[occi-wg] Resource Types: Compute / Network / Storage

Krishna Sankar (ksankar) ksankar at cisco.com
Sun Apr 19 10:45:29 CDT 2009


Sam, 

                Isn't the platform and infrastructure reversed ? IMHO,
Infrastructure should be above the platform. Also shouldn't we have a VM
layer just below the software ?

Cheers

<k/>

 

From: occi-wg-bounces at ogf.org [mailto:occi-wg-bounces at ogf.org] On Behalf
Of Sam Johnston
Sent: Sunday, April 19, 2009 1:25 AM
To: occi-wg at ogf.org
Subject: Re: [occi-wg] Resource Types: Compute / Network / Storage

 

Morning,

Turns out this isn't such a bad idea as between writing and sending that
post Andy Edmonds independently suggested exactly the same thing via the
wiki (suggestion: change workload to compute - workload might be
something ran on a compute resource).

This is such a good (albeit obvious) idea - thanks David/RM-WG - that
I've even updated my cloud computing reference model (attached) by
adding "network' to it.

Sam

On Sun, Apr 19, 2009 at 10:08 AM, Sam Johnston <samj at samj.net> wrote:

Evening,

So one thing I did see validated by the rm-wg document was the trend
towards compute/network/storage that we're fast settling on ourselves.

Our current terminology however is far more specific - we've picked up
"Drive" and "Server" from ElasticHosts for example. While this does make
sense a lot of the time there's nothing to say that OCCI can't be used
for VDI for example, where the "servers" are in fact "clients". Take it
a step further and you've got things like Dreamhost PS
<http://dreamhost.com/hosting-vps.html>  which kind of like a virtual
provate server in that it behaves like one (it can be restarted via
their API <http://wiki.dreamhost.com/API#dreamhost_ps-reboot>  etc.),
only it refers to resource allocations in a shared hosting environment
or MySQL instances.

Granted that's outside of our remit but ther'es no point stopping them
from using it by choosing our terminology poorly. In fact a lot of these
functions can apply equally to physical machines as they can to
lightweight threads in an Apache process (and everything in between
including, of course, virtual machines which are currently our primary
target).

I've been trying to think of other resources outside of these three main
types but even strange things like ISDN interfaces (yes, this sort of
thing does appear in enterprise data centers) can be handled via PCI
passthrough parameters on a virtual machine.

All in all, unless anyone has any concerns about this approach I'd like
to adopt this terminology throughout.

Sam

 

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