> > Also very important to understand that if task is mapped to role
> controller, but node where you want to apply that task doesn't have this
> role - it wont be executed.
> Is there a particular reason why we want to restrict a user to run an
> arbitrary task on a server, even if server doesn't
On Sat, Feb 7, 2015 at 9:42 AM, Andrew Woodward wrote:
> Dmitry,
>> thanks for sharing CLI options. I'd like to clarify a few things.
>>
>> > Also very important to understand that if task is mapped to role
>> controller, but node where you want to apply that task doesn't have this
>> role - it w
On Thu, Jan 15, 2015 at 6:20 PM, Vitaly Kramskikh
wrote:
> I want to discuss possibility to add network verification status field for
> environments. There are 2 reasons for this:
>
> 1) One of the most frequent reasons of deployment failure is wrong network
> configuration. In the current UI net
Sage and I talked about this while at Devconf and it seems it *may* be
based on something similar to the GlusterFS Native driver. We will be
starting discussions on how to create this integration in the ceph-devel
email list. Once we have a solution, we will send an update on this
email list.
Hi Angus,
If causal reads is set in a session, it won't delay all reads, just
that specific read that you set if for. Let's say you have 4 sessions,
in one of them you set causal reads, the other 3 won't wait on
anything. The read in the one session that you set this in will be
delayed, in the oth
On 02/07/2015 07:42 AM, Luis Pabón wrote:
Sage and I talked about this while at Devconf and it seems it *may* be
based on something similar to the GlusterFS Native driver. We will be
starting discussions on how to create this integration in the
ceph-devel email list. Once we have a solution,
Not really sure. The Ganesha FSAL could be another possibility, but we
are just starting the discussions. Hopefully we we'll know more soon.
- Luis
On 02/07/2015 05:30 PM, Ben Swartzlander wrote:
On 02/07/2015 07:42 AM, Luis Pabón wrote:
Sage and I talked about this while at Devconf and it s
>
>
> 1) Cherry pick scheduler code from Nova, which already has a working a
> filter scheduler design.
> 2) Integrate swarmd to leverage its scheduler[2].
I see #2 as not an alternative but possibly an "also". Swarm uses the
Docker API, although they're only about 75% compatible at the moment.
I
From: Eric Windisch mailto:e...@windisch.us>>
Reply-To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)"
mailto:openstack-dev@lists.openstack.org>>
Date: Saturday, February 7, 2015 at 10:09 AM
To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)"
mailto:openstack-dev@
I second that. my first instinct is the same as Steve.
-- dims
On Sat, Feb 7, 2015 at 1:24 PM, Steven Dake (stdake) wrote:
>
>
> From: Eric Windisch
> Reply-To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)"
>
> Date: Saturday, February 7, 2015 at 10:09 AM
> To: "OpenStack Deve
Ok, so if we proceed using Swarm as our first pursuit, and we want to add
things to Swarm like scheduling hints, we should open a Magnum bug ticket to
track each of the upstream patches, and I can help to bird dog those. We should
not shy away from upstream enhancements until we get firm feedbac
Sorry for late. I'm OK with both nova scheduler and swarm as both of them
using same logic for scheduling: filter + strategy (weight), and the code
structure/logic is also very similar between nova scheduler and swarm.
In my understanding, even if we use swarm and translate go to python, after
thi
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