Re: Apache Cassandra Contributor Meeting
Thanks Patrick. Looking forward to tomorrow’s meeting. I added an agenda item around 4.0 — it’s not my intention to lead that section necessarily but I think a check in / progress update / follow up on Josh’s email will be good to cover. Jordan On Mon, Jan 13, 2020 at 6:11 PM Patrick McFadin wrote: > And I sent this without saying when. Let me save you a click on the > confluence link. > > January 21, 1PM PST > > On Mon, Jan 13, 2020 at 5:28 PM Patrick McFadin > wrote: > > > Hi everyone, > > > > In order to catch up on what's happening here, here's the establishing > > thread: > > > https://lists.apache.org/thread.html/aa54420a43671c00392978f2b0920bc6926ca9ba1e61a486ad39fb21%40%3Cdev.cassandra.apache.org%3E > > > > Key points that Scott Andreas proposed in the initial email was > > > > Motivation for such a meeting > > 1. We currently have Slack, JIRA and emails however an agenda driven > video > > meeting can help facilitate alignment within the community. > > 2. This will give an opportunity to the community to summarize past > > progress and talk about future tasks. > > 3. Agenda notes can serve as newsletters for the community. > > > > To that, I humbly offer my services as a community organizer to help with > > the logistics and setup. I'm happy to say this is finally happening and I > > apologize this has taken so long. I saw some of the examples mentioned in > > the original thread for other open source projects and I "borrowed" > heavily > > from them. > > > > I created a page in the Cassandra Confluence page to hopefully centralize > > both logistics and records of each call. You can fine it here: > > > https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/CASSANDRA/Apache+Cassandra+Contributor+Meeting > > > > The meetings are on Zoom and set to be wide open. Anyone can join via > > computer or phone. I'm using a tier that allows for 100 participants. If > we > > need more, I can change the type of meeting but it's more of a pain for > > logistics. We can try this and see how it goes. Once the meeting starts > > I'll hit record, I'll post the video on YouTube and add the link to the > > notes. All meeting notes for each agenda items can live in the doc above > > and remain as a permanent record. After the meeting, I'll send the notes > > link to the dev list as a reminder that it happened to anyone subscribed. > > > > If you have agenda items, please edit the Confluence page and add your > > name and what you would like discussed. > > > > My contribution here is as an organizer. Please feel free to email or > > Slack if you need anything. Most important, a video meet is an alpha > > product and we'll learn a lot from the first time trying. I'll try to > keep > > note of things to improve in the doc. > > > > See you there, > > > > Patrick > > >
RE: Amazon MCS contribution plan
I'd like to introduce Steve Mayszak, who has recently joined the MCS team. Steve is looking into work required to get the infrastructure online. In the ASF-slaves.txt it says: "For adding additional infrastructure see https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/pages/viewpage.action?pageId=127406622"; It seems permissions on that page are locked down. Could someone please help us get access to that page? -Almero -Original Message- From: Mick Semb Wever Sent: Monday, January 13, 2020 11:51 PM To: dev@cassandra.apache.org Subject: Re: Amazon MCS contribution plan > Infrastructure > I have noticed that there is a need for infrastructure to run > automated tests for Cassandra. We'd like to help so that the tests can > be run regularly with a reasonable running time. We believe that 15 > m4.2xlarge [3] EC2 instances could help accomplish this, and we'd be > happy to make this capacity available. Can you help us validate that > this is the appropriate capacity, and guide us into how it should be > configured? This would be an immense contribution. Thank you Almero (and everyone at AWS). I think others that have had internal infrastructure for running the dtests will have much better input about what the ideal instance type is, but it is my understanding that servers with 32gb ram meets the minimum specs for our largest dtests. Michael? Aleksey? Sam? Alex? Blake? The ticket https://jira.apache.org/jira/browse/INFRA-14153 describes the process the last time infrastructure was added. The ASF-slaves.txt doc also helps explain a bit. https://github.com/apache/cassandra-builds/blob/master/ASF-slaves.txt Though cassandra1-7 are currently MIA, and some of the info there is out of date. I'd be more than happy to take charge in coordinating to get these servers in, if it all gets agreed upon. regards, Mick - To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@cassandra.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@cassandra.apache.org - To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@cassandra.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@cassandra.apache.org
Re: Amazon MCS contribution plan
Almero, Thanks for introducing Steve and thanks for helping out on the infra for Cassandra. I think Mick Semb Wever, Stephan Podkowinski and Michael Shuler can guide him on the infra side. There was an active discussion on Slack regarding infra for testing Cassandra. I’m not sure where we landed on it. Are we planning to add EC2 Instances as jenkins build nodes? Thanks, Dinesh > On Jan 20, 2020, at 8:14 PM, Gouws, Almero wrote: > > I'd like to introduce Steve Mayszak, who has recently joined the MCS team. > Steve is looking into work required to get the infrastructure online. > > In the ASF-slaves.txt it says: "For adding additional infrastructure see > https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/pages/viewpage.action?pageId=127406622"; > > It seems permissions on that page are locked down. Could someone please help > us get access to that page? > > -Almero > > > -Original Message- > From: Mick Semb Wever > Sent: Monday, January 13, 2020 11:51 PM > To: dev@cassandra.apache.org > Subject: Re: Amazon MCS contribution plan > > >> Infrastructure >> I have noticed that there is a need for infrastructure to run >> automated tests for Cassandra. We'd like to help so that the tests can >> be run regularly with a reasonable running time. We believe that 15 >> m4.2xlarge [3] EC2 instances could help accomplish this, and we'd be >> happy to make this capacity available. Can you help us validate that >> this is the appropriate capacity, and guide us into how it should be >> configured? > > > This would be an immense contribution. Thank you Almero (and everyone at AWS). > > I think others that have had internal infrastructure for running the dtests > will have much better input about what the ideal instance type is, but it is > my understanding that servers with 32gb ram meets the minimum specs for our > largest dtests. > > Michael? Aleksey? Sam? Alex? Blake? > > The ticket https://jira.apache.org/jira/browse/INFRA-14153 describes the > process the last time infrastructure was added. > > The ASF-slaves.txt doc also helps explain a bit. > https://github.com/apache/cassandra-builds/blob/master/ASF-slaves.txt > > Though cassandra1-7 are currently MIA, and some of the info there is out of > date. > > I'd be more than happy to take charge in coordinating to get these servers > in, if it all gets agreed upon. > > regards, > Mick > > - > To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@cassandra.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@cassandra.apache.org > > > - > To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@cassandra.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@cassandra.apache.org > - To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@cassandra.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@cassandra.apache.org