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Description
Don’t miss out! Join us at our upcoming event: KubeCon + CloudNativeCon Europe in Amsterdam, The Netherlands from April 17-21, 2023. 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: AWS ❤️ K8s - Nathan Taber, Head of Product for Kubernetes, AWS
Speakers: Nathan Taber
Nathan Taber, AWS Head of Product for Kubernetes, joins us to highlight what AWS is doing to support open source and contribute to Kubernetes.
A
Thanks
Ricardo
good
morning,
everybody
hi,
my
name
is
Nathan
Tabor
and
I
lead
the
product
team
for
kubernetes
at
AWS
and
I'm
really
excited
to
be
here,
get
a
few
minutes
to
talk
to
all
of
you
at
AWS
we
love
kubernetes
and,
of
course,
we
love
the
cncf,
our
team
wakes
up
every
day.
Thinking
about
how
can
we
improve
the
lives
of
our
customers
and
the
community
that
is
using
and
building
open
source
Technologies?
A
So
I
want
to
talk
about
a
few
things
that
we're
doing,
and
we
know
that
we're
not
alone
here
that
we're
not
doing
this
on
our
own
We
Stand,
shoulder
to
shoulder
with
you
and
the
entire
Community
to
innovate
and
to
serve
our
customers.
So
this
is
some
of
the
work
that
we've
been
doing
with
kubernetes
we're
building
the
AWS
cloud
provider
contributing
to
Cappy
and
are
part
of
the
security
response
committee.
A
We
recently
helped
Implement
gzip
optimizations,
which
improved
the
performance
of
kubernetes
clients
with
FCD
we're
bringing
our
operational
learnings
from
running
just
so
much
at
CD
at
scale
back
into
the
community
and
with
Tinkerbell.
We
have
multiple
core
maintainers
they've
done
a
lot
of
work,
updating
the
Tinkerbell
back
end
from
postgres
to
Native.
Kubernetes
Amazon
is
the
fourth
largest
contributor
to
open
Telemetry,
with
three
dedicated
maintainers
working
on
the
project.
A
key
contribution
has
been
improving:
collector
tracking
and
Metric
stability,
including
improved
Prometheus
interoperability
with
open
telemetry.
A
We
have
two
cortex
maintainers
at
AWS
and
Amazon
is
the
number
one
contributor
to
the
project.
This
last
year
we
open
source,
The,
Zone,
aware
controller,
to
make
it
easier
to
safely
update
by
zones
and
speed
up
highly
available
deployments
on
kubernetes.
We
also
introduced
parallel
compaction
on
ingester
scalability
to
reliably
support
larger
number
of
active
time
series
per
tenant.
A
Container
d,
as
many
of
you
know,
is
a
critical
part
of
kubernetes
and
we
have
three
maintainers
at
AWS
and
we're
the
number
one
contributor
to
containerd
this
year.
Our
team
has
driven
observability
improvements
as
well
as
general
project
health
and
maintenance
alongside
the
containerdy
community.
City
Cates
is
a
really
interesting
project.
A
Carpenter
is
another
new
open
source
project
that
just
was
recently
announced
from
AWS
and
it's
an
open
provider.
Cluster
Auto
scaler,
that's
built
by
the
team
at
AWS
that
radically
changes
how
capacity
is
assigned
to
clusters
provisioning
the
compute,
your
pods
need
when
they
need
to
scale
and
removing
the
need
to
think
about
setting
or
scaling
node
groups.
We've
been
thrilled
with
the
community
response
to
the
project
and
we
look
forward
to
building
more
providers
with
the
community.
A
Ack
is
a
set
of
open
controllers
built
to
allow
native
kubernetes,
provisioning
and
management
of
cloud
resources.
We
built
this
to
make
it
easy
for
anybody
to
manage
AWS
resources
using
kubernetes
and
we're
excited
to
see
this
project
being
used
directly
by
customers
in
their
clusters
and
as
a
part
of
cncf
projects
like
crossplane
and
we're
not
just
building
we're
expanding
our
contribution
to
the
cncf,
providing
up
to
three
million
dollars
in
credits.
Some
of
this
will
be
used
to
maintain
and
improve
the
core
common
CI
systems
which
deliver
cncf
project
images
to
customers.
A
Some
of
the
work
that
Emily
was
just
mentioning
before
we're
also
committed
to
long-term
support
for
kubernetes
and
the
entire
ecosystem
of
cncf
projects
with
the
open
ssf,
we've
recently
increased
our
investment
to
10
million
dollars
over
three
years
to
fund
work
in
securing
our
shared
open
source
ecosystem.
This
includes
2.5
million
dollars
to
the
alpha
omega
project
money.
That's
used
to
audit
open
source
libraries,
rewrite
foundational
libraries
in
Rust
and
ongoing
security
work
with
the
russ
Foundation
and
last
year
at
AWS.
A
This
is
not
very
visible
to
a
lot
of
people,
but
it's
very
important
to
us.
We've
launched
a
team
that
we
call
find
it
fix
it,
and
this
team
is
focused
on
finding
security
vulnerabilities
in
ubiquitous
open
source
libraries
and
then
offering
the
Upstream
Community
patches
for
these
vulnerabilities
and
in
cases
where
we
can,
we
don't
just
offer
patches,
but
we
actually
offer
a
test
Suite
to
ensure
that
future
developments
don't
reintroduce
vulnerabilities.