Hi all, I'd like to announce my candidacy to be Fuel PTL for the Newton cycle. I've been a member of Fuel team since the very beginning of the project. Fuel started as a proprietary deployment tool for OpenStack, but since that we have been smothly moving towards being more and more open and more and more community oriented. In the beginning of Mitaka cycle Fuel was approved to become an official OpenStack project under Big Tent. But being an offcial project is not enough. 95% of Fuel contributions during Mitaka are from Mirantis [1]. Fuel is huge and it is hard for companies and individuals to catch tendencies in Fuel project and thus it is hard for them to decide how, what and why they could contribute. One of the biggest problems I see is Fuel is not modular enough. Some Fuel components have already been brought out of Fuel and now they are fully independent. These are Bareon and Packetary. Bareon is a fork of Fuel-agent and is to become a generic OS provisioning tool. It already has third party contributions. Fuel is to switch to Bareon in Newton cycle. Packetary is a former part of Fuel-mirror. It is to become a generic tool to deal with DEB and RPM repositories and packages, so its use case is much broader than Fuel. Some current Fuel components are quite generic and thus they could be brought out of Fuel project. For example, Shotgun is a tool for collecting log files and commands output from an environment, but this functionality could potentially be useful for other projects. The same is about Network-checker. Some Fuel components strictly depend on Fuel but their purpose is generic. We could put some efforts to make these components fully data driven and thus expand their use case. For example, Fuel-menu is a tool that provides user configuration dialog. Why should it be Fuel specific? Could we make it data driven and expand its use case? The same is about Fuel-virtualbox, which is just a set of configurable shell scripts that could be used for non-Fuel virtualbox environments. Fuel-ostf also could be potentially used out of Fuel. Some Fuel components could potentially be substituted with generic community tools. For example, Fuel-nailgun-agent is a discovery/inventory tool. Ironic-inspector does the same. Ironic itself could be used as a power management tool. Perhaps Neutron could be used for network allocation and configuration. Anyway, we should put more efforts in integrating with other OpenStack projects. Besides, Fuel development process is feature driven. Contributors are encouraged to merge changes that implement a feature but they are not encoureged to think of how maintainable that change is and how it is related to the component architecture. Last couple cycles we suffered a lot when many features were to be merged by feature freeze. There were many feature freeze exceptions, we merged features that had not been tested well. My suggestion for Newton cycle is to switch from feature driven approach to component driven. All components should have dedicated teams that should plan components roadmap taking into account not only feature requests but also tech debt and components architecture. It is better when people are focused on their particular field like REST API, network configuration, OS provisioning, etc. That is going to make feature planning more predictable and avoid feature freeze rush. Component teams should also be responsible for thorough test coverage (including functional and system/integration tests) and for promotion of their components. If we make Fuel components as much independent and generic as possible, that will help us to expand component use cases and thus to to attract third party contributors. My primary goals for Newton cycle are: 1) Switch to component driven development approach (i.e. by-component teams, by-component releases) 2) Introduce by-component and cross-component functional testing 3) Attract third party contributors, so they contribute at least 10% There are lots of things that I'd like to be implemented (integrating with OpenStack packaging, UEFI support, torrent based OS provisioning, OpenStack deployment from source code, power management, LCM, etc.) but I'm going to rely on component teams opinions in such particular fields. Thanks for reading. If you like the plan, please vote. [1] http://stackalytics.com/?module=fuel-group&metric=commits