On Nov 3, 2010, at 8:44 AM, Robyn Bergeron wrote:

> FWIU, Major Hayden (rackerhacker on IRC) had the images uploaded
> yesterday for F14 launch, and they're available to use on rackspace
> cloud / slicehost already, as he's done for F13 and F12 releases.
> This is what spurred this thread originally - that it would be great
> for us to be marketing that F14 is available through other providers
> as well.
> 
> It's not necessarily a case of "knowing the right guy" - I think it's
> more than we have a Fedora enthusiast over at Rackspace, and uploading
> those images happens to be part of his job.  Of course, that could
> theoretically become a single point of failure if he left, so I think
> it would be good to have the discussion with about what the options
> are to circumvent that situation.  He's on this list, so I'll poke him
> on IRC and see if he can provide us with some more detail.
> 
> -robyn

Robyn described my work pretty well.  I'm the guy responsible for building all 
of the Linux base images for Rackspace customers to use, but there are others 
on my team that pitch in as well.  It's also true that I'm a Fedora enthusiast. 
;)

I started this discussion in IRC because although I'm glad to see traction on 
Fedora on EC2 (more Fedora usage is great), there are other providers (like the 
one I work for) that expend a lot of effort to provide Fedora for customers 
without any effort required from the Cloud SIG or Fedora developers.  However, 
those providers don't receive much attention or recognition in the fashion that 
EC2 does[1].  I completely understand that EC2 is extremely popular and that 
many cloud users think that EC2 is the only cloud compute offering available. 
;-)

Just for a little background, we've had Fedora running on Xen at Rackspace for 
customers since Fedora 9.  We go through thorough processes to provide a 
consistent experience for users when new Fedora releases are made and we 
perform a large amount of testing with new Fedora releases in our environment.  
While we certainly welcome outside assistance, we don't require any help to get 
a new Fedora release out the door for customers.  If something's broken, we 
find workarounds.  If it's still broken after that, we engage the development 
community to find a solution.

Robyn asked this morning if building the Fedora images is one of the duties of 
my job, or if it's something I do on my own time.  It's a bit of both; most of 
our demand surrounds Ubuntu and CentOS.  Users tend to prefer Ubuntu because 
they find it easier to use (I don't necessarily agree) and they prefer CentOS 
because of its stability.  Fedora is usually a "back-burner" item for the 
business but I take pride in pushing it to the front burner when a new release 
is available.

Robyn also asked about the possibility of the Cloud SIG uploading a Fedora 
image for customer use (as Amazon does with AMI's) and the possibility of 
running the Fedora kernel.  We don't offer the image upload option quite yet 
(but it's on the way), but we are offering pv-grub (in beta) for customers to 
use whichever kernel they like within their instance.  Once that comes out of 
beta, we will probably build Fedora images with pv-grub enabled and the Fedora 
kernel installed from the start.

As always, if there's anything else I can do for the Fedora community, I'm 
eager to help!

[1] http://press.redhat.com/2010/10/28/fedora-14-has-its-head-in-the-cloud/

--
Major Hayden
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