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From YouTube: Welcome + Introduction - Matt Klein, Lyft
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Welcome + Introduction - Matt Klein, Lyft
A
Envoy
con
our
our
first
one.
This
is
absolutely
fantastic.
Our
gold
today,
if
you're
on
Twitter's,
to
make
everyone
jealous
that
they're
not
here
so
the
hashtag
is
hash
on
boy
con
and
welcome
everyone.
You
know,
as
I've
said
multiple
times.
I
really
cannot
believe
that
so
many
people
are
here
wanted
to
come.
A
We've
had
people
that
are,
you
know,
trying
to
get
in
that
couldn't
get
a
ticket,
and
when
we
first
talked
about
doing
a
conference,
I
first
thought
that
you
know
no
one
would
submit
CFP
and
then
we
got
tons
of
CFPs
and
they
were
all
awesome
and
then
I
thought
no
one
would
actually
want
to
come
to
the
conference
and
then
we
sold
out.
We
got
a
bigger
room.
A
We
sold
that
out
and
it's
just
it's
a
testament
to
the
the
larger
community
that
people
are
so
excited
about
this,
so
I
am
so
thrilled
and
I'm.
So
happy
that
you're
all
here.
This
is
fantastic.
I
hope
that
most
people
here
know
what
envoy
is,
but
just
on
the
on
the
off
chance
that
you
don't
and
just
to
set
some
expectations
for
the
rest
of
the
day.
A
I'm
just
going
to
spend
you
know
30
or
60
seconds
talking
a
little
bit
about
the
envoy
project
and
and
what
it's
all
about
and
fundamentally
envoy,
is
a
network
proxy.
You
know
the
goal
of
envoy
is
that
the
network
should
be
transparent
to
applications,
and
you
know
like
I
say
in
most
of
my
talks.
You
know
we
we
develop
infrastructure,
but
our
goal
as
infrastructure
engineers
is
to
get
out
of
the
way
and
to
hopefully
allow
people
to
focus
on
their
business
logic.
A
A
So
I
thought
it
would
be
fun
actually
to
talk
a
little
bit
just
about
the
project,
history
and
incredible
to
me.
It
spans
almost
four
years
now,
which
is,
which
is
pretty
amazing,
and
you
know
we
start
and
we
go
back
to
sorry.
That's
gonna
be
a
little
little
small
to
see
on
on
this
side
screen,
but
we
go
back
to
around
the
beginning
of
May
of
2015.
This
was
the
first
commit
for
what
would
eventually
become
envoy
in
lifts,
private
repo
and
fun
fun
fact.
A
I
originally
was
going
to
call
it
lift
proxy,
but
someone
at
lyft
said
you
know
we
shouldn't
call
it
lift
proxy.
We
should
have
some
better
name
that
people
would
like,
so
I
got
out
the
thesaurus
and
I
searched
for
proxy,
and
there
was
envoy
and
I
said:
let's
call
it
envoy,
so
that's
that's
that's
why
it's
called
envoy
but
yeah.
So
this
was
back
in
2015
on
the
tail
of
the
work
that
I
had
done
back
at
Twitter.
A
You
know
seeing
some
of
the
some
of
the
issues
that
we
had
had
there
with
Twitter's
services
to
service
system,
as
well
as
its
edge
proxy
and
started
on
an
envoy
really
right.
When
I
came
to
lift-
and
you
know
fast
forward
through
2015,
we
actually
went
from
I
think
envoy
went
into
production
at
lyft
for
the
first
time
in
around
September
of
2015,
so
that
was
four
months
from
empty
repo
to
production
and
obviously
envoy
back
then
was
a
much
simpler
system.
A
We
were
just
using
it
for
edge
proxy,
but
even
at
that
very
early
stage,
you
know
we
were
already
seeing
some
of
the
benefits
over
the
existing
solutions,
particularly
around
observability,
and
that
was
really
fantastic
to
see.
So
throughout
you
know,
2015
and
into
early
2016.
We
were
focused
entirely
on
lyft.
We
were
beginning
to
roll
out
the
service
smash,
adding
all
kinds
of
features
you
know
focusing
on
our
a
couple
hundred
of
internal
developers-
and
you
know
I
think
that's.
A
One
of
the
things
that
has
made
envoy
so
successful
is
that
we
built
the
product
for
developers
at
lyft.
We
operated
envoy
at
lyft.
We
were
on
call
for
envoy
at
lyft,
so
you
know
there
was
a
lot
of
like
personal
effort
to
make
it
a
system
that
we
could
operate
at
scale
and
also
to
satisfy
real
real
problems
that
people
lived
were
actually
happening.
So
starting
you
know,
towards
the
first
or
second
corner
of
2016.
You
know
we
were
saying
we
built
this
awesome
thing.
Let's,
let's
go
and
let's
actually
open
source
it.
A
People
in
the
community
can
can
hopefully
benefit
from
this.
So
this
takes
us
towards
mid
2016.
The
first
commit
into
the
open
source
repo
was
on
August,
8th
2016,
and
then
we
eventually
announced
our
open
sourcing
in
September
of
2016,
and
you
know
it
was
a
incredibly
difficult
ride
to
actually
go
through
and
and
do
this
I
remember,
I
took
a
doc,
you
KN,
where
I
spent,
like
I,
think
80
hours
over
two
weeks.
A
Writing
all
the
documentation
in
the
initial
on
by
open
source
release,
documentation,
matters,
doing
all
the
blog
posts
and
a
bunch
of
other
stuff,
and
it
was.
It
was
pretty
pretty
awesome
and
you
know
pretty
quickly
when
we
open
sourced
it
was.
It
was
pretty
fantastic,
we
had
you
know
a
lot
of
interest
from
our
friends
over
at
Google,
also
a
bunch
of
other
companies,
and
things
continue
to
grow
pretty
quickly.
A
A
2017
was
the
most
difficult
year
of
my
life
by,
by
far
for
a
variety
of
reasons,
envoy
was
like
a
startup
that
blew
up,
and
you
know,
I
was
doing
CEO
chief
marketing
officer
PR,
all
of
those
things
and
2017
was
was
nuts.
It
just
went
from
trying
to
grow
this
thing
and
keep
quality
and
a
bunch
of
other
stuff
and-
and
you
know,
try
to
make
it
more
sustainable
and
to
see
all
of
you
out
here
today
is
just
incredible
to
me
that
we
have
gone
from
this
photo.
A
You
know
this
larger,
larger
community
and
it's
it's
just
fantastic.
So
towards
the
end
of
2017,
we
joined
CNC
F,
that's
been,
it's
been
great.
It's
been
great
to
have
the
code
in
a
neutral
home.
It's
been
great,
you
know
to
have
a
a
license
or
a
copyright
that
is
compatible
for
all
the
people
that
are
building
great
stuff
and
then
fast
forward,
and
to
just
recently
we
became
a
graduated
project
within
the
CNC
F.
That's
a
vote
of
confidence
that
you
know
the
project
isn't
going
to
go
anywhere.
A
You
know
it's
ready
for
enterprise
use,
we
have
a
sustainable
community
and
that's
fantastic,
and
you
know
looking
forward
now
when
I
look
around
at
all
of
you
and
all
of
the
cloud,
vendors
and
all
of
the
end-users
and
all
of
the
startups
and
all
of
the
people
that
are
building
products
on
on
envoy.
It's
just
it's
incredible.
I
mean
it
really
is
absolutely
incredible
and
I've
loved
watching
all
of
the
things
that
people
have
have
built
super
amazing.
A
You
know
it's,
it's
no
surprise,
but
we've
really
had
adoption
across
the
entire
industry
in
only
about
two
years.
The
question
now
is
often
who
is
not
using
envoy
or
who
is
not
planning
on
using
envoy
and
just
to
see.
This
type
of
adoption
in
such
a
short
period
of
time
is
just
absolutely
fantastic.
So
you
know
super
quickly.
Just
in
terms
of
you
know,
why
is
envoy
become
popular
I
think
you
know,
we
have
focused
a
lot
on
performance.
We've
focused
on
you
know,
making
sure
that
tail
latency
stays
stays
low.
A
We
have
even
with
the
community
growth,
we
have
kept
our
focus
on
reliability,
rigorous
code
review
testing,
just
really
focusing
on
making
sure
that
master
stays
stays
safe,
modern
code
base.
You
know
compared
to
some
of
our
competitors,
just
you
know,
being
a
github
focused
product,
and
you
know
just
focusing
on
that.
Modern
modern
stuff
has
been
great
for
us
extensibility.
A
We
allow
extensions
at
almost
every
every
layer
of
the
code
base
and
that's
allow
people
to
consume
the
core
and
then
build
really
a
flabbergasting
amount
of
products
on
top,
which
is
great,
you've
heard
me
talk
about
it
and
talks,
but
just
observability
observability
observability,
just
building
that
base
by
which
people
can
build
higher
systems.
You
know
that
allow
them
to
introspect,
what's
going
on,
has
been
very
powerful.
A
Our
XDS
configuration
api's
have
been
very
powerful,
allowing
that
decoupling
of
control,
plane
and
data
plane,
seeing
just
the
the
plethora
of
control
planes
that
people
have
been
building,
have
been
again
really
fantastic
and
I'll
talk
about
it,
but
really
that
the
biggest
thing
is
all
of
you.
Just
you
know
this.
This
larger
community
coming
together
has
been
fantastic.
So,
let's
just
talk
really
briefly
about
that
envoy.
As
you
all
know,
there's
no
paid
version,
there's
no
premium
version
and-
and
this
has
been
I-
think
the
reason
that
envoy
has
become
so
popular.
A
A
But
you
know
it's
really
it's
it's
all
of
you
that
I
think
have
made
this
project
so
successful
and
we're
always
looking
for
new
people
to
contribute
new
people
to
help
with
maintenance,
and
you
know
I
just
wanted
to
thank
all
of
you
for
coming
I'm,
so
excited
for
all
the
talks.
I
think
they're
gonna
be
fantastic.
So
thank
you.