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A
Thank
you,
everyone
for
joining
us,
sorry
for
the
quick
turnaround
on
changing
up
links,
but
thank
you
for
being
here
and
for
your
patience.
I
want
to
thank
you
for
coming
today
and
we're
hosting
today's
cncf
live
webinar,
cubester,
identify,
validate,
evaluate
and
now
browse
I'm
libby
schultz
and
I'll
be
moderating
the
webinar.
A
A
The
recording
and
slides
will
be
posted
later
today
to
the
cncf
online
programs
page
at
community.cncf.io
under
online
programs.
They
will
also
be
available
via
the
registration
links
which
we
will
put
on
both
links
so
that
everyone
is
covered
for
the
event
and
they
will
be
on
our
youtube
page,
a
cncf
youtube
playlist
online
programs.
B
So
we
wanted
to
come
back
and
and
tell
you
about
some
of
those,
but
first
kind
of
want
to
get
into
a
bit
of
a
recap
around
them
before
we
get
to
show
off
some
of
those
those
new
features
and
then
then
also
share
where,
where
you
can
find
out
more
how
you
can
contribute
and
all
of
that
good
stuff.
B
So
the
goal
of
of
the
the
talk
is:
how
does
this?
How
do
how
does
cubes
to
help
you
when
it
comes
to
benchmarking
and
validating
your
your
storage,
or
has
it
hit?
The
easy
button,
I
think,
is
what
we
initially
said
when
it
comes
to
your
kubernetes
storage,
but
also
think
about
this
as
a
handy
set
of
tools
to
have
in
your
back
pocket
when
it
comes
to
having
to
to
look
into
kubernetes
storage.
Now,
if
you're
in
various
different
kubernetes
environments
on
a
daily
basis,
this
could
become
quite
a
handy
little
tool.
B
Yes,
you
could
do
everything
that
we've
done
manually,
but
who
wants
to
be
doing
it
in
a
manual
laborious
way
when
this
enables
us
to
automate
a
lot
of
the
process
and
we'll
get
to
some
of
the
processes
as
we
get
through
and
really
the
the
key
new
feature
that
that
has
been
added
to
to
cubester
is
the
ability
to
to
open
up
or
fire
up
a
file
browser
to
inspect
the
contents
or
visualize
the
contents
of
your
pvcs.
B
I've
got
sireesh
here
who
can
who
can
touch
in
a
little
bit
more
detail
about
what
went
into
developing
that
and
making
that
that
happen.
But
if
we,
if
we
go
through
a
bit
of
a
recap,
first
of
of
cubestar
and
then
we
can
get
into
the
the
new
stuff
in
fact
sarees,
why
don't
you
you
give
a
little
bit
of
a
history
and
the
motivation
behind
it?
Given
that
you
were
the
the
creator
of
of
cubester.
C
Of
course,
michael
yeah,
so
in
initially
you
know
at
cass
and
working
at
cast-
and
you
know
we
faced
a
lot
of
customer
issues
where
a
lot
of
the
times
it
wasn't
the
castings
product
problem.
It
was
just
that
the
customer
had
miss.
I'm
sorry
badly
set
up
storage
right,
and
that
means
maybe
they're
missing
a
csi
driver
or
the
right
snapshot
class
or
whatever
it
may
be
right.
C
So
we
notice
a
lot
of
these
issues,
and
you
know,
a
lot
of
our
cycles
ended
up
going
into
figuring
out
why
their
storage
was
misconfigured
right.
So
you
know
I
started
building
a
tool
just
to
just
to
kind
of
suss
out
any
of
the
potential
mistakes
they
may
have
made
when
setting
up
their
storage
and
then
after
I
had
this
tool,
I
realized
that
you
know
it
was
powerful
enough
that
anybody
that's
dealing
with
kubernetes
storage
may
find
some
benefit
out
of
using
this
tool
right.
C
So
again,
what
are
the
kind
of
issues
that
we
normally
saw
in
the
field
which
storage
setup
correctly?
Is
it
ready
to
take
for
data
protection
as
in?
Can
you
take
snapshots?
Do
you
have
that
set
up
correctly
as
well,
and
then
also
what
we
realized
is
that
a
lot
of
our
customers
were
over
provisioning,
their
volumes.
They
were
giving
themselves
too
big
of
a
volume
than
what
they
actually
needed.
So
you
know
one
of
the
things
that
we
decided
that
we
should
check
is
based
on
their
application
right.
C
What
size
of
volumes
do
they
actually
need
right?
What
type
of
volumes
do
they
actually
need?
Do
they
need
super
fast
ssd?
Are
they
okay
with
standard
ssd
that
kind
of
that
kind
of
stuff
and
yeah?
Once
you
once
we
built
this
tool,
we
realized
that
hey.
We
can
now
benchmark
our
storage,
and
this
is
great
if
you
have
a
lot
of
options
and
you're
trying
to
like
figure
out
what
your
applications
do,
and
how
do
you
benchmark
that
against
the
storage
that
you
have
available
so
yeah?
B
Yeah,
I
think
I'd
add
on
that.
So
since
the
the
launch
of
the
the
project
back
in,
I
want
to
say
april
of
this
year
the
the
conversations
that
I've
had
around
it
has
definitely
especially
on
larger
clusters,
where
you've
got
especially
managed,
kubernetes
classes,
where
there's
a
lot
of
different
options
when
it
comes
to
kubernetes
storage,
especially
in
the
public
cloud.
It's
quite
good
for
exactly
what
cerise
just
said
about
making
sure
that
you've.
B
If
you,
if
I
found
it
a
very
easy
tool
to
to
quickly
identify
the
storage
that
I
have
available,
but
also
whether
that
underpinning
infrastructure
has
been
deployed
to
what
I
need
that
application
to
run
on
like
different
different
nodes,
different
discs,
different
there's,
so
many
characteristics
that
play
a
part
in
to
what
the
storage
performance
comes
out
of,
especially
in
the
public
clouds.
B
C
And
to
michael's
point,
like
storage
performance
changes
with
a
wide
number
of
factors
right
the
number
of
apps
running
in
the
cluster,
the
size
of
the
volumes
themselves,
and
then
you
never
know
when
something
goes
wrong
in
in
in
your
cluster,
and
you
want
to
measure
hey
it's
my
storage
behaving
the
way
it
was
from
day
one
till
now
right
and
those
kind
of
degradation
of
your
storage
could
easily
be
like
figured
out
with
the
tool
that
can
measure
your
storage
right.
B
Yeah,
that's
a
that's
a
really
good
point.
You
did
a
really
good
blog
at
the
beginning
of
the
launch
around
different
different
public
clouds,
different
configurations
that
gave
out
very
different
performance
results
as
well,
which
is
a
really
useful
blog.
That's
on
cubester.io,
but
yeah.
I
think
just
to
go
into
those
three
areas
that
are
there
that
were
existing
pre
pre,
the
new
browse
functionality
and
some
other
some
other
areas
is
one
it
was
that
identify,
and
that
was
the
okay.
B
What
what's
the
a
very
quick
and
easy
just
run
the
cubes
to
binary
and
understand
the
various
different
storage
options
that
you
have
present
in
the
cluster,
and
it
is
super
simple
like
if
I've
I've
got.
I've
got
the
latest
release
here
and
you
can
literally
and
I'm
on
an
eks
cluster,
but
it's
the
same,
regardless
of
whatever
context
you're
in
it
will
run
against
that.
You
can
see
that
it
does
some
checks.
B
You
can
see
that
it
warns
you
if
you're
using
a
provider,
that's
potentially
going
out
of
out
of
support,
but
then
here
you
can
see
that
I've
got
the
ebs.
Csi
driver
installed
it.
It
knows
that
it
lists
that
it
tells
me
what
storage
classes
I
have
the
volume
snapshot
classes.
I
also
have
within
there
and
if
I
want
to
then
start
running
the
additional
tests
against
that.
But
this
initial
identification
is
simply
just
run
that
cubester
command
and
like
get
this
output.
C
Yeah
and
yeah
I
mean
traditionally
what
would
somebody?
What
would
an
a
normal
kubernetes
user
do
right?
They
would
do
cube
cuddle,
get
storage
class
and
then
they'd
see
what
storage
classes
they
have
then
have
to
do
a
get
volume,
snapshot,
class
and
then
they'd
have
to
like
you
know
if
they,
if
they
had
multiple
provisioners
they'd,
have
to
look
at
the
details
to
figure
out
which
one
belongs
to
which
and
stuff
like
that.
So
this
kind
of
consolidates
everything
and
puts
all
the
knowledge
out
there.
B
Yeah
and
this,
and
so
the
next
point
also
just
goes
a
little
bit
further
on
to
that
especially
around
the
csi-
is
that
this
this
validate
enables
us,
because
it's
quite
easy-
and
this
will
depend
on
the
role
in
which
you're
playing
out
there
in
the
in
the
kubernetes
world,
if
you're,
implementing
implementing
kubernetes
clusters
on
a
daily
basis,
sometimes
several
or
you're
at
least
the
operation
side,
you're,
potentially
seeing
multiple
different
kubernetes
clusters,
and
we
we
know
that
that
the
csi
implementation,
if
not
they're
out
of
the
box
for
a
managed
service
provider,
then
there's
some
manual
steps
that
you
potentially
have
to
go
into.
B
One
being
you
have
to
create
the
volume
snapshot
class
or,
if
you
don't.
Obviously
you
don't
have
that
functionality
that
capability
within
that,
so
this
tool
will
give
you
that
quick
feedback
as
to
say
well,
yeah,
you've,
you've,
you've
got
that
and
it's
configured
correctly.
This
goes
back
to
one
of
the
pain
points
that
suresh
mentioned
around,
something
that
we
discovered,
or
we
were
seeing
from
a
lot
of
customer
bases,
maybe
not
like
csi
had
been
implemented,
but
the
volume
snapshot
class
had
not
been
implemented
to
take
advantage
of
that.
B
So
we
couldn't
have
couldn't
create
volume
snapshots
against
that
storage
class
which
ultimately,
when
you're
coming
into
data
management,
and
you
want
to
start
leveraging
that
it
obviously
falls
down
and
doesn't
work
so
being
able
to
validate
that's
an
important
task
to
to
be
able
to
achieve
that.
And
then
the
evaluation
aspect
is
okay.
So
that
goes
back
to
how
we
were
talking
about
the
performance
of
that
storage.
B
B
So
what
the
evaluation
part
aspect
of
the
tool
does
is
it
gives
us
access
to
an
fio
pod
that
runs
against
that
storage
class,
that
we
determined
and
then
it
will
give
you
back
the
information
around
what
that,
what
that
storage
is
capable
of
and
out
of
the
box,
it
has
its
own
like
default,
fio
config,
but
you
can
bring
your
own.
B
So
if
you
know
the
makeup
of
your
application,
does
something
specific,
maybe
like
read
backwards
or
something
that
the
characteristics
of
your
application,
you
can
bring
that
fio
fio's,
not
a
new
thing
at
all.
It's
been
used
for
benchmarking
for
for
years
and
years
for
as
long
as
we've
had
spinning
discs
and-
and
this
gives
us
the
the
the
ability
to
test
against
your
characteristics
of
your
application,
so
just
to
like
to
summarize
what
what's
actually
happening
and
what
what's?
What
is
the
project?
Actually
streamlining?
B
Now
again
I
mentioned
at
the
very
beginning.
You
could
absolutely
go
and
do
this
yourself
go
and
create
your
own
pod,
create
your
your
pvc,
validate
that
the
pvc
is
created.
You
take
a
snapshot
of
that
and
then
restore
that
into
a
clone,
and
you
validated
that
your
volume
snapshot
class
is
actually
configured
correctly
and
working
and
that
your
storage
is
capable
of
storage
snapshots
or
is
configured
correctly
for
for
snapshots
within
kubernetes,
but
so
what
cubester
does,
if
you
define
it
within
your
within
the
within
the
tool,
is
it's
gonna
deploy
that
lightweight
pod?
B
It's
gonna
deploy
it's
going
to
take
the
pvc
and
the
persistent
volume.
It's
then
going
to
snapshot
that
and
then
clone
it
back
to
itself,
and
maybe
we
can
get
into
the
demo
later
on
this
as
well.
If
we've
got
time,
but
we
ran
through
this
like
extensively
when
we,
when
we
first
when
this
first
came,
came
out,
but
really
that's
an
automated
approach,
it
really
is
as
simple
as
as
running
if
I,
if
I
just
go
back
into
here,
if
I
just
wanted
to
run.
B
I
was
just
I
was
trying
to
cheat
and
maybe
I'd
run
it
against
the
eks
cluster,
but
clearly
I
haven't,
but
what
it
does
is
it's
gonna
go
and
create
that
that
pod
it's
go
so
I
could
run
cubester
csi
check
minus
v.
I
think
it
is
or.
C
Actually,
michael,
I
think
this
is
only
a
10
gig
pvc
or
something
smaller,
the
the
fio
check.
Does
it
on
100,
gig,
pvp.
B
Yes,
csi
checks.
It
is
smaller.
If
I
do
maybe
one
gig
in
the
default
name
space.
We
should
see
this
containers
being
created.
B
If
I
do
a
cube,
ctl
get
pvc
as
well
should
see
that
we've
created
our
own
pvc
there
to
confirm
one
gig
so
and
then
we're
going
to
take
the
snapshot
against
that
and
then
we're
going
to
release
that
and
clear
up
after
us,
but
I'll
come
back
and
and
show
you
what
that
report
looks
like
after
similar
to
to
what
we
do
from
an
evaluation
point
of
view.
B
So
when
we're
using
fio
again
it's
going
to
deploy
that
pod
and
that
lightweight
os,
which
includes
fio
within
within
that
same
pod,
it's
going
to
take
a
persistent
volume
but
create
a
persistent
volume
claim
and
a
pv.
And
then
it's
going
to
run
a
scan
against
that,
and
I
think
this
is
where
that
100
gig
is
by
default.
But
you
can
change
that
and
it's
going
to
give
you
that
that
those
fio
results
out
the
back
of
that.
C
Yep
yeah,
it's
all
configurable
like,
like
you
said
you
know,
there's
many
options
that
they
can
use
to
change,
how
it
performs.
We
also
allow
you
to
pass
in
a
customized
fio
file.
So
if
you
really
know
the
requirements
of
your
application
in
terms
of
performance,
you
can
simulate
your
applications,
workload
with
the
custom
fio
file
and
then
once
you
pass
that
into
that
fio
command.
You
can
more
accurately
test
what
your,
what
your
application
needs
right.
B
B
We
took
a
snapshot
of
this.
We
can
see
the
name
of
the
snapshot
and
then
we
restored
that
to
a
cloned
pod
and
a
clone
pvc,
and
then
we
went
away
and
we
cleaned
up
everything,
and
then
we
got
the
report
back
saying
successfully
snapshoted
and
restored.
So
we
know
that
the
csi
driver
that
we're
leveraging
here
is
functional
and
unable
to
we've
validated
that
things
are
configured
correctly.
B
C
Sure
again,
it
really
came
down
to
like
customers,
customer
requests,
saying
hey.
I
want
to
quickly
get
an
insight
into
what
my
volumes
have,
especially
when
they're
trying
to
kind
of
track
what
has
changed
between
snapshots,
because
our
customers
take
snapshots
frequently
and
if
they
want
to
roll
back,
they
sometimes
want
to
see
the
contents
of
a
snapshot.
C
So
we
kind
of
came
up
with
this
tool
of
how
do
we
see
what's
inside,
of
a
pv
pvc?
And
you
know
what
are
different
way
ways
to
visualize
this
right
and
so
so
the
thought
process
there
was
that.
Well,
you
know
we
could
take
a
snapshot
and
then
you
know
for
fun.
We
thought
maybe
we
could
put
a
browser
in
a
pod
and
then
deploy
it
against
that
that
pv,
and
that
would
be
an
interesting
way
to
visualize
it.
C
So
then,
you
know
we
thought
cubester
was
a
good
place
for
that
to
land
because,
like
I
said
it's
a
toolbox,
and
this
could
be
just
another
tool
in
the
toolbox
yeah
once
we
kind
of
had
that
there.
You
know
the
thoughts
process
started.
Spinning
of
what
could
be
put
in
this
pod,
besides
just
a
file
browser
right
and
we'll-
maybe
touch
a
bit
on
that
later
in
terms
of
where
we
can
take
this.
B
Our
mission
critical
demo
application,
and
so
you
can
see
here
that
that
that's
what
we've
got
currently,
if
I
set
up
a
get
odd,
namespace
pacman
watch
and
then
we
kick
this
off
then
in
a
similar
way,
you're
gonna
one.
It's
gonna,
give
you
the
the
output
on
this
this
screen,
so
obviously
it's
taking
a
snapshot
to
begin
with.
In
fact,
I
probably
should
have
done
the
the
look
at
the
volume
snapshot
as
well.
But
basically,
what
we're
to
do
is
we're
going
to
that.
B
So
this
is
now
port
forwarding.
So
now
I've
got
access
to
a
clone
copy
of
my
pvc
of
my
db.
Basically
with
all
my
mission,
critical
high
scores
in
there
now.
This
is
probably
a
good
point
where
surish,
where
our
our
brains
went
afterwards
is
well.
Where
else
could
we
go
with
that,
and
this
is
probably
where
we
want
help
or
need
help
from
the
community,
for
how
do
we?
How
do
we
accomplish
these?
This
vision.
C
Yeah-
and
I
mean
obviously
like
a
file
browser
to
look
at
mongodb
files-
may
not
be
the
best
use
case,
but
you
know,
let's
say
you
have
in
an
application
that
stores
images
or
has
like
media
files,
or
something
like
that.
This
would
be
a
much
better
representation
or
much
better
way
to
see
the
contents
of
those
pvs.
And,
of
course,
you
can
always
like
you
know,
download
those
files
through
this
browser.
C
If
that's
something
that
you
need
to
do
right,
but
but
yeah
like
michael,
was
saying
that
this
is
just
like
one
application
that
we're
deploying
on
your
data.
Maybe
you
have,
let's
say
in
the
case
of
a
it's
just
a
mongodb.
C
B
Yeah-
and
I
think
that
opens
up
a
huge
door
in
that,
okay,
so
the
browse
part
is
the
the
opening
the
door
to
that
particular
data.
But
if
you
think
about
cloning,
that
data
and
making
it
accessible,
especially
a
database
such
as
I
don't
know
whether
I'm
not
a
database
expert
by
any
stretch,
but
if
you
could
take
something
like,
I
don't
know
like
my
sequel
workbench,
and
I
know
that
there
are
potentially
web
browser
versions
of
that
that
we
can
implement
into
into
pods
same.
B
I
expect
for
for
and
various
other
postgres
etc,
and
I
think
that
becomes
very
interesting
because
at
this
point
we're
on
a
clone
of
that
data,
we're
not
on
the
production
so
think
about.
This
is
this:
is
our
production,
pvc,
it's
still
serving
data
and
we
can
still
get
to
that
and
everything's
still
running
for
the
for
the
end
user.
But
what
if
we
wanted
to
actually
have
a
have
insight
into
that
data
and
start
doing
something
with
that
as
well?
B
I
think
that
becomes
a
very
interesting
road
map
idea
as
to
where,
where
cubesat
goes
like
in
the
future,
for
not
only
databases
but
like
siri,
said
around
media
files
being
able
to
yeah
it's
great
that
we
can.
We
can
open
that
up
here.
If
that
was
a.
B
If
that
was
a
group
of
images
that
were
being
stored
in
a
flat
file
type
storage,
then
we
could
definitely
potentially
leverage
that
somewhere
else,
but
that
whole
visibility
and
being
able
to
go
in
and
leverage
that
data
is
kind
of
a
an
interesting,
interesting
topic
that
we
could.
We
could
definitely
get
into
then
once
we're.
So
it
gives
you
the
port
forward
or
all
automatically
happens.
I
found
that
you
needed,
depending
on
the
operating
system
that
you're
running
x.
B
It
does
give
you
a
nice
error,
saying
xdg
not
found,
and
I
assume
that's
what
the
this
process
is
pulling,
but
once
we're
finished
and
we
want
to
start
getting
rid
of
this,
we
clean
up
all
the
resources
and
again
if
we
go
and
take
a
look
at
the
pods
you'll
see
that
we're
terminating
those
pods,
hopefully
and
cleaning
up
what
we've
just
done
from
that.
B
B
So
then
another
in
fact
this
was
this-
was
the
one
of
the
first
community
involvements
out
there
first
issue
raised,
and
I
think
it
was
a
pr
that
came
in
surrey
should
correct
me
if
I'm
wrong,
but
the
ask
was
around
arm
support,
arm
support,
obviously
out
there,
and
if
we
look
at
the
the
bigger
bigger
wider
world
around
edge,
but
also
around
other
architectures
for
for
home
labs,
etc.
B
Getting
used
to
again
back
going
back
to
like
the
learning,
the
learning
curve
of
of
kubernetes
and
storage
being
just
another,
a
hole
that
you
could
go
down
and
spend
a
lot
of
time
in
is
being
able
to
run
cubester
across
platforms
is,
is
hugely
important
because
who
knows
where
your
kubernetes
cluster
potentially
could
be,
especially
with
the
the
red
for
the
edge
deployments
that
are
out
there.
B
So
in
the
latest
release
it
was
we
released
the
the
ability
to
push
that
out
to
the
arm
as
well,
and
not
only
that,
but
obviously
there's
a
lot
of
mac
os
m1
laptops
out
there
now
that
have
that
arm
processor,
so
that's
also
included
here
I
don't
know.
Have
you
got
anything
to
add
their
serious?
It's.
C
No,
like
I
said
the
the
suggestions
came
in
saying
that,
can
you
support
arm,
and
you
know
we
decided
yeah?
Why
not
right
and
like
you
know,
we're
we're
trying
to
be
more
and
more
receptive
to
feedback
so
yeah,
if
you
guys
do
have
any
anything
you
want
to
see
in
the
future,
please,
you
know,
create
an
issue
comment.
Yeah
get
get
the
word
out
there
and
then
we'll
do
our
best
to
to
support
that
in
the
future.
B
I
realized
I
didn't
didn't
circle
windows
arm
64
as
well,
my
bad
for
that,
and
then
I
saw
this
on
a
couple
of
issues
as
well.
There
was
a
few
csi
drivers
that
that
were
not
added,
not
the
aws
one,
I'm
just
using
this
as
an
example,
but
where,
where
we,
where
it
reports
back
and
says
this
is
a
csr
driver.
This
is
based
on
a
a
list.
I
assume
surish,
and
there
was
a
couple
that
I
saw
that
we
that
we
just
had
to
update
that
list
is
that.
C
Yeah,
so
in
the
description,
if
you,
if
you
go
through
kubernetes
website
and
try
to
find
the
list
of
csi
drivers,
there's
a
list-
that's
maintained
there
by.
C
I
can't
really
let
me
try
to
find
a
link
for
that,
but
that's
the
list
that
has
all
the
csi
drivers
and
that's
the
one
that
we
source
all
our
data
from.
So
if
you're
up
to
date
and
listed
as
a
csi
driver
there,
then
then
we'll
get
all
your
information
as
well
as
when
we
do
cubestreet.
B
Okay,
so
it's
more
of
a
yeah
if
you've
got
a
csi
driver,
then
make
sure
you're
on
that
list
and
cubester
will
just
pick
it
up.
We
didn't
have
to
do
anything
to
support.
C
It
okay,
it's
more
of
just
you
know
we
have.
I
have
to
do
a
sort
of
a
go
generate
and
it
pulls
all
that
information
and
then
checking
the
file
right.
So
it's
not
it's
not
too
big
of
a
change,
but
something
that
I
could
definitely
do.
B
If
you
don't
see
your
driver
listed
here,
yeah
yeah
there
was,
there
was
some
vendors
out
there
that
that
wanted
it
now.
I've
kind
of
already
ran
through
the
demo
side
of
things.
Although
in
the
chat,
let
us
know
if
there's
anything
you'd
like
to
see
if
you.
If
this
is
the
first
time
you're
seeing
cubester,
then
you
might
want
to
see
the
fio,
and
I
think
there
was
some
other
enhancements
around
the
fio
json
output
as
well
suresh.
C
No,
I
think
they
covered
most
the
high
level
ones,
of
course,
there's
a
lot
of
smaller
little
issues
that
we
fixed
but
yeah
the
high
level
ones
yeah
you
got
most
of
them
in
terms
of
fio.
I
think
there's
a
question
about
the
blog.
Do
you
remember
where
that
blog
is
michael?
I
think
it
was
on
cncf
website.
B
B
Yeah,
so
I
guess
guess
where
we
wanted
to
go
is
is
firstly
like
how
do
you
get
hands-on
to
it?
So
I've
put
a
couple
of
qr
codes
up
here
that
that
should
still
be
working.
One
is
to
cubes
to
io,
and
that's
that
first
site
that
I
actually
went
to
where
I
thought
the
blog
was
and
that's
where
you're
going
to
get
instructions,
but
also
some
resources.
B
Me
and
cerisha
spoke
quite
a
bit
about
about
cubester
over
the
last
six
months
in
all
different
forms,
so
whether
that's
blogs
webinars,
like
this
or
like
general
general
sessions
around
the
functionality
and
walking
through
what
that
looks
like
we
did
a
live
stream
as
well
with
the
cncf
where
it
was
all
demo.
So
we
we
batted
around
a
bit
and
went
through
the
functionality
around
that
and
in
particular
showed
that
bring
your
own
fio
type
file
as
well,
which
is
super
simple
to
if
you've
got
access
to.
B
Those
which
fio
is,
is
a
an
open
source
tool
as
well.
So
all
of
the
examples
are
also
listed
on
github,
so
you
can
go
and
grab
hold
of
those
simply
put
to
get
started
with
cubester
to
install
the
tool,
go
and
grab
the
the
binaries
again
you'll
get
to
see
it
in
the
in
the
release
and
the
assets
of
of
github
you'll
see
this
long
list
of
of
of
files.
B
Another
way
another
yeah
another
way
to
install
it
is
using
another
open
source
tool
called
arcade
a-r-k-a-d-e
and
we've
just
recently
added
quite
a
few
open
source
tools
that
we're
that
we're
looking
after
from
a
from
a
custom
point
of
view,
cubes
to
being
one
of
those
so
being
able
to
go
to
arcade
arcade
get
cubester
and
it
will
go
and
download
based
on
your
os
based
on
your
architecture
and
it
will
go
and
download
and
install
or
put
the
cubes
to
binary
in
the
right
place
within
your
system,
the
other
area
that
I've
been
using
it.
B
I
know
I
didn't,
show
it,
but
basically
just
downloading
the
binary
and
then
putting
it
into
your
path
as
a
cube.
Ctl
plugin
as
well,
basically
just
changing
the
the
binary
so
that
it's
always
there.
It's
always
handy
to
to
have
just
in
that
that
element
on
whatever,
whatever
kubernetes
context
you're
on
and
you
can
see
yeah
the
the
various
different
commands
that
we
kind
of
went
through,
but
even
even
that
within
the
within
the
binary.
When
you
run
that
there's
quite
good
help
and
functionality.
B
If,
if
we're
missing
something,
then
please
let
us
know
on
that
that
front
as
well.
I
think
our
closing
thoughts,
if
there's
depending
on,
if
there's
any
questions
but
happy
to
answer
the
question,
show
anything
that
we
need
to
on
on
cubester.
But
I
think
our
biggest
ask
is
take
a
look,
whether
that's
just
using
it
just
to
see
if
it's
useful,
but
also
that
feedback
and
the
contributions
is,
is
huge
for
us
to.
But
we
really
think
this
is
useful.
You
could
you
already
heard
that
we
had
some
ideas.
B
We
had
some
other
ideas
before
as
well
about
how
do
we
visualize
that
fio
output
and
how
do
we?
How
do
we
yeah?
How
do
we
visualize
that
then
also
spreading
the
word
like
if
it
was
useful,
it'd
be
great
for
us
to
spread
it
around
the
community?
Let's
make
everyone's
life
a
little
bit
easier,
especially
when
it
comes
to
kubernetes
storage.
We're
all
gonna
have
to
we're
all
learning
all
different
stuff
and
everything's
got
to
be
at
a
level
and
yeah
our
biggest
takeaway.
B
Is
it's
a
handy
little
tool
for
for
benchmarking,
your
your
kubernetes
storage,
it's
one
of
them
things
to
have
in
your
back
pocket
just
to
quickly
spin
up
and
and
use.
Is
there
any
questions
suresh,
I
can't
see
the
chat.
C
C
You
know
we're
very
grateful
for,
for
that,
and
yeah
like,
like,
I
said,
a
hand,
little
tool
for
benchmarking,
your
storage,
but
more
than
that
just
a
way
to
explore
your
storage
options
and
then
also
now
you
know
the
browse
feature
lets
you
just
observe
and
explore
your
pvcs
as
well,
and
you
know
we'd
like
to
know
what
else
do
you
guys
want
to
see
out
of
this
tool?
Where
do
you
want
to
see
it
go,
and
what
do
you
think
we
should
add
to
it?.
C
B
Yeah
musa
makes
a
good
point
seeing
that
db
being
spun
up
in
the
same
pod,
like
basically
acting
as
that.
C
Yeah,
how
how
I
see
that
working
is,
you
know
you
run
the
browse
function
and
then
you
can
pass
in
any
image
that
you'd
want
to
pass
into
that
that
function
right
and
if
your
images
happens
to
be
some
sort
of
a
database,
visualizing
visualization
tool
and
that's
what
you
could
do.
A
All
right
well,
thank
you
both
so
much
for
joining
us.
Thank
you.
Everyone
for
bearing
with
us,
like,
I
said,
we'll
get
this
online
asap
this
afternoon
and
hopefully
in
the
next
hour,
so
that
anyone
that
wasn't
able
to
join
can
view
it.
Oh
here,
we've
got
one:
how
can
we
get
the
certificate?
C
When
you
say
certificate
srinivasa,
do
you
mean
in
order
to
install
the
app
I?
I
don't
think
we
have
signed
certificates
yet
so
that's
something!
That's
something
that
we
have
to
work
on.
That's
probably
one
one
of
the
yeah
more
more
requested
items,
so
that's
probably
top
of
the
list
getting
that
done.
B
A
Okay,
perfect
well,
thank
you
both
so
much.
Thank
you,
everyone
for
joining
us
and
hit
up
that
slack
channel.
If
you
have
any
questions
for
everybody
post
event
and
we
will
see
y'all
next
time.
Thank
you,
everybody!
So
much
and
thank
you
michael
and
sharish.