With the depends-on patch, last remaining osf repo
is also moved to osf/ namespace. Interop repos have
been already moved - https://review.opendev.org/#/c/734669/
This remove the foundation-board-repos.yaml as no repo
are there (after depends-on) and its data calculation too.
Depends-On: https://review.opendev.org/#/c/739286/
Change-Id: I1aa375e2c30ba2071b25e7ff2490b2b07a392b58
Refstack repositories have been moved under the "osf" namespace,
showing that they are not openstack-specific. The TC should no
longer track them as official "openstack" repositories.
Change-Id: I20eef26f2dfabffc9318be92179cc06bd64ac40d
The files listing the SIG and TC repos use a list under each group with
a dict containing the key 'repo' and then the repository name. Make the
board file format consistent so that tools parsing these files have
fewer formats to deal with.
Change-Id: I2466e02be772ff96e43f377c7431af880a4cea1d
Signed-off-by: Doug Hellmann <doug@doughellmann.com>
* As per the latest discussion with the refstack and interop team,
the refstack-client, refstack and python-tempestconf is moving
under interop WG.
* Removing refstack project reference from reference/projects.yaml
* Moved projects reference to legacy.yaml
http://eavesdrop.openstack.org/meetings/interopwg/2018/interopwg.2018-08-08-16.01.log.html#l-24
Change-Id: Ife8b48c4da05782657086858c77434ba12bba4b2
At the Board of Directors meeting on April 24, 2016 the Board of
Directors indicated that as DefCore has evolved it's focus on
interoperability and it's working structure, it's name may be a
source of some confusion to those outside of the community or who are new
to the community. The Board made an informal request that the DefCore
Committee consider changing it's name to more clearly reflect it's
focus and structure. In August of 2016, the Board passed a resolution
renaming the group to "The Interop Working Group".[1]
Since then, the Interop Working Group has completed a series of changes
to it's documentation and public resources to reflect it's new name.[2]
The next step in the process is to rename the project's resources in
infra, including it's git repository and associated artifacts.[3] This
This commit modifies a few remaining governance artifacts that referece
DefCore to use the new name/artifacts instead. Past TC resolutions
referencing DefCore have been ommitted to preserve historical context.
[1] https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Governance/Foundation/23Aug2016BoardMinutes
[2] For example: http://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack/defcore/commit/?id=d8fb682a2bd17c111f5dd4f8341fb1b300ac2d4d
[3] https://review.openstack.org/433414
Change-Id: I4f5d415f31c9976a001e318c7ae4dc9f9651e215
This commit fixes all the yamllint issues being reported by the validate
job. Now that we run this job nv in the gate we should clean up the
current output so that we can catch new issues on incoming patches.
Change-Id: Iac9cd534d177f975ce524fa7a945887dd0fa1806
This is a repo which the transparency committee will use to draft
proposed changes to the OpenStack Foundation Transparency Policy,
before each individual change is approved by a board vote.
See also:
http://lists.openstack.org/pipermail/transparency/2015-May/000029.html
Change-Id: Idcfa3162514fb4d02a49f20efbe43a8163f9b162
Account for the newly-created openstack/defcore repository by tracking
it into a specific list of repositories owned by the Board and its
subcommittees.
Change-Id: I640c3ddc1dc2c608bd46edf1f8b9e061c5021fa2