HTML: https://samuel.cassi.ba/state-of-the-kitchen-6th-edition
This is the sixth installment of what is going on with Chef OpenStack. The goal is to give a quick overview to see our progress and what is on the menu. Feedback is always welcome on the content and of what you would like to see more. ### Notable Changes * In the past month we released Chef OpenStack 17, which aligns with the Queens codename of OpenStack. Stabilization efforts centered largely around Chef major version updates and further leveraging Kitchen for integration testing. At the time of this writing, they are mirrored to GitHub and [Supermarket](https://supermarket.chef.io/users/openstack){:target="_blank"}. * openstack-attic/openstack-chef has been brought back from the aether to [openstack/openstack-chef](https://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack/openstack-chef){:target="_blank"}. This is now the starting point for Chef OpenStack integration examples and documentation. Many thanks to infra for the smooth de-mothballing. A special thanks to fungi for putting on his decoder ring on a weekend! * The openstack-dns (Designate) and overcloud primitives (client) cookbooks have been rehomed to the openstack/ namespace, donated by jklare, calbers and frickler. (thanks!) * Support for aodh has been added to the telemetry cookbook. Thanks to Seb-Solon for the patches! ### Integration * Containerization is progressing, but decisions of old are starting to need to be revisited. Networking is where the main area of focus needs to happen. * In past releases, Chef OpenStack pared down the integration testing to facilitate in landing changes without clogging Zuul. With Zuul v3, that allows some of the older methods to be replaced with lighter weight playbooks. No doubt, as tests become reimplemented, the impact to the build queue times will have to be a consideration again. ### Stabilization * With Rocky stable packages nearing GA, this means that the cookbooks will start focusing on stabilization in earnest. More to come. * The mariadb 2.0 rewrite has not been released upstream in Sous Chefs. We are collaborating to test it in the Chef OpenStack framework and make a decision on when to release to Supermarket. The major change here is making it a pure set of resources, replacing the now-defunct database cookbook. ### On The Menu *Slow Cooker Pulled Pork* * 1 pork butt (shoulder cut) -- size matters not here, the same liquid measurements go for an average size as well as a large size * Cookin' Sause (see below) * 1 cup (240mL) cider vinegar * 1 cup (240mL) beef stock (water works, too, but we like the flavor) * 1-2 tsp (5-10mL) liquid smoke #### Cookin' Sause * 1 cup (340g) yellow mustard * 1/4 cup (57g) salt * 1/4 cup (57g) ground black pepper * 1/4 cup (57g) granulated garlic * 1/4 cup (57g) granulated onion * 1/4 cup (57g) ground cayenne > Combine the spices and the mustard with a whisk. You can use the fancy stuff here, but it's kind of a waste. Ol' Yella works just fine. Your food, your call. #### Dippin' Sause -- not cookin' sause! * 1 can tomato paste * Cider vinegar * Red pepper flakes > There are no measurements on this because it's subjective. Trust your senses and err on the side of needing to add more. *to business!* 1. Rub pork butt with cookin' sause. Make that swine sublime. 2. Place that yellow mass of meat in your slow cooker 3. Add cider vinegar, stock, liquid smoke 4. Cook for 7.5-8 hours on low, until fork tender 5. Shred with forks until it doesn't look like mustard 6. Serve with dippin' sause, or use it as drownin' sause 7. Enjoy Your humble line cook, Samuel Cassiba (scas) __________________________________________________________________________ OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions) Unsubscribe: openstack-dev-requ...@lists.openstack.org?subject:unsubscribe http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev