DevOps in the Cloud

OpenStack Delivers Ussuri Update

The OpenStack community today officially released Ussuri, an update to the cloud management framework that tightens integration between components including the ability to automatically provision bare-metal servers using the Ironic IT automation framework built for that purpose.

In addition, the community has added IPv6 support to the Kuryr project for integrating OpenStack with container networking and support for the CRI-O image specification for Kubernetes clusters within the Zun container runtime project. As a result, IT teams can now employ Zun-created pods on Kubernetes clusters that can run Kata containers being developed under the auspices of the OpenStack Foundation.

Jonathan Bryce, executive director of the OSF, said support for OpenStack remains strong with more than 1,000 developers from 188 different organizations making contributions to Ussuri. More than 24,000 code changes have been made to OpenStack in this release. According to 451 Research, the OpenStack ecosystem is on track to be valued at $7.7 billion by 2023.

Most OpenStack deployments have been on top of virtual machines. However, as interest in bare-metal servers to run platforms such as Kubernetes has increased, so too has interest in employing OpenStack to automate the provisioning on that infrastructure.

At the same time, the relationship between Kubernetes and OpenStack remains complex. Many organizations prefer to deploy Kubernetes on top of virtual machines to ensure isolation. Others view Kubernetes running on bare-metal servers as a way to eliminate the need for virtual machines altogether. It’s too early to say how that debate will play out but for now most instances of Kubernetes are deployed on virtual machines. The issue is whether to deploy Kubernetes on one of several open source virtual machines or employ commercial virtual machines from VMware that have been widely adopted in enterprise IT environments.

The OSF is also trying to drive the development of Kata containers, which will enable IT teams to employ a container runtime on top of a lightweight virtual machine to achieve isolation between workloads. Bryce said IT teams should expect to see a significant upgrade to the Kata project that will, among other things, make the runtime easier to deploy.

Investments in OpenStack over the last decade have been substantial, so it’s unlikely many organizations that have adopted it are going to abandon it anytime soon. However, in greenfield environments many organizations are considering rolling out next-generation cloud-native applications based solely on Kubernetes. The OpenStack community has already signaled its intent to foster as much interoperability as possible with Kubernetes, which is developed under the auspices of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF).

In the grand scheme of OpenStack history, it’s not likely Ussuri will be remembered as a major update. However, it does serve as a reminder of how active the OpenStack community remains, especially as telecommunications providers continue to rely on the cloud framework to automate the provisioning of both 4G and 5G networking services.

In the meantime, enterprise IT teams that have embraced OpenStack as well should expect to be employing it to provision infrastructure to run both monolithic and microservices-based applications for years to come.

Mike Vizard

Mike Vizard is a seasoned IT journalist with over 25 years of experience. He also contributed to IT Business Edge, Channel Insider, Baseline and a variety of other IT titles. Previously, Vizard was the editorial director for Ziff-Davis Enterprise as well as Editor-in-Chief for CRN and InfoWorld.

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