On 11/06/2011, at 2:41 AM, Perry Myers wrote:
On 06/10/2011 12:24 PM, Mark McLoughlin wrote:
<snip>
> - should pacemaker-cloud be a part of Aeolus releases so that we
can
> pimp the HA stuff as an Aeolus feature? if so, is it okay for it to
> follow the Aeolus release schedule?
I think that sounds like a reasonable idea. I think the notion of guest
monitoring is sort of essential, so I'd like to see tight integration.
pcmk-cloud is a separable component though, so I don't think it would be
in the same tarball as another Aeolus component, but I'd have no
objection with bundling pcmk-cloud releases with Aeolus overall releases
and also no objection to tying their schedules together.
Trying to think what this would mean in practical terms.
We presently have:
+ an existing "stable" release (Fedora 14 & RHEL 6.1 rpms in public repos)
It's version 0.2.0 presently (kind of old), and we're working on 0.3.0
+ a "development/testing" repo (Fedora 14 & RHEL 6.1 rpms in public repos)
Rpms go in here pretty frequently. They're presently the rpms being
worked upon for Aeolus 0.3.0.
For any of these repo's, we carry every package (and dependency) that we
need, that's not already in each base OS.
So, we carry what's not in Fedora 14, and what's not in RHEL 6.1.
(tracked separately) We're actively getting packages put into Fedora
proper too, so we don't have to completely maintain them ourselves.
Looking at the Pacemaker Cloud README in git, it looks like this would
add a further new dependency package of libqb:
https://github.com/pacemaker-cloud/pacemaker-cloud
And we might need to get the qpid on F14 updated too (unsure).
Not sure of the effort involved, to do this. Chris Lalancette has
been involved in the Aeolus packaging side of things, so would be
able to give more guidance.
In the medium to long term, it could be interesting (depending upon
effort required). In the short term, not sure if this would mean
we'd be overcommitting ourselves?
+ Justin
Steve, any thoughts on the above or objections?
Perry
--
Aeolus Community Manager
http://www.aeolusproject.org