Anyone have opinions on this? Good idea? Bad idea?

On 13.11.24 12:33 PM, Joseph P. De Veaugh-Geiss wrote:
Hi! I'd like to ask the KDE community to give feedback on a possible eco initiative within KDE. The Open Source company Green Coding Solutions has a new tool called Eco-CI to estimate the carbon footprint of the CI/ CD pipeline. Is there support for adopting this tool within the KDE community (e.g., for Okular, as proposed)?

FYI if you are interested in talking with the developers directly, join the KDE Eco online meetup next week (see below) where Arne and Didi will be presenting.

As I see it, benefits of integrating Eco-CI into the development pipeline include:

 - Maximal transparency about the embodied carbon of a software releases in KDE.
  - Opportunities for data-driven improvement.
 - Quantifiable differences for any changes made to the development process.  - KDE will be a leader in providing data about the carbon footprint of our software development.

Drawbacks could include:

 - KDE may be the only organization providing such data and it could give negative impressions abut our environmental impact (to note: I don't think this is necessarily a good argument, but I can see it being one).  - Discouraging use of the CI/CD pipeline could negatively impact software quality.

Other benefits? Drawbacks? Do you support the idea?

More info can be found about Green Coding Solutions and the Eco-CI tool at this MR in the Okular repository: https://invent.kde.org/graphics/ okular/-/merge_requests/1030

"""
[Eco-CI] integrates into the GitLab CI/CD pipeline and estimates the energy and CO2 consumption of the pipeline by utilizing a Machine Learning model trained on real server energy data from SPECpower

The tool creates awareness of the energy cost and carbon emissions of CI/CD pipelines and empowers developers to create action for more sustainability.
"""

If you want to discuss with the Eco-CI developers directly, join us next Wednesday 20 November 19h CET (see below for details).

Cheers,
Joseph

-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: online meetup Wed. 20 Nov. 18h UTC | Green Coding Solutions: "Eco-CI" and "Powerletrics"
Date: Tue, 5 Nov 2024 12:40:14 +0100
From: Joseph P. De Veaugh-Geiss <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]

After a short three-month hiatus, the next KDE Eco online meetup will be Wednesday *20 November* 18-19h UTC! I am excited to announce that Green Coding Solutions will present two of their new measurement tools:

  - "Eco-CI" to measure energy consumption of CI/CD pipeline
  - "Powerletrics" Linux kernel extension for power usage estimations

Eco-CI has been suggested for integration into the Okular's CI/CD pipeline. For discussion, see: https://invent.kde.org/graphics/okular/-/ merge_requests/1030

See below for more details.

Minutes from past meetups can be found here: https://invent.kde.org/ teams/eco/opt-green/-/tree/master/community-meetups

_Overview_

*When*: Wed. 20 November 18-19h UTC

*Where*: https://meet.kde.org/b/jos-l59-2i1-9yt

*Topic*: Green Coding Solutions tools "Eco-CI" (CI/CD pipeline) and "Powerletrics" (Linux kernel extension)

*Pad*: Further ideas are collected at this pad, please add ideas of your own:

        https://collaborate.kde.org/s/cactBt4frrfTjbW

*Details*:

Eco-CI [0] is an open source GitHub / GitLab Plugin that estimates the energy and carbon emissions of a CI/CD workload. It hooks into the pipeline and will print a summary directly in the logs or as a downloadable artifact. Arne, one of the core developers, will present the tool and show some numbers from repos, including their average emissions, to get a feel for the importance of the topic. A discussion of integrating Eco-CI into Okular's GitLab repository will follow the presentation.

Powerletrics [1] is a kernel extension that brings per process power usage estimations to Linux. It is modelled after the MacOS tool powermetrics which developers can use to gain insights into their environmental impact of their code. With modern ICT infrastructure using more and more resources, it is important that there are easy tools for monitoring and optimisation available so that we don’t waste precious resources.

[0] https://github.com/green-coding-solutions/eco-ci-energy-estimation
[1] https://github.com/green-kernel/powerletrics


--
Joseph P. De Veaugh-Geiss (he/him)
KDE Eco Project & Community Manager
OpenPGP: 8FC5 4178 DC44 AD55 08E7 DF57 453E 5746 59A6 C06F
Matrix: @joseph:kde.org

Generally available Monday-Thursday from 10-16h CET/CEST. Outside of these times it may take a little longer for me to respond.

KDE Eco: Building Energy-Efficient Free Software!
Website: https://eco.kde.org
Mastodon: @[email protected]

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