►
Description
Don’t miss out! Join us at our upcoming hybrid event: KubeCon + CloudNativeCon North America 2022 from October 24-28 in Detroit (and online!). Learn more at https://kubecon.io. The conference features presentations from developers and end users of Kubernetes, Prometheus, Envoy, and all of the other CNCF-hosted projects.
Keynote: Welcome + Opening Remarks - Priyanka Sharma, Executive Director, Cloud Native Computing Foundation
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
In
fact,
do
you
know
that
year
over
year
the
number
of
people
taking
our
certification
exams
is
growing
by
216
percent
over
1
000
people
take
a
certification
test.
Every
week,
I'm
going
to
share
some
info
about
exciting
news
on
the
certification
front
later
in
the
announcements
section
of
my
keynote.
So
hang
tight.
A
A
How
many
people
do
you
think
are
here
today?
Anyone
want
to
take
a
guess
at
how
many
attendees
at
kubecon
cloud
nativecon
this
week,
just
yell
out
a
number
three
thousand
five
thousand
you're
getting
there
boom.
That's
right
over
7
000
folks
are
attending
the
event
with
over
10
000
attending
virtually
we
are
officially
sold
out
good
job
folks
yeah.
This
is
all
of
us.
A
A
This
group
of
700
folks
was
primarily
made
up
of
the
world's
few
experts,
people
who
had
been
working
on
complex
software
systems
for
years
decades.
Even
I
felt
very
out
of
place,
I
remember
vividly
walking
into
a
kubernetes
meetup
on
the
eve
of
the
event
imposter
syndrome
or
reality,
perhaps
just
attacking
me.
I
was
no
expert.
I
was
just
a
fan
of
the
complex,
beautiful
systems
that
these
people
knew
how
to
manage
and
wrangle.
A
A
A
A
A
I
learned
this
most
clearly
when
I
was
elected
to
the
cncf
governing
board,
surrounded
by
some
of
the
biggest
investors
in
cloud
native
with
the
likes
of
google
sap,
alibaba
amazon,
so
many
others.
I
met
leaders
essential
to
creating
this
industry
collaboration
that
we
call
the
kubernetes
ecosystem
in
this
environment.
I
found
my
opinions
and
my
employers
aspirations
were
important,
but
they
had
to
make
sense
in
the
context
of
other
folks
in
the
room.
A
I
encourage
you
to
bring
that
same
awareness
to
your
interactions
in
cloud
native,
but
it's
not
that
easy.
I
mean
when
we
met
last
november
or
was
it
october?
I
don't
remember
anymore,
it
was
we
had
actually
728
members
and
just
in
the
last
six
months
we
are
over
800
companies
with
that
many
folks
and
then
there's
hundreds
of
projects,
so
disagreements
are
bound
to
pop
up.
A
Let's
look
at
this
glass
of
water,
I'm
holding
it
and
I
look
through
it
and
I
see
all
of
you
through
the
glass
look
at
a
different
angle.
I
see
you
look
different
to
me
and
I'm
sure
when
you
look
through
this,
you
don't
see
what
I'm
seeing
you
see
me.
You
see
this
stage
same
glass
of
water,
different
perspectives
have
a
sip
now.
A
A
A
B
Well,
I'm
somebody
who
has
tried
to
build
bridges
in
a
country
that,
as
you
know,
the
united
states
is
the
most
diverse
one
of
the
most
diverse
countries
in
the
history
of
the
world.
I
have
tried
to
build
bridges
and
I
have
learned
that
the
payoff
is
extraordinary.
B
We
were
able
to
get
coal
miners,
their
health
benefits
and
pensions
back
fights
that
people
said
were
completely
impossible,
especially
given
the
political
divisions,
but
we
were
able
to
find
a
way
to
get
it
done,
and
I've
learned
that
I've
never
seen
a
bird
fly
with
only
a
left
wing.
I've
never
seen
a
bird
fly
with
only
a
right
wing.
We
need
each
other.
B
A
Awesome,
thank
you
for
joining
us
man
and
based
on
what
your
experience
is.
I'd
love
to
ask
you
a
question,
as
our
community
grows
larger
we're
united
in
our
mission
to
build
technology
a
certain
way,
but
beyond
that
a
pretty
diverse
bunch.
How
can
we
effectively
collaborate
when
there
are
lots
of
different
views
and
ideas.
B
First
and
foremost,
this
is
probably
the
most
important
community
in
the
tech
space
you're
you're,
carrying
a
mission
forward,
that's
bigger
than
anybody's
ego
or
anybody's
position,
and
you
know,
frankly,
the
the
future
of
what
humanity
can
do
together
through
technology
is
really
in
your
hands,
and
so
I
think
that
there's
a
certain
reverence
for
who
and
what
you've
created
it
has
to
always
be
there
number
one
number
two.
You
have
to
ask
yourself
the
question.
You
know
people
gotta,
fight
people,
gonna,
disagree,
disagreement's,
not
a
bad
thing.
B
It's
disrespect,
that's
a
bad
thing.
Disagreement
is
good,
but
disrespect
is
destructive.
So
the
question
is:
when
a
disagreement
comes
up.
How
do
you
act?
Here's
the
guideline
for
us.
If
everyone
in
the
situation
did
exactly
what
I'm
doing
exactly
the
way
I'm
doing
it,
will
we
have
a
community?
Could
we
actually
stay
together?
So
I'm
mad.
B
Somebody
said
something
I
didn't
like
if
I
tear
them
a
new
one,
if
I
go
in
to
say
that
just
kick
their
butt,
if
everybody
who's
mad,
did
that
every
single
time
will
we
have
a
community,
we
know-
probably
not
so
so
so
thinking
to
myself
the.
What
I'm
doing
you
know
basically
can
create
a.
I
guess
in
your
world
could
create
a
positive
or
negative
virus.
If
you
guys
know
more
technology
talking,
I
do,
but
you
know
what
kind
of
virus
are
you
creating?
What
kind
of
virus
are
you
spreading?
B
A
B
I
think
the
the
opportunity
that
we
have
is
to
make
sure
that
the
groups
that
we're
part
of
of
course
are
going
to
form
affinity
groups.
People
who
see
things
the
same
way
or
from
the
same
country
have
something
else
in
common.
That's
perfectly
fine,
but
the
question
is
in
a
conflict.
B
The
two
things
you
want
to
make
sure
always
present
are
space
and
grace,
and
you
think
about
it
yourself.
If
you
do
something
that
gives
someone
offense
and
we've
all
done
it
and
you
feel
terrible,
what's
the
one
thing
you
want
is
just
grace,
you
just
want
that
person
to
assume
the
best
about
you
and
give
you
the
opportunity
to
learn,
or
sometimes
when
you
feel
that
you've
been
offended,
and
you
want
to
communicate
that.
B
What's
the
one
thing
you
want,
you
just
want
the
space
to
be
able
to
share
it
and
to
feel
heard
well
that
grace
and
space
developing,
no
matter
what
tribe
you're
in
subgroup
you're
in.
If
any
group
you're
in
making
sure
that
you're
valuing
giving
people
grace
when
they
make
a
mistake
and
asking
for
space
when
you
want
to
communicate,
then
the
tribes
actually
wind
up
being
links
in
a
chain.
B
When
you
make
a
mistake-
or
maybe
it's
not
a
mistake,
you
you
did
something
you
gave
offense
and
then
that
person
comes
at
you
and
we've
all
been
through
this
with
so
much
force
and
so
much
anger
and
so
much
hostility
and
you're
left
there.
Maybe
for
them
it
was
just
like
quick.
You
know
a
couple
of
their
thumbs
just
moved
around
a
little
bit,
but
you're
left
with
that
pain
makes
it
harder
for
you
to
do
your
job
makes
it
harder
for
you
to
show
up
it's
hard.
B
If
you
make
your
contribution,
and
so
sometimes
we
knock
each
other
out
and
we're
knocking
out
genius,
we're
knocking
out
perspective,
we're
knocking
out.
Maybe
the
answer
to
a
question
that
could
really
change
the
world
because
we
are
treating
each
other
with
grace
and
giving
each
other
space
and
that's
what
you
have
to
fight
for
in
a
big
community
like
yours,.
B
You
know
you
matter
you
individually
matter,
it's
so
easy
to
feel
like
I'm
just
me
and
who
cares
and
the
world's
so
tough
and
whatever.
Please
don't
believe
that
if
you
have
the
ability
to
to
master
technology
to
code,
you
know
it
used
to
be
that
the
future
was
written
in
law.
It
was
written
by
lawyers
like
myself,
in
parliaments
and
in
courts
in
legislatures
in
executive
branches,
the
future
used
to
be
written
in
law.
Now
the
future
is
written
in
code,
it's
written
in
computer
code.
B
You
are
designing,
you
are
creating
the
infrastructure
for
a
new
human
civilization
that
is
being
born
right
now,
where
everybody
gets
to
contribute.
Everybody
gets
to
be
a
part
of
it
because
of
what
you're
doing
that
is
a
tremendous
power
and
as
as
spider-man's
uncle
ben
told
them
with
great
power
comes
great
responsibility.
B
You
have
tremendous
power,
you
may
have
been
a
geek
or
whatever
you're,
saying
and
and
left
out
and
mistreated
and
laughed
at
and
all
sort
of
stuff.
All
these
different
things.
We
all
have
those
things,
but
that's
not
who
you
are
now
you
are
in
possession
of
magical
powers
that
can
change
the
world
and
you're
in
a
community.
That's
designed
to
do
that.
That
is
an
unbelievable
gift
and
a
source
of
real
power,
and
I
just
ask
you
to
use
that
power
with
kindness
use
it
with
grace,
use
it
with
space.
B
A
A
C
Our
lives
have
changed
for
a
while
and
puts
everything
that
has
happened
in
my
life
up
until
this
point.
In
the
perspective-
and
you
know,
community
has
never
been
so
important
from
my
community
here
in
my
home,
my
family
friends,
my
squad
to
the
global
community
rolling
around
us
we're
standing
together
against
russia,
united
in
our
law
for
ukraine
and
the
modern
liberal
country.
We
have
worked
so
hard
to
build,
despite
here,
sort
of
hero.
C
C
I
am
incredibly
grateful
for
the
support
that
you,
the
cloud
native
community,
have
shown
us
when
I'm
joined
the
armed
forces.
I've
tweeted
that
we
needed
help
with
supplies
and
within
minutes
hundreds
of
messages
of
support
and
offers
of
help
are
in
fact,
operation.
Varetsky.
An
amazing
project
set
up
by
the
team
cloud
native
came
about
just
because
of
one
tweet.
C
C
A
A
E
E
E
E
In
february,
we
anticipated
the
need
for
the
medical
supplies
should
the
full-scale
invasion
begin.
We
started
procuring
tactical
medical
supplies
a
week
prior
to
february
24th,
the
beginning
of
the
war.
Talk
med,
a
term
that
we
use
colloquially
at
azim
now
means
everything
to
stop
the
bleeding
and
save
lives.
E
E
But
we're
seeing
that
we
definitely
need
more
help.
Our
intention
was
initially
to
just
train
100
medics
within
the
civilian
territorial
defense
forces
provide
them
with
special
backpacks
full
of
supplies,
but
to
date,
we've
procured
over
17
million
dollars
worth
of
tacmed
and
medical
supplies.
We
send
an
average
of
more
than
50
pallets
of
aid
to
ukraine
each
week.
In
the
first
month
of
the
war
we
shipped
over
218
tons
of
supplies
of
that
we've
purchased
more
than
120
000
tourniquets.
E
Let
me
break
this
down
for
you,
so
one
tourniquet
costs
because
we
get
a
bulk
price
for
it
about
20.,
so
we've
spent
over
2.5
million
dollars
on
tourniquets
alone
and,
as
you
may
have
heard,
there's
a
supply
chain
issue
and
at
times
there
aren't
enough
tourniquets
for
many
of
the
people
that
are
trying
to
buy
them,
but
asm
procures
the
supplies
that
we're
sending
ourselves
in
the
u.s
and
europe.
We
pack
the
supplies
in
a
warehouse
in
new
jersey.
E
E
E
We
continue
to
advocate
in
the
us,
both
through
public
protests
and
through
our
d.c
based
advocacy
group,
and
the
reason
why
we've
been
able
to
achieve
this
much
is
thanks
to
the
generosity
of
people
worldwide,
as
painful
as
it
has
been
to
witness
this
horrific
war
in
ukraine
evolved.
There
have
been
many
bright
spots
too.
It's
been
incredible
to
witness
the
global
response
to
the
humanitarian
crisis
in
ukraine.
E
We
had
historically
been
an
all-volunteer
organization
with
about
four
thousand
donors
and
two
hundred
fifty
thousand
dollars
in
annual
revenue
since
the
war
started.
Our
organization
has
witnessed
an
enormous
growth
in
donations
and
receiving
more
than
50
million
in
funding.
Since
the
war
began
from
over
125
000
donors,
the
average
donation
is
300
and
we've
spent
27
million
of
that
already
in
our
response,
and
the
need
is
great.
E
E
E
There's
more
to
this
slide,
so
there's
actually
a
really
big
it
community
in
ukraine.
So
what's
different
about
this
war,
I
think
is
that
everybody's
watching
it
from
their
phones.
I
mean
everyone.
Everyone
in
ukraine
is
watching
it
from
their
phones.
E
E
So
it's
among
the
top
five
industries
in
ukraine,
and
even
now
that
industry
is
going
really
strong.
I.T
professionals
are
still
employed
even
if
displaced,
and
they
continue
to
support
the
economy
of
ukraine
and
just
as
in
open
sources
where
everyone
submits
a
piece
of
code,
all
together,
they're
able
to
withstand
and
resist
russia.
This
is
how
ukraine
operates.
Razom
together,.
E
And
so
the
logos
featured
here
actually
represent
so
many
of
the
overwhelmingly
generous
companies
that
have
supported
our
work
so
far,
and
that
includes
many
employees,
corporate
social
responsibility,
programs,
founders
and
ceos
of
of
various
companies
and
we're
so
very
grateful
because,
as
we
said,
we're
going
to
all
need
to
work
together
to
rebuild
our
beautiful
homeland.
E
I
also
realized
I
forgot
to
introduce
myself,
so
I
guess
I'll
do
that.
Now,
sorry,
a
little
jet
lagged
came
all
the
way
from
seattle.
My
name
is
elena
ninkiewicz
and
I'm
ukrainian
american
first
generation.
My
kids
were
born
in
ukraine,
and
you
know
this
is
very
personal
to
us
and
I
think
the
same
is
true
for
everyone
at
asm
I
mean
we've
taken
leaves
of
absence
from
our
jobs.
E
Back
to
the
tech
guys,
so
ukrainians
in
tech
are
so
great
their
creative
problem.
Solvers
we've
had
a
lot
of
really
innovative
founders,
including
grammarly
and
petcube,
who
have
ukrainian
founders,
and
we
see
them
as
an
opportunity
to
keep
building
the
country.
So
in
addition
to
donating
to
causes-
and
there
are
so
many
great
causes
that
are
helping
ukraine,
including
this
conference
today.
Thank
you
so
much
for
this.
We
invite
you
to
consider
hiring
ukrainian
I.t
professionals
and
investing
in
ukrainian
startups
even
before
the
war
is
over.
A
That
was
wonderful.
We
want
to
help,
and
so
cncf
has
put
together
an
lfx
donation
page.
You
can
go
to
cncf
dot,
io
ukraine.
Any
funds
raised
will
be
split
between
razam
and
for
ukraine
and
project
duaretsky
for
our
own
ehort
directly.
I
really
hope
you
will
consider
giving
if
you
are
able
again
go
to
cncf
dot,
io,
slash
ukraine
to
make
a
contribution.
A
Today,
let's
do
this
team
and
for
those
looking
for
more
options,
we
I
created
a
list
here
of
organizations
that
seem
to
be
doing
amazing
work.
Please
feel
free
to
check
them
out
now,
with
very
little
time
left.
I
am
going
to
speed
through
the
announcements
pick
up
the
pace.
Real
fast
you'll
meet
a
few
more
interesting
people
and
have
some
fun
all
right.
Super
quickly,
kubecon
cloud
nativecon
europe
is
coming
back,
amsterdam
next
year
april,
17
to
21.
whew.
Yes,.
A
Second,
remember
I
said
earlier:
I
have
certification
news.
It's
true,
prometheus
certified
associate
is
for
beginners
getting
into
observability.
It's
a
prometheus
is
a
major
pillar
of
cloud
native
stacks
and
we're
happy
to
announce
this
new
certificate.
It's
modeled
after
other
kubernetes,
certs
and
it'll
consist
of
a
multiple
multiple
choice.
Online
exam
and
it'll
help
teach
the
best
practices
of
monitoring
cloud
native
applications.
Beta
testing
will
begin
soon
and
the
exam
will
be
generally
available
this
year,
make
sure
to
sign
up
for
those
of
you
who
came
on
monday.
A
You
heard
a
little
bit
about
this.
I'm
very
excited
to
announce
the
beta
version
of
the
new
cloud
native
network
function,
certification
program
designed
to
help
telecom,
a
communication
service
provider
industry
in
their
adoption
of
cloud
native
technologies
and
best
practices.
I
really
wish
I
had
more
time
to
go
into
it,
but
integrates
lots
of
cncf
projects
is
based
on
test
suite.
I'm
gonna
keep
going
now
and
you
can
self-certify
go
to
cncf.io
cnf
speaking
of
expansion
into
new
verticals.
A
I
would
like
to
ask
how
many
of
you
came
to
this
conference
on
a
plane
yep
most
of
us
right.
Well
chances
are,
you
were
on
a
boeing
plane.
Boeing
joins
us
as
a
cncf,
platinum
member
and
is
one
of
the
more
sophisticated
multi-cloud
players
in
the
space,
ricardo
and
gina.
Please
welcome
to
the
stage,
tell
us
a
little
bit
about
yourself
and
why
you
chose
to
join
the
foundation.
D
D
So
17
years
ago
I
was,
I
was
the
lead
sre
in
a
google
war
room
running
a
bunch
of
very
terrible
and
extremely
long
bash,
one-liners
to
stand
up
the
world's
first
production
board.
Cluster
we've
come
a
long
way
since
then,
like
an
extremely
long
way.
Today
at
boeing,
we
are
dedicated
to
building
ultra
high
rel
ultra
high
reliability,
high
integrity
mission,
critical
software.
D
Excuse
me
so
we're
in
particular
we're
working
to
leverage
the
the
massive
scalability
and
flexibility
of
public
cloud
deployments
to
build
to
build
modern
aerospace
products
and
to
deliver
rapid,
iteration
and
integration
to
our
customers.
D
One
of
the
things
that
distinguishes
boeing
as
a
cn
as
a
cncf
partner
is
that
we
are
truly
dedicated.
We
really
are
committed
to
the
belief
that
kubernetes
and
cloud
native
solutions
are
capable
of
of
extremely
high
reliability.
In
my
google
sre
days,
we
used
to
think
about
five
nines
as
kind
of
our
reliability
target
or
or
what
we
described
now
is
ten
to
the
minus
five
at
boeing.
We
are.
D
We
are
certain
that
we
can
be
using
kubernetes
to
deliver
products
and
deploy
products
that
that
can
achieve
reliability,
levels
10
to
the
minus
nine,
and
so
so.
We're
really
honored
to
be
to
be
part
of
this
partnership
and
to
and
to
really
extend
kubernetes
and
cloud
native
solutions
well
in
the
future
and
and
together
change
the
world
in
delivering
extremely
robust
software
deployments.
D
At
this
time,
I'd
like
to
introduce
ricardo
torres
so
he's
our
chief
engineer
of
open
source
and
cloud
native
computing
at
boeing,
and
thank
you
thanks.
A
F
As
jenna
shared
boeing
is
committed
to
riding
high
integrity
software
from
seabed
to
space,
with
a
few
clouds
sprinkled
in
under
the
boeing
umbrella,
we
have
autonomous
seafaring
vessels
collecting
environmental
data.
We
help
put
rockets
into
space
and
soon
you'll
be
able
to
see
tom
cruise
as
maverick
fly.
The
boeing
built
f
a-18
super
hornet.
F
A
G
Howdy
everybody
a
merry
cubecon
cloudnativecon
to
you
all
hope,
you're
staying
hydrated
and
getting
far
more
steps
on
your
watch
than
you're
used
to
usually.
I
know
I
am
despite
how
sunny
it's
been
here
in
valencia.
I've
noticed
it's
quite
cloudy
in
this
venue,
I'm
not
sure.
If
that's
just
me,
but
okay,
I
had
to
get
a
couple
in
there
as
head
of
ecosystem
at
the
cncf,
I'm
focused
on
finding
ways
to
enable
cloud
native
success
for
companies,
individuals
and
teams.
G
G
we're
at
american
greetings,
where
I
help
create
social
frameworks
to
support
our
seo
and
marketing
team
things
are
quite
content,
as
I'm
on
the
content
team
during
my
year
spent
here
I'll
learn
a
variety
of
ways
to
wish
someone
a
happy
birthday
version,
my
api
endpoints
and
create
the
organization's
first
ever
meme
generator.
We
have
to
have
our
start
somewhere
right,
unfortunately,
that
meme
generator
is
no
longer
up,
but
I
was
able
to
save
a
picture
on
that
front.
G
G
G
Flash
forward
again
to
2016
and
a
long
way
from
cleveland,
where
I
get
to
get
to
go
to
los
angeles.
I
can
say
that
I
miss
the
snow
in
the
midwest,
but
I
do
miss.
I
do
miss
all
of
the
foods.
Unfortunately,
it's
really
good
pierogies
things
like
that.
Just
can't
find
it
in
l.a,
it's
a
bummer
disney
studios
is
where
I
teach
teams
to
work
with
cloud
native
technologies,
reshape
the
studio's
approach
to
incident
management
and
lead
the
sre
team.
That
team
goes
on
to
manage
over
450
plus
different
services.
G
Now,
if
you
think,
having
one
service
down
is
a
is
a
handful
more
than
that
is
more
of
a
handful
disney,
as
an
organization
has
mastered
the
art
of
how
to
tell
a
story
but
I'll
soon
learn
that
it's
the
most
interesting
stories
happen
around
3
a.m.
On
incident
calls
it's
not
a
good
idea
to
assume,
but
in
most
cases
you
can
assume
it's
dns.
G
I
learned
that
there
is
more
than
one
way
to
get
things
done,
many
different
ways
to
see
a
problem.
Working
as
a
developer
advocate,
I
gained
an
understanding
in
how
to
coalesce
product
engineering
and
developer
experience
concerns
to
create
workflows
that
are
awesome
and
scalable
and
shareable
as
well.
G
Today,
on
the
topic
of
focus
and
best
practice
later
today,
we're
going
to
have
our
first
ever
cto
summit,
where
we
gather
knowledgeable
end
users
to
discuss
the
topic,
the
topic
of
resiliency
in
multi-cloud.
What
does
that
mean?
Does
that
mean
that
you're
using
excel
and
google
sheets,
probably
not
we'll
we'll
find
out
on
that
front?
G
If
you
have
those
deep
organization-wide
insights
and
you
want
to
participate
in
our
next
one
at
kubecon
cloudnativecon
na
in
detroit,
please
keep
an
eye
out
as
we're
gonna
have
a
sign
up
sheet.
In
a
few
weeks,
I'm
filled
with
enthusiasm
and
limitless
amounts
of
puns
to
help
guide.
You
on
your
cloud
native
journey
orange
you're
glad
that
we
get
to
work
on
this
together.
I
know
I
am
all
right,
I'm
gonna
peel
on
out
of
here
and
I'd
like
to
turn
things
back
over
to
priyanka.