Howdy! I am submitting my name to continue as PTL for Chef OpenStack. If you don't know me, I am scas on Freenode. I work for Workday, where I am an active operator and upstream developer. I have contributed to OpenStack since 2014, and joined the core team in early 2015. Since then, I have served as PTL for four cycles. I am also an active member of the Sous-Chefs organization, which fosters maintainership of community Chef cookbooks that could no longer be maintained by their author(s). My life as a triple threat, as well as being largely in the deploy automation space, gives me a unique perspective on the use cases for Chef OpenStack. Development continues to run about a release behind the coordinated release to stabilize due to contributor availability. In that time, overall testing has improved to raise the overall testing confidence in landing more aggressive changes. Local testing infrastructure tends to run closer to trunk to keep a pulse on how upstream changes will affect the cookbooks closer to review time. This, in turn, influences the changes that do pass the sniff test. For Stein, I would like to focus on some of the efforts started during Rocky. * Awareness and Community Chef OpenStack is extremely powerful and flexible, but it is not easy for new contributors to get involved. That is, if they can find it, down the dark alley, through the barber shop, and behind the door with a secret knock. Documentation has been a handful of terse Markdown docs and READMEs that do not evolve as fast as the code, which I think impacts visibility and artificially creates a barrier to entry. I would like to place more emphasis on providing this more well-lit entry point for new and existing users alike. * Consistency and HA Stability is never a given, but it is pretty close with Chef OpenStack. Each change runs through multiple, iterative tests before it hits Gerrit. However, not every change runs through those same tests in the gate due to the gap between local and integration. This natural gap has resulted in multiple chef-client versions and OpenStack configurations testing each change. There have existed HA primitives in the cookbooks for years, but there are no published working examples. I am aiming to continue this effort to further reducing the human element in executing the tests. * Continued work on containerization With efforts to deploy OpenStack in the context of containers, Chef OpenStack has not shared in the fanfare. I shipped a very shaky dokken support out of a hack day at the 2017 Chef Community Summit in Seattle, and have refined it over time to where it's consistently Doing A Thing. I have found regressions upstream (e.g. packaging), and have conservatively implemented workarounds to coax things into submission when the actual fix would take more months to land. I wish to continue that effort, and expand to other Ansible-based and Kitchen-based integration scenarios to provide examples of how to get to OpenStack using Chef. These are but some of my personal goals and aspirations. I hope to be able to make progress on them all, but reality may temper those aspirations. I would love to connect with more new users and contributors. You can reach out to me directly, or find me in #openstack-chef. Thanks! -scas