Re: [VOTE] SAFE (Security) Working Group
Zhipeng Huang
would like to remind TOC member to vote on WG proposition :)
On Thu, Sep 13, 2018 at 8:24 AM Sree Tummidi <stummidi@...> wrote: +1 (non-binding) --
Zhipeng (Howard) Huang Standard Engineer IT Standard & Patent/IT Product Line Huawei Technologies Co,. Ltd Email: huangzhipeng@... Office: Huawei Industrial Base, Longgang, Shenzhen (Previous) Research Assistant Mobile Ad-Hoc Network Lab, Calit2 University of California, Irvine Email: zhipengh@... Office: Calit2 Building Room 2402 OpenStack, OPNFV, OpenDaylight, OpenCompute Aficionado
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Re: [VOTE] etcd project proposal (incubation)
Aparna Sinha
+1 non-binding
On Mon, Sep 24, 2018 at 10:02 PM, Alena Prokharchyk <alena@...> wrote:
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Aparna Sinha Group Product Manager Kubernetes 650-283-6086 (m)
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Re: [VOTE] etcd project proposal (incubation)
+1 non binding
From: cncf-toc@... <cncf-toc@...> on behalf of Ayrat Khayretdinov <akhayretdinov@...>
Sent: Monday, September 24, 2018 6:58:14 PM To: Chris Aniszczyk Cc: CNCF TOC Subject: Re: [cncf-toc] [VOTE] etcd project proposal (incubation) +1 non binding
On Tue, Aug 21, 2018, 10:57 Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@...> wrote:
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Re: [VOTE] etcd project proposal (incubation)
Ayrat Khayretdinov <akhayretdinov@...>
+1 non binding
On Tue, Aug 21, 2018, 10:57 Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@...> wrote:
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Re: [VOTE] etcd project proposal (incubation)
Liz Rice
+1 non binding
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On Mon, 24 Sep 2018 at 14:56, <sam@...> wrote: +1 (non-binding) --
Liz Rice @lizrice | lizrice.com | +44 (0) 780 126 1145
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Re: [VOTE] etcd project proposal (incubation)
sam@...
+1 (non-binding)
Best, Sam Batschelet
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Re: [VOTE] etcd project proposal (incubation)
Jonathan Boulle <jon@...>
very belated +1 binding
On Fri, 24 Aug 2018 at 11:25, Michael Hausenblas <mhausenb@...> wrote: +1 (non-binding)
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Re: Helping Projects (was Re: [cncf-toc] What's the point? (or,"What's the Emperor wearing?"))
alexis richardson
Hi all Please keep these suggestions coming. Chris is gathering them up. I want to get us to a structured proposal here. a
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 8:24 PM Eduardo Silva <eduardo@...> wrote:
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Re: What's the point? (or,"What's the Emperor wearing?")
Zhipeng Huang
I think Sandbox is important for building a vibrant ecosystem, if the community could provide an excellent open source infrastructure (such as CI) then having sandbox project functioning like Chris mentioned is a great thing. The word constellation caught my eye from Alena's response. I think one way the foundation could be helpful is that in addition to the landscape we have now, ToC could coordinate the projects (incubated, graduated, sandboxed) to provide guides on various scenarios of integrations among these projects. AFAIK this type of thing is only maintained by specific projects or written on a blog by specific project contributors (e.g "How to use envoy together with kubernetes") Since many cloud native users will need to utilize a bunch of CNCF projects for various purposes, if they could easily find documentation on how these projects interact with each other if needed to, it would be beneficial for adoption and then broaden the ecosystem.
On Fri, Sep 21, 2018 at 3:39 AM Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@...> wrote:
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Zhipeng (Howard) Huang Standard Engineer IT Standard & Patent/IT Product Line Huawei Technologies Co,. Ltd Email: huangzhipeng@... Office: Huawei Industrial Base, Longgang, Shenzhen (Previous) Research Assistant Mobile Ad-Hoc Network Lab, Calit2 University of California, Irvine Email: zhipengh@... Office: Calit2 Building Room 2402 OpenStack, OPNFV, OpenDaylight, OpenCompute Aficionado
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Re: What's the point? (or,"What's the Emperor wearing?")
There was a lot of discussion regarding the sandbox (especially with the k8s incubator dissolving https://github.com/cncf/toc/issues/95#issuecomment-376940995) but the idea is that there was a need for a place for experimentation so projects can grow into high quality incubating/graduated projects as this process takes time if it does at all (https://github.com/cncf/toc/blob/master/process/sandbox.md#caveat-utilitor): "Encourage public visibility of experiments or other early work that can add value to the CNCF mission and build the ingredients of a successful Incubation level project" All sandbox projects get reviewed on an annual basis and may archived from the foundation. I expect to potentially see our first projects archived over the next 12 months but it's hard to predict the future.
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 9:29 AM, Alena Prokharchyk <alena@...> wrote: Sandbox is a great model that enforces collaboration and cloud native ecosystem growth. But it feels that the main CNCF goal of "fostering a community around a constellation of high-quality projects" in a way contradicts the current sandbox rule - "CNCF Sandbox projects can stay in the sandbox indefinitely". Indefinite membership - even with limited CNCF investment - is not sustainable without raising a quality bar at the acceptance level and beyond. Also the reasons why the sandbox candidate is found technically interesting/innovative, what advantages it has over similar projects (having a great community qualifies too) or/and why it is considered to be a high risk, can be delivered to the CNCF community with more clarify to reduce the chances of kingmaking blame --
Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719
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Re: Helping Projects (was Re: [cncf-toc] What's the point? (or,"What's the Emperor wearing?"))
Eduardo Silva
FYI: at Fluent Bit project (part of Fluentd) we started using IssueHunt I/O mostly to get more help on issues.
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Re: Helping Projects (was Re: [cncf-toc] What's the point? (or,"What's the Emperor wearing?"))
alexis richardson
This is a great idea Ben
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Overall a strong theme going into the GB off-site was "the TOC community wants more feedback from end users please". The GB and exec staff said that was heard and understood..
On Thu, 20 Sep 2018, 19:27 Ben Sigelman, <bhs@...> wrote:
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Re: Helping Projects (was Re: [cncf-toc] What's the point? (or,"What's the Emperor wearing?"))
Ben Sigelman
I've read this thread (and its predecessor) with interest and there have been so many great suggestions. One quick thing that would add some value and might (?) not be that hard... I actively do-not-want CNCF to "sell" its member projects to the companies in the end-user community. That said, it would be immensely valuable for CNCF to provide opportunities to engage in well-controlled user research *benefitting the OSS software* within those end-user organizations. The requests on this thread for developer compensation are heard and I think that would be :100:; in addition to paying developers, though, I think another challenge for a lot of OSS projects – especially those that have a point-and-click UI or similar HCI concerns – is actually getting user research beyond the actively committing developers. The downstream effect is that many OSS projects have challenging UIs. (Speaking as a commercial vendor, I may even personally benefit from this challenge, but I would *vastly* prefer to live in a world where OSS is a dream to use, and there's no way we're going to get there without better user research directed specifically towards the needs of the OSS projects) So, more briefly, it would be interesting if CNCF could at minimum provide an exchange / "marketplace" (sans money, I'd hope) where incubated or graduated projects could engage with end-user ICs to do user research; or, even better, if CNCF could actually administer that user research in a way that's aligned with best practices in that discipline. Just a thought. (And I'm interested to hear responses to ^^^; I don't see it suggested much, which usually means I'm wrong ;) Ben
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 2:08 AM alexis richardson <alexis@...> wrote:
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Re: Helping Projects (was Re: [cncf-toc] What's the point? (or,"What's the Emperor wearing?"))
Shannon Williams
Excellent point Jesse and Ruben – this is something I know I’d love to see the TOC bring to the Governing Board before our next meeting in Shanghai, Chris.
Best Regards,
Shannon Williams Rancher Labs +1 650-521-6902
From: cncf-toc@... <cncf-toc@...>
On Behalf Of Ruben Orduz
Sent: Thursday, September 20, 2018 8:44 AM To: me@... Cc: Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@...>; CNCF TOC <cncf-toc@...> Subject: Re: Helping Projects (was Re: [cncf-toc] What's the point? (or,"What's the Emperor wearing?"))
Cannot +1 this enough. There are folks out there donating their time/sweat to projects who have to rely on pittance/donations/freelance work. This foundation has more than enough means to provide a decent sustainability bonuses/stipends to these folks.
Best, Ruben
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 10:01 AM Jessica Frazelle via Lists.Cncf.Io <me=jessfraz.com@...> wrote:
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Re: Helping Projects (was Re: [cncf-toc] What's the point? (or,"What's the Emperor wearing?"))
Matt Klein <mklein@...>
Bounties on bug fixes comes to mind. +1. Bug bounties, pay for regular third party security audits, pay to have a white hat on staff doing security work on behalf of projects full time, etc. Pay the maintainers and high contributors who don't have other means to make money. Yes. For certain types of projects such as critical libraries where it's very difficult/impossible to make money maintaining, CNCF should consider adopting those projects and helping pay maintainers to work on them, even if part time. Even for projects in which there are other means to make money, some of us don't necessarily *want* to make money that way. We do it because, well, that is how we make money. There are real benefits for an organization like the CNCF providing fellowships to allow maintainers to remain neutral. I've written more about this here for those of you that haven't seen it: https://medium.com/@mattklein123/the-broken-economics-of-oss-5a1b31fc0182. The recent Linus salary discussion complicates discussion of this topic which is unfortunate because I think it's one that we increasingly need to have, but hopefully as some time passes we can come back to it. Such as All of the things Alexis points out. I would like to see more work on improving the GH experience around things like DCO, bots, issue management, CI, etc. I suspect there is easily a full time tooling job across all of CNCF. CI and negotiating with the vendors for the right amount of concurrency and machine types takes a lot of time. More dedicated help with docs perhaps by sourcing, hiring, and nurturing multiple full time tech writers. Basically, all of this.
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Re: What's the point? (or,"What's the Emperor wearing?")
Sandbox is a great model that enforces collaboration and cloud native ecosystem growth. But it feels that the main CNCF goal of "fostering a community around a constellation of high-quality projects" in a way contradicts the current sandbox rule - "CNCF Sandbox projects can stay in the sandbox indefinitely". Indefinite membership - even with limited CNCF investment - is not sustainable without raising a quality bar at the acceptance level and beyond. Also the reasons why the sandbox candidate is found technically interesting/innovative, what advantages it has over similar projects (having a great community qualifies too) or/and why it is considered to be a high risk, can be delivered to the CNCF community with more clarify to reduce the chances of kingmaking blame
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Re: Helping Projects (was Re: [cncf-toc] What's the point? (or,"What's the Emperor wearing?"))
Ruben Orduz <ruben@...>
Cannot +1 this enough. There are folks out there donating their time/sweat to projects who have to rely on pittance/donations/freelance work. This foundation has more than enough means to provide a decent sustainability bonuses/stipends to these folks. Best, Ruben
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Re: Helping Projects (was Re: [cncf-toc] What's the point? (or,"What's the Emperor wearing?"))
Matt Farina
A FAQ of practical knowledge to share between projects.
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A mentor program to help people who have to lead projects that are part of the CNCF. It’s different to lead an open source project on your own or as part of a company than it is under the CNCF. When I do something on my own or as part of a company I’m not vendor neutral. As part of a company I have can get to their policies. In the CNCF keeping vendor neutrality isn’t always obvious and we don’t have easy self service access to all the CNCF/TLF policies. This is all with my non-technical hat on and wanting to scale the org. As the number of projects go up I don’t see how Dan, Chris, and co scale without more self service and automation.
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Re: Helping Projects (was Re: [cncf-toc] What's the point? (or,"What's the Emperor wearing?"))
Jessica Frazelle <me@...>
Bounties on bug fixes comes to mind.
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Re: Helping Projects (was Re: [cncf-toc] What's the point? (or,"What's the Emperor wearing?"))
Jessica Frazelle <me@...>
Pay the maintainers and high contributors who don't have other means to make money.
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 05:13 Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@...> wrote:
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