> On Feb 15, 2017, at 02:07, Thierry Carrez <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Samuel Cassiba wrote:
>> [...]
>> *TL;DR* if you don't want to keep going -
>> OpenStack-Chef is not in a good place and is not sustainable.
>> [...]
> 
> Thanks for sharing, Sam.
> 

Thanks for taking the time to read and respond. This was as hard to write as it 
was to read. As time went on, it became apparent that this retrospective needed 
to exist. It was not written lightly, and does not aim to point fingers.

> I think that part of the reasons for the situation is that we grew the
> number of options for deploying OpenStack. We originally only had Puppet
> and Chef, but now there is Ansible, Juju, and the various
> Kolla-consuming container-oriented approaches. There is a gravitational
> attraction effect at play (more users -> more contributors) which
> currently benefits Puppet, Ansible and Kolla, to the expense of
> less-popular community-driven efforts like OpenStackChef and
> OpenStackSalt. I expect this effect to continue. I have mixed feelings
> about it: on one hand it reduces available technical options, but on the
> other it allows to focus and raise quality…

You have a very valid point. One need only look at the trends over the cycles 
in the User Survey to see this shift in most places. Ansible wins due to sheer 
simplicity for new deployments, but there are also real business decisions that 
go behind automation flavors at certain business sizes. This leaves them 
effectively married to whichever flavor chosen. That shift impacts Puppet’s 
overall user base, as well, though they had and still have the luxury of 
maintaining sponsored support at higher numbers.

Chef’s sponsored support has numbered far fewer. It casts an extremely negative 
image on OpenStack when someone looks for help at odd hours, or asks something 
somewhere that none of us have time to track. The answer to that is the point 
of making noise, to generate conversation about avenues and solutions. I could 
have kept my fingers aiming at LP, Gerrit and IRC in an attempt to bury my head 
in the sand. We’re way past the point of denial, perhaps too far, but as long 
as the results of the User Survey shows Chef, there are still users to support, 
for now. Operators and deployers will be looking to the source of truth, 
wherever that is, and right now that source of truth is OpenStack.

> 
> There is one question I wanted to ask you in terms of community. We
> maintain in OpenStack a number of efforts that bridge two communities,
> and where the project could set up its infrastructure / governance in
> one or the other. In the case of OpenStackChef, you could have set up
> shop on the Chef community side, rather than on the OpenStack community
> side. Would you say that living on the OpenStack community side helped
> you or hurt you ? Did you get enough help / visibility to balance the
> constraints ? Do you think you would have been more, less or equally
> successful if you had set up shop more on the Chef community side ?
> 

We set up under Stackforge, later OpenStack, because the cookbooks evolved 
alongside OpenStack, as far back as 2011, before my time in the cookbooks. The 
earliest commits on the now EOL Grizzly branch were quite enlightening, if only 
Stackalytics had the visuals. Maybe I’m biased, but that’s worth something.

You’re absolutely correct that we could have pushed more to set up the Chef 
side of things, and in fact we made several concerted efforts to integrate into 
the Chef community, up to and including having sponsored contributors, even a 
PTL. When exploring the Chef side, we found that we faced as much or more 
friction with the ecosystem, requiring more fundamental changes than we could 
influence. Chef (the ecosystem) has many great things, but Chef doesn’t 
OpenStack. Maybe that was the writing on the wall.

I keep one foot in both Chef and OpenStack, to keep myself as informed as time 
allows me. It’s clear that even Chef’s long-term cookbook support community is 
ill equipped to handle OpenStack. The problem? We’re too complex and too far 
integrated, and none of them know OpenStack. Where does that leave us?

--
Best,

Samuel Cassiba

> --
> Thierry Carrez (ttx)
> 
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