Hi, Thierry,

One question about this  ' The transition to the "big tent" governance model is 
now finished, with all the expected projects now officially part of the 
OpenStack community. The big tent is all about community: answering the "are 
you one of us" question.'. 

Does it mean that no more project will be approved to be a big tent project in 
the Newton and Ocata release?

Best Regards
Chaoyi Huang ( Joe Huang )


-----Original Message-----
From: Thierry Carrez [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, March 28, 2016 11:53 PM
To: OpenStack Development Mailing List
Subject: [openstack-dev] [election] [tc] TC candidacy

(This was also submitted as https://review.openstack.org/#/c/298294)

Hi everyone,

I'd like to submit my candidacy for reelection on the Technical Committee. For 
those who don't know me yet, my name is Thierry Carrez, I use "ttx" as my IRC 
nickname. I'm currently employed by the OpenStack Foundation as its Director of 
Engineering, which basically means I'm running the team in charge of ensuring 
the long-term health of the upstream OpenStack open source project and its 
governance. Handling the Technical Committee is my primary activity: 6 months 
ago I left the PTL role for the Release Management Team in order to be able to 
focus as much as possible on the TC.

One year ago I ran for election with the goal of having the TC "step out of the 
way"[1]. The idea was to remove the TC from the critical path of getting things 
done, and encourage a "ask for forgiveness, rather than permission" attitude in 
our community. I like to think we were successful at this. Project teams can 
now more easily add git repositories as they need them, they also end up 
asserting some tags by themselves, and the TC has generally moved to being an 
appeals board in case of disputes, rather than a procedural barrier in getting 
things done.

Here are the three priorities for my upcoming mandate, if the electorate 
chooses to reelect me to the TC:

1/ Cleaning up the big tent

The transition to the "big tent" governance model is now finished, with all the 
expected projects now officially part of the OpenStack community. The big tent 
is all about community: answering the "are you one of us" question. Our 
approach there was to be inclusive and assume good faith, especially as we 
caught up on documenting what we meant by "the OpenStack Way". Over the past 
year we created the Project Team Guide[2], which clearly explains what is 
expected of official project teams. I think it's time for us to look back at 
all those projects we have in the tent, reach out to those who are lacking, and 
not hesitate to remove the ones that are not following our common community 
practices from the list of official project teams. Demoting a project used to 
be particularly painful, with costly git repository renames crating disruption 
on the demoted projects. But now that all projects hosted under our 
infrastructure (official and unofficial) use the same namespace, this cost and 
disr
 uption are very limited, so cleaning up the big tent is now possible.

2/ Defining the limits of the big tent

The TC recently had two project team applications for which we had no good 
answer: Poppy and Tacker. Those resulted in close (and somewhat
arbitrary) votes as each TC member tried to interpret the mission statement 
words and what we stand for. In the case of Poppy, there was the question of 
whether a service that proxies to non-OpenStack commercial services could be 
considered part of "OpenStack", without an open source reference implementation 
to do end-to-end testing against. 
In the case of Tacker, there was the question of a service standing on top of 
other OpenStack services to present a domain-specific API tailored to a 
specific use case or industry. Should that still be "OpenStack", or just 
something that consumes OpenStack ? I'd like the TC to take a step back and 
explore those two questions, without the pressure of a specific project team 
addition. Clarifying the rules may result in some official projects to be 
demoted to "unofficial" status as they would not fit the rules anymore.

3/ Launching the new separated event for project team members

We recently started the discussion[3] on splitting the "design summit" 
into wider community feedback / requirements-gathering sessions (that would 
happen at the main Summit) and a specific event for project team members to 
gather in a co-located venue to come up with a plan and organize its execution. 
We still have a long way to go (and not that much time) to discuss the format 
and the timing of this new event, and I expect the Newton membership of the TC 
to help with taking quick decisions there. The next step here will be a 
cross-project workshop at the Design Summit in Austin to discuss the current 
plan and go deeper in the details.

Those are my three priorities for Newton and Ocata, and this is what I'll push 
the Technical Committee towards if I'm elected.

Thank you all for your consideration !

[1] http://ttx.re/stepping-out-of-the-way.html
[2] http://docs.openstack.org/project-team-guide/
[3] http://ttx.re/splitting-out-design-summit.html

--
Thierry Carrez (ttx)

__________________________________________________________________________
OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)
Unsubscribe: [email protected]?subject:unsubscribe
http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev

__________________________________________________________________________
OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)
Unsubscribe: [email protected]?subject:unsubscribe
http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev

Reply via email to