16:01:13 #startmeeting Fuel 16:01:13 Meeting started Thu Mar 5 16:01:13 2015 UTC and is due to finish in 60 minutes. The chair is kozhukalov. Information about MeetBot at http://wiki.debian.org/MeetBot. 16:01:15 Useful Commands: #action #agreed #help #info #idea #link #topic #startvote. 16:01:17 The meeting name has been set to 'fuel' 16:01:20 #chair kozhukalov 16:01:20 Current chairs: kozhukalov 16:01:24 hi 16:01:29 hi 16:01:36 o/ 16:01:40 hi 16:01:44 We've just started 16:01:58 Today we have just open discussion 16:02:38 actually there is a lot going on with our merges, but i guess everyone has been just to tired to be ready for status report 16:02:48 my suggestion is to discuss what we've managed to merge 16:02:55 hi all 16:03:00 and what we didnt :) 16:03:25 kozhukalov: sounds good 16:03:49 hi 16:04:23 ok, i have some info about ubuntu external repos 16:04:32 14.04 is merged 16:05:12 so, we are rebasing our feature and try to rub bvt 16:05:59 ikalnitsky: around? 16:06:06 yep 16:06:46 afaik you've just started another attempt to build iso 16:06:57 yes, i did 16:07:00 and it's failed 16:07:14 is there any devops? 16:07:20 bookwa, around? 16:07:26 bookwar ^^ 16:07:33 ikalnitsky: yup 16:07:52 rebase related issues? 16:07:53 teran_: do you know something about failed custom iso? 16:08:44 ikalnitsky: 6.1 ? 16:08:45 as far as i see, jenkins jon failed to fetch debian installer 16:09:01 yes, custom 6.1 iso 16:09:09 build no 525 16:09:17 some detailed info about external ubuntu repos feature is available here 16:09:21 #link https://etherpad.openstack.org/p/consume-external-ubuntu 16:09:38 it looks like it's the same issue tht we have with trusty yesterday 16:09:57 ikalnitsky: there were issues with custom builds, but we fixed them 16:10:23 ikalnitsky: how about we move discussion of you particular case into to #fuel-dev? 16:10:40 ok 16:10:52 general CI status: custom iso should work, fuel ci should work 16:11:16 kozhukalov: have we been able to do anything about mirror building or mirror validation yet? 16:11:53 ikalnitsky: if you build iso with this patch https://review.openstack.org/#/c/161640/3 it is not going to work because it needs one extra patch set here https://review.openstack.org/#/c/161208/4 16:12:45 kozhukalov: ok, i'll keep in mind 16:12:47 xarses: what exactly do you mean? split mirrors? 16:12:57 though i've tried to build without them 16:13:05 for external ubuntu repos 16:13:29 xarses: if so, it is better to ask vitaly parakhin 16:13:52 xarses: he is working on building separate ubuntu repos 16:14:55 xarses: our work is mostly to make fuel understand several repos with pinning 16:15:38 looks like vitaly is not here 16:15:39 xarses: but afaik Vitaly promised to finish his patch today 16:15:58 I'm here 16:15:59 ikalnitsky: do you know anything about this? 16:16:17 and patch is ready for review, as well as prepared Ubuntu mirror for 6.1 16:16:26 yes, but I mean, we need to be able to on the fuel node build local mirror of the packages needed by the install 16:16:28 #link https://review.openstack.org/#/c/161222/ 16:16:38 brain461: GREAT 16:16:44 we ship MOS packages via iso 16:17:37 regarding the caching solution for master node - PL team is investigating it, afair 16:17:55 yes, but what happens when i want to / need to / build a local mirror of the operating system packages? 16:17:56 xarses: afaik we are not going to build mirror on the fuel node 16:18:12 kozhukalov: we MUST have a solution for this 16:18:20 otherwise we are back to fuel 3.0.1 16:18:37 xarses: user is going to set several repos via UI and then we will use these repos/mirrors 16:19:02 we want to preprare script that will create a local copy for upstream mirror. full upstream or only pkgs required by fuel - it's still to be considered 16:19:22 yes, and if they provide their own mirror, we must be able to validate that it has all the packages 16:19:40 we can't just start and expect all the packages to be around 16:20:24 yes, we should validate downloaded packages in some way, at least by checksum 16:22:14 xarses: the flow is supposed to be like this: we test our deployment with official ubuntu mirror, and if it works, then for a user it is just recommended to use full mirror (internet/local) 16:22:46 kozhukalov: should be the other way around 16:23:06 we include the repo download and validation script in the test scenario 16:23:27 xarses: we have a chance to check if our deployment works with updated mirror around one week before it become official 16:23:58 canonical make kind of update announcements 16:24:36 kozhukalov: packages change and disappear from external repos all the time. mirrors could be un-available. Hey we even have it listed that we won't use the mirror list 16:24:46 instead we pick a single site 16:24:54 if user defines a mirror which is not compatible with our deployment it is all up to a user 16:25:10 no 16:25:16 we have to give them the tools to check it 16:25:34 we know what we need 16:25:39 not the user 16:25:51 we have these tools already 16:25:57 how is this tool going to look like? 16:25:58 in fuel-main 16:26:02 crap for now 16:26:09 but they must exist 16:26:24 and must be documented 16:26:45 xarses: should it be a button on ui? 16:27:04 kozhukalov: it should have been. its too late for that now 16:27:05 kinda 'validate my repos' 16:27:21 you can at least make it a pre-deployment check 16:27:54 kozhukalov: i think i know about what xarses is talking. Do you remember the fact that fuel-main builds its own repos with all needed packages somehow? 16:28:06 we had a plan to implement this button on UI, did the plans change? 16:28:28 can you still do it in time for feature freeze? 16:28:39 agordeev: yes, and we going to get rid of this scheme at all 16:29:29 kozhukalov: agordeev, yes worse case we can make the fuel-main make mirror scripts work inside the fuel master node 16:29:34 at least it's something 16:29:36 kozhukalov: looks like you've missed last week of discussions in the separate-mos-from-linux spec 16:30:12 #link https://review.openstack.org/#/c/148279/33..35/specs/6.1/separate-mos-from-linux.rst 16:30:29 angdraug: yes, absolutely 16:30:59 to sum up, we agreed that local repo creation and validation has to remain in scope 16:31:16 and xarses is arguing for reusing the code from fuel-main to save some implementation time 16:32:11 i am sorry i did not take part in those discussions, but my opinion is the opposite 16:32:47 opposite to which part? 16:33:02 keeping this part of the feature in scope, or reusing fuel-main code? 16:33:34 i am sure we need to stop rebuilding mirrors and continue to call them ubuntu and centos 16:34:36 if we build mirror with our own versions of packages we need to start calling it mos without any references 16:34:42 if we cleanly separate our packages from what we take verbatim from ubuntu, why is that still a problem? 16:35:29 if we separate, then it is ok, ubuntu is the copy of upstream nothing else 16:35:40 exact copy of upstream 16:35:41 kozhukalov: my issue is not with shipping an iso with these packages 16:36:01 kozhukalov: my issue is that the user MUST have tools to build local mirrors 16:36:14 the user must have tools to validate their mirrors 16:36:19 xarses: to build or just to validate ? 16:36:24 both 16:36:32 i mean user defines a set of repos: 1) copy of upstream 2) mos packages (not basic linux) 16:36:54 agordeev: in a perfect world, both. I could be convinced to live with one of the two 16:36:55 yes, and we have to give them the tools to build and validate (1) 16:37:11 we need to validate mos part far before we deliver it to a user 16:37:18 I can't be convinced to live with just one of the two :) 16:37:36 of course 16:37:59 which is why I also argued on that review I linked that we must include mos packages on the iso and not force user to download them from us 16:38:00 1) is EXACT copy of upstream 2) is EXACT copy of mos 16:38:08 nothing to be build 16:38:22 we need to build them not on master node 16:38:32 we need to build them on our ci 16:38:34 1) is a STRICT SUBSET of upstream 16:38:37 kozhukalov: how do you know that 1) will work for fuel /mos 16:38:43 and then deliver it as is 16:39:05 kozhukalov: how do you know that 1) has all the packages we expect 16:39:15 1) NOT SUBSET 16:39:23 1) MIRROR 16:39:44 it is a full mirror 16:39:47 mirror is going to be 30GB worth of packages even if you don't take multiverse 16:39:50 you expect some one to have a full mirror of ubuntu lying around? 16:39:54 isn't that 30 gb 16:40:04 we don't need to put it on the master node 16:40:04 =) 16:40:08 no we dont 16:40:12 there are to possibilites 16:40:13 downloading 3GB iso sucks badly enough 16:40:19 IF we moved the make mirror script to the fuel master 16:40:28 first is the mirror available via internet 16:40:43 second is a customer has it is own mirror 16:40:45 it would pull all of the packages we need 16:41:02 mirror on the internet is a poor man's option that should never be offered as the first choice 16:41:08 kozhukalov: no, customers only keep partial mirrors 16:41:20 if customer's local mirror is broken then it is all up to a customer 16:41:21 fuel is already too biased towards people setting up poc's in virtualbox 16:41:26 and the from the internet isn't a good choice, it breaks all the time 16:41:28 lets not make it even worse 16:42:01 it sounds like we need to have a voice call on this 16:42:09 mirror can not be a subset 16:42:21 as I said, we already had a week's worth of discussion across 3 spec reviews 16:42:24 mirror is what you get when you make a copy 16:42:31 kozhukalov: can you invite the relevant feature leads to discuss this. 16:42:40 why 30gb, btw? we need only one distro (trusty), not the whole ubuntu mirror - it should take ~5gb even with multiverse 16:43:09 xarses: yes, voice call is what we actually need ) 16:44:01 https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Debmirror#Start_The_Mirror_Build_Process 16:44:09 trusty = 60G 16:44:45 sounds like smaller if we dropped 32bit, but ya... way too big 16:44:58 no one who maintains their own repo keeps a full mirror 16:45:07 they use it as a gate for package control 16:45:19 what we need to provide to a customer is the script which make a mirror (exact copy of upstream) if a customer does not want to use internet 16:45:36 or maybe caching proxy is also not a bad option 16:45:39 kozhukalov: you're going in circles 16:45:50 we had extensive discussions about exactly what you're talking about 16:46:16 it's counterproductive to reiterate them all here 16:46:18 we have already beat caching proxy's to death, they fall through too much 16:46:32 ok 16:46:50 If we offer the possibility to download from internet, the possibility to also use an official Ubuntu CD should be added too, IMO. 16:46:52 please have a discussion with feature leads in MSK to catch up, and then lets have a voice call 16:47:34 angdraug: sure 16:47:54 do, we have anything else to discuss? 16:47:58 yes 16:48:07 I have a question about *-updates release series in LP 16:48:24 kozhukalov: Why would we need anything not in Ubuntu main? 16:48:31 looks like I'm in the same situation as you: I must have missed that discussion 16:48:33 zigo_ : it was one of the options, but it is terrible from user experience point of view 16:48:38 Canonical has all of OpenStack in main, AFAIK. 16:48:47 no 16:48:56 we have a bunch of packages not from main 16:49:01 angdraug: Which part isn't? 16:49:08 meetings without agenda sucks ;) 16:49:09 zigo_: because we have lots of patches 16:49:15 (please don't mention the python-xstatic... ;) 16:49:18 salmon_: +100500 16:49:44 can we please shelve the ubuntu discussion and move on to my question? 16:49:48 salmon_: you are welcome to add topics into agenda 16:50:19 angdraug: which question? 16:50:37 the question is why do we need separate *-updates release series for every release? 16:50:56 that adds an order of magnitude of complexity to our bug triage and release management 16:51:21 and I don't see any benefits whatsoever 16:51:50 it is better to ask aglarendil 16:51:55 if a patch is not suitable for 6.0-updates, it shouldn't be in 6.0.x release series, either 16:52:00 aglarendil: ^^^ 16:52:51 What you wrote makes sense dmitry. 16:52:56 andreaf: the plan is that -updates branch is for updates which can be applied randomply 16:53:01 angdraug: ^^ 16:53:04 sorry :) 16:53:17 define randomly 16:53:31 and why shouldn't the same requirement apply to everything in 6.0.x? 16:53:48 stable/6.0 is for updates which are released, like 6.0.1, and you can do update from 6.0 to 6.0.1 16:54:01 6.0-updates is for individual updates 16:54:35 why should 6.0.1 be more than the sum of individual updates? 16:54:36 update for a package which is delivered as a new package or even via some random bash script 16:54:56 any random bash script can be delivered as a pacakge 16:55:05 individual updates are exceptional and require additional checks 16:56:03 if this bash script does something on your compute nodes you deliver it in a package and then you add 3-pages long instruction how to run it, 6.0-updates branch is for these very custom exceptional cases 16:56:05 my point is, we should do the same checks for everything in 6.0.1, and maybe reduce the number of fixes we backport to only those that can pass those checks 16:56:24 angdraug: +1 16:56:54 If we bothered to backport it, the asumption is people want/need to consume it 16:56:55 we don't check that fix which comes to 6.0.1 HEAD can be cherry-picked on top of 6.0 without other changes 16:57:20 bookwar: we are building packages from these, not patches 16:57:28 at least I hope we do 16:57:38 the package should allways be rebuilt from HEAD 16:57:48 3 minutes 16:57:58 so sometimes people need to apply those very special changes independently of our release cycle, as we don't have 6.0.1 release yet, and they don't want to move to 6.0.1 at all, but they want this particular fix 16:58:13 so they should take a package from 6.0.1 package repo 16:58:29 along with all its dependencies 16:58:35 actually i am not defending this position, i am explaining it, and as i understand discussion is in progress here, and this is considered to be 'temporary' 16:58:39 then we build a package for it and push it to stable 16:58:59 I understand, and thanks for explaining it to us 16:59:15 I don't understand how we should be excluding any change from this process 16:59:18 angdraug: they take a package but our QA team doesn't check that this package can be taken alone 16:59:31 what you're telling us confirms my worry that it will significantly increase our complexity 16:59:52 so, QA burden is also increased 17:00:06 yes, it will 17:00:08 time 17:00:10 ok, guys, let's move our discussion to another channel 17:00:18 thanx everyone 17:00:21 ending 17:00:27 #endmeeting