16:02:29 <cody-somerville> #startmeeting Storyboard Weekly Meeting 16:02:29 <openstack> Meeting started Thu Feb 13 16:02:29 2014 UTC and is due to finish in 60 minutes. The chair is cody-somerville. Information about MeetBot at http://wiki.debian.org/MeetBot. 16:02:30 <openstack> Useful Commands: #action #agreed #help #info #idea #link #topic #startvote. 16:02:32 <openstack> The meeting name has been set to 'storyboard_weekly_meeting' 16:02:52 <cody-somerville> #link https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/StoryBoard#Meeting 16:06:08 <cody-somerville> #topic MVP0 progress 16:06:23 <cody-somerville> gothicmindfood: ^^ 16:09:23 <SergeyLukjanov> o/ 16:09:48 <gothicmindfood> well, reading backlog in #storyboard at the moment from the overnight work... 16:10:46 <gothicmindfood> SergeyLukjanov + NikitaKonovalov - care to chime in on where we are with auth stuff? 16:11:37 <NikitaKonovalov> those auth protocols are mindblowing, when you hit an "Unknown error" 16:11:38 <SergeyLukjanov> gothicmindfood, IIRC NikitaKonovalov is near to impl openid part 16:11:48 <SergeyLukjanov> :) 16:12:03 <NikitaKonovalov> yes, I finally got the openid part working 16:12:19 <NikitaKonovalov> so the change is comming soon to both client and server 16:12:48 <gothicmindfood> awesome! 16:13:05 <NikitaKonovalov> next thing on the list is to make Oauth part work on client and server sides 16:14:39 <NikitaKonovalov> since I'm new to all that local browser storage stuff, that may take some time to make things work properly 16:14:43 <gothicmindfood> ok - is there anything that's changed from the specs up at https://etherpad.openstack.org/p/StoryboardAuth ? 16:15:16 <gothicmindfood> (just so I can keep tabs on anything that's come up and changed our plan while krotscheck is away) 16:15:18 <cody-somerville> I thought we were going to use OpenID Connect vs. OAuth? 16:16:32 <NikitaKonovalov> OpenId connect is an Oauth implementation which says "what the user can do", but not "who the user is" 16:16:40 <gothicmindfood> I think OpenID connect uses OAuth, right? 16:17:08 <cody-somerville> How confusing. 16:17:19 <NikitaKonovalov> to tell "who the user is" we use OpenId (launchpad provider) 16:17:47 <gothicmindfood> http://openid.net/connect/ 16:17:57 <cody-somerville> Wish I could have accessed that while we were at the sprint, lol. 16:18:06 <cody-somerville> Anyhow, anything more on this topic? We're now past 1/4th mark in the meeting. :) 16:18:37 <gothicmindfood> I don't think so - we seem to be moving along, but I know ruhe mentioned a big roadblock has been a lack of reviews 16:18:59 <cody-somerville> I'm going to fix that by hiring some more folks, lol. 16:19:37 <cody-somerville> #topic Single or dual repositories ? 16:20:00 <ttx> did we decide on whether we'd go long term with one or two repos ? 16:20:19 <ttx> because we have requests to add storyboard-webclient to the list of openstack infra projects 16:20:34 <ttx> and I'd rather not accept that if we are going to merge the two repos tomorrow 16:20:55 <gothicmindfood> I think jeblair and mordred probably had the most feedback on that. 16:21:01 <ttx> the main argument for it was, iirc: ability to land client and serverside chanegs in on e go 16:21:10 <mordred> what did I do? 16:21:26 <ttx> the main argument against it was, iirc: mixed core reviewers team 16:21:31 <cody-somerville> I'm in favour of keeping them separate. 16:21:35 <gothicmindfood> mordred: thoughts on 1 vs 2 repos for storyboard. 16:22:01 <mordred> I believe that what we were going to do was explore combined pip/grunt toolchain as a poc in the zuul repo 16:22:15 <NikitaKonovalov> as for me, the only possible proble is to keep everything in sync 16:22:42 <mordred> with teh other things on our plate, I'd rather not rework the tooling that's currently in place and working until we have an actual answer for a next thing 16:23:21 <gothicmindfood> so we're keeping them at 2 for at least a while, ttx (sounds like) 16:23:49 <ttx> ok. thanks! all I needed to know 16:23:53 <ttx> next topic :) 16:24:00 <jeblair> agreed on 2 16:24:33 <jeblair> (i had some arguments in favor of 1, but on futher exploration, i think 2 will be better in the long run, particularly if we treat both as separate python-based deliverables) 16:24:42 <cody-somerville> #agreed on keeping two repositories for now - api server and web client. 16:24:44 <jeblair> (but we should still experiment on zuul) 16:25:10 <cody-somerville> #topic Blocked reviews ? 16:26:13 <ttx> I feel like I've been reviewing consistently recently, but in most cases I only +2d, not +2/APRVd 16:26:23 <ttx> do we have a review bottleneck ? 16:26:40 <ttx> should we attach mordred to the review chair ? 16:27:04 * cody-somerville grins. 16:27:06 <mordred> I need to review - I've been in a 3-day meeting 16:27:08 <mordred> sorry 16:27:37 * gothicmindfood thinks the review chair sounds better than the 3-day meeting chair 16:27:43 <ttx> do we need another +2 ? 16:27:43 <gothicmindfood> :) 16:28:32 <cody-somerville> Let's continue to monitor the situation. 16:28:51 <cody-somerville> #topic Brainstorm on statuses (StoryBoard/Story_Status) 16:29:01 <cody-somerville> #link https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/StoryBoard/Story_Status 16:29:31 <ttx> So I started brainstorming around the need for story statuses 16:29:38 <gothicmindfood> I dig the workflow up there from Glance/Drivers 16:29:54 <ttx> mostly due to markwash posting https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Glance/Drivers 16:30:14 <ttx> I think his states make sense, but i wish we didn't have any status 16:30:29 <ttx> because if a human needs to set them, they will end up wrong 16:30:43 <ttx> or maybe we should have them only on the features side 16:31:02 <ttx> or maybe we can design priorities in such a way that they encapsulate our needs for status 16:31:24 <ttx> that's step 0 of the discussion, if you have thoughts, please add them to that page 16:31:37 <gothicmindfood> I'm curious - what do we think statuses give us? 16:31:51 <ttx> We have task-level statuses that are linked to the state of the corresponding change in gerrit 16:32:07 <ttx> gothicmindfood: see user stories at the top 16:32:11 <gothicmindfood> ttx: what are the task level statuses? 16:32:28 <ttx> Todo, Under review, Merged 16:32:50 <ttx> that way they are automartically set in 99% of the cases 16:33:13 <ttx> story-level statuses are used for approval of the whole idea, basically. 16:33:14 <gothicmindfood> ttx: so, PTLs etc. need to approve features right now before they can land? 16:33:22 <NikitaKonovalov> well, at least story-level statuses ("New", "Partially done", "Completed") might also be set automatically 16:33:24 <ttx> gothicmindfood: they try to, yes 16:33:39 <ttx> gothicmindfood: except LP makes that tracking a bit miserable 16:33:53 <cody-somerville> I thought the story-level status would be determined automatically based on task-level statuses 16:34:03 <gothicmindfood> ttx: is there a reason they approve at the feature level and not the task level? 16:34:16 <ttx> cody-somerville: they want to automatically block reviews that are not attached to an approved story, basically 16:34:27 <ttx> (at least on the feature side) 16:34:39 <ttx> gothicmindfood: that's a good question 16:34:58 <ttx> gothicmindfood: let me expand on that 16:35:16 <ttx> gothicmindfood: feature stories can have multiple tasks affecting the same project, or multiple projects 16:35:40 <ttx> in the case of multiple tasks affectig the same project, you actually want to approve them in bulk. The story is good for your project or not. 16:36:12 <ttx> in the case of tasks affecting separate projects though... you can't really have story-level approval, because each project PTL might have a different opinion 16:36:22 <gothicmindfood> ttx: but in the case of tasks underneath a feature belonging to different projects.... EXACTLY. 16:36:42 <gothicmindfood> this is what I was getting at over on priority page 16:36:47 <ttx> which is why I think we actually need to explore alternative ways of expressing that 16:36:50 <gothicmindfood> (I think) (I'm also tired) 16:36:57 <cody-somerville> I'd like to suggest that we don't try to support this use case for now. 16:37:02 <cody-somerville> It's... messy. 16:37:05 <ttx> and we may want to brainstorm on priority first 16:37:26 <gothicmindfood> I am leaning towards the idea that maybe story status doesn't really give us much 16:37:31 <gothicmindfood> in teh way of useful or actionable information 16:37:35 <ttx> cody-somerville: oh it's not URGENT. It's just one of the two big open design areas we need to brainstorm on 16:37:59 <ttx> just wanted to raise the topic to start making you think about it 16:38:09 <ttx> we can move on, we won't solve it today ;) 16:38:44 <gothicmindfood> if OS was the kind of group that enforced story status as a workflow assignment mechanism, I could see it being useful, but... we'll have to continue to hash it out before I think a case is made. :) 16:38:58 <cody-somerville> #topic Brainstorm on priorities (StoryBoard/Priority) 16:39:08 <ttx> so that's the other big open area 16:39:09 <cody-somerville> #link https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/StoryBoard/Priority 16:39:38 <ttx> I tried to come up with a list of ways priority could be implemented 16:40:42 <ttx> I see some questions in there, i'll try to answer them 16:40:56 <ttx> how does the "official" priority get set when multiple groups have different priorities for the same story? 16:41:06 <gothicmindfood> yeah, that was mine 16:41:17 <ttx> each task is attached to one project. Project has PTL who defines official prio 16:41:32 <ttx> that's task-level priority 16:41:41 <gothicmindfood> so at the story level, how does that play out? 16:42:03 <ttx> there is no story priority. 16:42:07 <gothicmindfood> ok 16:42:11 <gothicmindfood> that was me misunderstanding, then. 16:42:18 <ttx> about kanban-style boards requiring a universal process: i don't think that's the case. You don't have to all have the same columns 16:42:32 <ttx> you shoudl actually pick columns that make sense for your process 16:42:51 <cody-somerville> I'd like to suggest that we go with simple priorities to start with. 16:42:59 <gothicmindfood> cody-somerville: I agree. 16:43:08 <NikitaKonovalov> and what about Launchpad "heat" do we need something like that? 16:43:18 <gothicmindfood> I'm curious about how multi-dimensional would work 16:43:19 <NikitaKonovalov> not a priority 16:43:19 <ttx> NikitaKonovalov: it's pretty useless 16:43:38 <gothicmindfood> but I think it should be introduced based on a need, not because we're playing around with it :) 16:44:15 <persia> Simple priorities quickly devolve to arguments and procedurism if folk have differing opinions about something (maybe PTL can squash this, using procedures from Malone, but ...) 16:44:55 <cody-somerville> persia! 16:45:01 <ttx> gothicmindfood: the need is described in the user stories. We need to express some priority or ranking, and multiple stakeholders have different priorities 16:45:38 <gothicmindfood> ttx: I meant the kanban stuff, not the rest :) 16:45:54 <ttx> the kanban-style view is just saying each stakeholder can have multiple priority views, instead of just one. 16:46:35 <ttx> (it's not a real kanban, basically. it doesn't map to a production process. 16:46:59 <gothicmindfood> so, my inclination is just to wait for the ask from project xyz and until then build the simple priority. 16:47:10 <ttx> anyway, will brainstorm more. Thoese pages were just meant to trigger your interest 16:47:15 <persia> For those planning to implement: what is the difference in effort between parallel and multi-dimensional? 16:47:46 <ttx> persia: paralell would be one priority view per group or person 16:47:51 <persia> ttx: Right. 16:48:07 <ttx> multi-dimensional would allow multiple priority views per group or person. 16:48:29 <persia> My thought is that for MVP, it makes sense to only have parallel, and then move to multi-dimensional when someone is unhappy with parallel, unless switching is expected to be too painful 16:48:37 <ttx> gothicmindfood: interestingly enough, currently we use a mix of milestone targeting and priority to express priority 16:48:48 <ttx> I would also like to fix that. 16:48:52 <persia> That said, if multi-dimensional is easy to implement, no point doing parallel first 16:49:14 <gothicmindfood> ttx: explain how that works, now with milestone targeting and priority. 16:49:39 <ttx> gothicmindfood: we sue milestone targeting to designate a subset of important tasks (bugs and features) to complete for a milestone 16:49:42 <ttx> use* 16:49:54 <ttx> then we use priority to rank them 16:49:59 <gothicmindfood> ttx: and who designates the milestone targeting, the PTL? 16:50:27 <ttx> gothicmindfood: anyone can, which is a problem 16:50:36 <gothicmindfood> ha. yes. I can see that. 16:50:44 <ttx> so we use tricks (like setting a priority on the blueprint) to make it "approved" 16:51:16 <ttx> in a priority-only view, you would just add tasks to a specific list and rank them. 16:51:30 <ttx> things not on the list don't need to be ranked. 16:52:09 <gothicmindfood> right - I'm just wondering who sets the priority here 16:52:10 <ttx> that's useful. setting a priority is not very useful. 16:52:17 <gothicmindfood> and if that's a restricted group of some kind 16:52:36 <ttx> yes, that would be the "drivers", in connection with release management 16:52:56 <ttx> basically the PTLs and their delegates 16:53:12 <ttx> anyway, we are abusing the meeting to brainstorm 16:53:31 <ttx> maybe we should move to open discussion 16:53:33 <gothicmindfood> ha. ttx: I will send you an email TODAY to schedule more time to actually brainstorm 16:53:45 <ttx> ack 16:54:05 <ttx> I need to think more about how that could work. 16:54:35 <ttx> I'd like it to be simple and flexible 16:55:05 <ttx> the drawback of prioritization is that it relies on the fact everything is triaged 16:55:05 <cody-somerville> Any other comments on this topic? 16:55:22 <ttx> whereas the list approach is all about selecting tasks that matter to you 16:55:55 <ttx> so it can be reused for targeting work to a given milestone, and also to follow tasks that matter to you 16:56:41 <cody-somerville> #topic Any Other Business 16:56:46 <ttx> cody-somerville: i'm reluctant to add basic priorities, because I fear we actually don't want priorities at all, basically 16:56:59 <cody-somerville> ttx: I was pondering the same thing. 16:57:22 <ttx> we want worklists 16:57:27 <cody-somerville> I'd like to propose that folks add their IRC nick next to items they add to the agenda. 16:57:31 <persia> Sorted worklists? 16:57:58 <ttx> persia: they would be sorted. But then the oredr might mean something or not mean something 16:58:10 <ttx> depdending on what the list is about :) 16:58:29 <persia> Perfect! 16:58:32 <ttx> damn, typo hour 16:58:55 <ttx> persia: I like it too. It's elegant. Just need to doublecheck it actually makes sense :) 16:59:35 <ttx> cody-somerville: +1 for adding names. Will do next time :) 16:59:37 <persia> Doesn't scale to long lists, but long lists aren't usually interesting in terms of priority 16:59:45 <ttx> persia: right 16:59:52 <cody-somerville> #endmeeting