►
From YouTube: Brigade Community Meeting -- 2022-02-01
Description
A recording of the Brigade Community Meeting on 2022-02-01
A
A
Keeping
it
trimming
for
a
while
very
nice,
okay,
all
right,
so
I
will
let's
see,
share
the
agenda
quickly
and.
A
A
Okay,
and
is
this
big
enough
for
people
to
read
all
right
cool,
so
the
the
agenda
looks
long,
but
it's
really
not
we'll
just
go
over
what
some
of
the
big
news
was.
This
week
we
released
a
second
episode
of
brigade
in
five
minutes.
A
We
demonstrated
it
using
github,
although
you
can
also
use
azure,
active
directory
or
google
cloud
identity
platform,
we
could
potentially
have
episodes
about
the
other
two
options
in
the
future
if
people
were
especially
interested
in
those,
but
we
do
need
some
opinions
or
requests
or
what
have
you
about
what
topics
to
cover?
Next,
I
put
authorization
at
the
top
of
the
list,
since
the
last
thing
we
covered
was
authentication.
Authorization
seems
like
the
logical
next
thing.
A
I
threw
a
few
other
ideas
out
there,
but
if
anybody
has
other
ideas
or
wants
to
suggest
a
priority
or
a
a
rank
stacking
for
these,
you
know
that's
cool
any
opinions
from
anybody
about
content.
They'd
like
to
see
in
that
video
series.
A
Okay,
I'll
I'll,
take
that
as
no,
in
which
case
probably
I'll
I'll
tackle
them
in
the
order
that
they're
written
here-
and
I
should
emphasize-
I
actually.
C
A
Oh
yeah,
I'm
sorry
I
wasn't
talking
about
what
topic
is
next
on
the
agenda
I
was
talking
about
what
topic
is
next
for
the
brigade
in
five
minutes
series.
Oh.
D
A
Okay,
yeah,
I
I
I
understand
what
you
are
suggesting
now.
I
think
that's
a
really
good
idea,
the
only
the
only
thing
I
so
okay,
we
should
maybe
move
that
up
higher
in
the
list.
Then
I
do
think
authorization
should
precede
that
because
you
have
to
create
a
service
account
and
give
it
some
permissions
in
order
for
a
gateway
to
work.
So
it
makes
sense,
so
I
think
covering
authorization
before
the
gateway
would
be
good.
A
I
am
also
to
be
honest,
a
little
worried
that
we
can't
squeeze
the
github
gateway
into
five
minutes,
because-
and
that's
nothing,
that's
no
fault
of
our
own.
It
is
simply
that
setting
up
a
so-called
github
app
is
a
relatively
onerous
process.
That
really
has
nothing
to
do
with
brigade,
so
it
might
have
to
be
a
video,
that's
separate
from
the
five-minute
series,
but
yeah.
We
definitely
should
do
a
video
on
that
topic.
I
think
that's
a
great
suggestion.
A
So,
moving
on
from
the
brigade
in
five
minutes,
we
do
have
the
other
big
news
item
this
week.
The
new
github
gateway
is
ga
and
we
should
have
a
blog
post
going
about
that
going
out
about
that
later.
Today,
bridget,
I
already
saw
some
of
the
feedback
that
you
provided
on
that.
Thank
you,
as
always,
bridget
is
the
best
by
the
way
at
reviewing
you
know
any
kind
of
copy
or
prose
like.
If
you
can
get
her
to
review
your
stuff.
A
You
should
because
she's
awesome
not
that
I'm
volunteering
you
for
anything
also.
We
do
potentially
need
some
opinions
about
what
peripherals
are
the
next
priority
so
now
that
the
github
gateway-
which
I
think
most
people
probably
would
have
agreed-
is
our
most
important
gateway.
A
Now
that
that
is
ga
there's
the
question
of
where,
where
does
maintainer
time
go,
and
I
want
to
actually
propose
that
the
cron
event
source
that
george
contributed
might
actually
be
the
next
most
valuable
thing
that
we
have,
because
I
think
that's
really
good
for
people
who
want
to
use
brigade
to
do
things
like,
for
instance,
schedule
you
know
nightly
code
scans,
you
know
static
code,
analysis
or
security
stuff.
You
know,
I
I'm
thinking
about
already
how
we
might
use
it.
I
could
use
it
to.
A
You
know,
run
a
yarn
audit
nightly
on
any
of
our
javascript
based
components
turns
out.
I
don't
like
having
that
run
as
part
of
the
ci
process,
because
all
too
often
we
become
aware
of
new
vulnerabilities
and
it
starts
making
things
fail,
even
though
nothing
in
the
pr
at
hand
even
touched
those
dependencies.
So
I
I
can
see
that
we
have
immediate
use
for
it.
It
seems
very
valuable
to
me
and-
and
personally
that's
where
I
would
vote
that
we
spend
our
time.
A
Also,
it's
a
very
simple
component,
so
I
think
it's
something
that
can
probably
you
know
bga
and
in
a
matter
of
days,
if
we
just
really,
you
know,
give
it
the
attention
that
it
needs.
A
As
for
the
rest
of
them,
I'd
really
like
to
hear
opinions
about
which
of
these
peripherals
people
think
are
most
useful
to
them,
and
so
so
that
we
know
where
we
should
focus
our
efforts.
A
Well,
we
can
think
about
it.
People
can
always
feel
free
to
open
issues
or
raise
this
as
a
topic
of
discussion
in
the
slack
channel
I'll
quickly
share
some.
We
have
an
unmute,
oh
george,
hey,
can
you
hear
me
loud
and
clear.
E
Yeah
yeah,
I'm
glad
to
be
here
it's
very
early
for
me.
Sorry,
I
think
6am
but
yeah.
I
think
there
is
zumbat
from
brazil
joining
as
well,
but
still
not
the
perfect
time
for
them,
and
I'm
here
in
melbourne,
australia,
but
look
about
the
the
gateways
yeah.
They
create
the
current
job.
I
did
last
night
I
moved
the
the
ripple
and
I
think
something
on
teams
or
a
discord.
A
Yeah
that
would
be
awesome
discord
is,
I
guess
you
could
say
on
my
wish
list,
the
the
things
that
I,
the
bulleted
items
that
I
put
on
this
list
up
until
now.
These
are
things
that
already
exist
and
just
have
to
be
taken
across
the
line
so
but
yeah.
If
somebody
wants
to
start
something
net,
new
yeah
discord
and
teams
gateways
are
absolutely
on
the
wish
list.
A
So
if,
if
you
want
to
try
your
hand
at
that
or
you
have
anybody
who
you
can
line
up
to
help
out
with
that,
that
would
be
absolutely
amazing.
George.
E
Yeah
no
worries
I'll,
let
you
know,
I
think
it's
a
quick
queen
if
you
can
get
someone
to
do
it
and
no
help
to
do
it.
You
said
something
you
can
start
from
the
existing.
A
The
next
thing
I
was
going
to
do
was
share
a
little
bit
about
progress
on
a
v2
compatible
costi.
So
this
was
something
that
we
originally
hadn't
necessarily
planned
on
doing.
But,
as
I've
said
a
few
times
now,
it
just
kind
of
materialized,
because
I
started
learning
react
and
realized
how
easy
it
could
actually
be
to
do
this
and
it
has
been
publicly
deployed.
Can
people
still
see
this.
A
Let's
see
if
that's
correct,
yes,
so
I'll
give
this
little
preview
of
it.
It
is
out
there
publicly
right
now.
Most
people
cannot
log
into
it
at
the
moment
you
have
to
be
a
member
of
the
brigadecore
org
in
order
to
log
in
at
the
moment.
I
may
change
that
soon,
so
that
everybody
can
have
read-only
permissions
on
this,
but
it
actually
works.
It
can
show
you
all
of
the
projects
and
the
status
of
the
latest
event
for
each
project.
A
A
You
can
look
at
logs
from
the
get
initializer
component
that
yanked
all
of
the
source
code
down
from
github.
You
can
look
at
the
worker
logs.
This
is
where
the
script
is
executing.
I
apologize.
The
the
log
streaming
component
might
be
a
little
buggy
still.
A
You
can
also
look
at
the
various
jobs
that
the
event
worker
has
run.
So
you
could
pick
any
one
of
these
really
and
you
can
see
the
ammo
for
the
job.
Again,
you
can
see
get
initializer
logs.
A
You
can
see
other
container
logs,
so
if
you
have
sidecar
containers,
you
can
see
those
as
well.
So
here's
an
example:
this
one
has
a
sidecar,
a
docker
demon
running
in
a
sidecar.
You
can
see
all
of
its
logs,
so
this
actually
gives
a
lot
more
access
to
a
lot
more
information
than
the
original
kashti
did.
A
We
can
also
see
users.
Oh,
it
looks
like
radu
logged
in
for
the
first
time
just
a
minute
ago,
cool,
although
you're,
probably
getting
errors
radu,
because
you
don't
have
any
permissions
yet
see.
Radu
has
no
permissions.
Oh
whoa!
I
really
just
blew
things
up.
Okay,
so
we're
we're
still
working
on
this,
but
it's
it's
a
thing
that
I'm
working
on
as
time
allows
it's.
A
Basically,
when
I
get
blocked
on
something
else,
I
shift
gears
and
I
work
on
that
for
a
little
bit,
but
I
think
in
the
not
too
distant
future.
This
can
be
a
thing
that
we
actually
release.
A
So
that's
it
for
the
agenda,
except
for
just
a
general
discussion
about
expanding
the
community
and
contributor
base,
and
I
am
happy
to
see
a
new
face
here
today.
Also
so
welcome
humberto.
I
hope
I'm
pronouncing
that
correctly.
I
I'm
assuming
george
for
cute
rook
recruited.
You.
E
A
Oh
excellent
yeah.
Thank
you.
Thank
you
very
much,
george
for
continuing
to
you,
know,
advertise
and
and
promote
this
project.
It's
been
very,
very
helpful
and
again,
thank
you
very
much
for
the
the
kron
event
source.
It
looks
great.
E
Yeah
my
pleasure,
let's
see
how
I
can.
I
can
help
going
forward
and
yeah
there's
a
few
people
interested
in
brazil.
It's
just
four
o'clock
for
them.
They
probably
a
little
bit
after
five,
probably
get
more
attention.
People
are
finishing
work
and
then
one
or
two
hours
ahead.
If
you
can
move
the
meeting-
or
maybe
I
can
organize
another
one
in
portuguese,
just
for
them.
E
A
Two
hours
forward:
how
does
that
work
for
other
folks
is
is
do
any
of
the
regular
attendees?
Can
you
handle
doing
this
at
1pm
pacific?
What
time
is
it
pacific
now
eleven?
So
would
this
be
nine?
Wouldn't
this
be
nine?
Am
pacific.
C
I
think
he's
saying
to
put
it
you're
currently
at
11
a.m:
pacific-
and
I
think
he's
saying
if
it
were
1
p.m.
Pacific
then
george
wouldn't
have
to
take
the
meeting
at
five
in
the
morning.
He
could
wake
up
and
have
some
coffee
and
oh.
E
Fourth,
for
you
and
back,
I
don't
know
it's
just
like
two
hours,
I
think
in
brazil
will
be
six
o'clock.
Six
pm,
probably
people
finish
work
and
they
can
join.
I
think
in
india
people
be
waking.
E
India,
I
think,
would
be
too
late
for
them
by
you.
Europe.
A
C
C
A
I
mean
also,
I
mean
also
we
could
consider
moving
the
day
if
what
is
it
1
pm
pacific
on
some
other
day
works
well
for
everybody.
F
I
mean
we've
also.
We've
also
talked
about
having
alternate
times
for
the
meeting,
and
I
know
that's
kind
of
confusing,
but
we
could
look
at
having
east
coast
and
eu
time
frame
time,
yeah
friendly
slot
and
then
a
pack
and
then
west
coast
friendly
time
zone,
and
we
could
alternate
between
the
two.
I
think
it's
gonna
be
you're,
always
going
to
leave
at
least
half
the
world
out
right.
A
Yeah,
I
think
I
think,
once
upon
a
time
we
had
done
that
before
so
yeah.
I
think
that's
that's
something
that
we
could
do
so.
Maybe
we'll
keep
the
current
time
slot
for
every
other
occurrence
and
then
the
other
occurrences.
We
will
move
back
to.
F
A
So,
just
returning
to
the
topic
of
expanding
the
community
and
the
contributor
base,
this
continues
to
be
a
little
bit
of
a
concern
that
I
have.
We
really
need
to
attract
more
attention
to
this
project
if
we're
going
to
keep
it
going.
A
So
I
was
talking
to
karen
earlier
today,
or
maybe
it
was
yesterday.
I
don't
remember
now
about
possibly
dropping
a
bunch
more
swag.
You
know
in
order
to
incentivize
or
reward
contributors,
so
we'll
see
what
we
can
work
out
in
terms
of
that.
A
Yeah,
so
I
I
think
right
now,
our
our
best
asset
for
bringing
new
people
into
the
project
is
george
who's
really
been
out
there
selling
and
promoting
us
we.
So
we
should
definitely
send
george
some
swag,
so
karen
and
I
will
reach
out
to
you
about
that
and
get
your
your
details.
So
we
can
you
can
ship
to
australia
right
karen.
B
E
A
A
Okay,
yeah
so
hope
so,
hopefully,
when
we
start
having
half
of
the
meetings
later,
they'll
be
able
to
to
start
joining
us,
but
you
know:
are
they
hanging
out
in
our
slack
channel
at
all?
Because
you
know
always,
you
know
always
willing
to.
You
know
talk
about
stuff
in
there
as
well.
E
Yep
they
are
on
dislike
already:
okay
and
there's
another
one
for
india
that
joined
last
week.
He
pinged
me
on
linkedin
and
he
wants
to
help.
D
E
The
community
and
yeah
you
have
now
what
is.
A
Your
idea
in
australia
now
one
thing
that
bridgette
brought
up
last
time
and
I
apologize.
I
haven't
taken
action
on
it,
yet
I
think
it
was
you
who
brought
it
up.
Bridgette
was
about
putting
some
kind
of
blog
post
or
something
out
there.
That's
kind
of
a
call
for
content
and
suggesting
to
others.
You
know
what
kind
of
content
we
would
be
interested
in
sharing
if
they
were
to
create
it
and
send
it
our
way.
A
So
I'll
try
to
get
something
like
that
up
in
the
next
few
days,
just
to
kind
of
solicit
some
some
non-code
contributions,
because
really
at
this
point
content
is
more
important.
It's
the
thing!
That's
getting
the
word
out
there
and
oh
welcome
moises.
A
How
are
you
so
yeah
I'll
try
to
get
a
post
together
about
that
in
the
next
few
days?
But
but
everybody
here
you
know,
should
consider
it
an
open
invitation.
You
know,
if
you
have
anything,
that's
you
know
anything
brigade
related.
Obviously
that's
worth
blogging
about
or
talking
about
in
a
five
minute
video.
You
know,
let's,
let's
do
something,
one
thing
in
particular:
maybe
for
vaughn
and
radhu.
A
A
A
Yeah
so
so
I
I
had
tried
that
once
and
I
got
stuck
pretty
quickly,
but
I'm
just
bringing
it
up,
because
if
somebody
has
made
it
work
like
somebody
who
works
at
a
wasm
startup,
for
instance,
if
somebody
has
made
it
work,
I
think
that
would
be.
You
know
an
absolutely
awesome
awesome
thing
to
blog
about
or
make
a
video
about.
F
We
have
workloads
running
in
crusted
on
top
of
aks.
The
only
thing
that
doesn't
work
is,
for
example,
git
clone.
So
as
assuming
you're
going
to
be
able
to
pass
the
informations
in
a
different
way
like
files
or
standard
in
and
get
it
through
standard
output,
then
it
should
definitely
work.
But
just
cloning
is
not
going
to
work
for
sure.
A
A
All
right
awesome!
Well,
thank
you.
Everybody
for
coming.
This
was
our
best
attended
call
so
far.
This
is
very
encouraging.
So
welcome
to
the
new
faces,
george
thanks
again
for
for
all
of
your
recent
contributions
and
yeah.
This
is
exciting
thanks.
Everybody.
E
E
Very
close
yeah
windows.
D
E
We
have
a
community
called
azuta
and
that
community
has
like
170
people
on
telegram
and
then
yeah.
There's
a
few
people
interested
to
help
and
probably
react.
There
are
more
people
that
can
help
I'm
doing
sdk
for
c-sharp
as
well,
and
I
think
we
have
a
few
c-sharp
developers
on
this
community
because
I'm
trying
to
get
helping
as
well.
A
Also,
george,
you,
you
just
made
me
think
of
something
that,
if,
if
you
or
anybody
else
had
interest
in
translating
the
existing
docs
into
portuguese,
that
is
certainly
beneficial,
especially
if
you
have
a
lot
of
people
in
brazil,
for
instance,
who
are
interested
in
this.