Consider this: Which OS runs on the bay nodes is not important to end users. 
What matters to users is the environments their containers execute in, which 
has only one thing in common with the bay node OS: the kernel. The linux 
syscall interface is stable enough that the various linux distributions can all 
run concurrently in neighboring containers sharing same kernel. There is really 
no material reason why the bay OS choice must match what distro the container 
is based on. Although I’m persuaded by Hongbin’s concern to mitigate risk of 
future changes WRT whatever OS distro is the prevailing one for bay nodes, 
there are a few items of concern about duality I’d like to zero in on:

1) Participation from Magnum contributors to support the CoreOS specific 
template features has been weak in recent months. By comparison, participation 
relating to Fedora/Atomic have been much stronger.

2) Properly testing multiple bay node OS distros (would) significantly increase 
the run time and complexity of our functional tests.

3) Having support for multiple bay node OS choices requires more extensive 
documentation, and more comprehensive troubleshooting details.

If we proceed with just one supported disto for bay nodes, and offer 
extensibility points to allow alternates to be used in place of it, we should 
be able to address the risk concern of the chosen distro by selecting an 
alternate when that change is needed, by using those extensibility points. 
These include the ability to specify your own bay image, and the ability to use 
your own associated Heat template.

I see value in risk mitigation, it may make sense to simplify in the short term 
and address that need when it becomes necessary. My point of view might be 
different if we had contributors willing and ready to address the variety of 
drawbacks that accompany the strategy of supporting multiple bay node OS 
choices. In absence of such a community interest, my preference is to simplify 
to increase our velocity. This seems to me to be a relatively easy way to 
reduce complexity around heat template versioning. What do you think?

Thanks,

Adrian

On Feb 29, 2016, at 8:40 AM, Hongbin Lu 
<hongbin...@huawei.com<mailto:hongbin...@huawei.com>> wrote:

Hi team,

This is a continued discussion from a review [1]. Corey O'Brien suggested to 
have Magnum support a single OS distro (Atomic). I disagreed. I think we should 
bring the discussion to here to get broader set of inputs.

Corey O'Brien
From the midcycle, we decided we weren't going to continue to support 2 
different versions of the k8s template. Instead, we were going to maintain the 
Fedora Atomic version of k8s and remove the coreos templates from the tree. I 
don't think we should continue to develop features for coreos k8s if that is 
true.
In addition, I don't think we should break the coreos template by adding the 
trust token as a heat parameter.

Hongbin Lu
I was on the midcycle and I don't remember any decision to remove CoreOS 
support. Why you want to remove CoreOS templates from the tree. Please note 
that this is a very big decision and please discuss it with the team 
thoughtfully and make sure everyone agree.

Corey O'Brien
Removing the coreos templates was a part of the COE drivers decision. Since 
each COE driver will only support 1 distro+version+coe we discussed which ones 
to support in tree. The decision was that instead of trying to support every 
distro and every version for every coe, the magnum tree would only have support 
for 1 version of 1 distro for each of the 3 COEs (swarm/docker/mesos). Since we 
already are going to support Atomic for swarm, removing coreos and keeping 
Atomic for kubernetes was the favored choice.

Hongbin Lu
Strongly disagree. It is a huge risk to support a single distro. The selected 
distro could die in the future. Who knows. Why make Magnum take this huge risk? 
Again, the decision of supporting single distro is a very big decision. Please 
bring it up to the team and have it discuss thoughtfully before making any 
decision. Also, Magnum doesn't have to support every distro and every version 
for every coe, but should support *more than one* popular distro for some COEs 
(especially for the popular COEs).

Corey O'Brien
The discussion at the midcycle started from the idea of adding support for RHEL 
and CentOS. We all discussed and decided that we wouldn't try to support 
everything in tree. Magnum would provide support in-tree for 1 per COE and the 
COE driver interface would allow others to add support for their preferred 
distro out of tree.

Hongbin Lu
I agreed the part that "we wouldn't try to support everything in tree". That 
doesn't imply the decision to support single distro. Again, support single 
distro is a huge risk. Why make Magnum take this huge risk?

[1] https://review.openstack.org/#/c/277284/

Best regards,
Hongbin
__________________________________________________________________________
OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)
Unsubscribe: 
openstack-dev-requ...@lists.openstack.org<mailto:openstack-dev-requ...@lists.openstack.org>?subject:unsubscribe
http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev

__________________________________________________________________________
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

Reply via email to