On Jan 16, 2014, at 4:59 PM, "Renat Akhmerov" 
<rakhme...@mirantis.com<mailto:rakhme...@mirantis.com>> wrote:

On 16 Jan 2014, at 13:06, Jesse Noller 
<jesse.nol...@rackspace.com<mailto:jesse.nol...@rackspace.com>> wrote:

Since it’s pretty easy to get lost among all the opinions I’d like to 
clarify/ask a couple of things:


  *   Keeping all the clients physically separate/combining them in to a single 
library. Two things here:
     *   In case of combining them, what exact project are we considering? If 
this list is limited to core projects like nova and keystone what policy could 
we have for other projects to join this list? (Incubation, graduation, 
something else?)
     *   In terms of granularity and easiness of development I’m for keeping 
them separate but have them use the same boilerplate code, basically we need a 
OpenStack Rest Client Framework which is flexible enough to address all the 
needs in an abstract domain agnostic manner. I would assume that combining them 
would be an additional organizational burden that every stakeholder would have 
to deal with.

Keeping them separate is awesome for *us* but really, really, really sucks for 
users trying to use the system.

You may be right but not sure that adding another line into requirements.txt is 
a huge loss of usability.


It is when that 1 dependency pulls in 6 others that pull in 10 more - every 
little barrier or potential failure from the inability to make a static binary 
to how each tool acts different is a paper cut of frustration to an end user.

Most of the time the clients don't even properly install because of 
dependencies on setuptools plugins and other things. For developers (as I've 
said) the story is worse: you have potentially 22+ individual packages and 
their dependencies to deal with if they want to use a complete openstack 
install from their code.

So it doesn't boil down to just 1 dependency: it's a long laundry list of 
things that make consumers' lives more difficult and painful.

This doesn't even touch on the fact there aren't blessed SDKs or tools pointing 
users to consume openstack in their preferred programming language.

Shipping an API isn't enough - but it can be fixed easily enough.

Renat Akhmerov
_______________________________________________
OpenStack-dev mailing list
OpenStack-dev@lists.openstack.org<mailto:OpenStack-dev@lists.openstack.org>
http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev
_______________________________________________
OpenStack-dev mailing list
OpenStack-dev@lists.openstack.org
http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev

Reply via email to