On Mon, Dec 4, 2023 at 2:02 PM Maarten Dammers
<maarten(a)mdammers.nl>
wrote:
Hi,
The email I received was probably well intended, but felt like a threat
to sabotage my tools. The whole project already got me unhappy from the
start with tasks, contrary to Phabricator etiquette [1], being assigned to
me because I happened to be at the top of the list. I called out the person
doing that, but I never got a reply. I guess etiquette is not enforced for
staff?
I probably have about 70+ jobs spread over several accounts that are at
risk. It feels like you're just dumping work in my lap without any benefit
for me as maintainer. I understand you want to make it easier to maintain
the infrastructure, but do you have any idea how demotivating this is?
Maarten
[1]:
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Bug_management/Phabricator_etiquette
On 30-11-2023 16:41, Seyram Komla Sapaty wrote:
Hello, all!
Starting today we are kicking off the process to shut down Grid Engine
and we want to share the timeline with you.
== Background ==
WMCS made the Grid Engine available as a backend engine for hosting tools
on Toolforge - our Platform as a Service(PaaS) offering.
An additional backend engine, Kubernetes, was also made available on
Toolforge.
Over time, maintaining and securing the grid has proven to be difficult
and making it harder to provide support to the community in other ways
because a lot of man-hours of maintenance work is spent on this.
This is mainly due to the fact that there has been no new Grid Engine
releases (bug fixes, security patches, or otherwise) since 2016.[0]
Maintenance work on the grid continued because it was widely popular with
the community and the Kubernetes offering didn't yet have many grid-like
features that contributors came to love.
Once the Kubernetes platform could handle many of the workloads, we
started the grid deprecation process by asking maintainers to migrate off
the grid.[1]
Over the past year, we've been reaching out to our tool maintainers and
working with them to migrate their tools off the Grid to Kubernetes.
We have reached out directly to all maintainers with their phabricator
ticket IDs.
The latest updates to Build Service[2] have addressed many of the issues
that prevented tool maintainers from migrating.
== Initial Timeline ==
The detailed grid shutdown timeline is available on wiki.[3] The
important dates have been copied below.
* 14th December, 2023: Any maintainer who has not responded on
phabricator will have tools shutdown and crontabs commented out. Please
plan to migrate or tell us your plans on phabricator before that date.
* 14th February, 2024: The grid is completely shut down. All tools are
stopped.
If you need further clarification or help migrating your tool, don't
hesitate to reach out to us on IRC, Telegram, Phabricator[4] or via any of
our support channels.[5]
Thank you.
[0]:
https://techblog.wikimedia.org/2022/03/14/toolforge-and-grid-engine/
[1]:
https://wikitech.wikimedia.org/wiki/News/Toolforge_Grid_Engine_deprecation
[2]:
https://wikitech.wikimedia.org/wiki/Help:Toolforge/Build_Service
[3]:
https://wikitech.wikimedia.org/wiki/News/Toolforge_Grid_Engine_deprecation#…
[4]:
https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/project/profile/6135/
[5]:
https://wikitech.wikimedia.org/wiki/Portal:Toolforge/About_Toolforge#Commun…
--
Seyram Komla Sapaty
Developer Advocate
Wikimedia Cloud Services
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