Sovereign Cloud Stack

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OSISM 7.1.0 released

Felix Kronlage-Dammers 12. Juli 2024

With the subsequent minor releases to Release 6 of the SCS IaaS reference implementation OSISM 7 we’ve managed to get lots of good continous changes out of the door. Among other reasons the recent security advisory CVE-2024-32498 caused further updates and fixes, so the 7.0.6 has become a 7.1.0. Thanks to the OpenStack Vulnerability Management Team and our colleagues from OSISM we were able to provide updated containers for the SCS IaaS Reference Implementation in time for the responsible disclosure of CVE-2024-32498. In the aftermath of the disclosure and fixes a set of redefined patches were merged and backported upstream in OpenStack, these are part of the 7.1.0 release of OSISM as well.

Aside from these very promiment features, there are several areas that have seen improvements and additions. Following featues have been added to the OSISM manager:

From the upstream kolla-ansible project, which has seen a fair share of contributions made possible by the funding through SCS, we’re now able to consume the following new features:

As part of our tender for software defined storage we’re working together with colleagues from B1 Systems on bringing rook into OSISM as the successor of ceph-ansible for managing ceph deployments. The 7.1.0 release contains a technical preview for deployments with rook,

Last, but certainly not least the documentation has been improved and new documentation has been added:

All the gory details about 7.1.0 can be read upon in the excellent OSISM release notes.

Über den Autor

Felix Kronlage-Dammers
Felix has been building (open source) IT Infrastructure since the late 90s - during high school he helped build and run an ISP specialized in providing UUCP over ssh. Between then and now felix has always been active in various open source development communities (from DarwinPorts, OpenDarwin to OpenBSD and nowadays the Sovereign Cloud Stack). His interests range from monitoring and observability over infrastructure-as-code to building and scaling communities and companies. A technician at heart he enjoys enabling others to do awesome stuff. He is part of the extended board of the OSBA and describes himself as an unix/open source nerd. If not working, doing OSS for fun and (non-)profit or spending time with his family, he is usually found on a road bike.