Mark, Glad you pointed to right code. Reviewed and stand corrected. My mis-underdtanding was I considered 20919.01 as first release and 2019.02 as second release of the year. However based on your comments and reference I understand that it is year.month of release , thus 2019.11 includes 'usuri' and previous 3 releases as listed pointed by you. - "os_trademark_approval": { - "target_approval": "2019.11", - "replaces": "2019.06", - "releases": ["rocky", "stein", "train", "ussuri"], - "status": "approved" - } - }, - That clears that I should have asked for 2019.11. Few more questions on Tempedt tests. I read some where that we have about 1500 Tempest tests overall. Is that correct? The interop code lines have gone down from 3836 lines to 3232 in train to usuri. Looks contrary to growth, any comments? Question then is 60 compute and 40 storage lines I see in test cases, do we have stats for Tempest tests what's the distribution of 1500 tests across Platform, compute, storage etc. Where and how can I get that. information as documented report. Based on above should we expect decrease or increase for say 2020.05 Vancouver release? How does one certify a kubernetes cluster running openstak modules, one module per docker container in a kubrrnetes cluster using tempest say like in Airship Control Plane on k8s worker node, which is a OpenStack over kubernetes cluster. Is this possible and if so what test we need to modify to test and certify a Containerized OpenStak in Airship as OpenStack Platform? Can we even certify if for say 2019.11? This should open up exciting possibilities if practical to extend OpeStack powered platform to Airship. Like to hear anyone who has insight to educate us on that. ThanksPrakash Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android On Mon, Feb 24, 2020 at 6:09 AM, Mark Voelker<mvoelker@vmware.com> wrote: Hi Prakash, I am curious to find out if any Distribution or Products based on Openstack Train or Usuri are seeking the latest certifications based on 2019.02. Hm, there actually isn’t a 2019.02 guideline--were you perhaps referring to 2019.06 or 2019.11? 2019.06 does cover Train but not Usuri [1], 2019.11 covers both [2]. As an FYI, the OpenStack Marketplace does list which guideline a particular product was most recently tested against (refer to https://www.openstack.org/marketplace/distros/ for example, and look for the green “TESTED” checkmark and accompanying guideline version), though this obviously doesn’t tell you what testing might be currently in flight. [1] https://opendev.org/openstack/interop/src/branch/master/2019.06.json#L75[2] https://opendev.org/openstack/interop/src/branch/master/2019.11.json#L75 At Your Service, Mark T. Voelker On Feb 22, 2020, at 5:04 AM, prakash RAMCHANDRAN <pramchan@yahoo.com> wrote: Hi all, I am curious to find out if any Distribution or Products based on Openstack Train or Usuri are seeking the latest certifications based on 2019.02. Similarly does any Hardware Driver of Software application seeking OpenStack compatibility Logo? Finally does anyone think that Open Infra Distro like Airship or StarlingX should promote Open Infra Airship or Open Infra StarlingX powered as a new way to promote eco system surrounding them similar to OpenStack compatible drivers and software. Will then Argo, customize,Metal3.io or Ironic be qualified as Open Infra Airship compatible? If so how tempest can help in testing the above comments? Refer to this market place below as how Distos and Products leverage OpenStack logos and branding programs. https://www.openstack.org/marketplace/distros/ Discussions and feedback are welcome. A healthy debate as how k8s modules used in Open Infra can be certified will be a good start. ThanksPrakash Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android