This document presents a matrix that describes which features are ready to be used and which features are works in progress. It includes links to relevant documentation and functional tests.
Warning
Please note: this is a work in progress!
Users want reliable, long-term solutions for their use cases. The feature classification matrix identifies which features are complete and ready to use, and which should be used with caution.
The matrix also benefits developers by providing a list of features that require further work to be considered complete.
Below is a matrix for a selection of important verticals:
For more details on the concepts in each matrix, please see Notes on Concepts.
This is a summary of the key features dev/test clouds, and other similar general purpose clouds need, and it describes their current state.
Below there are sections on NFV and HPC specific features. These look at specific features and scenarios that are important to those more specific sets of use cases.
Feature | Maturity | Hyper-V CI | Ironic CI | libvirt+kvm (x86 & ppc64) | libvirt+kvm (s390x) | libvirt+virtuozzo CT | libvirt+virtuozzo VM | libvirt+xen | IBM PowerVM CI | VMware CI | XenServer CI | IBM zVM CI |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Create Server and Delete Server | complete | ✔ |
? |
✔ |
? |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
Snapshot Server | complete | ? |
? |
✔ |
? |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
? |
✔ |
✔ |
Server power ops | complete | ✔ |
? |
✔ |
? |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
Rebuild Server | complete | ✔ |
? |
✔ |
? |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✖ |
✔ |
✔ |
✖ |
Resize Server | complete | ✔ |
? |
✔ |
? |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✖ |
✔ |
✔ |
✖ |
Volume Operations | complete | ✔ |
✖ |
✔ |
? |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✖ |
Custom disk configurations on boot | complete | ✔ n |
✖ |
✔ |
? |
✖ |
✔ |
✔ |
✖ |
✔ |
✔ |
✖ |
Custom neutron configurations on boot | complete | ✔ |
✖ |
✔ |
? |
? |
? |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
Pause a Server | complete | ✔ |
✖ |
✔ |
? |
✖ |
✔ |
✔ |
✖ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
Suspend a Server | complete | ✔ |
✖ |
✔ |
? |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✖ |
✔ |
✔ |
✖ |
Server console output | complete | ✔ |
✖ |
✔ |
? |
? |
? |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
Server Rescue | complete | ✔ |
✖ |
✔ |
? |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✖ |
✔ |
✔ |
✖ |
Server Config Drive | complete | ✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
? |
✖ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
Server Change Password | experimental | ✔ |
✖ |
✔ |
? |
✖ |
✖ |
✖ |
✖ |
✖ |
✔ |
✖ |
Server Shelve and Unshelve | complete | ✔ |
✖ |
✔ |
? |
✖ |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
✖ |
✔ |
✖ |
This includes creating a server, and deleting a server. Specifically this is about booting a server from a glance image using the default disk and network configuration.
info:
complete
drivers:
complete
unknown
partial
partial
complete
complete
complete
complete
unknown
complete
complete
This is creating a glance image from the currently running server.
info:
complete
drivers:
complete
unknown
partial
partial
complete
complete
unknown
unknown
unknown
complete
complete
This includes reboot, shutdown and start.
info:
complete
drivers:
complete
unknown
partial
partial
complete
complete
complete
complete
unknown
complete
complete
You can rebuild a server, optionally specifying the glance image to use.
info:
complete
drivers:
complete
unknown
partial
partial
complete
complete
complete
complete
unknown
missing
missing
You resize a server to a new flavor, then confirm or revert that operation.
info:
complete
drivers:
complete
unknown
complete
partial
complete
complete
complete
complete
unknown
missing
missing
This is about attaching volumes, detaching volumes.
info:
complete
drivers:
complete
unknown
complete
complete
complete
complete
complete
complete
missing
complete
missing
This is about supporting all the features of BDMv2. This includes booting from a volume, in various ways, and specifying a custom set of ephemeral disks. Note some drivers only supports part of what the API allows.
info:
complete
drivers:
complete
unknown
missing
complete
complete
partial
partial
complete
(updated in “N” release)missing
missing
missing
This is about supporting booting from one or more neutron ports, or all the related short cuts such as booting a specified network. This does not include SR-IOV or similar, just simple neutron ports.
info:
complete
drivers:
complete
unknown
unknown
unknown
partial
partial
partial
partial
missing
complete
partial
This is pause and unpause a server, where the state is held in memory.
info:
complete
drivers:
complete
unknown
missing
partial
complete
complete
partial
complete
missing
missing
complete
This suspend and resume a server, where the state is held on disk.
info:
complete
drivers:
complete
unknown
partial
partial
complete
complete
complete
complete
missing
missing
missing
This gets the current server console output.
info:
complete
drivers:
complete
unknown
unknown
unknown
complete
complete
partial
partial
missing
complete
complete
This boots a server with a new root disk from the specified glance image to allow a user to fix a boot partition configuration, or similar.
info:
complete
drivers:
complete
unknown
partial
complete
complete
complete
complete
partial
missing
missing
missing
This ensures the user data provided by the user when booting a server is available in one of the expected config drive locations.
info:
complete
drivers:
complete
unknown
missing
partial
complete
complete
complete
complete
partial
complete
complete
The ability to reset the password of a user within the server.
info:
experimental
drivers:
partial
unknown
missing
missing
missing
partial
missing
partial
missing
missing
missing
The ability to keep a server logically alive, but not using any cloud resources. For local disk based instances, this involves taking a snapshot, called offloading.
info:
complete
drivers:
complete
unknown
missing
complete
complete
complete
missing
complete
missing
complete
missing
Network Function Virtualization (NFV) is about virtualizing network node functions into building blocks that may connect, or chain together to create a particular service. It is common for this workloads needing bare metal like performance, i.e. low latency and close to line speed performance.
Important
Unless specifically enabled
, live migration is not currently
possible for instances with a NUMA topology when using the libvirt driver.
A NUMA topology may be specified explicitly or can be added implicitly due
to the use of CPU pinning or huge pages. Refer to bug #1289064 for more
information.
Feature | Maturity | libvirt+kvm (x86 & ppc64) | libvirt+kvm (s390x) | libvirt+xen |
---|---|---|---|---|
NUMA Placement | experimental | ✔ |
? |
✖ |
CPU Pinning Policy | experimental | ✔ |
? |
✖ |
CPU Pinning Thread Policy | experimental | ✔ |
? |
✖ |
Configure placement of instance vCPUs and memory across host NUMA nodes
info:
experimental
drivers:
partial
unknown
missing
Enable/disable binding of instance vCPUs to host CPUs
info:
experimental
drivers:
partial
unknown
missing
Configure usage of host hardware threads when pinning is used
info:
experimental
drivers:
partial
unknown
missing
High Performance Compute (HPC) cloud have some specific needs that are covered in this set of features.
Feature | Maturity | Hyper-V CI | Ironic | libvirt+kvm (x86 & ppc64) | libvirt+kvm (s390x) | libvirt+virtuozzo CT | libvirt+virtuozzo VM | libvirt+xen | PowerVM CI | VMware CI | XenServer CI |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
GPU Passthrough | experimental | ✖ |
? |
✔ l |
? |
✔ |
✔ |
✖ |
✖ |
✖ |
✔ k |
Virtual GPUs | experimental | ✖ |
✖ |
✔ queens |
? |
? |
? |
? |
✖ |
✖ |
✔ queens |
The PCI passthrough feature in OpenStack allows full access and direct control of a physical PCI device in guests. This mechanism is generic for any devices that can be attached to a PCI bus. Correct driver installation is the only requirement for the guest to properly use the devices.
info:
experimental
drivers:
complete
(updated in “L” release)unknown
partial
partial
missing
partial
(updated in “K” release)missing
missing
unknown
missing
Attach a virtual GPU to an instance at server creation time
info:
experimental
drivers:
partial
(updated in “QUEENS” release)unknown
unknown
unknown
unknown
partial
(updated in “QUEENS” release)missing
missing
missing
missing
This document uses the following terminology.
These are the users we talk about in this document:
Note
This is not an exhaustive list of personas, but rather an indicative set of users.
To reduce the size of the matrix, we organize the features into groups. Each group maps to a set of user stories that can be validated by a set of scenarios and tests. Typically, this means a set of tempest tests.
This list focuses on API concepts like attach and detach volumes, rather than deployment specific concepts like attach an iSCSI volume to a KVM based VM.
A deployment maps to a specific test environment. We provide a full description of the environment, so it is possible to reproduce the reported test results for each of the Feature Groups.
This description includes all aspects of the deployment, for example the hypervisor, number of nova-compute services, storage, network driver, and types of images being tested.
The Feature Group Maturity rating is specific to the API concepts, rather than specific to a particular deployment. That detail is covered in the deployment rating for each feature group.
Note
Although having some similarities, this list is not directly related to the DefCore effort.
Feature Group ratings:
For a feature to be considered complete, it must have:
There are various reasons why a complete feature may be required, but generally it is when all drivers support that feature. New drivers need to prove they support all required features before they are allowed in upstream Nova.
Required features are those that any new technology must support before being allowed into tree. The larger the list, the more features are available on all Nova based clouds.
Deprecated features are those that are scheduled to be removed in a future major release of Nova. If a feature is marked as complete, it should never be deprecated.
If a feature is incomplete or experimental for several releases, it runs the risk of being deprecated and later removed from the code base.
The deployment rating refers to the state of the tests for each Feature Group on a particular deployment.
Deployment ratings:
The eventual goal is to automate this list from a third party CI reporting system, but currently we document manual inspections in an ini file. Ideally, we will review the list at every milestone.
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