On 07/05/2012 04:07 PM, Dave Neary wrote:
Hi,
On 07/05/2012 09:40 PM, Robert Middleswarth wrote:
> On 07/05/2012 01:11 PM, Dave Neary wrote:
>> 1. We come up with a set (5-10) of demo stories we want to tell in the
>> wiki. These should contain:
>> * The feature we want to demo
>> * The "before recording" set-up that needs to be done
>> * The steps to demo the feature
>> * A quick script that someone can follow to explain what they're
>> doing.
>>
>> I'd like a few of these scripts to be for existing oVirt features
>> (say, migrating a VM to a different node) and a few to be for features
>> which are new in 3.1 (see the release notes at
>>
http://ovirt.org/wiki/Release_Notes_Draft for details there, we should
>> pick one or two nice visible features like all-in-one install).
>>
> How are we going to decide on these features we want to demo? Also some
My thoughts were low-tech - everyone propose that we demo their
favourite feature. I was going to see the page with what I thought
were the most promising features from the release notes and the home
page, and throw in a couple of ringers that people would disagree with
to start discussion & debate ;-)
I'm guessing that the number of things we'll want to demo will be
small enough that the priority will be obvious. We can always do more,
as long as we respect the priority listand get the most important ones
done before the release, if possible.
> of the features like Glusterfs integration might be to complex for a 5
> to 10 min video.
True. Although the actual "add Glusterfs as a storage node" demo could
be literally 30s - but of course, we wouldn't be showing how to set up
the Glusterfs cluster in that.
As I understand it, the steps are:
1. Turn on Gluster support in the Clusters preferences of the Engine
2. Ensure vdsm-gluster is installed on the node
3. Create a volume in the Engine preferences, add some bricks, and
make it available to nodes.
A few of those steps make the diff between an working
and not working
setup. This morning I upgraded to a newer beta and had to
engine-cleanup my setup. I forgot one of my own steps. Should have
read my own guide :) In fact I had to pull up my own guide to remember
the step I missed.
I got all this from your tutorials, there may be small but important
steps I've left out - but if we assume that someone has an engine,
some nodes, and a Gluster set-up as prerequisites, then we can get it
down to a 10 minute webcast.
I do take your point, though. In general anything longer than 5-10
minutes (5 minutes is the sweet spot, anything longer than 15, people
won't watch) is too long, and we should break it up into steps, each
of which makes sense on its own.
Most projects don't have to bandwidth to hosts
there own video's and use
either Vimeo or Youtube. Youtube limits you to 10 min video so that is
a good max :) But 5 min is a good length.
>> 3. Finally, we do voice-overs to add a sound track to the demo (and if
>> we have any skilled sound engineers, some tasteful CC licenced
>> background music would be great!)
> Sounding like a good overview now it is time to get into the mud and
> figure out how to implement that.
Cool :) What I like to hear. For recording audio, I was thinking very
simply, record a sound-track while talking along to the video. You'll
need some kind of a script to make it go well, and I'd expect that
it'll take 4 or 5 takes before you'll have something you're happy
with, but if you cut down the demo to the bare bones, it can work
really well.
>> If it sounds good, which features do you think we should screencast as
>> top priority?
> Well I think you have already hit one of the most useful ones.
>
> 1) VM migrations
>
> Other simple idea that might make useful video's are.
>
> 2) The Log Collector (engine-log-collector), Maybe even showing the
> creation of a BZ report?
> 3) Uploading ISO (engine-iso-uploader), May be a little simple but we
> could combine with getting the ISO for windows drivers?
> 4) How to upload images (engine-image-uploader) or Migrating from
> another system using something like virt-v2v / virt-p2v
> 5) Cloning a Virtual Machine from a Snapshot.
> 6) Creating Templates
> 7) Pinning Virtual Machines to specific physical CPUs
> 8) Setup multiple networks showing how to activate and connecting to a
> hosts.
> 9) Adding storage domains? Building a data center?
> 10) Exporting VM for backup or moving to another data center.
I definitely like adding storage domains/new disks, uploading
images/ISOs, creating new images from templates or snapshots,
migrating from another system. Someone would need to explain to me why
Log Collector and CPU pinning are cool, and I'm not sure if setting up
multiple networks would make for a cool demo.
It might not be sexy to some but to an admin like me it would be. A
utility to helps me collect the need info for a bug report and makes my
life easier would be very sexy to me. Also really useful for internal
use as we could point people to the video/howto for submitting bugs.
I was thinking stuff like "adding a new node/VM" or
"connecting
remotely to a VM" would be kind of simple, but useful.
I could see creating a
VM. But connecting to VNC might actually turn
some users off. Showing spice under might be because it is more integrated.
Cheers,
Dave.