/srv/irclogs.ubuntu.com/2012/10/18/#ubuntu-classroom.txt

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=== ChanServ changed the topic of #ubuntu-classroom to: Welcome to the Ubuntu Classroom - https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Classroom || Support in #ubuntu || Upcoming Schedule: http://is.gd/8rtIi || Questions in #ubuntu-classroom-chat || Current Session: Ubuntu Women Career Days: - Instructors: Dolasilla
ClassBotLogs for this session will be available at http://irclogs.ubuntu.com/2012/10/18/%23ubuntu-classroom.html following the conclusion of the session.19:00
Cheri703Hi everyone, welcome to our CareerDays session!19:01
Cheri703We had a pretty lengthy hiatus, but we are back!19:01
Cheri703Today's presentation is goign to be by Dolasilla - Silvia Bindelli, about being a Software Release Coordinator!19:01
Cheri703Silvia was also recently elected to the Ubuntu Women Leadership team, so we're very excited to have her.19:02
Cheri703As always: To ask a question, you need to be in #ubuntu-classroom-chat and ask your question in the following format:19:02
Cheri703QUESTION: <question>19:02
Cheri703Where <question> is your actual question. If you do not begin the line with QUESTION:, ClassBot will not recognize it, and your question will most likely not get answered.19:02
Cheri703Alright, Dolasilla, if you're ready, take it away!19:02
DolasillaHello all!19:02
DolasillaI'm really exciteted to be here19:03
DolasillaSo, first, let me introduce myself19:03
DolasillaI'm Silvia, I was born in northern Italy 29 years ago, but I currently live in South of France (which, bottom line, I love!).19:03
DolasillaI'm a computer engineer, I graduated at the Politecnico di Milano 4 years ago, with a master thesis in software engineering.19:03
Dolasilla(ah, a little disclaimer: feel completely free to ask question at any time in the chat channel, I will try to answer them as soon as they get)19:04
DolasillaI started being involved in opensource since 2007 but I've been using open source tools for longer time19:04
DolasillaAlso my master thesis was about an autonomic system (a system able to self-manage) and it was integrating some open source projects, like for instance LIME (http://lime.sourceforge.net/index.html)19:05
DolasillaAfter graduation I've worked for like 5 months at the university as an assistant researcher in the same field as my master thesis (software engineering), and it was pretty interesting!19:05
DolasillaAfter that I've been working in the IT department of a fashion company (yeah, sounds weird) where I was in charge of the business process management project.19:05
DolasillaThis is also an experience I've enjoyed pretty much.19:05
DolasillaI love talking to people, and improving their life through technology19:06
Dolasillaand that position gave the possibility to really do that19:06
DolasillaDuring that time I had to discuss with managers to understand the way they worked, and then implementing the same or improved processes in the tool, in order to automatize part of their activities and providing a way to organize the output of each phase, in order to build an organized knowledge base structured on the activity flow.19:07
DolasillaThe tool was very interesting as well: unfortunately not open source, but based on a J2EE architecture.19:07
DolasillaIt had a very practical user interface, to do the most of the job. But it also allowed to develop new features and to integrate it with the legacy systems of the company.19:07
DolasillaI had fun "playing" with it in order to customize it to better fit the needs of the company.19:08
DolasillaSuch a job was allowing me to deal both with technologies and with people, that is a balance I try to find in all my jobs, as I love both aspects.19:08
DolasillaAfter a couple of years I moved to south of France, looking for new experiences but always trying to keep those two element alive in my day-to-day job.19:08
DolasillaAnd I've managed to get it in my current position as a release coordinator.19:08
DolasillaI'm currently working in a big IT company which operates mainly in the online booking business. Bookings of flights, hotels, etc...19:08
DolasillaMy job mainly consists in coordinating the activities that bring a new release of a software or a patch to the production systems for one of the divisions.19:09
DolasillaBasically my role starts after the QA phases and before the actual use of the system by everyone.19:09
DolasillaWe have a big datacenter, located in a different country19:10
Dolasillathe releasing team coordinates the activities that actually send new pieces of software to the datacenter19:10
Dolasillaour customers are airlines19:10
Dolasillahotels19:11
Dolasillabut even travel agencies19:11
Dolasillaso what we "send" to the data center are both real software upgrades19:11
Dolasillabut also customizations of the websites of customers, of the way the flow of your booking is shown to you when you book a flight19:12
Dolasilla(or an hotel room or whatever else)19:12
DolasillaSo if we look at the day-to-day activity, it actually consists of a mixture of technical and social skills that you need to use everyday.19:12
DolasillaFrom a technical point of view, for instance, in my team we maintain the configurations of the the production systems (which of course cannot be the same of the development or testing or Quality Assurance platforms).19:13
DolasillaWe get the updates of such configuration set by architecture and development teams, and we store them in our tool to make sure they are applied to the right "farm"19:14
Dolasillafor those who are less familiar with the farm concept, take it as a logical abstraction of a set of server19:15
DolasillaOf course another important element in our job is we have to know the main architecture of production systems and the way newly developed software is deployed.19:15
DolasillaAbout the social side of the job, instead, we often have to coordinate several activities at the same time (technical changes on production servers, new customization of customer websites, new software releases,...).19:16
DolasillaOften we find ourselves to be in the middle, having to mediate between the need to keep production environments as much stable as possible, and the needs of marketing to keep the customers happy complying to all of their requests for new features.19:16
DolasillaThis can be challanging, but since I'm there I have definetly improved my coordination skills, having to take into account at the same time several different activities and needs19:17
Dolasilla!y19:18
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ClassBotCheri703 asked: What is the usual time table you are working on? How long is the release process?19:18
DolasillaIt depends19:19
Dolasillaif we consider the single web application of the single customer, they have really frequent updates19:19
Dolasillaon a weekly bases19:19
Dolasillabasis19:19
Dolasillaif we think instead of the core of the software, so the engine which actually allows for the booking flows and to search a flight19:20
Dolasillawe typically have 3 major releases per year19:20
Dolasillaand 1 or 2 service packs between them19:20
Dolasillabut of course, the work for the release that is going to production next month has started much time ago19:21
Dolasillathe discussion about which changes should be included in it have started also one year in advance19:21
DolasillaWe in the releasing team come to the very end of the flow19:21
Dolasillaafter all development and testing has been done19:22
Dolasillaof course, some preparation is needed on our side also, before we actually go in production19:22
DolasillaThe classical flow for a new release from our side is: we first get new configuration settings, some days in advance, in order to store them in our releasing tools.19:22
DolasillaWe also get notified in case we need to include some technical migration of the underlying technologies (application servers, web servers,...).19:22
shookeeshi19:22
Dolasillance we get the record for the new release, we check its content, include the notes about new configurations and send it to another team in charge of "packing" things up and send them to production.19:23
DolasillaThis is only an example of the main standard flow, after that there are several different kind of loads as well as different targets depending on the product and the customers.19:23
DolasillaIn general, for anything, the "packing" part is mostly automated19:24
DolasillaThe packaging team role is mostly to supervise the packing part, the application of the load on our test system, and then the sending of the delivery19:25
Dolasillaand to raise exceptions in case they notice something wrong19:25
DolasillaThe job gets particularly interesting when it is about new implementations of new products and for new customers.19:25
DolasillaIn this case we have to set up our tools and testing environments to consider new farms. And often we face unforseen challanges about how to deploy brand new architectures and how to handle, afterwards, their maintenance.19:26
DolasillaOr it happens that something on which developers are working on their platform need to be sent to production farms, but the content is huge and new in the structure which requires to coordinate different teams in finding a solution, which most likely implies changes in the releasing tools and processes.19:26
DolasillaHere the job can get technically quite interesting when it's about thinking solutions to new problems. But also the coordination part keeps being important, to interact with several different teams (development, production support, QA,..) to get the inputs needed for setting up new environments.19:27
DolasillaSo basically if in most of the cases we have defined processes and tools to automate the job, the challange comes when you get something new which does not fit in19:28
DolasillaAnd you have to think of new processes as well as changings in the tools19:28
DolasillaWe have in general calm moments, like between a service pack and a release, where we just have standard patches19:29
Dolasillaand really tense moment, during release time19:29
Dolasillawhere everything must work fine and at the right time19:29
Dolasillato minimize the impact on customers, to make sure they get the newest version working properly since the very first day19:30
DolasillaIt's always about trying to find a balance between offering always the latest improvement, and to keep the stability of production systems19:31
DolasillaFrom the technological point of view, the company being so big, production systems integrate a wide number of technologies, some of them are open source some others are proprietary.19:31
Dolasillawe also have several internal tools we use to maintain configurations and to ease our releasing job: they care for us of all the configurations of each farm and each product. we just have to keep them up to date everytime there is something new, and then they will automatically fill the fields of parametrized configuration files.19:32
DolasillaAlso these tools are based on a variety of technologies, and we often rely on open source ones, like apache servers, for instance.19:32
DolasillaWe handle our own tools and this allow us to have the flexibility to update them quickly when a new need rises19:33
DolasillaI would say this is more or less it, hope I've been able to provide a global idea of what I do, but I would be happy to answer any question or to explain further any aspect19:33
ClassBotCheri703 asked: Is your job one that you "leave at work" or is it the type of job that if something goes wrong you'll get a call during the night that something needs attention?19:34
DolasillaThe second one you said ;)19:34
Dolasillalet's say, in general, we manage to "leave at work"19:34
Dolasillabut in cut-off periods, so when a big new implementation is going to production19:35
Dolasillathen we can get definetly called at night, and it happened to me as well19:35
Dolasillabecause if you are changing the full systems of the callcenter of some big company19:35
Dolasillayou may find new issues that you did not find even in all the tests19:36
Dolasillaand then you need to send immediately the fix to production19:36
Dolasillayou cannot wait the next day19:36
Dolasillaeven because if the company is on the other side of the world "next day" can be a relative concept19:36
Dolasillaanyways, in "normal" mode, we don't get called19:36
Cheri703Awesome. :D19:38
Cheri703I'm going to put out a final call, if anyone has any other questions, please ask them in #ubuntu-classroom-chat19:39
Cheri703Well, thank you again to Dolasilla for your time and presentation!19:40
DolasillaMy pleasure!19:40
Cheri703As always we'll have the logs linked at http://wiki.ubuntu-women.org/CareerDays and we'll post them to the Ubuntu Women blog as well.19:40
Dolasillathanks to you!19:40
Cheri703If anyone has any further questions after reading through the logs, definitely feel free to contact the UW Team through the contact info on the CareerDays page.19:41
DolasillaBye everyone, feel free to contact me for any further question!19:43
ClassBotThere are 10 minutes remaining in the current session.19:50
ClassBotThere are 5 minutes remaining in the current session.19:55
ClassBotLogs for this session will be available at http://irclogs.ubuntu.com/2012/10/18/%23ubuntu-classroom.html20:00
=== ChanServ changed the topic of #ubuntu-classroom to: Welcome to the Ubuntu Classroom - https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Classroom || Support in #ubuntu || Upcoming Schedule: http://is.gd/8rtIi || Questions in #ubuntu-classroom-chat ||
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