Hi,
so as people know, the ansible repository is quite old. Fedora was one of the first big public ansible user, and as such, has a rather huge repo.
And going where no one has gone before has the downside of not being able to build on others people experience with the new tools, resulting in sometime less optimal solutions, or using older patterns, or just regular bitrot. And as people have seen on the list, I did sent a few patches for refactoring and cleaning things around as I did explore the repo, but I think it would be more efficient to work on that as a team.
Therefor, I would like to know who would be interested by a hackfest during flock this year. The idea would be to focus on improving existing playbooks. And among the tasks, we could have: - convert tasks who are not to be roles (example, 2fa) - start using dependencies among roles (example, collectd, fedmsg) - move from yum modules to packages (to handle the yum to dnf change) - remove things < F21 (or EL 6 when applicable) - move handlers, vars, files to role (or role arguments) - move cronjob declaration to cron module (since currently, cron is not reloaded, so changes are not picked)
and I think that alone would keep us busy. That's most of the time small tasks, so that would scale well to any number of participants, and with a low complexity, so open to everybody.
I already did the proposal before the end of the Cfp, but I kinda forgot to send a email about it.
Any people besides me interested ?
On Mon, Apr 11, 2016 at 10:41:44AM +0200, Michael Scherer wrote:
Hi,
so as people know, the ansible repository is quite old. Fedora was one of the first big public ansible user, and as such, has a rather huge repo.
And going where no one has gone before has the downside of not being able to build on others people experience with the new tools, resulting in sometime less optimal solutions, or using older patterns, or just regular bitrot. And as people have seen on the list, I did sent a few patches for refactoring and cleaning things around as I did explore the repo, but I think it would be more efficient to work on that as a team.
Therefor, I would like to know who would be interested by a hackfest during flock this year. The idea would be to focus on improving existing playbooks. And among the tasks, we could have:
- convert tasks who are not to be roles (example, 2fa)
- start using dependencies among roles (example, collectd, fedmsg)
- move from yum modules to packages (to handle the yum to dnf change)
I had a discussion with Toshio on IRC a while ago and the package module isn't actually *the* answer to all our use-cases. For the simplest cases it will work, but for example if we want/need to interact with repo (for example adding infra-testing) then it won't work. So a playbook like the upgrade_package one, is not really convertible to the packages module :(
That being said, for roles where we only install packages, porting from yum/dnf to packages should work,
- remove things < F21 (or EL 6 when applicable)
- move handlers, vars, files to role (or role arguments)
- move cronjob declaration to cron module (since currently, cron is not reloaded,
so changes are not picked)
and I think that alone would keep us busy. That's most of the time small tasks, so that would scale well to any number of participants, and with a low complexity, so open to everybody.
I already did the proposal before the end of the Cfp, but I kinda forgot to send a email about it.
Any people besides me interested ?
I think it's a good idea. Eventually we could tackle a few of these during technical debt fighting weeks as well.
Pierre
On Mon, Apr 11, 2016 at 11:18:47AM +0200, Pierre-Yves Chibon wrote:
On Mon, Apr 11, 2016 at 10:41:44AM +0200, Michael Scherer wrote:
Hi,
so as people know, the ansible repository is quite old. Fedora was one of the first big public ansible user, and as such, has a rather huge repo.
And going where no one has gone before has the downside of not being able to build on others people experience with the new tools, resulting in sometime less optimal solutions, or using older patterns, or just regular bitrot. And as people have seen on the list, I did sent a few patches for refactoring and cleaning things around as I did explore the repo, but I think it would be more efficient to work on that as a team.
Therefor, I would like to know who would be interested by a hackfest during flock this year. The idea would be to focus on improving existing playbooks. And among the tasks, we could have:
- convert tasks who are not to be roles (example, 2fa)
- start using dependencies among roles (example, collectd, fedmsg)
- move from yum modules to packages (to handle the yum to dnf change)
I had a discussion with Toshio on IRC a while ago and the package module isn't actually *the* answer to all our use-cases. For the simplest cases it will work, but for example if we want/need to interact with repo (for example adding infra-testing) then it won't work. So a playbook like the upgrade_package one, is not really convertible to the packages module :(
My proposal is only to cover things along those lines: https://infrastructure.fedoraproject.org/cgit/ansible.git/commit/?id=9cea817...
ie, instead of having several variation on "package installation', just have one so playbooks are shorter and more idiomatic.
And looking on https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/yum_module.html vs https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/package_module.html show that indeed, there is a bit more options in yum modules that the generic wrapper :)
That being said, for roles where we only install packages, porting from yum/dnf to packages should work,
- remove things < F21 (or EL 6 when applicable)
- move handlers, vars, files to role (or role arguments)
- move cronjob declaration to cron module (since currently, cron is not reloaded,
so changes are not picked)
and I think that alone would keep us busy. That's most of the time small tasks, so that would scale well to any number of participants, and with a low complexity, so open to everybody.
I already did the proposal before the end of the Cfp, but I kinda forgot to send a email about it.
Any people besides me interested ?
I think it's a good idea. Eventually we could tackle a few of these during technical debt fighting weeks as well.
In a ideal world, we could also start to write some doc on the best practices, or improve ansible-lint to push people to follow those guidelines.
Also, I can't really make sure I would be present for a technical debt fighting week, while I would be present for flock :)
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