On 6/4/19 7:39 AM, Doug Hellmann wrote:
Sean Mooney <smooney@redhat.com> writes:
On Mon, Jun 3, 2019 at 8:27 AM Slawomir Kaplonski <skaplons@redhat.com> wrote:
Hi,
On 1 Jun 2019, at 20:49, Mohammed Naser <mnaser@vexxhost.com> wrote:
On Sat, Jun 1, 2019 at 1:46 PM Slawomir Kaplonski <skaplons@redhat.com> wrote:
Hi,
I don’t know OSA at all so sorry if my question is dumb but in devstack we can easily write plugins, keep it in separate repo and such plugin can be easy used in devstack (e.g. in CI jobs it’s used a lot). Is something similar possible with OSA or will it be needed to contribute always every change to OSA repository?
Not a dumb question at all. So, we do have this concept of 'roles' which you _could_ kinda technically identify similar to plugins. However, I think one of the things that would maybe come out of this is the inability for projects to maintain their own plugins (because now you can host neutron/devstack/plugins and you maintain that repo yourself), under this structure, you would indeed have to make those changes to the OpenStack Ansible Neutron role
i.e.: https://opendev.org/openstack/openstack-ansible-os_neutron
However, I think from an OSA perspective, we would be more than happy to add project maintainers for specific projects to their appropriate roles. It would make sense that there is someone from the Neutron team that could be a core on os_neutron from example.
Yes, that may work for official projects like Neutron. But what about everything else, like projects hosted now in opendev.org/x/ repositories? Devstack gives everyone easy way to integrate own plugin/driver/project with it and install it together with everything else by simply adding one line (usually) in local.conf file. I think that it may be a bit hard to OSA team to accept and review patches with new roles for every project or driver which isn’t official OpenStack project.
You raise a really good concern. Indeed, we might have to change the workflow from "write a plugin" to "write an Ansible role" to be able to test your project with DevStack at that page (or maintain both a "legacy" solution) with a new one.
On Mon, 2019-06-03 at 08:39 -0400, Mohammed Naser wrote: the real probalem with that is who is going to port all of the existing plugins.
Do all projects and all jobs have to be converted at once? Or ever?
Perhaps not all at once, but I would say they all need to be converted eventually or we end up in the situation Dean mentioned where we have to maintain two different deployment systems. I would argue that's much worse than just continuing with devstack as-is. On the other hand, practically speaking I don't think we can probably do them all at once, unless there are a lot fewer devstack plugins in the wild than I think there are (which is possible). Also, I suspect there may be downstream plugins running in third-party ci that need to be considered. That said, while I expect this would be _extremely_ painful in the short to medium term, I'm also a big proponent of making the thing developers care about the same as the thing users care about. However, if we go down this path I think we need sufficient buy in from a diverse enough group of contributors that losing one group (see OSIC) doesn't leave us with a half-finished migration. That would be a disaster IMHO.
How much complexity do those plugins actually contain? Would they be fairly straightforward to convert?
Could we build a "devstack plugin wrapper" for OSA? Could we run OSA and then run devstack with just the plugin(s) needed for a given job?
Is there enough appeal in the idea of replacing devstack with something closer to what is used for production deployments to drive us to find an iterative approach that doesn't require changing everything at one time? Or are we stuck with devstack forever?
kolla-ansible has also tried to be a devstack replacement in the past via the introduction of dev-mode which clones the git repo of the dev mode project locally and bind mounts them into the container. the problem is it still breaks peoles plugins and workflow.
some devstack feature that osa would need to support in order to be a replacement for me are.
You've made a good start on a requirements list for a devstack replacement. Perhaps a first step would be for some of the folks who support this idea to compile a more complete list of those requirements, and then we could analyze OSA to see how it might need to be changed or whether it makes sense to use OSA as the basis for a new toolset that takes on some of the "dev" features we might not want in a "production" deployment tool.
Here's another potential gap for whoever is going to make that list: devstack pre-populates the environment with some data for things like flavors and images. I don't imagine OSA does that or, if it does, that they are an exact match. How do we change those settings?
That leads to a good second step: Do the rest of the analysis to understand what it would take to set up a base job like we have for devstack, that produces a similar setup. Not necessarily identical, but similar enough to be able to run tempest. It seems likely that already exists in some form for testing OSA itself. Could a developer run that on a local system (clearly being able to build the test environment locally is a requirement for replacing devstack)?
After that, I would want to see answers to some of the questions about dealing with plugins that I posed above.
And only then, I think, could I provide an answer to the question of whether we should make the change or not.
1 the ablity to install all openstack project form git if needed including gerrit reviews.
abiltiy to eailly specify gerrit reiews or commits for each project
# here i am declaring the os-vif should be installed from git not pypi LIBS_FROM_GIT=os-vif
# and here i am specifying that gerrit should be used as the source and # i am provide a gerrit/git refs branch for a specific un merged patch OS_VIF_REPO=https://git.openstack.org/openstack/os-vif OS_VIF_BRANCH=refs/changes/25/629025/9
# *_REPO can obvioulsy take anythign that is valid in a git clone command so # i can use a local repo too NEUTRON_REPO=file:///opt/repos/neutron # and *_BRANCH as the name implices works with branches, tag commits* and gerrit ref brances. NEUTRON_BRANCH=bug/1788009
the next thing that would be needed is a way to simply override any config value like this
[[post-config|/etc/nova/nova.conf]] #[compute] #live_migration_wait_for_vif_plug=True [libvirt] live_migration_uri = qemu+ssh://root@%s/system #cpu_mode = host-passthrough virt_type = kvm cpu_mode = custom cpu_model = kvm64
im sure that osa can do that but i really can just provide any path to any file if needed. so no need to update a role or plugin to set values in files created by plugins which is the next thing.
Does OSA need to support *every* configuration value? Or could it deploy a stack, and then rely on a separate tool to modify config values and restart a service? Clearly some values need to be there when the cloud first starts, but do they all?
we enable plugins with a single line like this
enable_plugin networking-ovs-dpdk https://github.com/openstack/networking-ovs-dpdk master
meaning there is no need to preinstall or clone the repo. in theory the plugin should install all its dependeices and devstack will clone and execute the plugins based on the single line above. plugins however can also
This makes me think it might be most appropriate to be considering a tool that replaces devstack by wrapping OSA, rather than *being* OSA. Maybe that's just an extra playbook that runs before OSA, or maybe it's a simpler bash script that does some setup before invoking OSA.
read any varable defiend in the local.conf as it will be set in the environment which means i can easily share an exact configuration with someone by shareing a local.conf.
im not against improving or replacing devstack but with the devstack ansible roles and the fact we use devstack for all our testing in the gate it is actually has become one of the best openstack installer out there. we do not recommend people run it in production but with the ansible automation of grenade and the move to systemd for services there are less mainatined installers out there that devstack is proably a better foundation for a cloud to build on. people should still not use it in production but i can see why some might.
Speaking about CI, e.g. in neutron we currently have jobs like neutron-functional or neutron-fullstack which uses only some parts of devstack. That kind of jobs will probably have to be rewritten after such change. I don’t know if neutron jobs are only which can be affected in that way but IMHO it’s something worth to keep in mind.
Indeed, with our current CI infrastructure with OSA, we have the ability to create these dynamic scenarios (which can actually be defined by a simple Zuul variable).
https://github.com/openstack/openstack-ansible/blob/master/zuul.d/playbooks/...
We do some really neat introspection of the project name being tested in order to run specific scenarios. Therefore, that is something that should be quite easy to accomplish simply by overriding a scenario name within Zuul. It also is worth mentioning we now support full metal deploys for a while now, so not having to worry about containers is something to keep in mind as well (with simplifying the developer experience again).
> On 1 Jun 2019, at 14:35, Mohammed Naser <mnaser@vexxhost.com> wrote: > > Hi everyone, > > This is something that I've discussed with a few people over time and > I think I'd probably want to bring it up by now. I'd like to propose > and ask if it makes sense to perhaps replace devstack entirely with > openstack-ansible. I think I have quite a few compelling reasons to > do this that I'd like to outline, as well as why I *feel* (and I could > be biased here, so call me out!) that OSA is the best option in terms > of a 'replacement' > > # Why not another deployment project? > I actually thought about this part too and considered this mainly for > ease of use for a *developer*. > > At this point, Puppet-OpenStack pretty much only deploys packages > (which means that it has no build infrastructure, a developer can't > just get $commit checked out and deployed). > > TripleO uses Kolla containers AFAIK and those have to be pre-built > beforehand, also, I feel they are much harder to use as a developer > because if you want to make quick edits and restart services, you have > to enter a container and make the edit there and somehow restart the > service without the container going back to it's original state. > Kolla-Ansible and the other combinations also suffer from the same > "issue". > > OpenStack Ansible is unique in the way that it pretty much just builds > a virtualenv and installs packages inside of it. The services are > deployed as systemd units. This is very much similar to the current > state of devstack at the moment (minus the virtualenv part, afaik). > It makes it pretty straight forward to go and edit code if you > need/have to. We also have support for Debian, CentOS, Ubuntu and > SUSE. This allows "devstack 2.0" to have far more coverage and make > it much more easy to deploy on a wider variety of operating systems. > It also has the ability to use commits checked out from Zuul so all > the fancy Depends-On stuff we use works. > > # Why do we care about this, I like my bash scripts! > As someone who's been around for a *really* long time in OpenStack, > I've seen a whole lot of really weird issues surface from the usage of > DevStack to do CI gating. For example, one of the recent things is > the fact it relies on installing package-shipped noVNC, where as the > 'master' noVNC has actually changed behavior a few months back and it > is completely incompatible at this point (it's just a ticking thing > until we realize we're entirely broken). > > To this day, I still see people who want to POC something up with > OpenStack or *ACTUALLY* try to run OpenStack with DevStack. No matter > how many warnings we'll put up, they'll always try to do it. With > this way, at least they'll have something that has the shape of an > actual real deployment. In addition, it would be *good* in the > overall scheme of things for a deployment system to test against, > because this would make sure things don't break in both ways. > > Also: we run Zuul for our CI which supports Ansible natively, this can > remove one layer of indirection (Zuul to run Bash) and have Zuul run > the playbooks directly from the executor. > > # So how could we do this? > The OpenStack Ansible project is made of many roles that are all > composable, therefore, you can think of it as a combination of both > Puppet-OpenStack and TripleO (back then). Puppet-OpenStack contained > the base modules (i.e. puppet-nova, etc) and TripleO was the > integration of all of it in a distribution. OSA is currently both, > but it also includes both Ansible roles and playbooks. > > In order to make sure we maintain as much of backwards compatibility > as possible, we can simply run a small script which does a mapping of > devstack => OSA variables to make sure that the service is shipped > with all the necessary features as per local.conf. > > So the new process could be: > > 1) parse local.conf and generate Ansible variables files > 2) install Ansible (if not running in gate) > 3) run playbooks using variable generated in #1 > > The neat thing is after all of this, devstack just becomes a thin > wrapper around Ansible roles. I also think it brings a lot of hands > together, involving both the QA team and OSA team together, which I > believe that pooling our resources will greatly help in being able to > get more done and avoiding duplicating our efforts. > > # Conclusion > This is a start of a very open ended discussion, I'm sure there is a > lot of details involved here in the implementation that will surface, > but I think it could be a good step overall in simplifying our CI and > adding more coverage for real potential deployers. It will help two > teams unite together and have more resources for something (that > essentially is somewhat of duplicated effort at the moment). > > I will try to pick up sometime to POC a simple service being deployed > by an OSA role instead of Bash, placement which seems like a very > simple one and share that eventually. > > Thoughts? :) > > -- > Mohammed Naser — vexxhost > ----------------------------------------------------- > D. 514-316-8872 > D. 800-910-1726 ext. 200 > E. mnaser@vexxhost.com > W. http://vexxhost.com >
— Slawek Kaplonski Senior software engineer Red Hat
-- Mohammed Naser — vexxhost ----------------------------------------------------- D. 514-316-8872 D. 800-910-1726 ext. 200 E. mnaser@vexxhost.com W. http://vexxhost.com
— Slawek Kaplonski Senior software engineer Red Hat