Re: [VOTE] CoreDNS project proposal (inception)
Jonathan Boulle <jonathan.boulle@...>
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On 2 February 2017 at 22:52, Chris Aniszczyk via cncf-toc <cncf-toc@...> wrote: At yesterday's TOC meeting, the TOC decided to formally invite CoreDNS again but this time as an inception level CNCF project. Please vote on the project proposal located here:
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Re: Storage Patterns for container native - community content
Hi Folks,
This is an interesting topic and our team from the newly established OpenSDS community is now actively developing and have a primitive PoC working demo with kubernetes (picked up by Kubeweekly).
We are also interested in participating in the seminar, please feel free to contact me if anything needed
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On Thu, Feb 2, 2017 at 10:39 PM, NASSAUR, DOUGLAS C via cncf-toc <cncf-toc@...> wrote:
Let me know if interested in looping in some libStorage work we are doing. Also plan on having the architecture committee publish a series of "cloud native pattern reference implementations" is like to get lots of eyes on. Putting out a call for participation
on that effort first of next week.
Regards, Doug
On Feb 2, 2017, at 9:31 AM, Mark Coleman via cncf-toc < cncf-toc@...> wrote:
Hey Alex,
This looks great. I'm already in talks with Portworx to do a 'What is container storage and why should I care?' style webinar in March.
I'd like to get StorageOS involved too. We previously did a Cloud Native Networking webinar with people from both Tigera and Weaveworks and it went well.
Would you have time for a quick chat next Tuesday/Wednesday?
Mark
On Wed, Feb 1, 2017 at 4:50 PM Alex Chircop via cncf-toc < cncf-toc@...> wrote:
Hi,
Following the discussion at the last TOC call, I’m attaching a doc to cover the topics that we are volunteering to generate for the community. As background, we are proposing
to focus this series on storage related patterns, starting with an overview and moving onto more complex use cases and examples. We are planning to generate roughly an article a week on average for around ~3 months.
I’m keen to understand if this is in line with what you think would be useful to the community and would be interested in any feedback and comments. We would obviously be more
than happy to work with anyone else who might be interested in contributing and/or any opportunity for joint work on any of the topics.
Doc is here:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/14vVawyRcRRPm_mGZfl-tpQDCq2Q9aWxeHgdpZLAWnzU
Kind Regards,
Alex
Alex Chircop
Founder and CTO
T:
+44 7968 948832
E:
alex.chircop@...
W:
http://storageOS.com
L:
uk.linkedin.com/in/alexchircop/
Skype: chira001
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This email and any attachments are confidential to the intended recipient and may also be privileged or copyrighted material. Any review,
retransmission, dissemination or other use of, or taking of any action in reliance upon, this information by persons or entities other than the intended recipient is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient please delete it from your system and notify
the sender.
StorageOS Ltd is a company registered in England and Wales with company number 9614942.
Registered office address: 2 Minton Place, Victoria Road, Bicester, Oxfordshire, OX26 6QB.
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-- Zhipeng (Howard) Huang
Standard Engineer IT Standard & Patent/IT Prooduct Line Huawei Technologies Co,. Ltd Office: Huawei Industrial Base, Longgang, Shenzhen
(Previous) Research Assistant Mobile Ad-Hoc Network Lab, Calit2 University of California, Irvine Office: Calit2 Building Room 2402
OpenStack, OPNFV, OpenDaylight, OpenCompute Aficionado
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[VOTE] CoreDNS project proposal (inception)

Chris Aniszczyk
At yesterday's TOC meeting, the TOC decided to formally invite CoreDNS again but this time as an inception level CNCF project. Please vote on the project proposal located here:
https://github.com/cncf/toc/pull/9
Remember that the TOC has binding votes only, but we do appreciate non-binding votes from the community as a sign of support.
Thanks!
-- Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719
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Re: Storage Patterns for container native - community content
NASSAUR, DOUGLAS C <dn283x@...>
Let me know if interested in looping in some libStorage work we are doing. Also plan on having the architecture committee publish a series of "cloud native pattern reference implementations" is like to get lots of eyes on. Putting out a call for participation
on that effort first of next week.
Regards, Doug
On Feb 2, 2017, at 9:31 AM, Mark Coleman via cncf-toc < cncf-toc@...> wrote:
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
Hey Alex,
This looks great. I'm already in talks with Portworx to do a 'What is container storage and why should I care?' style webinar in March.
I'd like to get StorageOS involved too. We previously did a Cloud Native Networking webinar with people from both Tigera and Weaveworks and it went well.
Would you have time for a quick chat next Tuesday/Wednesday?
Mark
On Wed, Feb 1, 2017 at 4:50 PM Alex Chircop via cncf-toc < cncf-toc@...> wrote:
Hi,
Following the discussion at the last TOC call, I’m attaching a doc to cover the topics that we are volunteering to generate for the community. As background, we are proposing
to focus this series on storage related patterns, starting with an overview and moving onto more complex use cases and examples. We are planning to generate roughly an article a week on average for around ~3 months.
I’m keen to understand if this is in line with what you think would be useful to the community and would be interested in any feedback and comments. We would obviously be more
than happy to work with anyone else who might be interested in contributing and/or any opportunity for joint work on any of the topics.
Doc is here:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/14vVawyRcRRPm_mGZfl-tpQDCq2Q9aWxeHgdpZLAWnzU
Kind Regards,
Alex
Alex Chircop
Founder and CTO
T:
+44 7968 948832
E:
alex.chircop@...
W:
http://storageOS.com
L:
uk.linkedin.com/in/alexchircop/
Skype: chira001
This email and any attachments are confidential to the intended recipient and may also be privileged or copyrighted material. Any review,
retransmission, dissemination or other use of, or taking of any action in reliance upon, this information by persons or entities other than the intended recipient is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient please delete it from your system and notify
the sender.
StorageOS Ltd is a company registered in England and Wales with company number 9614942.
Registered office address: 2 Minton Place, Victoria Road, Bicester, Oxfordshire, OX26 6QB.
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Re: Storage Patterns for container native - community content
Hey Alex,
This looks great. I'm already in talks with Portworx to do a 'What is container storage and why should I care?' style webinar in March.
I'd like to get StorageOS involved too. We previously did a Cloud Native Networking webinar with people from both Tigera and Weaveworks and it went well.
Would you have time for a quick chat next Tuesday/Wednesday?
Mark
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
On Wed, Feb 1, 2017 at 4:50 PM Alex Chircop via cncf-toc < cncf-toc@...> wrote:
Hi,
Following the discussion at the last TOC call, I’m attaching a doc to cover the topics that we are volunteering to generate for the community. As background, we are proposing to focus this series on storage
related patterns, starting with an overview and moving onto more complex use cases and examples. We are planning to generate roughly an article a week on average for around ~3 months.
I’m keen to understand if this is in line with what you think would be useful to the community and would be interested in any feedback and comments. We would obviously be more than happy to work with anyone
else who might be interested in contributing and/or any opportunity for joint work on any of the topics.
Doc is here:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/14vVawyRcRRPm_mGZfl-tpQDCq2Q9aWxeHgdpZLAWnzU
Kind Regards,
Alex
Alex Chircop
Founder and CTO
T: +44 7968 948832
E:
alex.chircop@...
W:
http://storageOS.com
L:
uk.linkedin.com/in/alexchircop/
Skype: chira001
This email and any attachments are confidential to the intended recipient and may also be privileged or copyrighted material. Any review,
retransmission, dissemination or other use of, or taking of any action in reliance upon, this information by persons or entities other than the intended recipient is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient please delete it from your system and notify
the sender.
StorageOS Ltd is a company registered in England and Wales with
company number 9614942. Registered office address: 2 Minton Place, Victoria Road, Bicester, Oxfordshire, OX26 6QB.
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Interesting tech marketing from Amazon
I thought this was worth sharing as an example of the sort of tech-biz guidance that members of the CNCF community could write. The piece is by someone from AWS and talks about cloud native vs other cloudy things.
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Storage Patterns for container native - community content

Alex Chircop
Hi,
Following the discussion at the last TOC call, I’m attaching a doc to cover the topics that we are volunteering to generate for the community. As background, we are proposing to focus this series on storage
related patterns, starting with an overview and moving onto more complex use cases and examples. We are planning to generate roughly an article a week on average for around ~3 months.
I’m keen to understand if this is in line with what you think would be useful to the community and would be interested in any feedback and comments. We would obviously be more than happy to work with anyone
else who might be interested in contributing and/or any opportunity for joint work on any of the topics.
Doc is here:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/14vVawyRcRRPm_mGZfl-tpQDCq2Q9aWxeHgdpZLAWnzU
Kind Regards,
Alex
Alex Chircop
Founder and CTO
T: +44 7968 948832
E:
alex.chircop@...
W:
http://storageOS.com
L:
uk.linkedin.com/in/alexchircop/
Skype: chira001

This email and any attachments are confidential to the intended recipient and may also be privileged or copyrighted material. Any review,
retransmission, dissemination or other use of, or taking of any action in reliance upon, this information by persons or entities other than the intended recipient is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient please delete it from your system and notify
the sender.
StorageOS Ltd is a company registered in England and Wales with
company number 9614942. Registered office address: 2 Minton Place, Victoria Road, Bicester, Oxfordshire, OX26 6QB.
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CNCF is gearing up to make a significant set of investments into Continuous Integration (CI) in 2017. I wanted to lay out some of our goals as well as what we are not trying to achieve. Feedback and updates on these are welcome. In general, we're looking for discussions to occur on cncf-ci-public@... so please join that list if you are interested in the subject.
Non-goals
All CNCF projects already make extensive use of CI. We are not aiming to replace their existing CI, or require them to use our platform, or force them to follow specific standards or processes. CI is a fast-moving ecosystem and project maintainers are in the best position to adjust intra-project CI based on their own requirements.
We don’t want to build our own testing framework or harness. There are tons of perfectly adequate ones. We want to integrate existing tools to provide useful results to our projects and our community, not develop a new testing project from scratch.
Goals
We want any testing work we fund to integrate continuously. Ideally, that means running on every commit via web hook. If technology or economic reasons dictate, it could instead run daily or other periodic basis. No manual setup should be needed.
We need any work we fund to be open source. It’s acceptable for it too be built on top of closed source platforms like CircleCI, TravisCI, AWS, etc., but if CNCF funding is paying for code to be written, we need that code to be open source. That allows it to be reviewed, improved, iterated on, etc. by others, especially by developers from individual projects.
All test frameworks eventually have problems of false positives, false negatives, and flapping (i.e., intermittent failures). We want to use best practices to document and minimize these.
The GitHub Status API is a de facto standard for third-party CI services to integrate with GitHub and other services. Any work we fund should (eventually) implement the GitHub Status API, and be integrated into relevant projects as long as false positives are at a sufficiently low level.
CNCF is helping develop a cloud native software stack that enables cross-cloud deployments. Cross-project CI that ensures ongoing interoperability is especially valuable. We’re also interested in a dashboard that shows the cross-project interoperability status of both the latest released version and HEAD of each CNCF project. We would also like to ensure that CNCF projects are able to deploy successfully on to most (and ideally all) public clouds as well as bare metal private clouds and common infrastructure like OpenStack and VMWare. -- Executive Director, Cloud Native Computing Foundation < https://cncf.io/> tel:+1-415-233-1000
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Re: Cloud Native Infrastructure book
fantastic - how can we help?
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On Tue, Jan 31, 2017 at 9:43 PM, Lee Calcote <leecalcote@...> wrote: Justin,
I’ve been in discussion with Brian over the past month in wrapping up a title (on container orchestration) and moving on to co-authoring here. We’d yet to reach out… until now. :)
- Lee
On Jan 31, 2017, at 3:23 PM, Alexis Richardson via cncf-toc <cncf-toc@...> wrote:
Hi all
I have encouraged Justin to post here because I think this is worthy of promotion within the group & community. "PTAL" as they say!
a
On Tue, Jan 31, 2017 at 9:19 PM, Justin Garrison via cncf-toc <cncf-toc@...> wrote:
Hello,
I'm working on a book with O'Reilly on Cloud Native Infrastructure. The book is focusing on general practices and ideas for how you should set up your infrastructure to manage cloud native applications. It will show examples with CNCF projects but I hope to not go too in depth (1-2 chapters per project) so I can still reference other books/resources if readers want to dig deeper into a project. The book isn't targeting a single cloud and I hope to keep the design principles as generic as possible so readers can replicate the ideas in any cloud including on-premises.
The reason I'm emailing the list is I'm going to need some help (this is my first book). Thank you everyone who has already reached out to me and offered assistance. I'll reply as soon as I'm able to. Right now I'm looking for the following resources.
Co-author: I believe, and Brian from O'Reilly agrees, having a co-author could help the process for areas I'm not strong in, getting more immediate feedback, and obviously sharing the load of writing a book. The book is going to be a 6-8 month commitment. If anyone is interested or has suggestions for someone they'd recommend please have them email me. Reference resources: white papers, case studies, and other books on infrastructure design. I've already read a lot of books/papers on the subject but I'm sure there's some I've missed. The Linux Foundation is also working on making their case studies available for the book. Let me know if you have any favorites so I can make sure I reference them. Example applications for each project focus. I don't plan to build one giant application throughout the book but rather focus on one small application per chapter and explain why a certain project/idea is beneficial to have. An example would be something that sends a lot of logs and show examples of why fluentd implements log collection in a cloud native way vs relying on syslog.
I have already submitted the book proposal and am moving forward with the project but haven't actively started writing. I'm still gathering/organizing thoughts and information. If anyone has resources they'd be able to share please send them.
Thank you for any help you can provide and I'm sure I'll be asking the community for more reviews and feedback in the coming months.
-- Justin Garrison justingarrison.com
_______________________________________________ cncf-toc mailing list cncf-toc@... https://lists.cncf.io/mailman/listinfo/cncf-toc
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Re: Cloud Native Infrastructure book
Gianluca Arbezzano <gianarb92@...>
Hello all
I started to write something under a title "Docker in production" but my first idea was to produce something about how to manage modern and scalable distributed systems. After few months I realized that I can not do that alone and I decided to release some chapters (that was already written) as whitepapers.
I am still looking around to have the opportunity to write something about these topics, I am ready to write a book alone but I am open to taking part with some chapters. This seems a good opportunity. Just ping me if you like.
Gianluca
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Hi all
I have encouraged Justin to post here because I think this is worthy
of promotion within the group & community. "PTAL" as they say!
a
On Tue, Jan 31, 2017 at 9:19 PM, Justin Garrison via cncf-toc
< cncf-toc@...> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I'm working on a book with O'Reilly on Cloud Native Infrastructure. The book
> is focusing on general practices and ideas for how you should set up your
> infrastructure to manage cloud native applications. It will show examples
> with CNCF projects but I hope to not go too in depth (1-2 chapters per
> project) so I can still reference other books/resources if readers want to
> dig deeper into a project. The book isn't targeting a single cloud and I
> hope to keep the design principles as generic as possible so readers can
> replicate the ideas in any cloud including on-premises.
>
> The reason I'm emailing the list is I'm going to need some help (this is my
> first book). Thank you everyone who has already reached out to me and
> offered assistance. I'll reply as soon as I'm able to. Right now I'm looking
> for the following resources.
>
> Co-author: I believe, and Brian from O'Reilly agrees, having a co-author
> could help the process for areas I'm not strong in, getting more immediate
> feedback, and obviously sharing the load of writing a book. The book is
> going to be a 6-8 month commitment. If anyone is interested or has
> suggestions for someone they'd recommend please have them email me.
> Reference resources: white papers, case studies, and other books on
> infrastructure design. I've already read a lot of books/papers on the
> subject but I'm sure there's some I've missed. The Linux Foundation is also
> working on making their case studies available for the book. Let me know if
> you have any favorites so I can make sure I reference them.
> Example applications for each project focus. I don't plan to build one giant
> application throughout the book but rather focus on one small application
> per chapter and explain why a certain project/idea is beneficial to have. An
> example would be something that sends a lot of logs and show examples of why
> fluentd implements log collection in a cloud native way vs relying on
> syslog.
>
> I have already submitted the book proposal and am moving forward with the
> project but haven't actively started writing. I'm still gathering/organizing
> thoughts and information. If anyone has resources they'd be able to share
> please send them.
>
> Thank you for any help you can provide and I'm sure I'll be asking the
> community for more reviews and feedback in the coming months.
>
> --
> Justin Garrison
> justingarrison.com
>
> _______________________________________________
> cncf-toc mailing list
> cncf-toc@...
> https://lists.cncf.io/mailman/listinfo/cncf-toc
>
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Re: Cloud Native Infrastructure book
Justin,
I’ve been in discussion with Brian over the past month in wrapping up a title (on container orchestration) and moving on to co-authoring here. We’d yet to reach out… until now. :)
- Lee
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Show quoted text
On Jan 31, 2017, at 3:23 PM, Alexis Richardson via cncf-toc <cncf-toc@...> wrote:
Hi all
I have encouraged Justin to post here because I think this is worthy of promotion within the group & community. "PTAL" as they say!
a
On Tue, Jan 31, 2017 at 9:19 PM, Justin Garrison via cncf-toc <cncf-toc@...> wrote:
Hello,
I'm working on a book with O'Reilly on Cloud Native Infrastructure. The book is focusing on general practices and ideas for how you should set up your infrastructure to manage cloud native applications. It will show examples with CNCF projects but I hope to not go too in depth (1-2 chapters per project) so I can still reference other books/resources if readers want to dig deeper into a project. The book isn't targeting a single cloud and I hope to keep the design principles as generic as possible so readers can replicate the ideas in any cloud including on-premises.
The reason I'm emailing the list is I'm going to need some help (this is my first book). Thank you everyone who has already reached out to me and offered assistance. I'll reply as soon as I'm able to. Right now I'm looking for the following resources.
Co-author: I believe, and Brian from O'Reilly agrees, having a co-author could help the process for areas I'm not strong in, getting more immediate feedback, and obviously sharing the load of writing a book. The book is going to be a 6-8 month commitment. If anyone is interested or has suggestions for someone they'd recommend please have them email me. Reference resources: white papers, case studies, and other books on infrastructure design. I've already read a lot of books/papers on the subject but I'm sure there's some I've missed. The Linux Foundation is also working on making their case studies available for the book. Let me know if you have any favorites so I can make sure I reference them. Example applications for each project focus. I don't plan to build one giant application throughout the book but rather focus on one small application per chapter and explain why a certain project/idea is beneficial to have. An example would be something that sends a lot of logs and show examples of why fluentd implements log collection in a cloud native way vs relying on syslog.
I have already submitted the book proposal and am moving forward with the project but haven't actively started writing. I'm still gathering/organizing thoughts and information. If anyone has resources they'd be able to share please send them.
Thank you for any help you can provide and I'm sure I'll be asking the community for more reviews and feedback in the coming months.
-- Justin Garrison justingarrison.com
_______________________________________________ cncf-toc mailing list cncf-toc@... https://lists.cncf.io/mailman/listinfo/cncf-toc
_______________________________________________ cncf-toc mailing list cncf-toc@... https://lists.cncf.io/mailman/listinfo/cncf-toc
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Re: Cloud Native Infrastructure book
Hi all I have encouraged Justin to post here because I think this is worthy of promotion within the group & community. "PTAL" as they say! a On Tue, Jan 31, 2017 at 9:19 PM, Justin Garrison via cncf-toc <cncf-toc@...> wrote: Hello,
I'm working on a book with O'Reilly on Cloud Native Infrastructure. The book is focusing on general practices and ideas for how you should set up your infrastructure to manage cloud native applications. It will show examples with CNCF projects but I hope to not go too in depth (1-2 chapters per project) so I can still reference other books/resources if readers want to dig deeper into a project. The book isn't targeting a single cloud and I hope to keep the design principles as generic as possible so readers can replicate the ideas in any cloud including on-premises.
The reason I'm emailing the list is I'm going to need some help (this is my first book). Thank you everyone who has already reached out to me and offered assistance. I'll reply as soon as I'm able to. Right now I'm looking for the following resources.
Co-author: I believe, and Brian from O'Reilly agrees, having a co-author could help the process for areas I'm not strong in, getting more immediate feedback, and obviously sharing the load of writing a book. The book is going to be a 6-8 month commitment. If anyone is interested or has suggestions for someone they'd recommend please have them email me. Reference resources: white papers, case studies, and other books on infrastructure design. I've already read a lot of books/papers on the subject but I'm sure there's some I've missed. The Linux Foundation is also working on making their case studies available for the book. Let me know if you have any favorites so I can make sure I reference them. Example applications for each project focus. I don't plan to build one giant application throughout the book but rather focus on one small application per chapter and explain why a certain project/idea is beneficial to have. An example would be something that sends a lot of logs and show examples of why fluentd implements log collection in a cloud native way vs relying on syslog.
I have already submitted the book proposal and am moving forward with the project but haven't actively started writing. I'm still gathering/organizing thoughts and information. If anyone has resources they'd be able to share please send them.
Thank you for any help you can provide and I'm sure I'll be asking the community for more reviews and feedback in the coming months.
-- Justin Garrison justingarrison.com
_______________________________________________ cncf-toc mailing list cncf-toc@... https://lists.cncf.io/mailman/listinfo/cncf-toc
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Cloud Native Infrastructure book
Justin Garrison <justinleegarrison@...>
Hello,
I'm working on a book with O'Reilly on Cloud Native Infrastructure. The book is focusing on general practices and ideas for how you should set up your infrastructure to manage cloud native applications. It will show examples with CNCF projects but I hope to not go too in depth (1-2 chapters per project) so I can still reference other books/resources if readers want to dig deeper into a project. The book isn't targeting a single cloud and I hope to keep the design principles as generic as possible so readers can replicate the ideas in any cloud including on-premises.
The reason I'm emailing the list is I'm going to need some help (this is my first book). Thank you everyone who has already reached out to me and offered assistance. I'll reply as soon as I'm able to. Right now I'm looking for the following resources. - Co-author: I believe, and Brian from O'Reilly agrees, having a co-author could help the process for areas I'm not strong in, getting more immediate feedback, and obviously sharing the load of writing a book. The book is going to be a 6-8 month commitment. If anyone is interested or has suggestions for someone they'd recommend please have them email me.
- Reference resources: white papers, case studies, and other books on infrastructure design. I've already read a lot of books/papers on the subject but I'm sure there's some I've missed. The Linux Foundation is also working on making their case studies available for the book. Let me know if you have any favorites so I can make sure I reference them.
- Example applications for each project focus. I don't plan to build one giant application throughout the book but rather focus on one small application per chapter and explain why a certain project/idea is beneficial to have. An example would be something that sends a lot of logs and show examples of why fluentd implements log collection in a cloud native way vs relying on syslog.
I have already submitted the book proposal and am moving forward with the project but haven't actively started writing. I'm still gathering/organizing thoughts and information. If anyone has resources they'd be able to share please send them.
Thank you for any help you can provide and I'm sure I'll be asking the community for more reviews and feedback in the coming months.
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FYI: CNCF Applying to GSOC 2017; Call For Project Ideas + Mentors

Chris Aniszczyk
CNCF is applying as a mentoring organization to Google Summer of Code this year: https://developers.google.com/open-source/gsoc/
If you're interesting in mentoring and/or have a project idea to contribute, please list it here:
So far we have ideas from k8s, fluentd and opentracing, with other CNCF projects in the process of collecting project ideas + mentors.
Thanks!
-- Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719
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DRAFT TOC slides for Feb 2017 meeting tomorrow
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FYI: CloudNativeCon/KubeCon EU schedule is live!

Chris Aniszczyk
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Re: [RESULT] linkerd project proposal
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On Mon, 23 Jan 2017, 17:53 William Morgan, < william@...> wrote: Thank you! And thank you very much for your support and help along the way.
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Re: [RESULT] linkerd project proposal
Thank you! And thank you very much for your support and help along the way.
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On Mon, Jan 23, 2017 at 8:21 AM, Alexis Richardson <alexis@...> wrote: Congratulations!
On Mon, 23 Jan 2017, 16:18 Chris Aniszczyk via cncf-toc, < cncf-toc@...> wrote: I'm happy to announce that linkerd ( https://github.com/linkerd/linkerd) has been accepted as a CNCF inception project. We will be working with the linkerd community over the next few weeks to bring them within the CNCF family.
Here are is a summary of the voting:
+1 (binding) [7/9 TOC votes]
+1 (non-binding community votes)
Congrats linkerd community and thanks again to everyone who voted!
--
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Re: [RESULT] linkerd project proposal
Chris we should add that topic to the f2f
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All CNCF projects are currently incubating or inception, none have graduated at the moment. It's something we are working on later this year as the graduation criteria was recently accepted:
Thanks!
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Re: [RESULT] linkerd project proposal

Chris Aniszczyk
All CNCF projects are currently incubating or inception, none have graduated at the moment. It's something we are working on later this year as the graduation criteria was recently accepted:
Thanks!
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Show quoted text
On Mon, Jan 23, 2017 at 8:30 AM, Lee Calcote <leecalcote@...> wrote: Exciting! Are any other projects currently in inception or have all others graduated? On Jan 23, 2017, at 10:21 AM, Alexis Richardson via cncf-toc < cncf-toc@...> wrote:
-- Chris Aniszczyk (@cra) | +1-512-961-6719
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