[openstack-dev] [magnum][app-catalog][all] Build unified abstraction for all COEs
Adrian Otto
adrian.otto at rackspace.com
Sun Apr 24 03:27:00 UTC 2016
Magnum is not a COE installer. It offers multi tenancy from the ground up, is well integrated with OpenStack services, and more COE features pre-configured than you would get with an ordinary stock deployment. For example, magnum offers integration with keystone that allows developer self-service to get a native container service in a few minutes with the same ease as getting a database server from Trove. It allows cloud operators to set up the COE templates in a way that they can be used to fit policies of that particular cloud.
Keeping a COE working with OpenStack requires expertise that the Magnum team has codified across multiple options.
--
Adrian
On Apr 23, 2016, at 2:55 PM, Hongbin Lu <hongbin.lu at huawei.com<mailto:hongbin.lu at huawei.com>> wrote:
I am not necessary agree with the viewpoint below, but that is the majority viewpoints when I was trying to sell Magnum to them. There are people who interested in adopting Magnum, but they ran away after they figured out what Magnum actually offers is a COE deployment service. My takeaway is COE deployment is not the real pain, and there are several alternatives available (Heat, Ansible, Chef, Puppet, Juju, etc.). Limiting Magnum to be a COE deployment service might prolong the existing adoption problem.
Best regards,
Hongbin
From: Georgy Okrokvertskhov [mailto:gokrokvertskhov at mirantis.com]
Sent: April-20-16 6:51 PM
To: OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)
Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [magnum][app-catalog][all] Build unified abstraction for all COEs
If Magnum will be focused on installation and management for COE it will be unclear how much it is different from Heat and other generic orchestrations. It looks like most of the current Magnum functionality is provided by Heat. Magnum focus on deployment will potentially lead to another Heat-like API.
Unless Magnum is really focused on containers its value will be minimal for OpenStack users who already use Heat/Orchestration.
On Wed, Apr 20, 2016 at 3:12 PM, Keith Bray <keith.bray at rackspace.com<mailto:keith.bray at rackspace.com>> wrote:
Magnum doesn¹t have to preclude tight integration for single COEs you
speak of. The heavy lifting of tight integration of the COE in to
OpenStack (so that it performs optimally with the infra) can be modular
(where the work is performed by plug-in models to Magnum, not performed by
Magnum itself. The tight integration can be done by leveraging existing
technologies (Heat and/or choose your DevOps tool of choice:
Chef/Ansible/etc). This allows interested community members to focus on
tight integration of whatever COE they want, focusing specifically on the
COE integration part, contributing that integration focus to Magnum via
plug-ins, without having to actually know much about Magnum, but instead
contribute to the COE plug-in using DevOps tools of choice. Pegging
Magnum to one-and-only one COE means there will be a Magnum2, Magnum3,
etc. project for every COE of interest, all with different ways of kicking
off COE management. Magnum could unify that experience for users and
operators, without picking a winner in the COE space ‹ this is just like
Nova not picking a winner between VM flavors or OS types. It just
facilitates instantiation and management of thins. Opinion here: The
value of Magnum is in being a light-weight/thin API, providing modular
choice and plug-ability to COE provisioning and management, thereby
providing operators and users choice of COE instantiation and management
(via the bay concept), where each COE can be as tightly or loosely
integrated as desired by different plug-ins contributed to perform the COE
setup and configurations. So, Magnum could have two or more swarm plug-in
options contributed to the community.. One overlays generic swarm on VMs.
The other swarm plug-in could instantiate swarm tightly integrated to
neutron, keystone, etc on to bare metal. Magnum just facilities a plug-in
model with thin API to offer choice of CEO instantiation and management.
The plug-in does the heavy lifting using whatever methods desired by the
curator.
That¹s my $0.2.
-Keith
On 4/20/16, 4:49 PM, "Joshua Harlow" <harlowja at fastmail.com<mailto:harlowja at fastmail.com>> wrote:
>Thierry Carrez wrote:
>> Adrian Otto wrote:
>>> This pursuit is a trap. Magnum should focus on making native container
>>> APIs available. We should not wrap APIs with leaky abstractions. The
>>> lowest common denominator of all COEs is an remarkably low value API
>>> that adds considerable complexity to Magnum that will not
>>> strategically advance OpenStack. If we instead focus our effort on
>>> making the COEs work better on OpenStack, that would be a winning
>>> strategy. Support and compliment our various COE ecosystems.
>
>So I'm all for avoiding 'wrap APIs with leaky abstractions' and 'making
>COEs work better on OpenStack' but I do dislike the part about COEs
>(plural) because it is once again the old non-opinionated problem that
>we (as a community) suffer from.
>
>Just my 2 cents, but I'd almost rather we pick one COE and integrate
>that deeply/tightly with openstack, and yes if this causes some part of
>the openstack community to be annoyed, meh, to bad. Sadly I have a
>feeling we are hurting ourselves by continuing to try to be everything
>and not picking anything (it's a general thing we, as a group, seem to
>be good at, lol). I mean I get the reason to just support all the
>things, but it feels like we as a community could just pick something,
>work together on figuring out how to pick one, using all these bright
>leaders we have to help make that possible (and yes this might piss some
>people off, to bad). Then work toward making that something great and
>move on...
>
>>
>> I'm with Adrian on that one. I've attended a lot of container-oriented
>> conferences over the past year and my main takeaway is that this new
>> crowd of potential users is not interested (at all) in an
>> OpenStack-specific lowest common denominator API for COEs. They want to
>> take advantage of the cool features in Kubernetes API or the versatility
>> of Mesos. They want to avoid caring about the infrastructure provider
>> bit (and not deploy Mesos or Kubernetes themselves).
>>
>> Let's focus on the infrastructure provider bit -- that is what we do and
>> what the ecosystem wants us to provide.
>>
>
>__________________________________________________________________________
>OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)
>Unsubscribe: OpenStack-dev-request at lists.openstack.org?subject:unsubscribe<http://OpenStack-dev-request@lists.openstack.org?subject:unsubscribe>
>http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev
__________________________________________________________________________
OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)
Unsubscribe: OpenStack-dev-request at lists.openstack.org?subject:unsubscribe<http://OpenStack-dev-request@lists.openstack.org?subject:unsubscribe>
http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev
--
Georgy Okrokvertskhov
Director of Performance Engineering,
OpenStack Platform Products,
Mirantis
http://www.mirantis.com<http://www.mirantis.com/>
Tel. +1 650 963 9828
Mob. +1 650 996 3284
__________________________________________________________________________
OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)
Unsubscribe: OpenStack-dev-request at lists.openstack.org<mailto:OpenStack-dev-request at lists.openstack.org>?subject:unsubscribe
http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.openstack.org/pipermail/openstack-dev/attachments/20160424/8de7fd99/attachment.html>
More information about the OpenStack-dev
mailing list