> On 27. 1. 2021, at 18:07, [email protected] wrote:
> 
> Hello,
> 
> Oracle Linux is offering CentOS users/dev/production servers to switch to 
> Oracle Linux free of cost. They've produced a script to do this.  Oracle also 
> has their own Repo's for oVirt and use it for their own Oracle Linux 
> Virtualization Manager [Re-branded oVirt].
> 
> I know Red Hat has announced moving away from RHV and focusing on OpenShift 
> virtualization. They'll happen in 2022-forward.  Are we already to assume 
> oVirt will follow suite and migrate to OpenShift??

oVirt is an open source project, RHV is Red Hat’s product, they don’t 
necessarily mean the same
Openshift Virtualization already exists, it has upstream too, though not very 
mature yet. 

We will look at collaboration there for sure, like we did before with Openstack 
integrations. But that doesn’t mean we migrate oVirt into Openshift tomorrow.
Kubevirt/Kubernetes is a very different thing, it may make sense for some 
people to eventually move there, it may make sense for others not to. Well, 
like with Openstack...

> 
> Questions:
> Since announcement of CentOS going EOL and move to CentOS Stream... [Not 
> doing it].  
> 
> - Will the oVirt team continue to develop past 4.4 release as well as support 
> Oracle Linux? 

There were emails on that before - we changed our development model to rather 
continuous “4.4.z” with faster incremental updates instead of 9+ months large 
drops. So in that sense “beyond 4.4” is where we are already. As for OL support 
see the other thread, I do not see why it wouldn’t work provided that RHEL will 
work. Can’t say if we will have any resources to dedicate to OL specifically.

> - Does Oracle really develop to their own ovirt repo and virtualization 
> manager product

no idea if there’s a fork. As for a product, afaik yes, there’s OLVM.

> - What about supporting OpenSuSE or SLES?

not on the roadmap. we had discussions about different distros, also long time 
ago, but it’s not feasible, there are too many little differences. If anyone 
would want to contribute we don’t mind, but it’s by no means a small feat (we 
do have some remains here or there from our failed debian attempt long long 
time ago)

> - oVirt packages on RHEL?  [RH announced they will allow RHEL installed on up 
> to 16-hosts for FREE]

possibly. But dependencies are the key...

> I am considering to test moving CentOS 7 development  work-loads to Oracle 
> Linux and use their oVirt repo.
> 
> Really like to know if oVirt developers plan to continue to build on what is 
> there moving forward. Or will the project die?  I use oVirt on production 
> work-loads [same as others] with GREAT success.  This is an absolute VMWare 
> replacement.

Great to hear, We are still very much around.
But many of those questions/plans do depend on contributors. We’d be very happy 
to accept other contributors who would want to expand/improve oVirt...

Thanks,
michal

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