Hungry for Operational Excellence? ChefConf 2012 satisfies!

Since my team at Dell sponsored the inaugural ChefConf, we had the good fortune to get a handful of passes and show up at the event in force.  I was also tapped for a presentation (Chef+Crowbar gets Physical+OpenStack Cloud) and Ignite session (Crowbar history).

I live demo’ed using a single command window with knife to manage both physical and cloud infrastructure.    That’s freaking cool!  (and thanks to Matt Ray for helping to get this working)

It’s no surprise that I’m already a DevOps advocate and Opscode enthusiast, there were aspects of the conference that are worth reiterating:

  • Opscode is part of the cadre of leaders redefining how we operate infrastructure.  The energy is amazing.
  • The acknowledgement of the “snowflake” challenge where all Ops environments are alike, but no two are the same.
  • A tight integration between Operations and lean delivery because waterfall deployments are not sustainable
  • Opscode’s vision is rooted in utility.  You can be successful without design and then excel when you add it.  I find that refreshing.
  • There was a fun, friendly (“hug driven development?!”) and laid back vibe.  This group laughed A LOT.
  • For a first conference, Opscode did a good job with logistics and organization.
  • I saw that the back rooms and hallways are buzzing with activity.  This means that people are making money with the technology.

Crowbar + Chef installs & manages OpenStack Essex (Live Demo, 45 minutes):

 

Ignite Talk about Dell Crowbar History (5 minutes)

Crowbar v1.3 Release adds Cloudera Hadoop & RHEL/Centos 6.2. Preps v1.4 for Essex & Ubuntu 12.04

I’m very pleased to post we’ve cut the 1.3 Crowbar release!

1.3 Release Highlights (branch “elefante”)

  • Introduction of Cloudera 3.7 Hadoop Barclamp
  • New Operating System versions: Ubuntu 11.10, RHEL 6.2, Centos 6.2
  • Upgrade the Sledgehammer image to Centos 6.2
  • Alias & Group Feature (Alias is linked into DNS & Chef Search)
  • Barclamp import from UI
  • Pre-populate Node names & descriptions
  • Export of logs & database snapshot from UI
  • For the Dell Additions: Support for 12g Hardware Models (720xd & 720) via WSMAN

1.4 Previews already in the tree (“essex-hack” branch)

We’ve been working in advance for the 1.4 Release on the Essex-Hack branch.

  • Ubuntu 12.04 Support
  • OpenStack Essex Packages (from Ubuntu)

Crowbar’s emergence as a DevOps enabled Cloud Provisioner

I’m going to be talking Crowbar & OpenStack at Chef Conf next week.  While I’m always excited to wave the Crowbar flag, it’s humbling to see our vision for an open source based cloud provisioner picking up momentum in the community.

Dieter Plaetinck

…I think this tool deserves more attention and should be added to your devops toolchain for the cloud (triple buzzword bonus!!!)…

Hosting News

…As an alternative to proprietary, licensed software models, Dell continues to see heavy customer interest in the OpenStack-Powered Cloud Solution, which integrates the OpenStack cloud operating system, cloud-optimized Dell PowerEdge C servers, the Dell-developed Crowbar software framework, and services…

Sys-Con Post by Mirantis

…Finally, there is Dell and Crowbar. Dell’s approach to riding the OpenStack wave is, perhaps, the most creative. Crowbar is neither a hardware appliance nor an enterprise version of OpenStack. It’s a configuration management tool built around OpSource’s Chef, designed specifically to deploy OpenStack on Dell servers. Crowbar effectively serves as the glue between the hardware and any distribution of OpenStack (and not only OpenStack)…

Robert Booth w/ Zenoss

Well if you care to only give them the best then introduce them to a set of tools that will drastically change the way they do business in a way they want to. Introduce them to Dell’s Crowbar and OpsCode Chef and you will make their job easier, faster and possibly put a stop to the finger pointing! No longer will they have to pull out the IT secret decoder ring to understand what the dev team put in the deployment docs.

Four OpenStack Trends from Summit: Practical, Friendly, Effective and Deployable

With the next OpenStack Austin meetup on Thursday (sponsored by Puppet), I felt like it was past time for me to post my thoughts and observations about the Spring 2012 OpenStack design conference.  This was my fifth OpenStack conference (my notes about Bexar, Cactus, Diablo & Essex).  Every conference has been unique, exciting, and bigger than the previous.

My interest lies in the trend lines of OpenStack.  For details about sessions, I recommend Stefano Maffulli‘s  excellent link aggregation post for the Summit.

1. Technology Trend: Practical with Potential.

OpenStack started with a BIG vision to become the common platform for cloud API and operations.  That vision is very much alive and on-track; however, our enthusiasm for what could be is tempered by the need to build a rock solid foundation.  The drive to stability over feature expansion has had a very positive impact.  I give a lot of credit for this effort to the leadership of the project technical leads (PTLs), Canonical‘s drive to include OpenStack in the 12.04 LTS and the Rackspace Cloud drive to deploy Essex.  My team at Dell has also been part of this trend by focusing so much effort on making OpenStack production deployable (via Crowbar).

Overall, I am seeing a broad-based drive to minimize disruption.

2. Culture Trend: Friendly but some tension.

Companies at both large and small ends of the spectrum are clearly jockeying for position.  I think the market is big enough for everyone; however, we are also bumping into each other.  Overall, we are putting aside these real and imagined differences to focus on enlarging the opportunity of having a true community cloud platform.  For example, the OpenStack Foundation investment formation has moneyed competitors jostling for position to partner together.

However, it’s not just about paying into the club; OpenStack’s history is clearly about execution.  Looking back to the original Austin Summit sponsors, we’ve clearly seen that intent and commitment are different.

3. Discussion Trend: Small Groups Effective

The depth & quality of discussions inside sessions was highly variable.  Generally, I saw that large group discussions stayed at a very high level.  The smaller sessions required deep knowledge of the code to participate and seemed more productive.  We continue to have a juggle between discussions that are conceptual or require detailed knowledge of the code.  If conceptual, it’s too far removed.  If code, it becomes inaccessible to many people.

This has happened at each Summit and I now accept that it is natural.  We are using vision sessions to ensure consensus and working sessions to coordinate deliverables for the release.

I cannot over emphasize importance of small groups and delivery driven execution interactions: I spent most of my time in small group discussions with partners aligning efforts.

4. Deployment Trend: Testing and Upstreams matter

Operations for deploying OpenStack is a substantial topic at the Summit.  I find that to be a significant benefit to the community because there are a large block of us who were vocal advocates for deployability at the very formation of the project.

From my perspective at Dell, we are proud to see that wide spread acknowledgement of our open source contribution, Crowbar, as the most prominent OpenStack deployer.   Our efforts at making OpenStack installable are recognized as a contribution; however, we’re also getting feedback that we need to streamline and simplify Crowbar.  We also surprised to hear that Crowbar is “opinionated.”   On reflection, I agree (and am proud) of this assessment because it matches best practice coding styles.  Since our opinions also drive our test matrix there is a significant value for our OpenStack deployment is that we spend a lot of time testing (automated and manual) our preferred install process.

There’s a push to reconcile the various Chef OpenStack cookbooks into a single upstream.  This seems like a very good idea because it will allow various parties to collaborate on open operations.  The community needs leadership from Opscode to make this happen.  It appears that Puppet Labs is interested in playing a similar role for Puppet modules but these are still emerging and have not had a chance to fragment.

No matter which path we take, the deployment scripts are only as good as their level of testing.   Unreliable deployment scripts have are less than worthless.

Dell Cloud in the Community – events, speaking and sponsorships!

Members of various Dell Cloud teams are out and about!  You can catch us North, South, East, West and Central!

I get a lot of questions about the Dell Hosted Cloud (my team does “private hyperscale cloud“) so I’m glad to offer ACUG as a venue where people can talk to Stephen Spector and hear it from the source.

Date Topics Event Venue Sponsor
5/12 Topics: OpenStack Foundation, DevStack & Folsom Summit review. Austin OpenStack Meetup Austin, TX (Tech Ranch) Puppet Labs
5/15 Dell Public Cloud team will discuss and demonstrate vCloud running an HPC platform for highly processor intensive applications (Greenbutton and SAP) Austin Cloud User Group Austin, TX Dell Public Cloud
5/16 OpenStack Topics (TBD) including Folsom Summit review, Quantum, HyperV Boston OpenStack Meetup Boston, MA (Havard, Maxwell Dworkin 119) SUSE
5/16-17 DevOps applications for Chef on OpenStack private clouds using Crowbar. Chef User Conference San Francisco, CA Opscode
5/??
TBD
Help us kick out a rock solid Essex deploy using Crowbar and Chef. World Wide Essex Deploy Day Multiple Live & Remote Locations Dell OpenStack
5/23-24 Open source software in the government.  Specifically, I’m talking about  OpenStack, Hadoop and Crowbar.  I know that Cloudera and Canonical will be there. Military Open Source Charleston, SC Mill-OSS

PS: The slides are posted if you missed our 3-way joint session with Dell, Opscode & enStratus at the OpenStack Summit.

Did Austin Stackers get what we wanted at the OpenStack Design Summit?

image

This post is a follow-up from the April 12 Austin OpenStack  (OSTAX) meeting.

Overall, we had a good meeting with strong attendance.  Unlike last meeting, the attendees were less OpenStack experienced; however, many us worked for companies that are members of the OpenStack Foundation.  I work for Dell (a gold sponsor).

Rather than posting before the summit, I’ve scored my summit experiences against our poll to see if our priorities were met.  (note: Thanks to Greg Althaus for additional input in the commentary)

Issue OSTAX Rank Results from Summit Outlook
Stability vs. Features Prioritization & Processes 68% This was a major thread throughout the summit in multiple sessions.   My feeling of the dialog was the stability (including continuous integration) was a core requirement. Excellent
API vs Code. What does it mean to be “OpenStack” 68% This is a good news / bad news story.  As OpenStack Compute gets split into more and more independent pieces; their interactions will require a well-defined externalized API.  The continuing issue is that these APIs will be still driven by the python-based reference implementation.  In some regards, APIs will emerge and be better codified.  Newer PTLs bring additional perspective and beliefs around APIs vs Code. Mixed
Operations focus: making OpenStack easy to deploy and manage 68% This was a major topic with many sessions dedicated to operationalizing OpenStack.  Special focus was given to shared Puppet and Chef deployment code.There were specific sessions around High Availability and what that means.  From this session, consensus was built for infrastructure HA documentation using Pacemaker for Folsom.  There was NOT consensus for instance-level HA. Trending Positive
Documentation Standards and improved user guides 59% Anne Gentle is championing this and had a presence throughout the summit. Strong
Driving for Hypervisor feature parity (KVM, Xen and also VMware/HyperV) 57% While Libvirt/KVM continues to dominate.  Citrix was present to support XenServer and Microsoft made commitments for (returning) HyperV support. Uneven Progress
Improving collaboration (get beyond listserv & IRC) so information is more persistent 56% I was not involved in discussions around this topic. No Comment
Have more operations discussion / design at the Design Summit 54% We had many sessions about operations tooling but little about specific considerations for operations.  Perhaps we need to take a step towards shared deployment scripts. Action with Fragmentation
Nova-volume to split out and/or more API driven (less integrated) 51% This was a major topic in multiple sessions.  There are a number of parties that are signing up to create block storage as a stand-alone project.Cinder will be the block storage service.  Not just good sessions were held, but good plans were built for constructing and improving the project.  The project will start as a clone of the current nova project with unique chunks living in Cinder and common pieces of both projects move to the openstack-common project.The Cinder working group is very cross company and had a strong desire to maintain a minimal specification (current API replacement) with only one additional feature required for Folsom (boot from volume).  The boot from volume feature is really a Nova feature, but the Cinder team will most likely drive it to ensure Cinder/Nova separation. Surprisingly Active
OpenStack on Windows & HyperV 50% This is two topics.  Microsoft is committing for OpenStack to support HyperV as a Nova Compute node.  Running the rest of the suite on Windows does not appear to be a priority (or practical?) Promising Potential
Orchestration. More projects like Donabe? 48% There are a number of ecosystem projects emerging.  Now that Essex has emerged as a solid release, I expect to see an acceleration projects.  At this time, they are still incubating.There was also the acknowledgement that there are two levels of orchestration, instance orchestration (think nova scheduler) and workload orchestration (think Donabe or VAPP).  Instance orchestration had many good discussions and improvements suggested and started (host aggregates, filter scheduler extensions, …) Building Slowly
Making Nova into smaller components 46% This was a thread in several sessions and it part of the ongoing stabilization work to improve collaboration.  One important component of this is moving common code into a shared library. In process, needs focus
How should invitations be handed out to Summit? Was the last process to Dev focused? 40% I was not aware of any discussion of this at the summit.  Looks like we all need to go out and commit some code! No Comment

Overall, I think that the Austin Stacker priorities were well positioned at the Design Summit.

After the split, I’m posted the twitter feed from the meeting (in post  order):

Continue reading

Dell Team at the OpenStack Spring 2012 Summit

It’s OpenStack Summit time again for my team at Dell and there’s deployment in the air. It’s been an amazing journey from the first Austin summit to Folsom today. Since those first heady days, the party has gotten a lot more crowded, founding members have faded away, recruiters became enriched as employees changed email TLDs and buckets of code was delivered.

Throughout, Dell has stayed the course: our focus from day-one has been ensuring OpenStack can be deployed into production in a way that was true to the OpenStack mission of community collaboration and Apache-2-licensed open source.

We’ve delivered on the making OpenStack deployable vision by collaborating broadly on the OpenStack components of the open source Crowbar project. I believe that our vision for sustainable open operations based on DevOps principles is the most complete strategy for production cloud deployments.

We are at the Folsom Summit in force and we’re looking forward to discussions with the OpenStack community. Here are some of the ways to engage with us:

  • Demos
    • During the summit (M-W), we’ll have our Crowbar OpenStack Essex deployments running. We kicked off Essex development with a world-wide event in early March and we want more people to come and join in.
    • During the conference (W-F), we’ll be showing off application deployments using enStratus and Chef against our field proven Diablo release.
  • Speakers
    • Thursday 1:00pm, OpenStack Gains Momentum: Customers are Speaking Up by Kamesh Pemmaraju (Dell)
    • Friday 9:50am, Deploy Apps on OpenStack using Dashboard, Chef and enStratus by Rob Hirschfeld (Dell), Matt Ray (Opscode) and Keith Hudgins (enStratus).
    • Friday 11:30am, Expanding the Community Panel
      including Joseph George (Dell)
    • This fun round trip road trip from Rackspace & Dell HQs in Austin to the summit and home again promises to be an odyssey of inclusion. Dell OpenStack/Crowbar engineer Andi Abes (@a_abes). Follow @RoadstackRV to follow along as they return home and share their thoughts about the summit!
  • Parties
    • Monday 6pm Mirantis Welcome Party, co-sponsored with Dell, at Sens Restaurant (RSVP)
    • Tuesday 5pm “Demos & Drinks” Happy Hour, co-hosted by Dell, Mirantis, Morphlabs, Canonical at the Hyatt Regency Hospitality Room off the Atrium

My team has been in the field talking to customers and doing OpenStack deployments. We are proud to talk about it and our approach.

Mostly importantly, we want to collaborate with you on our Essex deployments using Crowbar.  Get on our list, download/build crowbar, run the “essex-hack” branch and start banging on the deploy.  Let’s work together to make this one rock solid Essex deploy.

Seven Cloud Success Criteria to consider before you pick a platform

From my desk at Dell, I have a unique perspective.   In addition to a constant stream of deep customer interactions about our many cloud solutions (even going back pre-OpenStack to Joyent & Eucalyptus), I have been an active advocate for OpenStack, involved in many discussions with and about CloudStack and regularly talk shop with Dell’s VIS Creator (our enterprise focused virtualization products) teams.  And, if you go back ten years to 2002, patented the concept of hybrid clouds with Dave McCrory.

Rather than offering opinions in the Cloud v. Cloud fray, I’m suggesting that cloud success means taking a system view.

Platform choice is only part of the decision: operational readiness, application types and organization culture are critical foundations before platform.

Over the last two years at Dell, I found seven points outweigh customers’ choice of platform.

  1. Running clouds requires building operational expertise both at the application and infrastructure layers.  CloudOps is real.
  2. Application architectures matter for cloud deployment because they can redefine the SLA requirements and API expectations
  3. Development community and collaboration is a significant value because sharing around open operations offers significant returns.
  4. We need to build an accelerating pace of innovation into our core operating principles
  5. There are still significant technology gaps to fill (networking & storage) and we will discover new gaps as we go
  6. We can no longer discuss public and private clouds as distinct concepts.   True hybrid clouds are not here yet, but everyone can already see their massive shadow.
  7. There is always more than one right technological answer.  Avoid analysis paralysis by making incrementally correct decisions (committing, moving forward, learning and then re-evaluating).

OpenStack Meetup 4/12: Austin at Summit, DevStack Essex

Austin Stackers!  This Thursday is our April meetup at the Austin TechRanch.

Please RSVP so that we know how much food to get!  SUSE is this Month’s sponsor for food and my team at Dell continues to pickup the room rental.  We have 35 RSVPs as of Monday noon – this will be another popular meeting (last meeting minutes).

Topics for the meetup are:

With the Summit next week, I think it is very important that we pre-discuss Summit topics and priorities as a community.  It will help us be more productive individually and for our collective interests when we engage the larger community next week.

OpenStack vs CloudStack? It’s about open innovation.

Yesterday, I got a short drive in a “Kick-Ass” Fisker Karma.  As someone who converted a car to electric, it was a great treat to see the amazing quality, polish and sophistication of the Karma.  Especially since, six years ago, I had to build my own EV.  Today there is a diversity of choices ranging from the Nissan, GM, Tesla, Aptera, Fisker and others.  Yet even with all these choices, EVs are far from the main stream.

How does that relate to Cloud *aaS?  It’s all about innovation cycles and adoption.

Cloud platforms (really, IaaS software) have transformed from DIY to vibrant projects in the last few years; however, we still don’t know what the finished products will look like – we are only at the beginning of the innovation cycle.

With yesterday’s Citrix’s “CloudStack joins Apache” announcement painted as a shot against OpenStack, it is tempting to get pulled into a polarized view of the right or wrong way to implement cloud software (NetworkWorld,  JavaWorld, CloudPundit).  I think that feature by feature comparisons miss the real dynamics of the cloud market.

The question is not about features today, it is about forward velocity tomorrow.  There are important areas needing technology development (network, storage, etc) in the cloud infrastructure space.  

So the real story, expressed eloquently by Thierry Carrez, is about open collaboration and the resulting pace of innovation.  That means that I consider all the cloud platforms in the market to be immature because we are still learning the scope of the “cloud” opportunity.

The critical question is how the various cloud projects will maintain growth and adopt innovation.  Like the current generation of EVs, we must both prove value in production and demonstrate our ability to learn and improve.

The Citrix decision to submit CloudStack to the Apache Foundation underscores this point: success of projects is about attracting collaboration and innovation.

From the perspective of building innovation and attracting developers, the tension between OpenStack and CloudStack is very real.