interop/doc/source/process/2016A.rst
Mark T. Voelker 1ad79da568 Fix status of 2016A process doc
The 2016A process was approved by the OpenStack Board of Directors
back in January of 2016 [1] but that change was never denoted in
the documents in the DefCore git repo.  This patch fixes that.

[1]
https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Governance/Foundation/26Jan2016BoardMinutes

Change-Id: I625bd1d35fae6959e9dae0a225ca8d9460450bca
2016-08-17 14:04:18 -04:00

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13 KiB
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OpenStack DefCore Process 2016A
================================
:Status: Approved
:Replaces: 2015B
This document describes the DefCore process required by the OpenStack
bylaws and approved by the OpenStack Technical Committee and Board.
Expected Time line:
---------------------------------------
+------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+-----------+
| Time Frame | Milestone | Activities | Lead By |
+============+===========+======================================+===========+
| -3 months | S-3 | Draft status | DefCore |
+------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+-----------+
| -2 months | S-2 | ID new Capabilities | Community |
+------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+-----------+
| -1 month | S-1 | Score Capabilities | DefCore |
+------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+-----------+
| Summit | S | Review status | Community |
+ + +--------------------------------------+-----------+
| | | Advisory/Deprecated items selected | DefCore |
+------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+-----------+
| +1 month | S+1 | Self-testing | Vendors |
+------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+-----------+
| +2 months | S+2 | Test Flagging | DefCore |
+------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+-----------+
| +3 months | S+3 | Approve Guidance | Board |
+------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+-----------+
Note: DefCore may accelerate the process to correct errors and omissions.
Process Definition
--------------------------------------
The DefCore Guideline process has two primary phases: Draft and Review.
During the Draft phase (A), the DefCore Committee is working with community
leaders to update and score the components of the guideline. During the
Review phase (B), general community and vendors have an opportunity to
provide input and check the guidelines (C) against actual implementations.
Review phase ends with Board approval of the draft guideline (D).
This section provides specific rules and structure for each phase.
NOTE: To ensure continuity of discussion, process components defined below
must _not_ reuse numbers in future revisions. The numbering pattern
follows draft, section and sub-item numbering, e.g.: 2015A.B2.2. This
requirement may create numbering gaps in future iterations that will help
indicate changes.
Guidelines Draft Phase (A)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Starting: S-3
A1. New Guidelines Start From Previous Guidelines
1. New Guidelines start from the previous Board approved document.
2. New Guidelines are given the preliminary name of "next.json".
A2. Community Groups Tests into Capabilities
1. DefCore Committee coordinates community activities with the Technical
Leadership to revise the capabilities based on current technical needs
and functionality.
2. Capabilities must correspond to projects which are part of the
"TC-approved release" as designated by the TC (see bylaws of the
Foundation, section 4.1(b)(iii)).
3. Groupings may change between iterations.
4. Tests must have unique identifiers that are durable across releases
and changes in grouping.
5. Tests must be under OpenStack Technical Committee governance.
6. The DefCore working group will provide the test groupings in JSON format
for scoring.
7. The DefCore working group will provide a human-readable summary of
the Guideline generated from the JSON version.
A3. DefCore Collects Recommendations for Designated Sections
1. Designated Sections will not be removed without being deprecated in the
previous Guideline.
2. Designated Sections will not be added without being advisory in the
previous Guideline.
3. Designated Sections will not be added or be made advisory unless the
corresponding code base is designated as part of the "TC-approved release"
by the Technical Committee (see bylaws of the Foundation, section
4.1(b)(iii)).
4. Technical leadership may, but is not required to, assist DefCore with
defining advisory sections for projects that have advisory or required
capabilities.
5. Designated Sections may be sufficiently defined for Guidelines using
general descriptions.
6. DefCore will present A3.4 descriptions to the Board for approval.
7. Technical leadership may, but is not required to, provide more specific
details describing the Designated Sections for a project.
8. Designated Sections will be included in the JSON Guideline.
A4. DefCore Committee identifies required capabilities
1. DefCore uses Board approved DefCore scoring criteria to evaluate
capabilities.
2. DefCore needs Board approval to change scoring
criteria.
3. Scoring criteria factor or weights cannot change after Draft is
published.
4. DefCore identifies cut-off score for determining that a
capability is required.
5. Capabilities will not be removed without being deprecated in the
previous Guideline.
6. Capabilities will not be added without being advisory in the previous
Guideline.
7. For level of "widely deployed" adoption criteria, the size of the
pool being considered will match the scope of the community being
considered. Capabilities will be evaluated based on their use in their
component. Components will be evaluated based on their use in the
Platform.
A5. Foundation Staff recommends OpenStack Components and OpenStack Platform
Scope
1. Foundation Staff recommends capabilities to include in each OpenStack
Component.
2. Foundation Staff recommends which Components are required for
the OpenStack Platform.
3. To support the Foundation recommendation, DefCore will apply the approved
scoring criteria to evaluate if a component should be included in the
platform (see A4).
A6. Additional Capabilities and Tests
1. DefCore will work with the community to define new capabilities.
2. Test grouping for new capabilities will be included in the DefCore
documents.
3. DefCore will publish a list of missing capabilities and capabilities with
inadequate test coverage.
A7. DefCore Committee creates recommendation for Draft.
1. DefCore Committee coordinates activities to create draft.
2. DefCore Committee may choose to ignore recommendations with documented
justification.
Guidelines Review Phase (B)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Starting: Summit
B1. All Reference Artifacts are reviewed via Gerrit
1. Draft Guideline
2. Designated sections
3. Test-Capability groupings
4. Flagged Test List
5. Capability Scoring criteria and weights
6. Not in Gerrit: Working materials (spreadsheets, etc)
B2. Presentation of Draft Guidelines for Review
1. DefCore will present Draft Guidelines to the Board for review.
2. DefCore will distribute Draft Guidelines to the community for review.
3. Foundation Staff will provide Draft Guidelines to vendors for review.
4. A link to the Gerrit document must be provided with the review materials.
B3. Changes to Guideline made by Gerrit Review Process
1. Community discussion including vendors must go through Gerrit.
2. All changes to draft must go through Gerrit process.
3. DefCore will proxy for users who do not participate in the Gerrit process
with attribution.
B4. For Gerrit reviews, DefCore CoChairs act as joint PTLs
1. DefCore CoChairs serve as "core" reviewers (+2).
2. Requests for changes must be submitted as patches by the requesting
party.
3. DefCore Committee members may proxy change requests as long as the
requesting party is explicitly acknowledged.
4. One DefCore CoChair needs to be Board member.
5. One DefCore CoChair needs to be elected by DefCore working group. Election
quorum is composed of attendees present during the election meeting.
6. Additional core reviewers (+2) can be appointed by CoChairs.
7. Election meetings must be posted at least one meeting prior.
Community Review & Vendor Self-Test (C)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Starting: S and continues past S+3
C1. Vendor Self-Tests
1. Vendors are responsible for executing tests identified by the
DefCore working group.
2. The Foundation may, but is not required to, provide tooling for
running tests.
3. The Foundation may, but is not required to, define a required
reporting format.
4. Self-test results may be published by Vendors in advance of Foundation
review, but must be clearly labeled as "Unofficial Results - Not Yet
Accepted By The OpenStack Foundation".
5. Vendors who publish self-tests MUST provide them in the same format that
would be submitted to the OpenStack Foundation but MAY provide additional
formats if they choose to do so.
6. Self-test results cannot be used as proof of compliance.
C2. Vendor submits results to Foundation for review
1. The Foundation determines the acceptable format for submissions.
2. The Foundation has final authority to determine if Vendor meets
criteria.
3. The Foundation will provide a review of the results within 30 days.
C3. Vendor Grievance Process
1. Vendors may raise concerns with specific tests to the DefCore
working group.
2. The DefCore working group may choose to remove tests from a Guideline
(known as flagging).
3. The DefCore working group will acknowledge vendor requests to flag tests
within 30 days.
C4. Results of Vendor Self-Tests will be open
1. The Foundation will make the final results of approved vendors
available to the community.
2. The Foundation will not publish incomplete or unapproved results.
3. Only "pass" results will be reported. Skipped and failed results will
be omitted from the reports.
4. Reports will include individual test results, not just capability
scoring.
5. Vendors are required to submit a description of the system and
configuration used to achieve the results.
6. The Foundation may require vendors to submit specific details of the
configuration and may also require use of a specific format for
reporting.
C5. API Usage Data Report
1. The Foundation will provide DefCore working group with an open report
about API usage based on self-tests.
2. To the extent the data is available, capabilities beyond the DefCore
list will be included in the report.
C6. Only Two Approved Guidelines at a time:
1. Vendors seeking Foundation validation are limited to using the two
latest approved Guidelines.
2. Since past validations are respected, older Guidelines will be
maintained as superseded for historical reference.
3. Guideline status progresses as follows:
:draft: initial work, pre-summit (S-3) discussion material
:review: as presented at summit (S) for community review
:approved: board approved, one of the two official guidelines
:superseded: board approved, now superseded by two latest guidelines
Guideline Approval (D)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Starting: S+3
D1. Board will review and approve DefCore Guideline from draft
1. Guidelines are set at the Platform, Component and Capability level
only.
2. The DefCore Committee will submit the human-readable summary of
capabilities (see section A2[6]) to the Board for approval.
3. By voting to approve the summary, the Board delegates responsibility
for maintaining test groupings to the DefCore working group subject to
the limitations described in section D2.
4. Guidelines only apply to the identified releases (a.k.a. release
tags).
D2. DefCore Committee has authority on test categorization
1. DefCore Committee can add flagged tests before and after Guideline
approval.
2. DefCore Committee cannot add additional Tests to Capability mappings
after approval.
3. DefCore Committee maintains the test to capability mappings in the
JSON representation.
D3. Designated sections only enforced for projects with required capabilities
1. Designated sections may be defined for any project.
2. Designated sections apply to the releases (a.k.a. release tags)
identified in the Guideline.
3. Designated sections will be included in the JSON Capabilities file
to ensure a single source of identification.
D4. Guidelines are named based on the date of Board approval
1. Naming pattern will be: 4-digit year, dot (period), and 2-digit month.
Functional Information
----------------------
:Format: RestructuredText
:Layout: 1.0