On 02/24/2014 01:50 AM, Christopher Yeoh wrote: > Hi, > > There has recently been some speculation around the V3 API and whether > we should go forward with it or instead backport many of the changes > to the V2 API. I believe that the core of the concern is the extra > maintenance and test burden that supporting two APIs means and the > length of time before we are able to deprecate the V2 API and return > to maintaining only one (well two including EC2) API again.
Yes, this is a major concern. It has taken an enormous amount of work to get to where we are, and v3 isn't done. It's a good time to re-evaluate whether we are on the right path. The more I think about it, the more I think that our absolute top goal should be to maintain a stable API for as long as we can reasonably do so. I believe that's what is best for our users. I think if you gave people a choice, they would prefer an inconsistent API that works for years over dealing with non-backwards compatible jumps to get a nicer looking one. The v3 API and its unit tests are roughly 25k lines of code. This also doesn't include the changes necessary in novaclient or tempest. That's just *our* code. It explodes out from there into every SDK, and then end user apps. This should not be taken lightly. > This email is rather long so here's the TL;DR version: > > - We want to make backwards incompatible changes to the API > and whether we do it in-place with V2 or by releasing V3 > we'll have some form of dual API support burden. > - Not making backwards incompatible changes means: > - retaining an inconsistent API I actually think this isn't so bad, as discussed above. > - not being able to fix numerous input validation issues I'm not convinced, actually. Surely we can do a lot of cleanup here. Perhaps you have some examples of what we couldn't do in the existing API? If it's a case of wanting to be more strict, some would argue that the current behavior isn't so bad (see robustness principle [1]): "Be conservative in what you do, be liberal in what you accept from others (often reworded as "Be conservative in what you send, be liberal in what you accept")." There's a decent counter argument to this, too. However, I still fall back on it being best to just not break existing clients above all else. > - have to forever proxy for glance/cinder/neutron with all > the problems that entails. I don't think I'm as bothered by the proxying as others are. Perhaps it's not architecturally pretty, but it's worth it to maintain compatibility for our users. > - Backporting V3 infrastructure changes to V2 would be a > considerable amount of programmer/review time Agreed, but so is the ongoing maintenance and development of v3. > > - The V3 API as-is has: > - lower maintenance > - is easier to understand and use (consistent). > - Much better input validation which is baked-in (json-schema) > rather than ad-hoc and incomplete. So here's the rub ... with the exception of the consistency bits, none of this is visible to users, which makes me think we should be able to do all of this on v2. > - Whilst we have existing users of the API we also have a lot more > users in the future. It would be much better to allow them to use > the API we want to get to as soon as possible, rather than trying > to evolve the V2 API and forcing them along the transition that they > could otherwise avoid. I'm not sure I understand this. A key point is that I think any evolving of the V2 API has to be backwards compatible, so there's no forcing them along involved. > - We already have feature parity for the V3 API (nova-network being > the exception due to the very recent unfreezing of it), novaclient > support, and a reasonable transition path for V2 users. > > - Proposed way forward: > - Release the V3 API in Juno with nova-network and tasks support > - Feature freeze the V2 API when the V3 API is released > - Set the timeline for deprecation of V2 so users have a lot > of warning > - Fallback for those who really don't want to move after > deprecation is an API service which translates between V2 and V3 > requests, but removes the dual API support burden from Nova. One of my biggest principles with a new API is that we should not have to force a migration with a strict timeline like this. If we haven't built something compelling enough to get people to *want* to migrate as soon as they are able, then we haven't done our job. Deprecation of the old thing should only be done when we feel it's no longer wanted or used by the vast majority. I just don't see that happening any time soon. We have a couple of ways forward right now. 1) Continue as we have been, and plan to release v3 once we have a compelling enough feature set. 2) Take what we have learned from v3 and apply it to v2. For example: - The plugin infrastructure is an internal implementation detail that can be done with the existing API. - extension versioning is a concept we can add to v2 - we've also been discussing the concept of a core minor version, to reflect updates to the core that are backwards compatible. This seems doable in v2. - revisit a new major API when we get to the point of wanting to effectively do a re-write, where we are majorly re-thinking the way our API is designed (from an external perspective, not internal implementation). [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robustness_principle -- Russell Bryant _______________________________________________ OpenStack-dev mailing list OpenStack-dev@lists.openstack.org http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev