On Thu, Aug 2, 2018, at 9:57 AM, Alex Schultz wrote:
> Ahoy infra folks,
> 
> So TripleO/RDO is currently working on our transition from python2 to
> python3 and would like to stabilize on Fedora 28 during the Stein
> cycle until a newer version of CentOS comes out with proper python3
> support.  So we would like to ask if it would be possible to keep
> Fedora 28 around until Fedora 30 comes out + 1 month. This is the
> published maintenance schedule[0].  Based on current assumptions this
> would mean that Fedora 28 would be EOL around June, 2019.  Ideally our
> plan would be to migrate off of the Fedora 28 jobs before it is
> officially EOL.
> 
> We are aware that release schedules can change and are definitely
> keeping an eye on that in terms of Fedora.  The next release of Fedora
> 29 is slated to include python 3.7 which may be too new for
> OpenStack[1] so we would like to start work on the 3.6 that is
> available from 28.  We've already started working on getting packaging
> working for Fedora 28. Our first goal is to get the various services
> and deployments working under 3.6. Once that has been tackled, an
> upgrade to Fedora 29 or newer will likely be less work than trying to
> go from 2.7 to 3.7.
> 
> We would like to use fedora 28 rather than something like python3 from
> EPEL7 in that it would be a better representation of a Red Hat based
> OS without any python2 support.  We're looking to uncover the python 2
> to 3 transition issues with TripleO as well as starting to pull in
> other newer dependencies.
> 
> Thanks,
> -Alex
> 
> [0] 
> https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Fedora_Release_Life_Cycle#Maintenance_Schedule
> [1] 
> http://lists.openstack.org/pipermail/openstack-dev/2018-July/132179.html

The main reason for wanting to move up the list of Fedora releases quickly was 
the people supporting the Fedora images didn't want to invest in older releases 
once they were superseded. If tripleo (or others) are willing to help care for 
those images and fix them when they break, we should be able to support them 
through the entirety of their designated lifetime. I do not expect we would 
keep images around for releases that have reached their end of life. It just 
isn't practical to try and keep up with security issues, and we should move on.

Considering that, I think we can hold off removing Fedora 28 images until that 
release's EOL date or if they break for a prolonged period of time with no one 
working to fix it.

As a note, Fedora 28 does come with python2.7. It is installed so that Zuul 
related ansible things can execute under python2 on the test nodes. There is 
the possibility that ansible's python3 support is working well enough that we 
could switch to it, but that requires testing and updates to software and 
images and config.

Hope this helps,
Clark



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