[openstack-dev] use of the word certified
Asselin, Ramy
ramy.asselin at hp.com
Mon Jun 9 16:56:49 UTC 2014
Based on the discussion I'd like to propose these options:
1. Cinder-certified driver - This is an attempt to move the "certification" to the project level.
2. CI-tested driver - This is probably the most accurate, at least for what we're trying to achieve for Juno: Continuous Integration of Vendor-specific Drivers.
Ramy
-----Original Message-----
From: Duncan Thomas [mailto:duncan.thomas at gmail.com]
Sent: Monday, June 09, 2014 4:50 AM
To: OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)
Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] use of the word certified
On 6 June 2014 18:29, Anita Kuno <anteaya at anteaya.info> wrote:
> So there are certain words that mean certain things, most don't, some do.
>
> If words that mean certain things are used then some folks start using
> the word and have expectations around the word and the OpenStack
> Technical Committee and other OpenStack programs find themselves on
> the hook for behaviours that they didn't agree to.
>
> Currently the word under discussion is "certified" and its derivatives:
> certification, certifying, and others with root word "certificate".
>
> This came to my attention at the summit with a cinder summit session
> with the one of the cerficiate words in the title. I had thought my
> point had been made but it appears that there needs to be more
> discussion on this. So let's discuss.
>
> Let's start with the definition of certify:
> cer·ti·fy
> verb (used with object), cer·ti·fied, cer·ti·fy·ing.
> 1. to attest as certain; give reliable information of; confirm: He
> certified the truth of his claim.
So the cinder team are attesting that a set of tests have been run against a driver: a certified driver.
> 3. to guarantee; endorse reliably: to certify a document with an
> official seal.
We (the cinder) team) are guaranteeing that the driver has been tested, in at least one configuration, and found to pass all of the tempest tests. This is a far better state than we were at 6 months ago, where many drivers didn't even pass a smoke test.
> 5. to award a certificate to (a person) attesting to the completion of
> a course of study or the passing of a qualifying examination.
The cinder cert process is pretty much an exam.
I think the work certification covers exactly what we are doing. Give cinder-core are the people on the hook for any cinder problems (including vendor specific ones), and the cinder core are the people who get bad-mouthed when there are problems (including vendor specific ones), I think this level of certification gives us value.
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