From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: agustin.benito@codethink.co.uk (Agustin Benito Bethencourt) Date: Mon, 31 Oct 2016 15:33:39 +0100 Subject: [cip-dev] f2f meeting at ELCE 2016 summary Message-ID: <58175643.30607@codethink.co.uk> To: cip-dev@lists.cip-project.org List-Id: cip-dev.lists.cip-project.org Dear CIP friends, At ELCE Thursday Oct 13th, the CIP group had a f2f meeting. After having lunch together, Board members met for about an hour. After that the rest of the members joined and discussed the following topics for over an hour: ++ 4.4 kernel repository * During the event was announced that the first CIP kernel will be 4.4. At the meeting we clarified where to have the repository for that kernel. ** In the past, we reached the consensus to stay as close to the kernel community as possible. Following this approach, there is a consensus at CIP on using kernel.org as the working place for the kernel. The Linux Foundation fully supports this decision. * The general idea is to have the working repositories where it make sense and mirror them all in a central place. * CIP will use by default the Linux kernel tools/process to submit/review patches. ** We are currently discussing the general maintainership policies. ++ Other tools. Repositories mirrors * As mirroring tool we will use Gitlab (as a service for now). ** As a key advantage it was stated that this tool can be set behind the firewall which for big corporations can make a difference in getting internal traction towards working in the open. Feature wise, Gitlab has what CIP needs. * Gitlab will be use for additional required software beyond the kernel. ** When the account is set up, we will announce it. ++ CIP platforms * The goal of the discussion was to find a common ground we all can share, assuming each member will focus most of their energy on those platforms used in production. * CIP basic requirements for selecting a platform: ** At least one ARM and one Intel board ** At least one low cost development board for each architecture. ** No matter what CIP chooses, the list can be increased when consensus is reached. ** If any SoC joins CIP, we will obviously strongly consider adding their boards to the list. * The boards selected at this point are: ** Beaglebone Black (TI Sitara 335x). This is a low cost board we reached consensus upon. ** Altera Cyclone V. CIP will figure out some details about how to handle off-tree code from it. * The discussion around other boards is still ongoing. ++ Delivery (release) model * When do we plan to release the platform? How? ** Agustin Benito Bethencourt (Codethink) will present a proposal to CIP about this to start the discussion. ++ Whitepaper * Since CIP was announced, in April 2016, the Group has reached consensus in several fundamental topics. For this reason, we agreed to write a Whitepaper to describe the current status and considerations of the CIP project. * Current main consensus points are summarised in the CIP slides presented at various events. The idea is to move from there to a document. * CIP group will start working on this topic as soon as possible. ++ 2017 CIP roadmap * In order to define 2017 activity, CIP decided to pick up some key dates an plan milestones around them. ** Consensus was reached around ELC, LinuxCon Japan and ELCE, based on the experience from 2016. Best Regards -- Agustin Benito Bethencourt Principal Consultant - FOSS at Codethink agustin.benito at codethink.co.uk