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=== Security (SIG) ===
 
=== Security (SIG) ===
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Last updated 2018-09-11 by fungi
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Operated for a while in parallel with the project team of the same name, during Rocky it assumed responsibility for the corresponding deliverable repositories. Many of its previous members (both the SIG and the team) have slowly faded from the OpenStack community, and most of those who remain have also been drafted into the VMT. It still holds regular weekly meetings, has a consensus chair, is present for events like the PTG and Summit/Forum, and has continued to manage OSSN and security assessment tasks to assist the VMT... but as it's now mostly the same people the lines there have become increasingly blurry.
  
 
=== Security (team) ===
 
=== Security (team) ===

Revision as of 13:54, 11 September 2018

This page is a live document and contains notes from TC members working with project teams to ensure they have everything they need and are not running into issues. This information is not necessarily complete.

TC members are attached as liaisons to each of the project teams, SIGs, or UC working groups. The idea is for these liaisons to keep up with the general health of the group, understand any issues they encounter, and help them work with the TC on solutions if necessary. Some TC members may be more active within the group than the basic liaison responsibilities imply, but that is not required.

Liaisons should monitor their groups by:

  • reading meeting logs or participating in meetings
  • watching summit "project update" videos
  • reading relevant messages on the mailing list
  • talking with the PTL, chair, and other group members
  • checking contribution rates and review turnaround times

Liaisons

SIGs

Group TC members
API mugsie
Extended Maintenance fungi
First Contact fungi
K8s dims
Meta dhellmann
Resource Management cdent
Scientific pabelanger
Security fungi
Self-healing zaneb
Upgrade emilien

Working Groups

Group TC members
App Dev Enablement zaneb
Diversity fungi
Enterprise
Fault Genes
Interop dims, fungi
LCOO
Large Deployment pabelanger
Edge/Massively Distributed Clouds ttx
Operators Telecom/NFV smcginnis
Ops Tags smcginnis
Product
ProfessionalCertification
Public Cloud ttx

Project Teams

Group TC members
Barbican fungi, ttx
Blazar cmurphy, mnaser
Chef Openstack pabelanger, mnaser
Cinder smcginnis, dims
Cloudkitty ttx, dims
Congress cdent, fungi
Cyborg ttx, TheJulia
Designate cmurphy, cdent
Documentation dhellmann, pabelanger
Dragonflow dims, cdent
Ec2-Api TheJulia, cmurphy
Freezer ttx, mugsie
Glance smcginnis, mugsie
Heat zaneb, emilien
Horizon cmurphy, smcginnis
I18n emilien, cdent
Infrastructure fungi, mnaser
Ironic mugsie, fungi
Karbor ttx, mugsie
Keystone fungi,cmurphy
Kolla dims, TheJulia
Kuryr dims, cdent
Loci pabelanger, dims
Magnum mnaser, dims
Manila smcginnis, pabelanger
Masakari pabelanger, cdent
Mistral zaneb, cmurphy
Monasca zaneb, TheJulia
Murano dhellmann, emilien
Neutron mugsie, dims
Nova mnaser, dhellmann
Octavia mnaser, mugsie
Openstack Charms ttx, emilien
Openstack-Helm ttx, dims
Openstackansible mnaser, smcginnis
OpenStackClient dhellmann, cmurphy
Openstacksdk pabelanger, TheJulia
Oslo dhellmann, mugsie
Packaging-Rpm cmurphy, zaneb
Powervmstackers emilien, TheJulia
Puppet Openstack cmurphy, pabelanger
Qinling zaneb, TheJulia
Quality Assurance cdent, fungi
Rally pabelanger, mnaser
Refstack fungi, TheJulia
Release Management dhellmann, smcginnis
Requirements fungi, dhellmann
Sahara emilien, pabelanger
Searchlight mugsie, mnaser
Security fungi, zaneb
Senlin zaneb, smcginnis
Solum zaneb, mnaser
Stable Branch Maintenance fungi, smcginnis
Storlets ttx, dhellmann
Swift smcginnis, mugsie
Tacker TheJulia, emilien
Telemetry cdent, dhellmann
Tricircle emilien, cdent
Tripleo emilien, cmurphy
Trove ttx, mugsie
Vitrage emilien, dhellmann
Watcher smcginnis, TheJulia
Winstackers pabelanger, cdent
Zaqar zaneb, dims
Zun zaneb, ttx

Status updates

Barbican

Last updated 2018-09-08 by fungi

The team seems generally healthy and was considered to have "diverse affiliation" at the time we removed the affiliation diversity tags. Vulnerability reports for its code deliverables are officially overseen by the OpenStack VMT and have no outstanding public security issues unhandled. Changes are reviewed and approved with regularity in most of their deliverables. They're keeping up with applicable cycle goals, release deadlines, holding regular weekly meetings in IRC (if sometimes a bit short and with only a handful of participants) and putting important design discussions on the development mailing list. Over the past cycle they migrated their task and defect tracking from Launchpad to Storyboard, and were bolstered somewhat in their mission by the inclusion of Castellan (though not officially a Barbican deliverable, still maintained by many of the same folks and basically a foster child in Oslo's care) in the base services list.

I have personally failed at syncing up with the team directly (my fault entirely not theirs), but will endeavor to do so at the PTG (they'll be sharing a room with the Security SIG/VMT) and add any of the concerns or other items they express.

Blazar

Reported issues

  • Organizational diversity fragility: NTT represents 79% of core reviews
  • Requested to be listed under project navigator on openstack.org (ttx mentioned that should be taken care of)
  • A lot of work seems to be going around updating document linking

Chef OpenStack

Reported issues

  • Individual fragility: Samuel Cassiba represents 75% of commits

Cinder

Update: June 22, 2018, smcginnis

  • Some drop off in participation by some cores, but still active enough not to raise any red flags
  • Overall less community involvement
  • Project may just be "stable" and doesn't need as much activity as the past
  • Still a lot of bug fix work to be done, but no major new features on the roadmap

Cloudkitty

Updated July 19, 2018 (ttx)

  • Currently single-vendor (all cores from ObjectifLibre), failure to retain onboarded people
  • Activity is low but stable (33 commits in Rocky so far compared to 57 total in Queens)
  • Works to support standalone operation and reusability in a Prometheus-driven stack, good feedback from users on that strategy
  • It's mostly in competition with homegrown solutions, which makes it a bit special
  • IRC meetings do not appear on eavesdrop.openstack.org -- no regular meeting, focusing on doing some small group meeting for key topics
  • Migrated to StoryBoard
  • Limited ML engagement (mostly used for team-wide announcements)

Congress

Update 2018-07-30 by cdent

  • Commits somewhat down from Queens (119 in Queens, 69 in Rocky so far)
  • Commits and reviews in the hands of a small but diverse group
  • Limited engagement on os-dev, but effective: http://lists.openstack.org/pipermail/openstack-dev/2018-May/130180.html
  • IRC logged for both channel and meetings, low but steady traffic.
  • Working to address step learning curve that new contributors face by refactoring tempest tests and associated documentation.

Cyborg

Update: 2018-07-10, TheJulia

  • Email responded to by PTL on July 4th. PTL has nothing to really report.
  • Activity seems to be moderately in-line with the prior cycle, although one of the cores has since become an independent contributor.
  • Cyborg does presently hold a weekly meeting on Wednesdays which does appear active, otherwise IRC is quiet.
    • There is no calendar entry on eavesdrop.openstack.org for cyborg, TheJulia let the PTL know.
  • Email sent to the PTL to initiate communication on July 2nd

Designate

Last updated 2018-07-23 by cdent

  • Low number of reviews, commits, and contributors but it is somewhat steady.
  • A significant amount of the code activity is related to aligning with infra/testing/qa related goals and not feature development. "most of our work at the moment is based around fixing the gate / not breaking future versions"
  • ML list use is light, but that's always been the case.
  • IRC channel is not busy but is responsive.
  • Lurking difficulties:
    • As of yet, no support for WSGI, which will break things in a pure py3 environment (due to eventlet)
    • Low number of reviews means meeting community goals difficult and distracting.
    • Feature requesting is not formalized/transparent, people show up asking "why isn't thing X present?"
    • Designate is present in many OpenStack distributions but vendors are not providing active contribution support.

Summary: muddling along, but struggling to address feature demands because of lack of incoming flow of people.

Diversity

Last updated 2018-07-03 by fungi

  • The Diversity WG continues to have semi-weekly meetings in their IRC channel with anywhere from 2 to 8 participants (varying week to week)
  • Current activities include finalizing the updated diversity survey and following up on feedback to the foundation event coordinators (preferred pronoun stickers for badges, some way to indicate visibly that you don't wish to be photographed, designated alcohol-free areas at official social events)
  • Also communicating with the Women of OpenStack group about the possibility of more closely collaborating on sponsored event activities

Documentation

Update: 2018-07-18, pabelanger

  • Revist meeting format at stein PTG
  • To early to report on new office hours, but people still seem to ask questions at random times.
  • review queue is pretty stable
  • suggestion in https://review.openstack.org/#/c/579177/, wondering if the TC could help the docs team promote some of the proposed docs guidelines
  • could use more designer resources to work on some outstanding tasks wrt docs.o.o that we previously talked about in Dublin. I'm hoping to get some intern time secured from the Foundation in the coming weeks.
  • Email send to PTL to initiate communication

Dragonflow

Reported issues

  • Organizational diversity fragility: Huawei represents 100% of core reviews
  • The team did not produce a Queens release. Their last release was 4.0.0 on Sept 1, 2017. Should projects that do not prepare releases be considered official? -- dhellmann
  • No PTL volunteer(s) for Stein.

ec2-api

Reported issues

  • Individual fragility: Andrey Pavlov represents 100% of core reviews

Update: July 3, 2018 (cmurphy)

  • Low activity due to general maturity
  • Still actively used by operators, bugs are reported and fixed
  • Three cores, all reportedly active
  • Being part of OpenStack is still valued
    • Operators are still using the project, so better to be coupled with OpenStack
    • Depends on other components of OpenStack, so there is value in collaborating together

Extended Maintenance

Last updated 2018-09-08 by fungi

Newly formed SIG in the Rocky cycle, built on the ruins of the old Stable Branch Management team. They're still feeling out the changes we outlined in Dublin and Vancouver for EM as compared to the old stable/EOL workflow.

I have personally failed at syncing up with the chair directly (my fault entirely not theirs), but will endeavor to do so at the PTG as they're attending in person.

First Contact

Last updated 2018-09-08 by fungi

Primarily focused on fleshing out the contributor guide, working with OSF staff on the contributor portal, and most recently the employer guide (targeted at helping management at contributors' employing organizations understand what resources they can provide to help their upstream interactions be more successful and lower-friction). They meet fairly consistently in IRC each week, and while those active in the SIG are fairly few in number they represent work important to the overall health of our community so can use all the support they can get.

I have personally failed at syncing up with the chair directly (my fault entirely not theirs), but will endeavor to do so at the PTG as they're attending in person.

Freezer

ttx updated Aug 28, 2018

  • Lots of warning lights:
    • Still uses pycrypto [1]
    • freezer and freezer-web-ui missed the Rocky-2 and Rocky-3 milestones, so Freezer was not included in Rocky
    • There was No PTL volunteer(s) for Stein.
    • No PTG presence
    • No team meeting since August 2017
  • That said:
    • The historic PTL (Saad Zaher) is working on it on his free time, and was on paternity leave lately (congrats!)
    • Several people stepped up to save it from being made unofficial (Trinh Nguyen from Edlab, Geng Changcai from ZTE)
    • Activity was significant in Rocky (88 commits), with good diversity
  • Recommendation is to reassess before stein-2 milestone

Glance

Heat

Update: 2018-06-28, zaneb

  • Under active development
  • Only 4 active cores, 3 from Red Hat. This is limiting the amount of development that can be done and the velocity of the project.
    • Especially struggling with stable reviews (only 1 active core, and the stable-maint team are the gatekeepers for adding more)
  • Active on mailing list and IRC
  • Regular IRC meetings
  • Excellent progress on the (massive) mox-removal goal in Rocky
  • The heat-translator sub-project no longer has any team overlap with the rest of the project, and is struggling for core reviewers. It might be time to consider another home for it.

Horizon

Update: July 20, cmurphy

  • Lost several core reviewers recently
  • Some promising new contributors, could become cores if they help with reviews more
  • Nearly complete with mox goal
  • Focus on cross-project plugins and CI coverage
  • Lots of participation in weekly meetings
  • Concern about getting help with AngularJS work
    • Converting more of horizon to AngularJS is still seen as the right technical direction (it provides a better user experience) but community contribution is suffering from it
    • Hard to ask devs from other OpenStack projects to add support for new features in non-Python
    • Hard in general to attract new JS devs when OpenStack is mostly Python

I18n

Update: July 04, emilien

Reported issues: none, yet. The team changed leadership in Queens.

Queens status:

  • 87 modules touched (+87%)
  • 17 languages supported (+6%)
  • 55 active translators (-14%) (TODO, need to check with PTL if it has an impact)
  • 7 companies support (-22%)

I18n team previously had team meetings but decided to have office hours instead. Usually tracks completion of Rocky community goals. A lot of collaboration with Doc team. Dedicated mailing-list: openstack-i18n - pretty busy

Rocky:

Infrastructure

Interop

Last updated 2018-07-03 by fungi

  • Only a few active members of the Interop WG reviewing and contributing patches to the openstack/interop repository
  • Affiliation is fairly diverse, but with so few active that's probably not really relevant
  • Mandated to maintain interoperability guidelines in support of official trademark programs, so the board will likely step in if active participants fall below a minimum viable count
  • Heavily dependent on the RefStack and QA teams for their tool development

Ironic

Karbor

Keystone

Update July 3, 2018 (cmurphy)

  • High pressure due to being a central part of OpenStack
  • Focus on "improving the commons" - policy/RBAC work, unified quota management, application development
  • 10 cores with varying levels of activity, nearly all are at most part-time
    • Concern over possibility of team burnout

Kolla

Update: 2018-07-30, TheJulia

  • Discussion in IRC with the PTL about a week after initial contact in #openstack-tc
  • PTL felt that the team was in a good state, that goals had been progressing.
  • Slight increase in review activity/commits, overall seems fairly healthy.

Update: 2018-07-10, TheJulia

  • No reply received. Follow-up email sent on 2017-07-10 and contact initiated on IRC.
  • Email sent to the PTL to initiate communication on July 2nd

Kuryr

Updated 2018-08-13 by cdent, from an email response by dmellado to a message from dims

Reported issues

  • Organizational diversity fragility: RedHat represents 79% of core reviews
    • Considering moving or adding meetings to reach more timezones
  • Making good headway in general
  • Have some challenges with infra that they'd like to figure out:
    • Would be good to have an openstack-infra k8s registry for containers
    • Would be nice to have nested VMs with large RAM to test pods
  • Need to work with neutron to deal with API slowness

Large Deployment

Update: 2018-07-14, pabelanger

Loci

Reported issues

Update: 2018-08-09, pabelanger

  • PTL missed original email, reason for delay.
  • LOCI is now a single-repo project. Retired other repos.
  • Is stable, but have not agreed and implemented a versioning system.
  • Master branch of LOCI can build N-<HEAD of master> OpenStack currently, and this makes the stable branching structure a bit unappealing.
  • LOCI has 3 independent efforts right now from a few people that are encouraging.
    • aarch64 support though we haven't setup gates yet
    • opensuse 15 support
    • kolla-loci/loci-kolla support. The output will allow loci images to be used with kolla-ansible without kolla-ansible changes.
  • core of LOCI is stable and solid throughout all of this. Most/all of this work is about integrations with other OpenStack projects with the long term goals of sharing the "deploy" gates with OSH/Kolla/Triple-O, testing LOCI images.
  • Email send to PTL to initiate communication

Magnum

Manila

Update: June 22, 2018, smcginnis

  • Project appears to be in good shape
  • Focusing on bug fixes and stabilization rather than any big new features
  • Drop of in involvement from EU, particularly from HPE and IBM
  • Increase of participation from China makes EU drop off not as much of an issue other than time coverage
    • Not a lot of involvement on IRC or weekly meeting though
  • Lots of good interest downstream, particularly from HPC and telco communities

Masakari

Reported issues

  • Low activity in Rocky for a "new" project
  • Organizational diversity fragility: NTT represents 97% of core reviews

Mistral

  • Active development, with a steady stream of reviews and patches spread fairly evenly across a handful of contributors
  • Organisational diversity is low, however - most contributions come from Nokia and Red Hat.
  • Switched to multiple weekly office hours, logged as meetings. Quoting Dougal on lessons learned:
    • Essentially we have ended up with a less formal meeting, but it happens multiple times in the week. The biggest advantage is that we can cover more timezones. I think it generally works well, but sometimes it is very quiet and just me - in those cases I tend to do bug triage and other routine tasks. This has helped reduce the bug backlog by at least 50%! We are a small team and a more formal weekly meeting always felt forced, as we didn't always have specific topics to discuss or there would only be a couple of us. So now the structure of the meetings is generally "Anyone here and want to chat? We have X new bugs we can talk about" and then we take it from there. Having a list of IRC nicks to ping at the start of meetings has helped remind people :)
  • Missing PTG4 because it happens that no cores are available, so virtual PTG is planned instead. Mistral have participated in previous PTGs and expect to find it easier being co-located with the Summit.

Monasca

Update: August 14th, 2018

  • Team is fairly small and tends to utilize a single core reviewer strategy to approve changes.
  • Team is holding weekly meetings which seem quite active. Contributor activity seems stable compared to the prior cycle.
  • Check-in email sent to the PTL on August 14th. PTL is on vacation until end of month.

Murano

  • murano and murano-dashboard missed the Rocky-2 milestone


Update 13 June 2018, dhellmann

  • Recent US government action against ZTE has had an impact on the team, because ZTE employees are key contributors to the project and the core team. It is unclear how much ZTE will be able to continue to contribute in the future. [2]
  • The murano-core team has members froM AT&T and Mirantis, as well as ZTE.
  • emilien sent email on 2018-07-17

Update 6 Aug 2018, dhellmann

  • Rong Zhu responded with some hopeful comments about the ZTE situation improving (and it seems to have) and meaning that team members will be more active on IRC again

Nova

Update 5 July 2018, dhellmann

  • melwitt reports "I can't think of any issues we need help with"

Octavia

  • Feeling a small shortage of contributors (contributions & code review)
  • OpenStack-wide "interruptions" affect team heavily
  • Moving from screen to systemd affected team for ~4 weeks
  • WSGI Implementation took time (and changes) and team feels community goals aren't super constructive to project
  • Zuul V3 cutovers (and constant restarts) affect productivity and slow down progress
  • Sometimes certain things that should be done the "OpenStack" way such as involving PTLs in decisions don't happen
  • Storyboard issues: https://etherpad.openstack.org/p/storyboard-issues

Openstack Charms

Update: June 20, ttx

  • Currently single-vendor (all cores from Canonical), but with some external participation
  • Steady activity, keeping up with recent evolution (includes Vault and Gnocchi, integrates Designate with Neutron)
  • Holds weekly IRC meetings with rotating chair
  • Uses Launchpad, and is likely to stay there as it allows sharing tasks with Ubuntu packaging
  • Limited ML engagement (thread left dangling at [3])

OpenStack-Helm

Update: June 26, ttx

  • Currently single-vendor (all cores from AT&T), but with external participation (SKT, 99cloud, Intel...)
  • Increasing activity (412 commits in Rocky so far compared to 513 total in Queens)
  • Holds weekly IRC meetings, pretty active discussions
  • Migrated to StoryBoard
  • Limited ML engagement (mostly used for team-wide announcements)
  • OpenStack-Helm is release-independent -- it aims to support Newton -> master and track latest all the time. They are waiting until they reach a certain quality level (and stable interface) before declaring a 1.0. See requirements for 1.0. This explains lack of releases.

OpenStackAnsible

OpenStackClient

Update: 28 June 2018, dhellmann, cmurphy

  • uses IRC and the mailing list but no meetings
  • the review team is small, but there are several active reviewers not on the core team yet who are candidates
  • there is quite a review backlog, but the PTL is optimistic that adding the new reviewers will help with that
  • they are still interested in being included on the help wanted list (hence the "orange" status, for now)

Openstacksdk

Update: 2018-07-02, TheJulia

  • Initial communication with PTL, should expect to follow-up with-in the next few days.

Oslo

Reported issues

  • Most of the more active members are employed by Red Hat, so it would be good to bring in more diverse contributors
  • oslo.privsep, taskflow, and oslo.service are used in several significant service projects, but are effectively unmaintained.
  • oslo.service has some issues with the WSGI service not working under python3. The plan is to encourage all projects to stop using that feature, deprecate, then remove it.
  • taskflow is one of several projects that needs to update to a newer version of networkx, but the API changes in networkx mean reworking some of taskflow. Supporting both versions of the APIs may be complicated.

Update: 12 June 2018, dhellmann

  • The team is small, but active and working on recruiting.
  • Team produces regular and frequent releases for the maintained libraries
  • Team meets weekly using IRC
  • Team had both onboarding and project update sessions in Vancouver
  • The level of activity within each library varies.
  • Several of the libraries are reaching a "stable" state in which they may not see many updates beyond bug fixes. This has spurred a discussion of how to treat projects like that, led by the release management team [4]

Packaging-RPM

Reported issues

Update 21 Aug 2018 (cmurphy):

  • Concern over low investment from original collaborators - was once a Mirantis/RH/SUSE project, now primary investment is mainly SUSE
  • Not enough reviewers, and not a big pool of contributors to draw from given reduced corporate investment
  • Seeing activity from several Asian companies but they don't participate in discussions, unclear on what their investment is or how to get them to engage more (some contributors seem to be clearly stats seeking)
  • Requires significant effort to keep up to date, original vision of promoting CD by gating with other OpenStack projects and other deployment projects did not pan out (mostly due to lack of time for engagement)
  • Not sure if it remains valuable to remain under governance

Powervmstackers

  • Email sent on August 9th (emilien).
  • No help is needed, and their collaboration with other projects became better over time.
  • Contributions are indeed owned by IBM but they welcome (and have) external contributors.
  • The project looks quite healthy so far, and nothing much to report now.

Puppet Openstack

Update: 2018-08-06 (cmurphy)

  • Good progress on important features
    • Puppet 5 support
    • Debian support
  • Some frustration with spam changes (compounded over multiple modules)
  • Tripleo moving away from depending on Puppet so maintenance shifting more toward operators
  • Overall seems to be growing traction and staying healthy

Qinling

Update: August 20th, 2018, TheJulia

  • PTL Confirmed small team nature, and that the team is largely focused on getting all of the minimum needs taken care of to have a viable FaaS component.
  • Emailed PTL on August 14th, 2018.
  • Project does not seem to hold regular meetings, but also appears to early in gearing up additional interest.
  • Rocky timeframe contributions are much more diverse than Queens timeframe contributions which is a good sign.
  • Core reviewing seems to use a mix of one and two core reviewers, weighted heavily towards a single reviewer.

Quality Assurance

Discussion with gmann, 2018-08-07:

  • overall healthy with most repos receiving attention from a diversity of contributors
  • grenade is one repo which is of concern, largely due to sdague's departure
  • switch to office hours has been positive, increasing doing and discussion, rather than simply reporting
  • help from individuals usually associated with other projects important aspect of QA health

Outside of that discussion, there are concerns expressed about QA being too focused on tempest, and tempest being too focused on Nova.

Rally

Reported issues

  • Half on GitHub those days, and unwilling to drop direct branching ACLs
  • Individual fragility: Andrey Kurilin represents 56% of commits
  • Organizational diversity fragility: GoDaddy represents 97% of core reviews
  • It looks like the project may be moving out of gerrit to GitHub? https://github.com/xrally and https://xrally.org -- dhellmann

Refstack

Reported issues

Last updated 2018-07-03 by fungi

  • The core review team has only two active members, both funded directly by the OpenStack Foundation (one reaching the end of that internship)
  • The bulk of recent contributions to the main refstack deliverable are from the same two individuals
  • Most recent outside development interest has been in the python-tempestconf library for tempest.conf generation, which has also produced some sideline support development in the refstack-client deliverable
  • The Refstack effort is considered to be reaching feature-complete state in the coming weeks as some final pieces land, and then will likely be put in maintenance mode from a governance perspective
  • The refstack and refstack-client deliverables may make sense to get adopted by the Interop WG so the Refstack team itself can be wound down and officially disbanded
  • The python-tempestconf deliverable isn't necessarily a good fit for QA team adoption, but may be looking for an adoptive home or may warrant creation of its own official TC-recognized team

Release Management

Update: 28 June 2018, dhellmann & smcginnis

  • The review work has become easier, but there are still only 3 team members. That leaves succession planning for the PTL role a bit up in the air, and also poses challenges with the members travel to conferences all at the same time.
  • Working on a reviewers' guide to help with recruiting.
  • Completed adjusting ACLs for all official teams to use the reviewable release process for deliverables that are part of the OpenStack release.

Requirements Management

  • need more reviewers, badly, as discussed a joint leadership meeting in Vancouver

Update: 14 June 2018, dhellmann

  • team has recently lost several members
  • most work is really down to 3 people (Matt, Dirk, Tony)
  • they work for 3 separate companies, but the team is so small that the diversity measures are questionable
  • the changes this cycle to stop syncing requirements should lower the review burden somewhat, but the move to python 3 is going to take some work
  • meets regularly
  • accomplishments this cycle
    • stopped syncing dependencies between projects
    • working on networkx upgrade
    • uncapped eventlet
    • uncapped sphinx
    • added optional lower-constraints test jobs for project teams that want them

Resource Management SIG

Update 2018-07-10, cdent. Summary: SIG is idling.

Concerns or Issues:

  • While the project had some initial planning at Res_Mgmt_SIG, little has happened since.
  • This is likely due to the main participants being overbooked to be able to fit things in.
    • cdent is one of those main participants and hasn't had a chance to do anything
  • Given the desire for these evaluations to not include participants, cdent being the evaluator is probably not ideal

Sahara

Update: June 13, emilien

Reported issues: none, yet.

  • The team changed leadership in Queens
  • Last PTG was virtual
  • Most commits in Rocky are from Red Hat (92% of core reviews)
  • The team is really small, most of commits are done by 2 contributors and 3 contributors are active in reviews
  • Latest survey shows that Sahara is used in production by 3% of deployments and 8% in test phase. 25% of users are interested by Sahara
  • Following goals and releases
  • Email sent to PTL on June 13th

Searchlight

Reported issues

  • searchlight and searchlight-ui missed the Rocky-1 milestone
  • Release forced for searchlight and searchlight-ui for the Rocky-2 milestone; also missed the Rocky-3 milestone
  • No PTL volunteer(s) for Stein.

Security (SIG)

Last updated 2018-09-11 by fungi

Operated for a while in parallel with the project team of the same name, during Rocky it assumed responsibility for the corresponding deliverable repositories. Many of its previous members (both the SIG and the team) have slowly faded from the OpenStack community, and most of those who remain have also been drafted into the VMT. It still holds regular weekly meetings, has a consensus chair, is present for events like the PTG and Summit/Forum, and has continued to manage OSSN and security assessment tasks to assist the VMT... but as it's now mostly the same people the lines there have become increasingly blurry.

Security (team)

Scientific

Update: July 17, pabelanger

Senlin

Solum

Reported issues

  • Individual fragility: Zhurong represents 100% of core reviews
  • Zhurong is employed by ZTE and recent US government actions might affecting contributions

Stable Branch Maintenance

Last updated 2018-09-08 by fungi

This team was disbanded during the Rocky cycle, morphing into the Extended Maintenance SIG.

Storlets

Update: August 9, ttx

  • The team is essentially one person: Kota Tsuyuzaki the PTL represents 100% of core reviews
  • Kota is pretty active though, and maintains the project well. He ran a project update session in Vancouver, and tries to recruit more contributors (including in local meetups).
  • The team currently being one person, there are no IRC meetings or ML threads. Best way to join the team is the IRC channel (#openstack-storlets)

Swift

Update: July 3, smcginnis

  • Team has recently lost two very active long time cores
  • Activity has gone down, like many OpenStack projects, but there is still a large list of important work to complete
  • Changed their policy to only require one +2
    • Change in policy is allowing to land more code
    • No bad side effects of this change have been encountered so far
  • Some recent progress has been made on Python 3 compatibility

Tacker

Update: August 14th, 2018, TheJulia

  • Reached out via email to the new PTL to obtain their perspective as to the current status.
  • Worth noting that the new PTL is different than the prior PTL who was attributed to having 75% of the core reviews.
  • They have meetings, although occasionally do seem to skip a week or two, but the team is relatively small and diverse which would make missing lacking quorum to have a meeting more of a possibility.

Reported issues

  • Individual fragility: Yong Sheng Gong represents 75% of core reviews

Telemetry

Update: 2018-07-25, cdent

  • Only two active cores and contributors (from Red Hat), despite continued value.
  • Lowish number of commits and reviews, but about what one would expect for a small and stable project
  • Effectively in maintenance mode
  • Some potential for greater engagement with Monasca
  • The features in ceilometer are being shrunk to meet the needs of the people who are making contributions and there is concern that lack of engagement by others will lead to something breaking.

Tricircle

Reported issues

TripleO

Update: June 13, emilien

  • Mainly Red Hat (99% of core reviews). Some contributors from vendors (storage/network plugins)
  • Number of contributors / core reviewers always increasing
  • Quite healthy, no problem reported so far

Trove

Reported issues

Update: June 12, ttx

  • The team changed leadership in Rocky
  • Zhao Chao handles bulk of commits (51%)
  • The new team is small, but pretty alive and active. Needs more contributors to be stable.
  • Mostly contributors in China (AWCloud, China Telecom, China Mobile)
  • Drop in activity in Rocky: 45 commits by Rocky-2, to compare with the 245 commits in Queens
  • Organizational diversity: 53% of commits are from AWCloud. Reviews are shared between 23% China Telecom, 19% China Mobile, 19% Awcloud. Last cycle with 41% IBM.
  • Regular weekly meetings, well run with clear documentation of outcomes
  • Tracks completion of Rocky community goals
  • A few ML threads, but mostly to discuss things external to the team (new meeting time, stable maint team composition)
  • Missed Rocky-2 milestone, but mostly due to a misunderstanding of release policy.
  • No project update in Vancouver, but was discussed in meeting: sadly no team member was present.
  • Reached out to PTL by email on June 12 for additional concerns / questions.

Upgrade SIG

WIP (emilien)

Vitrage

Reported issues

  • Organizational diversity fragility: Nokia represents 80% of core reviews
  • Affected by ZTE situation


Update 2018-07-18 (dhellmann)

  • Meeting regularly on IRC
  • One of their cores who works for ZTE has been absent for a while, but has returned to contributing.
  • They usually have a hands-on lab at summits to attract users and potential contributors.
  • The next PTG aligns with Jewish New Year, so many of their contributors will not be attending. They intend to have a virtual PTG instead.
  • The CFP for the Berlin summit caught them off guard because it was so early, and they found it a bit hard to plan discussions because they don't even know what the next release will hold. They did submit a few talk proposals.
  • Vitrage, by its nature, relies heavily on other projects. They have had good success working with other project teams, but do frequently struggle to find accurate and complete developer-oriented documentation for some of them.

Watcher

Update: 2018-07-10 TheJulia

  • PTL inquires if there is any way for the TC to assist with raising awareness of Watcher.
  • Actively recruiting and seeking out new contributors, and anticipating to meet community goals. Anticipating to create new roadmap at the PTG.
  • Contributions appear mainly from NEC at this time, but history shows a moderately more diverse contributor base.
  • PTL indicates core team is critically small, and that they have lost two out of five cores due to the ZTE withdraw due to the conflict with the US Government. Review metrics line up with what would be expected from loss of 40% of the core reviewers.
  • Email sent to the PTL to initiate communication on July 2nd

Winstackers

Reported issues

  • Individual fragility: Claudiu Belu represents 100% of core reviews
  • Claudiu missed the deadline for being PTL but would like to continue
  • His organization is invested in making sure that Hyper-V continues to be well supported in Nova, Neutron, Cinder
  • Increased release velocity by Microsoft means greater change in Hyper-V
  • Issues with having access to sufficient CI hardware for feature parity with other hypervisors, especially things like SR-IOV

Zaqar

Reported issues

  • zaqar and zaqar-ui missed the Rocky-2 milestone

Zun

  • PTL and ~25% of commits (in Queens) are from ZTE
  • PTL non-responsive to email so far
  • Regular meetings happening, mostly chaired by previous PTL (although current PTL has appeared on occasion)
  • Healthy-looking pace of development still happening
  • Loosened review policy to only require 1 reviewer: http://lists.openstack.org/pipermail/openstack-dev/2018-July/132582.html