Home Blog Page 77

Leveraging the Open Source Program Office: New Research Unpacks the Evolution of the OSPO (and a Whole Lot More)

OSS is a growing phenomenon, and every journey to open source best practices is unique. At the same time, there’s a whole lot of room to grow some more. Many organizations use Open Source Program Offices to align their open source efforts under a management system and policies designed to create a positive experience for internal developers and external participants to the communities they participate in and contribute. 

While the Linux Foundation, under the auspices of The TODO Group, has previously published whitepapers about the benefits of open source and OSPOs, it became apparent that it needed an established model for evolving an OSPO within an organization. Beyond the modeling, it was important to supplement pathways to open source best practices with good old-fashioned storytelling in OSPO leadership and formation to help other leaders and practitioners see themselves in the process. It’s hard not to be inspired by the vision of some of the community’s innovators, so why not share their stories?

The TODO Group, in collaboration with Linux Foundation Research, is pleased to release a new whitepaper, The Evolution of the Open Source Program Office, as a roadmap for others to follow.

Ana Jiménez Santamaría, TODO Group’s OSPO Program Manager, further explains the motivations behind the development of the roadmap and case study: 

“I have seen an increasing need for OSPO guidance in many organizations. I hope this study provides a way to better frame and visualize the OSPO ecosystem complexity and provide a roadmap to ease OSPO planning and adoption. We welcome the open source community to contribute and collaborate to these resources, expanding the initial archetype scope or improving the documentation for each of the stages.”

This whitepaper provides a set of patterns and directions – and even a checklist! – to help implement an OSPO or an open source initiative within corporate environments. This includes an OSPO maturity model, practical implementation from noted OSPO programs across regions and sectors, and a handful of broad OSPO archetypes (or personas), which drive differentiation in OSPO behavior.

Intending to drive differentiation in OSPO behavior, this whitepaper features a set of OSPO Archetypes from a company perspective, including:

Industry CollaborativesCross-Industry CollaborativesProject FacilitatorsOpen Source First OrganizationsTechnology Strategy ExpertsSoftware Companies

The OSPO maturity model has been developed based on a series of interviews from leaders of noted OSPO programs, including some of the most influential technology firms such as Red Hat, Microsoft, SAP, and VMware, as well as some of the most iconic brands. And yes, the research dug into recent OSPO survey data, too.

As the culmination of the research process, the whitepaper features three case studies of the evolution of  OSPOs in end-user organizations in different industry verticals: Bloomberg (financial services), Comcast (media), and Porsche (transportation/automotive). Each case is structured as a journey through the stages of the OSPO model to put it into practice. 

Bloomberg runs a highly mature OSPO with nine years of experience. With over 6,500 developers engaged and as many as 20 dedicated specifically to OSS, it is a major incubator of projects such as Kserve, bqplot, and PowerfulSeal.

Kevin P. Fleming, who served as the former head of technology engagement at Bloomberg, recalls the need for the organization to have trusted advisors when it comes to open source:

 “As more and more people from management down to individual contributors understood that we wanted to build better relationships and broaden engagement and usage of open source, we became advisors in strategic decision-making. Should we use this particular project from this community? Does it look like a real community, or is it being run by a single company or individual? We helped answer those questions.”

Comcast is a five-year veteran of open source adoption, has four full-time engineers in its OSPO, and has been highly active incubating projects such as Apache Traffic Control, Trickster, and Kuberhealthy within the larger OSS community. 

Nithya Ruff, who is a Comcast fellow and also serves on the Linux Foundation Board of Directors as chair, emphasized the need to make working on open source projects easy and to facilitate the process for Comcast employees when they participate:

“A lot of our engineers love being able to contribute to OSS and being able to speak at conferences, publish papers and blogs. Our job is to make it easy to make it work in OSS. We believe OSS is a critical component of innovation as a company and a key advantage in attracting great developers to work with us.” 

Porsche’s OSPO is relatively new, having been in operation for two years, but already has a number of developers and engineers dedicated to open source coding incubating projects such as the Porsche Design System, the OSS Review Toolkit, and the Cookie Consent Banner.

Nik Peters, who runs Porsche’s OSPO, feels that the company’s role in open source is well suited to driving standards adoption in the automotive industry as an OSS end user.

“As an organization, we are in-between being a contributor and being a participant. One of our big goals is to see if we can drive and set open standards—for example, an automotive open source standard … our big goal is to move from 10 to 20 percent in-house embedded software to at least 60 percent over five years. This for us is a game-changer,” 

Not all experiences are equal, but each is unique and valuable in its own right. 

Who should read this report? Anyone who wants to learn about the value of the Open Source Program Office and its significance to organizational compliance, competitiveness, and stewardship of shared technologies in hardware, software, and standards. 

The post Leveraging the Open Source Program Office: New Research Unpacks the Evolution of the OSPO (and a Whole Lot More) appeared first on Linux Foundation.

How to build redundancy into your network (and what to avoid)

Redundancy with automated failover is good. But making the wrong decisions can make a high-availability solution worse than no redundancy at all.

Read More at Enable Sysadmin

How sysadmins can rethink study habits for training or certification

Starting a new training series? You may find the fast-paced sysadmin life changes how you learn and retain information.

Read More at Enable Sysadmin

Building containers by hand using namespaces: Use a net namespace for VPNs

Learn about Linux namespaces by isolating a VPN connection in the net namespace.

Read More at Enable Sysadmin

Open Networking & Edge Executive Forum (ONEEF) Returns Virtually, April 12-14, 2022

Global Industry Executives across telco, cloud and enterprise to share thought-leading visions with global open source networking and edge communities – in across alternating time zones 

SAN FRANCISCO, February 22, 2022 – The Linux Foundation, the nonprofit organization enabling mass innovation through open source, in partnership with LF Networking and LF Edge,  ​​today announced the Open Networking & Edge Executive Forum (ONEEF) will take place virtually April 12-14, 2022. The Open Networking & Edge Executive Forum (spring) and Summit (fall) are the industry’s premier open networking and edge computing events focused on end to end solutions powered by open source. 

Building on the successful inaugural ONEEF event last spring, the Linux Foundation, LF Networking, and LF Edge are pleased to announce the 2022 Executive Forum, where leading industry executives will again share their visions from the Telco, Cloud, and Enterprise verticals. Attendees will learn how to leverage open source ecosystems and gain new insights for digital transformation. Presented in a virtual format across three days, this is a one-track event starting in a different time zone each day to better reach our global audience. 

“We are  pleased to welcome thought leaders from across the globe to the virtual stage for ONEEF 2022,” said Arpit Joshipura, general manager, Networking, Edge & IoT, at the Linux Foundation. “This curated experience is designed to complement the Open Networking & Edge Summit with thought leaders and collaborators from around the globe coming together to share insights, best practices, and new ideas that enhance the vertical space across open source networking, edge, cloud and enterprise stacks.”

Details on Executive speakers and session agenda will be available soon, but attendees can expect to hear industry insights from Analysys Mason analyst Caroline Chappell, as well as updates on the direction of major initiatives like the  5G Super Blue Print. Stay tuned for more details.

Speakers and Content from ONEEF 2021, including sessions videos, are available online.

Registration & Sponsorships

Presented in a virtual format across three days, this is a one track event that will be held in a different time zone each day to reach our global audience in the Americas, EMEA, and APAC. There is no cost to attend, but participants must be registered in order to access the sessions: https://events.linuxfoundation.org/open-networking-and-edge-exec-forum/

Sponsorship opportunities are available for this special executive edition of Open Networking & Edge Summit. For more information on sponsoring this event, contact us at events@lfnetworking.org.

The LF Networking developer community will also host the LFN Developer & Testing Forum this Summer, taking place June 13-16, in Porto, Portugal. Registration for that event  is also open, with more details to come. 

About the Linux Foundation

Founded in 2000, the Linux Foundation is supported by more than 2,000 members and is the world’s leading home for collaboration on open source software, open standards, open data, and open hardware. Linux Foundation’s projects are critical to the world’s infrastructure including Linux, Kubernetes, Node.js, and more. The Linux Foundation’s methodology focuses on leveraging best practices and addressing the needs of contributors, users and solution providers to create sustainable models for open collaboration. For more information, please visit linuxfoundation.org.

The Linux Foundation Events are where the world’s leading technologists meet, collaborate, learn and network in order to advance innovations that support the world’s largest shared technologies.

The Linux Foundation has registered trademarks and uses trademarks. For a list of trademarks of The Linux Foundation, please see its trademark usage page: www.linuxfoundation.org/trademark-usage. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds. 

###

The post Open Networking & Edge Executive Forum (ONEEF) Returns Virtually, April 12-14, 2022 appeared first on Linux Foundation.

Troubleshoot and monitor Linux system performance with nmon

nmon consolidates real-time and historical performance data from different system resources, making it a fantastic tool to have in your sysadmin belt.

Read More at Enable Sysadmin

10 habits of great Ansible users

Ansible makes it easier to create, share, and manage automation, but like any tool, some ways of using it are better than others.

Read More at Enable Sysadmin

What the first five lines of Linux’s top command tell you

Wondering how your system is performing and using resources? Check the Linux top command’s first five lines.

Read More at Enable Sysadmin

How to set up a network bridge for virtual machine communication

Use the nmtui console to set up network connectivity for VMs to communicate over an IP network.

Read More at Enable Sysadmin

Check your YAML for errors with yamllint

Check for YAML violations in your code before it gets executed with yamllint.

Read More at Enable Sysadmin