Skip to main content

Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates from Canonical and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

Thank you for contacting us. A member of our team will be in touch shortly. Close

  1. Blog
  2. Article

Joshua Powers
on 31 August 2017

cloud-init Summit in Seattle, Washington


Introduction

Last week the cloud-init development team from Canonical ran a two-day summit in Seattle, Washington. The purpose of the summit was to meet with contributors to cloud-init from cloud providers and OS vendors to demo recent developments in cloud-init, resolve outstanding issues, and collect feedback on development and test processes as well as future features. Attendees included developers from Amazon, Microsoft, Google, VMWare, and IBM cloud teams, as well as the maintainers of cloud-init from Red Hat, SUSE, and of course, Ubuntu. Special thanks go to Google for hosting us and to Microsoft for buying everyone dinner

Demos

The cloud-init development team came with a number of prepared demos and talks that they gave as a part of the summit:

  • cloud-init analyze: Ryan demoed the recently added analyze feature to aid in doing boot time performance analysis. This tool parses the cloud-init log into formatted and sorted events to assist in determining long running steps during instance initialization.
  • cloud-config Schema Validation: Chad demonstrated the early functionality to validate cloud-configs before launching instances. He demoed two modules that exist today, how to write the validation, and what positive and negative results look like.
  • Integration Testing and CI: Josh demonstrated the integration test framework and shared plans on running tests on actual clouds. Then showed the merge request CI process and encouraged this as a way for other OSes to participate.
  • Using lxd for Rapid Development and Testing: Scott demoed setting userdata when launching a lxd instance and how this can be used in the development process. He also discussed lxd image remotes and types of images.

Breakout Sessions

In addition to the prepared demos, the summit had numerous sessions that were requested by the attendees as additional topics for discussion:

  • Netplan (v2 YAML) as primary format
  • How to query metadata
  • Version numbering
  • Device hotplug
  • Python 3
  • And more…

During the summit, we took time to have merge review and bug squashing time. During this time, attendees came with outstanding bugs to discuss possible fixes as well as go through outstanding merge requests and get live reviews.

Conclusions

A big thanks to the community for attending! The summit was a great time to meet many long time users and contributors face-to-face as well as collect feedback for cloud-init development. Notes of both days can be found on the cloud-init mailing list. There you will find additional details about what I have described above and much more. Finally, if you are interested in following or getting involved in cloud-init development check out #cloud-init on Freenode or subscribe to the cloud-init mailing list.

Related posts


Canonical
15 November 2024

Canonical announces the first MicroCloud LTS release 

Cloud and server Article

Canonical announces the first MicroCloud LTS release. MicroCloud 2.1.0 LTS features support for single-node deployments, improved security posture, and more flexibility during the initialization process. ...


Felipe Vanni
13 November 2024

Join Canonical in Paris at Dell Technologies Forum

AI Article

Canonical is thrilled to be joining forces with Dell Technologies at the upcoming Dell Technologies Forum – Paris, taking place on 19 November. This premier event brings together industry leaders and technology enthusiasts to explore the latest advancements and solutions shaping the digital landscape. Register to Dell Technologies Forum – ...


Serdar Vural
12 November 2024

Bringing automation to open source 5G software at Ubuntu Summit 2024

5G Article

In today’s massive private mobile network (PMN) market, one of the most common approaches to PMN software and infrastructure are proprietary private business solutions. However, as our recent demonstrations at the October 2024 Ubuntu Summit in the Hague showed, open source software with enterprise-grade support is a cost-effective alterna ...