Il giorno lun 7 feb 2022 alle ore 00:15 Patrick Hibbs <
hibbsncc1701(a)gmail.com> ha scritto:
I wouldn't mind doing some testing. I have a little coding
experience but
it's mostly on the desktop (Application) side of things not Web. Although
if it meant getting a proper certificate management UI I'd be willing do
it. (I've been thinking about rolling up my sleeves for that exact purpose
anyway.)
The main issue as I see it is two fold:
1. We don't have all of the needed sources to rebuild ovirt from scratch.
I.e. We're missing the oVirt Node build scripts.
Replied about this just a minute ago:
https://lists.ovirt.org/archives/list/users@ovirt.org/message/LLKJKW22FAY...
In addition to that, I would be happy to peer with you (or find someone if
I'm too busy) if you step in and offer to build node and maintain it for
your $preferred_distribution as we have a peer program offer to help
whoever wants to step in:
https://lists.ovirt.org/archives/list/users@ovirt.org/message/QQVZHTFBF7N...
Further, we also don't have a complete set of SRPMs. I've
tried getting
them for backup / disaster recovery issues, and it's a huge pain to track
them all down from the various repos that are involved. Keep in mind that
was *before* RH started archiving repos so it's probably even harder now.
(Note: You can't just do "reposync --source" that's been broken for
years
because CentOS didn't want to rebuild their package lists to include them
automaticly. Some of them are on
vault.centos.org, but some are not.
Tracking down the third party repos oVirt uses is also difficult for the
same reason.) Does anyone have a link to the complete set of source
packages outside of oVirt's dev team?
All src.rpm for ovirt and its dependencies are publicly available, if you
dont' find something feel free to ask and we'll point you to the src.rpm.
2. oVirt's fate is still very much uncertain. I don't think anyone
really wants to go through the trouble of creating a fork unless oVirt as a
project is truely EOL'd. Currently we know that RHVM will EOL in a few
years, but the oVirt project itself has made no such annoucement. All of
the threads on this subject are more or less contingency planning sessions
and criticism of a decision they haven't made yet. Personally, I think we
should wait until oVirt has made their statement publicly before going down
this path.
As for why the criticism is being made, I can say it has some merrit. If
oVirt were to continue past RHVM's EOL, or if oVirt were to be forked by
the community into a new project, accepting the RH deprecations into
oVirt's design and source tree is short-sighted. At best it's them trying
to avoid techincal debt and loosing (unofficial) support for RHEL. At
worst, it's oVirt degrading itself in deference to RH's new shiny offering
at the oVirt users' expense and detriment. Again, we're now at two
functionalities that have been, or will be, removed: SPICE (which is all
around better than the suggested VNC replacement) and now GlusterFS (which
will cause massive downtime for those unfortunate enough to have used it as
their storage backend.) Given that oVirt never really supported RHEL
outright, (i.e. it's not tested on that platform), and that many of the
people on this mailing list have requested support for CentOS's various
replacement distros. I, and others, don't see a reason for oVirt's
continuing to accept these changes. A statement on the matter would be nice.
Personally, I will wait for an official annoucement from oVirt before
making any decisions as well. Although, for what it's worth, I would cast
my vote to retain the GlusterFS support if it's avaiable on the hosts. I
was already using GlusterFS 9 packages in oVirt 4.3 and CentOS 7 so I could
connect a set of raspberry pi 4 bricks to the engine. So it's not like the
support cannot exist if RH doesn't provide the packages for it. (Fun home
experiment. Turns out it works just fine. I can easily run 20+ VMs
concurrently with this setup, and it pays for itself via the electric bill
as a bonus.)
-Patrick Hibbs
On Sun, 2022-02-06 at 19:07 +0000, David White via Users wrote:
At the risk of sounding like a Red Hat or IBM fanboy, I have decided to
give Red Hat the benefit of the doubt here, and to not make any decisions
about switching off of oVirt until and unless an official announcement is
made.
In the meantime, I know that I need to move off of Gluster (and I made
that decision before the Gluster announcement), and I would need storage
with any other solution anyway, so that's where I'm going to focus my own
efforts.
In the meantime, while I realize that the optics of a company like IBM /
Red Hat shutting a project like oVirt down looks bad to the FOSS community,
I'm going to push back a little bit. We have had access to a FOSS
application that obviously works for a lot of people. No company is
required to provide their services for free, and likewise, I'm of the
opinion that one needs to be willing to pay (or contribute in some way) for
a quality product service. It reminds me of the mantra: "Fast, Cheap, Free
- pick two".
So here's an alternative perspective: What can the community contribute
and do in order to keep the project going? Anyone could fork it, rebrand
it, and run with it.
I claim to be a software developer, and the uplink in my datacenter is
only 100mbps right now (of course I can increase it when needed), so I
doubt I could provide much value in terms of hosting or coding.
But I do know security. I'm a Linux systems engineer with over 10 years of
experience. I know website content management systems. And people have told
me that I'm good at documentation. So I think I have a lot of skill sets
that I could "offer" (albeit I don't have much time, and as we all know,
time is money. I've been dealing with a serious personal matter since
beginning of December, and I'm effectively an acting single parent at the
moment).
I'll end this the way I started: I'm going to wait to see what happens
before I personally make any decisions to change my entire underlying
virtualization infrastructure. In the meantime, I'll continue to work on
what I can control - the underlying storage. And if oVirt does shutdown in
the future, I'd love to have a conversation with anyone interested in
helping out to fork the project and keep it running.
Sent with ProtonMail <
https://protonmail.com/> Secure Email.
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