: bool = False,
>>>     ) -> Tuple[int, int]:
>>>         if settings.DATABASE_ACCESS_ISOLATION:
>>>             return InternalAPIClient.dagbag_process_file(
>>>                 file_path=file_path,
>>> callback_requests=callback_requests, pickle_dags=pickle_dags
>>>             )
>>>         return self.process_file_db(
>>>             file_path=file_path, callback_requests=callback_requests,
>>> pickle_dags=pickle_dags
>>>         )
>>>
>>> i.e. all API access is "marshalled" (perhaps the wrong word) via a
>>> single pluggable (and eventually configurable/replaceable) API client.
>>> Additionally (though less important) `self.use_grpc` is changed to a
>>> property on the `airflow.settings` module (as it is a global setting, not
>>> an attribute/property of any single instance.)
>>>
>>> (In my mind the API client would include the from_protobuff/to_protobuff
>>> methods that you added to TaskInstance on your POC PR. Or the from_protbuff
>>> could live in the FileProcessorServiceServicer class in your example, but
>>> that probably doesn't scale when multiple services would take a
>>> TI/SimpleTI. I guess they could still also live on TaskInstance et al and
>>> just not be used - but that doesn't feel as clean to me is all)
>>>
>>> Thoughts? It's not too big change to encapsulate things like this I hope?
>>>
>>> Sorry again that we didn't look at the recent work on this AIP sooner.
>>>
>>> -ash
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Wed, Aug 10 2022 at 13:51:02 -06:00:00, Andrew Godwin
>>> <andrew.god...@astronomer.io.INVALID> wrote:
>>>
>>> I also wish we'd had this discussion before!
>>>
>>> I've converted several million lines of code into API-driven
>>> services over the past decade so I have my ways and I'm set in them, I
>>> guess :)
>>>
>>> Notice that I didn't say "use REST" - I don't think REST maps well to
>>> RPC style codebases, and agree the whole method thing is confusing. I just
>>> mean "ship JSON in a POST and receive JSON in the response".
>>>
>>> As you said before though, the line where you draw the abstraction is
>>> what matters more than the transport layer, and "fat endpoints" (doing
>>> transactions and multiple calls on the API server etc.) is, I agree, the
>>> way this has to go, so it's not like this is something I think is totally
>>> wrong, just that I've repeatedly tried gRPC on projects like this and been
>>> disappointed with what it actually takes to ship changes and
>>> prototype things quickly. Nothing beats the ability to just throw curl at a
>>> problem - or maybe that's just me.
>>>
>>> Anyway, I'll leave you to it - I have my own ideas in this area I'll be
>>> noodling on, but it's a bit of a different take and aimed more at execution
>>> as a whole, so I'll come back and discuss them if they're successful.
>>>
>>> Andrew
>>>
>>> On Wed, Aug 10, 2022 at 1:36 PM Jarek Potiuk <ja...@potiuk.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> 1st of all - I wish we had this discussion before :)
>>>>
>>>> > The autogenerated code also is available from OpenAPI specs, of
>>>> course, and the request/response semantics in the same thread are precisely
>>>> what make load balancing these calls a little harder, and horizontal
>>>> scaling to multiple threads comes with every HTTP server, but I digress -
>>>> clearly you've made a choice here to write an RPC layer rather than a
>>>> lightweight API layer, and go with the more RPC-style features, and I get
>>>> that.
>>>>
>>>> OpenAPI is REST not RPC and it does not map well to RPC style calls. I
>>>> tried to explain in detail in the AIP (and in earlier discussions). And the
>>>> choice is basically made for us because of our expectation to have
>>>> minimal impact on the existing code (and ability to switch off the remote
>>>> part). We really do not want to introduce new API calls.  We want to make
>>>> sure that existing "DB transactions" (i.e. coarse grained calls) are
>>>> remotely executed. So we are not really talking about lightweight API
>>>> almost by definition. Indeed, Open API also maps a definition described in
>>>> a declarative way to python code.  but it has this non-nice part that
>>>> OpenAPI/REST, it is supposed to be run on some resources. We have no
>>>> resources to run it on - every single method we call is doing something.
>>>> Even from the REST/OpenAPI semantics I'd have a really hard time to decide
>>>> whether it should be GET, POST or PUT or DELETE. In most cases this will be
>>>> a combination of those 4 on several different resources. All the "nice
>>>> parts" of Open API (Swagger UI etc.) become next to useless if you try to
>>>> map such remote procedures we have, to REST calls.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> > I still think it's choosing something that's more complex to maintain
>>>> over a simpler, more accessible option, but since I won't be the one
>>>> writing it, that's not really for me to worry about. I am very curious to
>>>> see how this evolves as the work towards multitenancy really kicks in and
>>>> all the API schemas need to change to add namespacing!
>>>>
>>>> The gRPC (proto) is designed from ground-up with maintainability in
>>>> mind. The ability to evolve the API, add new parameters etc. is built-in
>>>> the protobuf definition. From the user perspective it's actually easier to
>>>> use than OpenAPI when it comes to remote method calls, because you
>>>> basically - call a method.
>>>>
>>>> And also coming back to monitoring - literally every monitoring
>>>> platform supports gRPC to monitor. Grafana, NewRelic, CloudWatch, Datadog,
>>>> you name it. In our case.
>>>>
>>>> Also load-balancing:
>>>>
>>>> Regardless of the choice we talk about HTTP request/response happening
>>>> for 1 call. This is the boundary. Each of the calls we have will be a
>>>> separate transaction, separate call, not connected to any other call. The
>>>> server handling it will be stateless (state will be stored in a DB when
>>>> each call completes). I deliberately put the "boundary" of each of
>>>> the remotely callable methods, to be a complete DB transaction to achieve
>>>> it.
>>>>
>>>> So It really does not change whether we use gRPC or REST/JSON.
>>>> REST/JSON vs. gRPC is just the content of the message, but this is the very
>>>> same HTTP call, with same authentication added on top, same headers - just
>>>> how the message is encoded is different. The same tools for load balancing
>>>> works in the same way regardless if we use gRPC or REST/JSON. This is
>>>> really a higher layer than the one involved in load balancing.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Wed, Aug 10, 2022 at 9:10 PM Andrew Godwin
>>>> <andrew.god...@astronomer.io.invalid> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Well, binary representation serialization performance is worse for
>>>>> protobuf than for JSON in my experience (in Python specifically) - unless
>>>>> you mean size-on-the-wire, which I can agree with but tend to not worry
>>>>> about very much since it's rarely a bottleneck.
>>>>>
>>>>> The autogenerated code also is available from OpenAPI specs, of
>>>>> course, and the request/response semantics in the same thread are 
>>>>> precisely
>>>>> what make load balancing these calls a little harder, and horizontal
>>>>> scaling to multiple threads comes with every HTTP server, but I digress -
>>>>> clearly you've made a choice here to write an RPC layer rather than a
>>>>> lightweight API layer, and go with the more RPC-style features, and I get
>>>>> that.
>>>>>
>>>>> I still think it's choosing something that's more complex to maintain
>>>>> over a simpler, more accessible option, but since I won't be the one
>>>>> writing it, that's not really for me to worry about. I am very curious to
>>>>> see how this evolves as the work towards multitenancy really kicks in and
>>>>> all the API schemas need to change to add namespacing!
>>>>>
>>>>> Andrew
>>>>>
>>>>> On Wed, Aug 10, 2022 at 12:52 PM Jarek Potiuk <ja...@potiuk.com>
>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Sure I can explain - the main reasons are:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> - 1) binary representation performance - impact of this is
>>>>>> rather limited because our API calls are doing rather heavy processing
>>>>>> compared to the data being transmitted. But I believe it's not 
>>>>>> negligible.
>>>>>> - 2) automated tools to automatically generate strongly typed Python
>>>>>> code (that's the ProtoBuf part). The strongly typed Python code is what
>>>>>> convinced me (see my POC). The tooling we got for that is excellent. Far
>>>>>> more superior than dealing with json-encoded data even with schema.
>>>>>> - 2) built-in "remote procedure" layer - where we have
>>>>>> request/response semantics optimisations (for multiple calls over the 
>>>>>> same
>>>>>> chanel) and exception handling done for us (This is basically what 
>>>>>> "Remote
>>>>>> Procedure" interface provide us)
>>>>>> - 3) built-in server that efficiently distributes the method called
>>>>>> from multiple client into a multi-threaded/multi-threaded execution (all
>>>>>> individual calls are stateless so multi-processing can be added on top
>>>>>> regardless from the "transport" chosen).
>>>>>>
>>>>>> BTW. If you look at my POC code, there is nothing that strongly
>>>>>> "binds" us to gRPC. The nice thing is that once it is implemented, it can
>>>>>> be swapped out very easily. The only Proto/gRPC code that "leaks" to
>>>>>> "generic" Airflow code is mapping of some (most complex) parameters to
>>>>>> Proto . And this is only for most complex cases - literally only few of 
>>>>>> our
>>>>>> types require custom serialisation - most of the mapping is handled
>>>>>> automatically by generated protobuf code. And we can easily put
>>>>>> the "complex" mapping in a separate package. Plus there is an "if"
>>>>>> statement for each of the ~ 30 or so methods that we will have to turn 
>>>>>> into
>>>>>> remotely-callable. We can even (as I proposed it as an option) add a 
>>>>>> little
>>>>>> python magic and add a simple decorator to handle the "ifs". Then the
>>>>>> decorator "if" can be swapped with some other "remote call" 
>>>>>> implementation.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The actual bulk of the implementation is to make sure that all the
>>>>>> places are covered (that's the testing harness).
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On Wed, Aug 10, 2022 at 8:25 PM Andrew Godwin
>>>>>> <andrew.god...@astronomer.io.invalid> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Hi Jarek,
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Apologies - I was as not involved as I wanted to be in the AIP-44
>>>>>>> process, and obviously my vote is non-binding anyway - but having done a
>>>>>>> lot of Python API development over the past decade or so I wanted to 
>>>>>>> know
>>>>>>> why the decision was made to go with gRPC over just plain HTTP+JSON 
>>>>>>> (with a
>>>>>>> schema, of course).
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> The AIP covers why XMLRPC and Thrift lost out to gRPC, which I agree
>>>>>>> with - but does not go into the option of using a standard Python HTTP
>>>>>>> server with JSON schema enforcement, such as FastAPI. In my experience, 
>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>> tools for load balancing, debugging, testing and monitoring JSON/HTTP 
>>>>>>> are
>>>>>>> superior and more numerous than those for gRPC, and in addition the
>>>>>>> asynchronous support for gRPC servers is lacking compared to their plain
>>>>>>> HTTP counterparts, and the fact that you can interact and play with the
>>>>>>> APIs in prototyping stages without having to handle obtaining correct
>>>>>>> protobuf versions for the Airflow version you're using.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I wouldn't go so far as to suggest a veto, but I do want to see the
>>>>>>> AIP address why gRPC would win over this option. Apologies again for the
>>>>>>> late realisation that gRPC got chosen and was being voted on - it's 
>>>>>>> been a
>>>>>>> very busy summer.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Thanks,
>>>>>>> Andrew
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Wed, Aug 10, 2022 at 12:12 PM Jarek Potiuk <ja...@potiuk.com>
>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Just let me express my rather strong dissatisfaction with the way
>>>>>>>> this "last minute" is raised.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> It is very late to come up with such a statement - not that it
>>>>>>>> comes at all, but when it comes when everyone had a chance to take a 
>>>>>>>> look
>>>>>>>> and comment, including taking a look at the POC and result of checks. 
>>>>>>>> This
>>>>>>>> has never been raised even 4 months ago where the only choices were 
>>>>>>>> Thrift
>>>>>>>> and gRPc).
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> I REALLY hope the arguments are very strong and backed by real
>>>>>>>> examples and data why it is a bad choice rather than opinions.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> J,.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> On Wed, Aug 10, 2022 at 7:50 PM Ash Berlin-Taylor <a...@apache.org>
>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Sorry to weigh in at the last minute, but I'm wary of gRPC over
>>>>>>>>> just JSON, so -1 to that specific choice. Everything else I'm happy 
>>>>>>>>> with.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> I (or Andrew G) will follow up with more details shortly.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> -ash
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> On Wed, Aug 10 2022 at 19:38:59 +02:00:00, Jarek Potiuk <
>>>>>>>>> ja...@potiuk.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Oh yeah :)
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> On Wed, Aug 10, 2022 at 7:23 PM Ping Zhang <pin...@umich.edu>
>>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> ah, good call.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> I guess the email template can be updated:
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Only votes from PMC members are binding, but members of the
>>>>>>>>>>> community are encouraged to check the AIP and vote with 
>>>>>>>>>>> "(non-binding)".
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> +1 (binding)
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Thanks,
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Ping
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> On Wed, Aug 10, 2022 at 10:20 AM Jarek Potiuk <ja...@potiuk.com>
>>>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Thank you . And BTW. It's binding Ping :). For AIP's commiter's
>>>>>>>>>>> votes are binding. See
>>>>>>>>>>> https://github.com/apache/airflow/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.rst#commit-policy
>>>>>>>>>>> :D
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> On Wed, Aug 10, 2022 at 7:16 PM Ping Zhang <pin...@umich.edu>
>>>>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> +1 (non-binding)
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> Thanks,
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> Ping
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> On Thu, Aug 4, 2022 at 1:42 AM Jarek Potiuk <ja...@potiuk.com>
>>>>>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> Hey everyone,
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> I would like to cast a vote for "AIP-44 - Airflow Internal
>>>>>>>>>>>>> API".
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> The AIP-44 is here:
>>>>>>>>>>>>> https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/AIRFLOW/AIP-44+Airflow+Internal+API
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> Discussion thread:
>>>>>>>>>>>>> https://lists.apache.org/thread/nsmo339m618kjzsdkwq83z8omrt08zh3
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> The voting will last for 5 days (until 9th of August 2022
>>>>>>>>>>>>> 11:00 CEST), and until at least 3 binding votes have been cast
>>>>>>>>>>>>> .
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> Please vote accordingly:
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> [ ] + 1 approve
>>>>>>>>>>>>> [ ] + 0 no opinion
>>>>>>>>>>>>> [ ] - 1 disapprove with the reason
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> Only votes from PMC members are binding, but members of the
>>>>>>>>>>>>> community are encouraged to check the AIP and vote with
>>>>>>>>>>>>> "(non-binding)".
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> ----
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> Just a summary of where we are:
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> It's been long in the making, but I think it might be a great
>>>>>>>>>>>>> step-forward to our long-term multi-tenancy goal. I believe the 
>>>>>>>>>>>>> proposal I
>>>>>>>>>>>>> have is quite well thought out and discussed a lot in the past:
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> * we have a working POC for implementation used for
>>>>>>>>>>>>> performance testing:
>>>>>>>>>>>>> https://github.com/apache/airflow/pull/25094
>>>>>>>>>>>>> * it is based on on industry-standard open-source gRPC (which
>>>>>>>>>>>>> is already our dependency) which fits better the RPC "model" we 
>>>>>>>>>>>>> need than
>>>>>>>>>>>>> our public REST API.
>>>>>>>>>>>>> * it has moderate performance impact and rather good
>>>>>>>>>>>>> maintainability features (very little impact on regular 
>>>>>>>>>>>>> development effort)
>>>>>>>>>>>>> * it is fully backwards compatible - the new DB isolation will
>>>>>>>>>>>>> be an optional feature
>>>>>>>>>>>>> * has a solid plan for full test coverage in our CI
>>>>>>>>>>>>> * has a backing and plans for more extensive complete testing
>>>>>>>>>>>>> in "real" environment with Google Composer team support
>>>>>>>>>>>>> * allows for further extensions as part of AIP-1 (I am
>>>>>>>>>>>>> planning to re-establish sig-multitenancy effort for follow up 
>>>>>>>>>>>>> AIPs once
>>>>>>>>>>>>> this one is well in progress).
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> J.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>
>> --
>> Eugene
>>
>

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