this was sent to the wrong list! please ignore. (or if you find it interesting, then great!)
> On Dec 5, 2014, at 6:13 PM, Mike Bayer <mba...@redhat.com> wrote: > > 1. Alembic release - I worked through some regressions introduced by Alembic > 0.7.0 and the subsequent 0.7.1 with the Neutron folks. This started on > Monday with https://review.openstack.org/#/c/137989/, and by Wednesday I had > identified enough small regressions in 0.7.0 that I had to put 0.7.1 out, so > that review got expedited with https://review.openstack.org/#/c/138998/ > following from Neutron devs to continue fixing. Version 0.7.1 includes the > foreign key autogenerate support first proposed by Ann Kamyshnikova. > Changelog at > http://alembic.readthedocs.org/en/latest/changelog.html#change-0.7.1. > > 2. MySQL driver stuff. I have a SQLAlchemy user who is running some kind of > heavy load with gevent and PyMySQL. While this user is not > openstack-specific, the thing he is doing is a lot like what we might be > doing if and when we move our MySQL drivers to MySQL-connector-Python, which > is compatible with eventlet in that it is pure Python and can be > monkeypatched. The issue observed by this user applies to both PyMySQL and > MySQL-connector, and I can reproduce it *without* using SQLAlchemy, though it > does use a very makeshift connection pool designed to approximate what > SQLAlchemy’s does. The issue is scary because it illustrates Python code > that should have been killed being invoked on a database connection that > should have been dead, calling commit(), and then actually *succeeding* in > committing only *part* of the data. This is not an issue that impacts > Openstack right now but if the same thing applies to eventlet, then this > would definitely be something we’d need to worry about if we start using > MySQL-connector in a high load scenario (which has been the plan) so I’ve > forwarded my findings onto openstack-dev to see if anyone can help me > understand it. The intro + test case for this issue starts at > http://lists.openstack.org/pipermail/openstack-dev/2014-December/052344.html. > > 3. enginefacade - The engine facade as I described in > https://review.openstack.org/#/c/125181/, which we also talked about on the > Nova compute call this week, is now built! I spent monday and tuesday on the > buildout for this, and that can be seen and reviewed here: > https://review.openstack.org/#/c/138215/ As of today I’m still nursing it > through CI, as even with projects using the “legacy” APIs, they are still > finding lots of little silly things that I keep having to fix (people calling > the old EngineFacade with arguments I didn’t expect, people importing from > oslo.db in an order I did not expect, etc). While these consuming projects > could be fixed to not have these little issues, for now I am trying to push > everything to work as identically as possible to how it was earlier, when the > new API is not explicitly invoked. I’ll be continuing to get this to pass > all tempest runs through next week. > > For enginefacade I’d like the folks from the call to take a look, and in > particular if Matthew Booth wants to look into it, this is ready to start > being used for prototyping Nova with it. > > 4. Connectivity stuff - today I worked a bunch with Viktor Sergeyev who has > been trying to fix an issue with MySQL OperationalErrors that are raised when > the database is shut off entirely; in oslo.db we have logic that wraps all > exceptions unconditionally, including that it identifies disconnect > exceptions. In the case where the DB throws a disconnect, and we loop around > to “retry” this query in order to get it to reconnect, then that reconnect > continues to fail, the second run doesn’t get wrapped. So today I’ve fixed > both the upstream issue for SQLAlchemy 1.0, and also made a series of > adjustments to oslo.db to accommodate SQLAlchemy 1.0’s system correctly as > well as to work around the issue when SQLAlchemy < 1.0 is present. That’s a > three-series of patches that are unsurprisingly going to take some nursing to > get through the gate, so I’ll be continuing with that next week. This series > starts at https://review.openstack.org/139725 > https://review.openstack.org/139733 https://review.openstack.org/139738 . > > 5. SQLA 1.0 stuff. - getting SQLAlchemy 1.0 close to release is becoming > critical so I’ve been moving around issues and priorities to expedite this. > There’s many stability enhancements oslo.db would benefit from as well as > some major performance-related features that I’ve been planning all along to > introduce to projects. 1.0 is very full of lots of changes that aren’t > really being tested outside of my own CI, so getting something out the door > on it is key, otherwise it will just be too different from 0.9 in order for > people to have smooth upgrades. I do run SQLA 1.0 in CI against a subset of > Neutron, Nova, Keystone and Oslo tests so we should be in OK shape, but there > is still a lot to go. Work completed so far can be seen at > http://docs.sqlalchemy.org/en/latest/changelog/migration_10.html. > > > _______________________________________________ > OpenStack-dev mailing list > OpenStack-dev@lists.openstack.org > http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev _______________________________________________ OpenStack-dev mailing list OpenStack-dev@lists.openstack.org http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev