Testing oVirt...
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@scottalanmiller said in Testing oVirt...:
I didn't, I called software that doesn't keep up to date and leverages ancient libraries and doesn't consider the next update to be the starting path of abandonment.
But a package that relies on a stable LTS API doesn't need to be old. It can be updated as frequently as you like, the difference being - no need to constantly keep changing the way it works with the underlying OS, you can focus on the actual functionality of the app
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@scottalanmiller said in Testing oVirt...:
@dyasny said in Testing oVirt...:
@scottalanmiller wait, you expect software to be supported beyond a 10 year cadence? It can be extended to 20 for a customer, actually.
I want it supported currently. I want software actually being still developed today. Not that will "continue to run" twenty years after the developers quit and bugs just remain forever.
Zmanda comes to mind as an example of this exact issue. You really don't want that with a backup vendor!
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@scottalanmiller said in Testing oVirt...:
I want it supported currently. I want software actually being still developed today. Not that will "continue to run" twenty years after the developers quit and bugs just remain forever.
Why should it not be current, only because it relies on a stable OS?
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@dyasny said in Testing oVirt...:
What you describe is exactly what you are opposing here - always latest, always at the edge, and if development slows down even a bit, the entire product is worthless. Are you sure that's what you want to rely on?
This isn't Fedora. Fedora is not on the edge. It's stable, conservative. Just being updated regularly is in no way the same as being on the edge.
You could update daily, but have a year of testing before release. The frequency of release has no bearing on the "edginess" of the release. Those are two different factors.
CentOS could release once a decade, but be bleeding edge at release time. They aren't, but they could.
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@dyasny said in Testing oVirt...:
@scottalanmiller said in Testing oVirt...:
I want it supported currently. I want software actually being still developed today. Not that will "continue to run" twenty years after the developers quit and bugs just remain forever.
Why should it not be current, only because it relies on a stable OS?
You have to stop saying one is stable and one is on the edge. That's simply not what we are talking about. We are talking about a really slow update cycle, and a smaller update but more regular cycle.
In my mind, I want stable. So that means Fedora. CentOS is unstable, so I don't want software that demands it.
Your reasons make sense, but draw me to the opposite conclusion.
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@scottalanmiller said in Testing oVirt...:
This isn't Fedora. Fedora is not on the edge. It's stable, conservative. Just being updated regularly is in no way the same as being on the edge.
It is actually. 6 months is a very short time for QA to tackle an OS release, so it doesn't really. And updated regularly? Come on, do you do a
fedup
on a server every 6 months?You could update daily, but have a year of testing before release. The frequency of release has no bearing on the "edginess" of the release. Those are two different factors.
I can update CentOS as soon as updates arrive. They do arrive, and often enough.
CentOS could release once a decade, but be bleeding edge at release time. They aren't, but they could.
EL is pretty close to the current Fedora at release time in many ways. All the bits that are deemed important are backported, do NOT look at the versions, those numbers are really there to show the initial version of a package things started at, not the update level the backports took the package to atm
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@scottalanmiller I'm sorry, but your perception is really skewed here. Fedora is there to bring all the latest upstream code into an RPM oriented build, every few years, a Fedora version is frozen, and starts going through testing, bugfixing and retesting cycles very intensively. As more features arrive in the newer Fedora builds, those get backported into the frozen version, until it end up as an EL distribution. Not everything goes into EL (notably joystick drivers are skipped), but the stuff that is important for the enterprise use case all gets backported and yes tested and retested.
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@dyasny said in Testing oVirt...:
@scottalanmiller I'm sorry, but your perception is really skewed here. Fedora is there to bring all the latest upstream code into an RPM oriented build, every few years, a Fedora version is frozen, and starts going through testing, bugfixing and retesting cycles very intensively. As more features arrive in the newer Fedora builds, those get backported into the frozen version, until it end up as an EL distribution. Not everything goes into EL (notably joystick drivers are skipped), but the stuff that is important for the enterprise use case all gets backported and yes tested and retested.
ALl of that I've written about in that article. So you know I'm aware of it and talk about it.
But stuff needed for enterprise use in CentOS is NOT back ported. It just never arrives. CentOS is simply too stagnant for most real world applications. And anyone relying on it is the concern. Not CentOS itself, but the applications.
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@dyasny said in Testing oVirt...:
@scottalanmiller said in Testing oVirt...:
This isn't Fedora. Fedora is not on the edge. It's stable, conservative. Just being updated regularly is in no way the same as being on the edge.
It is actually. 6 months is a very short time for QA to tackle an OS release, so it doesn't really. And updated regularly? Come on, do you do a
fedup
on a server every 6 months?You could update daily, but have a year of testing before release. The frequency of release has no bearing on the "edginess" of the release. Those are two different factors.
I can update CentOS as soon as updates arrive. They do arrive, and often enough.
CentOS could release once a decade, but be bleeding edge at release time. They aren't, but they could.
EL is pretty close to the current Fedora at release time in many ways. All the bits that are deemed important are backported, do NOT look at the versions, those numbers are really there to show the initial version of a package things started at, not the update level the backports took the package to atm
"deemed important", but not to end users.
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@dyasny said in Testing oVirt...:
@scottalanmiller said in Testing oVirt...:
This isn't Fedora. Fedora is not on the edge. It's stable, conservative. Just being updated regularly is in no way the same as being on the edge.
It is actually. 6 months is a very short time for QA to tackle an OS release, so it doesn't really. And updated regularly? Come on, do you do a
fedup
on a server every 6 months?Yes we do. My standard images both have daily updates applied automatically (I have a Fedora and a Debian that I use.) The only thing I have to kick off myself is the twice a year system upgrade, and that's so much easier than any CentOS system update I've ever had to do.
Nitpicking time: It's not longer
fedup
, it was usingdnf
up to 28. I don't know what the update mechanism for 28 is/will be yet. -
@scottalanmiller EL is a platform, with the current container craze, all it really needs to be good at is running containers and supporting hardware well. That is already there and always was. All the bleeding edge development stuff is usually available not packaged for an OS but in the distribution channel for the specific language or platform (think pip, cpan, spark-packages.org or ansible-galaxy) or even easier - on dockerhub. So the apps can get support if they need it, and quite easily so. And in the modern, common use case of a cloud or k8s - what you have is a stable EL running the platform and your dev/test/stage/prod stuff in specific VMs or lightweight containers.
Software that has to run on the metal is usually of the same philosophy as EL itself
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@scottalanmiller said in Testing oVirt...:
"deemed important", but not to end users.
As an ex-product manager at RHT, I've sat through meetings with end users who laid out what was important for them, and then oversaw backports being made exactly for those features.
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@dyasny said in Testing oVirt...:
It is actually. 6 months is a very short time for QA to tackle an OS release, so it doesn't really. And updated regularly? Come on, do you do a fedup on a server every 6 months?
It's not like Windows where they have a whole team of people going over every bit of the OS.
It's Fedora Linux, it's not "Fedora" who is QAing every package. That's up to Apache to QA Apache stuff... not Fedora. That goes for just about every package that makes up a GNU/Linux OS if you know what I mean.
Fedora verify it's working smoothing together, picking stable releases of every package that goes in to it, and making sure they are happy together. It's not as involved, still a process, but not like it is with Windows where it needs years of testing, QA, etc..
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@travisdh1 dnf or yum or whatever, it's just a utility name, you know what I'm talking about, that's what's important
Frankly, knowing how often this (
fedy
) procedure breaks things or leaves muddy tracks all over the carpets, if you will, I'd hate to be responsible for a production setup where this is common practice. In disposable VMs - sure, who cares, just spawn some more if it dies. But on production platform machines - I like to be able to have weekends and see my family sometimes too much -
@obsolesce How many opensource OS and related products have you overseen from upstream ingestion to release?
Windows, actually, doesn't have much QA done, they release as soon as they stabilize, this is why no Windows is usable until SP1 at least. That's how they killed Netware, where the QA cycle was around 18 months, but the OS came out absolutely solid and bulletproof. And nothing changes since, except the adoption of the DevOps methodologies, which speed release up even more.
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@dyasny said in Testing oVirt...:
@obsolesce How many opensource OS and related products have you overseen from upstream ingestion to release?
Windows, actually, doesn't have much QA done, they release as soon as they stabilize, this is why no Windows is usable until SP1 at least. That's how they killed Netware, where the QA cycle was around 18 months, but the OS came out absolutely solid and bulletproof. And nothing changes since, except the adoption of the DevOps methodologies, which speed release up even more.
Ya obviously there's no good QA at Microsoft or their stuff wouldn't be broken every month. I get that lol.
But that wasn't my point at all.
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@obsolesce it just seems to me (and I might be wrong here of course) that you are speaking as an end user, a consumer of an opensource solution, and you do not know what is happening before the solution is released to the end user. Hence my question, which you ignored.
I'll make it clear though - for an enterprise level product to be released, even if it pulls in upstream code, everything has to be retested, both the functionality and the integration with the downstream stack. It would not be an enterprise product otherwise. And yes, this is no theory, I've been a part of this process in various capacities for over a decade now.
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@dyasny said in Testing oVirt...:
@travisdh1 dnf or yum or whatever, it's just a utility name, you know what I'm talking about, that's what's important
:thumbs_up:
Frankly, knowing how often this (
fedy
) procedure breaks things or leaves muddy tracks all over the carpets, if you will, I'd hate to be responsible for a production setup where this is common practice. In disposable VMs - sure, who cares, just spawn some more if it dies. But on production platform machines - I like to be able to have weekends and see my family sometimes too muchI actually agree with you that
fedup
was bad, which is why it was only around for a short time. The dnf tooling has been rock solid since they moved to it. -
@dyasny said in Testing oVirt...:
...everything has to be retested, both the functionality and the integration with the downstream stack.
That is exactly how I "summed it up" here in children's terms:
@obsolesce said in Testing oVirt...:
Fedora verify it's working smoothing together, picking stable releases of every package that goes in to it, and making sure they are happy together.
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@dyasny said in Testing oVirt...:
I'll make it clear though - for an enterprise level product to be released, even if it pulls in upstream code, everything has to be retested, both the functionality and the integration with the downstream stack. It would not be an enterprise product otherwise. And yes, this is no theory, I've been a part of this process in various capacities for over a decade now.
But nobody does this for every package included in a repository for every release that I know of. That would mean billions of tests for a modern distribution!