OpenStack China Tour #2 Shenzhen

The second stop of OpenStack China Tour, Shenzhen, has been successfully hosted by the COSUG and CSDN on Septempber 22, 2012, which is impressive til now, it was held in 3Wcoffee, a famous Internet theme coffee shop in Shenzen. It is the first time that OpenStack comes to Southern China, attracted about 80 attendees came in the scene, most of them are Cloud specialists, IT engineers, as well as OpenStack users from Canton, Shenzhen, Hong Kong and Hangzhou etc.

Speakers are coming from Sina Corporation, HK Cyberport, Canonical, CIeNET Technologies, they shared the vision about OpenStack in the Cloud market in the Greater China, and the newly launched OpenStack Foundation, and the technical view of OpenStack core projects. The interaction and communication between speakers and audience is also relatively sufficient, these speakers have done impressive presentations, so that you could hear constant applause in the scene.

Like usual, the first lecture come to Hui Cheng, the lead manager of COSUG and the technical manager of Sina, who initiated the first OpenStack based public cloud in China, Hui also leads his team to become the active corporate contributor which make Sina rank in the top 10 companies by changeset in Folsom release. He was elected by individual members to be an board member of OpenStack Foundation, which makes him to take more responsibility to promote and empower OpenStack in China. This time Hui Cheng introduced the latest progress of OpenStack Foundation and COSUG, as well as delving a little deeper in the deployment of Sina OpenStack production environment and experiences gained from the whole process of building a public cloud based on OpenStack, also explained why Sina choose OpenStack and its underneath of KVM and Ubuntu.

Bruce Lok is responsible for OpenStack IaaS public cloud platform`s development and operations in the Technology Centre of Hong Kong Cyberport, which has been put into the production environment to use. Bruce is also the manager of the newly created HKOSUG, he is excited to promote of open source cloud software OpenStack to the Hong Kong IDC industry and the community.

Rongze Zhu, the storage engineer of Sina, is one of the top 20 contributors to OpenStack projects, he introduced the status and objectives of Cinder. The Cinder support a lot of back-end storage, including open-source sheepdog, and ceph etc. also including the major storage vendors like IBM, Dell, HP, NetApp storage`s products. Rongze said Cinder’s emergence also gave domestic storage vendors an opportunity to participate in Cloud computing, he introduced how to write a driver, to let Cinder support their own storage products.

Zhengpeng Hou, the cloud specialist from Canonical, introduced the latest deployment tool (juju) of OpenStack in Ubuntu, and a live demonstration showed, Zhengpeng emphasized that juju is open source, anyone can use free.

George Wang, the director of CIeNET Technologies, said that because OpenStack is more open than the other Cloud platforms, so he chose to build internal IaaS platform through OpenStack. Cloud platform, engineers of CIeNET around the world can reuse resources, they can also have the right to call and release resources, which greatly accelerates the speed of application deployment which meets user’s requirement, also to enhance the utilization of internal resources.

In the end of this event, audience were giving rounds of warm applause while Hui Cheng was having a closing address, “We are not afraid of disclosing and sharing our detail network topology and design spec of production deployment, as well as our secret to success, because it’s the spirit of Internet and Open-Source, which make us grown up and will lead us stronger and stronger.”

The China OpenStack Tour @ Shenzhen event has proved to be successful, we received many praise and positive feedback in Weibo and email, one attendee send us an email saying “You guys have done a good job in arranging this event, thanks for your selfless sharing and wonderful speech, it’s really helpful for our start-up company”.

[Updated]

Slides are uploaded to Slideshare: http://www.slideshare.net/HuiCheng2/tag/openstackshenzhen

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OpenStack Community Weekly Newsletter (Sep 21-28)

Highlights of the week

OpenStack Folsom Is Here With The Schedule Of The Summit

Another release for OpenStack today, the sixth in a little over two years.  Folsom, or 2012.2 has two new services Networking (Quantum) and Block Storage (Cinder) services, architected in line with the OpenStack philosophy of pluggability and extensibility. While work was underway to establish the new OpenStack Foundation, our thriving community once again delivered the release on-time and with all planned essential features. The full announcement with links to the release notes on OpenStack 2012.2 (“Folsom”) released! Direct download links on http://bit.ly/openstackfolsom

Published the Agenda for the OpenStack Summit

The schedule for the OpenStack Summit has been published: take advantage of the discount until the end of September (save $200) on the registration fee and come meet this amazing OpenStack community live in San Diego.

Technical Committee elections results, Fall 2012

The OpenStack TC election period is now over. The winners for the 3 remaining seats on the Technical Committee are: Monty Taylor, Anne Gentle, Russell Bryant.

They are elected for a one-year term, and join the already-elected members: Vish Ishaya, John Dickinson, Brian Waldon, Joe Heck, Gabriel Hurley, Dan Wendlandt, John Griffith, Mark McLoughlin, Jay Pipes and Thierry Carrez.

OpenStack Folsom Architecture

Ken Pepple updated his “Intro to OpenStack Architecture 101” for the official documentation. Read the expanded version of it on his blog.

Providing a Unified View of OpenStack Projects

Wan to find answers to questions like: who’s contributing to that particular feature of OpenStack? What is that developer working on? How many work hours/lines of code went into adding that feature/blueprint? What are users saying about OpenStack? Register here for the webinar and don’t miss the talk on Wednesday, October 17 in San Diego.

The Top 3 New Swift Features in OpenStack Folsom

There has been a ton of activity in and around Swift throughout the Folsom release cycle. Swift has moved from version 1.4.8 in the Essex release to version 1.7.4 in the Folsom release. Some of the new features added in the Folsom release include the integration of Keystone middleware, the separation of the Swift CLI and client library so Glance can more easily integrate with Swift to store Nova images.

Swift has also added many new features to its core storage engine. Find out about it from SwiftStack Team.

From nova-network to quantum

If you wonder what changed in OpenStack Networking with the release of Folsom, this is the article to read. By Sébastien Han and Emilien Macchi.

Quantum plugin comparison

Folsom has been released, it’s probably time for some of you to deploy OpenStack. This is a follow up to the article titled From nova-network to Quantum. One of the main question with Folsom is: which Quantum plugin should I use? The answer could be in this article! Another article co-written with Emilien Macchi. Deep dive into the available plugins in Quantum for OpenStack Folsom.

Tips and tricks

Other news

Chart of the week

Lots more charts are available on Bitergia’s report on Folsom and Mark McLoughlin (spelled right this time) github tree.

Folsom contributors ecosystem

The weekly newsletter is a way for the community to learn about all the various activities occurring on a weekly basis. If you would like to add content to a weekly update or have an idea about this newsletter, please leave a comment.

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Providing a Unified View of OpenStack Projects

The OpenStack project is in fact many projects, developed by hundreds of people, tens of companies, used by thousands. These projects are managed via a number of email lists as well as software engineering tools such like wiki, issue trackers, version control, continuous integration, etc. From my perspective as the Community Manager, achieving a coherent view of all the information is tedious and immensely difficult. I can imagine that community members and corporate members are struggling with the same issues and perhaps even additional ones.

Thus, we are undergoing an integration project to achieve interoperability of content within and between OpenStack projects with dashboards, reports, traceability, and faceted search. We have embarked on a pilot project with zAgile, using their open source Wikidsmart platform, which is an integration platform for software engineering tools as well as other applications like Help Desk (Zendesk, OTRS, etc.) and CRM (Salesforce, SugarCRM, etc.). zAgile has some interesting customer examples using its platform to unite their environment such as SIX, the company responsible for Switzerland’s financial infrastructure.

The intention is to give the community a way to answer questions like: who’s contributing to that particular feature of OpenStack? What is that developer working on? How many work hours/lines of code went into adding that feature/blueprint? What are users saying about OpenStack? With the Wikidsmart prototype we have integrated information across different systems to give corporate and community users a unified view of all the efforts going into OpenStack in real-time. The system answers questions with faceted search of concepts across all the different repositories, tracing people and artifacts across different repositories and bug tracker in order to reconcile people and corresponding contributions.

We are excited to share with you the results of the pilot and solicit your feedback in the following ways:

With the integration, we know that we can become a much more efficient project in terms of communicating to members, monitoring our progress, and getting work done. I hope you can join me in discussing this important topic, and I look forward to your thoughts as comments to this blog, in person at OpenStack Summit, and in the survey.

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OpenStack Folsom Is Here With The Schedule Of The Summit

Another release for OpenStack today, the sixth in a little over two years.  Folsom, or 2012.2 has two new services Networking (Quantum) and Block Storage (Cinder) services, architected in line with the OpenStack philosophy of pluggability and extensibility. While work was underway to establish the new OpenStack Foundation, our thriving community once again delivered the release on-time and with all planned essential features.

The most impressive feature for me is the amount of people and companies that contributed to it: over 330 people from almost 50 companies. Not only the quantity of people involved in OpenStack Folsom has increased compared to the previous release Essex, but also the diversity of the echosystem increased. The study contributed by Bitergia shows how the ecosystem evolved between the two releases, increasing in size and diversity.

It’s time for yet another celebration before we head up to San Diego for the OpenStack Summit where we’ll start planning the next six months and Grizzly. The schedule for the Summit has been published: take advantage of the discount until the end of September (save $200) on the registration fee and come meet this amazing OpenStack community live in San Diego.

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India celebrates OpenStack foundation global meetup

As part of OpenStack global foundation meetup we here in India celebrated it in Bangalore, Chennai and Delhi.  The event was attended by over 100 enthusiastic people with different domains from  entrepreneurs, start-ups, technology solution architects to students.

Kavit Munshi wrote about Bangalore and Chennai meetup which can be found here 

Johnson Ebenezer D wrote about Chennai meetup which can be found here

Syed Armani wrote about Delhi/NCR meetup which can be found here

OpenStack India has accounts now on Slideshare(OpenStackIndia) and Twitter (@OpenStackIndia) as well.

We are looking forward to continue the momentum and take OpenStack meetup to new cities across India and gain more contributors and developers to the OpenStack project.

OpenStack Community Weekly Newsletter (Sep 14-21)

Highlights of the week

The OpenStack Foundation is here

If you haven’t heard the news, the Foundation is fully operationally now and it’s hiring, too. We celebrated globally with many of the OpenStack User Groups around the world (some pictures are in OpenStack flickr group).

What’s new in OpenStack Folsom ?

Emilien Macchi wrote a summary of what’s coming in OpenStack Folsom. Getting ready for the OpenStack F release.

What’s Up Doc? September 19 2012

Report from Docs land: still over 100 doc bugs, 18 targeted for folsom, 11 of those 18 do not have assignees. New docs landing pages from https://review.openstack.org/#/c/11232/ should land this week or next prior to the release date.

OpenStack Governance Elections: Technical Committee

The OpenStack community is called to elect the last 3 members of the OpenStack Technical Committee. Per section 4.1(b) of the OpenStack Foundation bylaws, the Technical Committee (“TC”) is a technical meritocracy managing all the technical matters relating to OpenStack. It replaces the “Project Policy Board” from the old governance. We have 11 candidates and the election process started. If you’re a qualified voter you have received an email with instructions on how to vote. Check your spam folders if you haven’t received any communication .

Trystack latest status update

The team is taking small steps to get the TryStack experience back on track. Nachi Ueno would like assistance with deploying Compute, Image, and Identity on TryStack. Contact him to help. Great opportunity to get some ops chops!

OpenStack China Tour Launches from Beijing

On September 16, OpenStack China Tour began its trip from Beijing. It is a series of OpenStack meetups organized by COSUG and CSDN in some Chinese major cities(Beijing, Shenzhen, Chengdu, Wuhan and Xi’an) in turn.

A Globally Distributed OpenStack Swift Cluster

SwifStack team is working towards evolving Swift into a single cluster can be distributed over multiple, geographically dispersed sites, joined via high-latency network connections.

Tips and tricks

Upcoming Events

Other news

  • OpenStack Folsom RC1 is here
  • OpenStack Project Meeting 2012-09-18: Summary and full logs

Welcome new contributors

Celebrating the first patches submitted this week by:

  • Nikola Dipanov, RedHat.com
  • Arathi, Persistent
  • Ripal Nathuji, Calxeda.com
  • Vijaya-erukala, Persistent
  • Newptone, Sina
  • Lapgoon

Silly entertainment of the week:
openSUSE community welcomes OpenStack Foundation

The weekly newsletter is a way for the community to learn about all the various activities occurring on a weekly basis. If you would like to add content to a weekly update or have an idea about this newsletter, please leave a comment.

OpenStack China Tour Launches from Beijing

On September 16, OpenStack China Tour began its trip from Beijing, it is a series of OpenStack meetups organized by COSUG and CSDN in some Chinese major cities(Beijing, Shenzhen, Chengdu, Wuhan and Xi’an) in turn,  Beijing stop attracted more than 150 engineers to come to the scene , was held in workplace of Shanda Innovations. Core contribution engineers from Intel, Sina, IBM, Gamewave etc. made a presentation. It is worth mentioning that more than half hundred of engineers watched the whole meeting live through WebEx, and this is also thanks to the support provided by  Cisco.

 As the most influential OpenStack senior engineer and early evangelist in China, Hui Cheng gave a deep insight about the open ecosystem of OpenStack, and why does OpenStack become so successful. Hui shared the latest OpenStack events happened both at home and abroad.

“Sina, Intel, IBM, Baidu, Netease, HiSoft, China Standard Software, Gamewave Ltd., Shanghai Jiaotong University have become the first wave of OpenStack players in China” said Hui Cheng, lead manager of COSUG and technical leader of Sina OpenStack team,  “They have already deployed OpenStack to their production or testing environment, and some of them is also the active corporate contributor in OpenStack  projects. For example, Sina has already contributed more than 100 patches in the OpenStack Folsom release, and definitely will have more in Grizzly.”

In addition, Hui Cheng said, “Sina will join hands with some companies, such as Intel, IBM, and other major Chinese corporate contributors, to unite the R & D resources, and jointly develop for some project blueprint, thereby to enlarge the contribution from China.

Dr. Jinsong Liu, senior engineer from Intel, reviewed the history of virtualization, and Intel’s contribution to the OpenStack community. Jinsong Liu showed the Intel TXT security technologies at the chip level.

At present, Yongsheng Gong is full-timely working at IBM and focuses on the OpenStack research and development. He shared the Quantum project’s architecture as well as his own understanding. CSDN noticed that audience raised many questions about Quantum, and they worried whether Quantum can be applied to the production environment. In regards to this concern, Hui Cheng added, “Quantum version needs to be G version (ie the second quarter of 2013) in order to meet the requirements of real production environment.”

Rongze Zhu, an active contributor in Cinder/Nova project from Sina, introduced the status and objectives of Cinder. Cinder supports a lot of back-end storage, including open-source sheepdog, ceph, etc., and also including the storage products of major storage vendors, such as IBM, Dell, HP and NetApp. Rongze Zhu said, “Cinder’s emergence also gave domestic storage vendors an opportunity to participate in Cloud computing.” Zhu Rongze introduced how to write a driver to enable Cinder support their own storage products. “Domestic storage vendors can also be added to the OpenStack ecological chain, Sina is willing to provide support,” said Rongze Zhu.

Junqiang Chen, the SA engineer from Gamewave Group Limited,  illustrated how to use the chef management OpenStack efficiently. Besides, Junjiang Chen recommended to developers two good books: “Getting Real” and “ReWork“, both of which are from 37signals.

As a member of the SWS team, Yejia Xu is mainly responsible for the OpenStack Keystone project and the development of SWS auth and identify system. Meanwhile, he is also the core developer of SWS Dashboard. Yejia Xu shared the architecture, expansion, installation and configuration of Keystone.

Shake Chen is the most active volunteer and mentor in COSUG, who has much experiences in OpenStack deployment,  he  contrast Xen and KVM, and evaluated some major opponents of OpenStack. Additionally, Shake Chen commented on several major IaaS platforms in China. According to him, AWS is still the giant of the entire cloud computing market, the domestic IaaS market is still in the incubation stage.

In the end, Hui Cheng, the lead manager of COSUG and co-organizer of OpenStack China Tour, expressed his sincere thanks to CSDN, the awesome partner of COSUG, and Shanda Innovations, who provides the venue and free drinks, as well as Cisco, who sponsored the WebEx online live video broadcast.

The next stop of this tour will be Shenzhen(event link), and welcome stackers from southern China and Hong Kong to participate.

Yan Bao from CSDN has much contribution to this news report.

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OpenStack Community Weekly Newsletter (Sep 7-14)

Highlights of the week

OpenStack Governance Elections: Technical Committee

Now that we have elected the Project Technical Leads for the next release, the OpenStack community is called to elect the last 3 members of the OpenStack Technical Committee. Per section 4.1(b) of the OpenStack Foundation bylaws, the Technical Committee (“TC”) is a technical meritocracy managing all the technical matters relating to OpenStack. It replaces the “Project Policy Board” from the old governance.

OpenStack Governance Elections Autumn 2012 Results

The OpenStack community has elected the Project Technical Leads.

Demo: Live Migration, without shared storage, using XenServer and OpenStack

Renuka Apte demonstrates the new OpenStack Folsom and Storage XenMotion to enables live migration of VMs, without shared storage, using XenServer and OpenStack.

This week in Docs

Getting ready for Folsom release, the doc team went from 34 High folsom-targeted doc bugs two weeks ago to 17 on Monday. The documentation team is working hard to deliver always better documentation for OpenStack. See what else there is to be done.

Security announcements

Tips and tricks

Upcoming Events

Other news

  • Approaching OpenStack Folsom RC1
  • OpenStack Project Meeting 2012-09-11: Summary and full logs

Welcome new contributors

Celebrating the first patches submitted this week by:

  • pengyuwei
  • Clemens Perz
  • jokcylou
  • Derek Yarnell
  • Teng Li
  • Alessandro Tagliapietra
  • Chris Yeoh, IBM
  • Sirisha Devineni, Persistent
The weekly newsletter is a way for the community to learn about all the various activities occurring on a weekly basis. If you would like to add content to a weekly update or have an idea about this newsletter, please leave a comment.

 

OpenStack Governance Elections: Technical Committee

Now that we have elected the Project Technical Leads for the next release, the OpenStack community is called to elect the last 3 members of the OpenStack Technical Committee. Per section 4.1(b) of the OpenStack Foundation bylaws, the Technical Committee (“TC”) is a technical meritocracy managing all the technical matters relating to OpenStack. It replaces the “Project Policy Board” from the old governance.

Anyone who would like to be a candidate for this election may now submit their names!

Valid candidates, like voters, must be an Active Technical Contributor, which means:

  1. they have contributed at least one change to one of the official OpenStack projects[3] (over which the TC has final authority) in the year preceding 23:59 PST, August 29, 2012; and
  2. they are an individual member of the Foundation by 23:59 PST, September 13, 2012.

The 10 already-elected members (recently-elected PTLs and PPB members that were elected to a one-year seat last Spring) cannot run.

To submit your name for the ballot, please send an email to the [email protected] mailing list with the following information included:

Subject: TC candidacy
Body: Ideally, a description of your platform, your technical/leadership credentials, experience, etc. — in short, anything that will be useful
for voters to assess your qualifications as a member of the OpenStack Technical Committee.

Your candidacy will then be validated, on the same thread, by one of the election officials (Stefano Maffulli, Duncan McGreggor, Thierry Carrez).

The deadline to submit your candidacy is 23:59 PDT, September 19. The election will then run from September 21 to September 27.

There is more information on the election process, including how we’ll break any tie on the wiki. Let us know if there’s anything more we can do to make this process as transparent as possible!

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OpenStack Governance Elections Autumn 2012 Results

The OpenStack community has elected the Project Technical Leads. Here are the winners:

NOVA Project Technical Lead (1 position)

Winner: Vish Ishaya (only candidate)

KEYSTONE Project Technical Lead (1 position)

Winner: Joe Heck (only candidate)

HORIZON Project Technical Lead (1 position)

Winner: Gabriel Hurley  (only candidate)

SWIFT Project Technical Lead (1 position)

Winner: John Dickinson (only candidate)

GLANCE Project Technical Lead (1 position)

Winner: Brian Waldon (only candidate)

CINDER Project Technical Lead (1 position)

Winner: John Griffith (only candidate)

QUANTUM Project Technical Lead (1 position)

Winner: Dan Wendlandt (Official poll results)

OPENSTACK-COMMON Project Technical Lead (1 position)

Winner: Mark McLoughlin (only candidate)

Congratulations to all PTLs. They are automatically granted a 6-month seat on the OpenStack Technical Committee whose election process will start soon.