►
From YouTube: Buoyant Sponsored Session - William Morgan, Buoyant
Description
Join us for Kubernetes Forums Seoul, Sydney, Bengaluru and Delhi - learn more at kubecon.io
Don't miss KubeCon + CloudNativeCon 2020 events in Amsterdam March 30 - April 2, Shanghai July 28-30 and Boston November 17-20! Learn more at kubecon.io. The conference features presentations from developers and end users of Kubernetes, Prometheus, Envoy, and all of the other CNCF-hosted projects
Buoyant Sponsored Session - William Morgan, Buoyant
A
All
right
thanks,
Thank,
You
Lyn
and
welcome
everyone
yeah
just
a
few
moments.
Okay,
there
we
go
all
right
great.
This
is
gonna,
be
a
little
crazy.
So,
as
Lynn
mentioned,
my
name
is
William
Morgan
I'm,
one
of
the
creators
of
linker
D.
Hopefully
you
have
heard
of
it.
It's
a
surface
mesh
I'm,
also
the
CEO
of
a
little
company
called
buoyant,
and
since
this
is
the
very
first
time
that
we're
kind
of
meeting
together,
I
thought
I'd
start
with
a
fundamental
question,
which
is:
does
the
service
mesh
actually
matter
right?
A
A
Okay.
Well,
so
I'll
take
a
step
back
all
right
it.
It
matters
a
little
bit
right.
Clearly
it
matters
to
you.
You
paid
the
big
bucks
to
be
here.
It
matters
to
me,
I'm,
building
a
service
mesh.
My
kids
college
education
is
like
tied
up
in
this
whole
thing.
You
know
so
welcome
to
America,
but
why
does
it
matter
right
and
I?
Think
the
the
reason
that
the
service
mission
matters
or
the
way
that
it
matters
is
the
same
way
that
plumbing
matters
right,
which
is
plumbing,
is
important.
A
It's
super-important
right
because
of
plumbing
we
can
build
cities
and
we
can
live
together
in
a
hygienic.
You
know
way
without
diseases
spread
we
and
all
the
economic
and
cultural
benefits
of
that
plumbing
is
important,
because
not
not
because
you
know
tubes
and
pipes
and
like
fluids
flowing
through
them
are
important,
except
maybe
to
a
small
group
of
people,
but
because
of
what
it
enables
so
I
think.
My
question
then,
for
the
service
mesh
is
okay.
A
What
is
the
service
mesh
enable
right
and
the
answer
that
I
am
gonna
give
may
come
as
a
shock,
which
is
I?
Think
what
the
service
mesh
fundamentally
enables
is
about
not
about
computers
or
services
or
meshes
or
retry
policies
or
whatever
I
think
it's
about
human
beings
right,
I,
think
the
service
mesh,
just
like
kubernetes,
just
like
containers,
just
like
everything
else
in
this
cloud
native
ecosystem,
is
fundamentally
a
way
for
allowing
human
beings
to
get
together
and
to
accomplish
purpose.
A
We
want
to
ship
software,
we
want
to
do
it
in
a
way,
that's
fast
and
reliable.
We
want
to
be
able
to
change
the
software.
We
want
to
be
able
to
place
all
these
crazy
demands
upon
it
right
and
fundamentally
what
the
service
mesh
allows
you
to
do
is
that
right,
but
the
service
mesh
is
not
enough
right,
there's
a
lot
more,
that
you
need
as
an
engineer
when
you're
trying
to
maintain
a
large
application
in
this
cloud
native
context
right.
A
Is
so
imagine
it's
a
control
plane
for
your
team.
Imagine
you
doing
a
kubernetes
deploy
dies.
Can
capture
that
deploy
automatically.
It
can
track
it
as
an
event
put
it
alongside
all
the
context
from
kubernetes
and
from
the
service
mesh.
It
can
place
that
event
in
a
global
timeline
of
all
changes
to
your
infrastructure,
whether
from
automatic
or
manual
sources.
It
can
compile
all
of
that
information
into
a
service
catalog
and
a
topology
that
shows
you
the
relationship
in
real
time
between
all
the
services
and
their
health.
Every
service
gets
a
home
page.
A
It's
just
like
facebook.
For
micro
services,
all
right
where
you
can
annotate
the
service
with
the
run
book
and
the
ownership
information,
you
get
a
list
of
all
the
deployments
and
where
they're
running
across
all
your
clusters
and
namespaces
any
ongoing
and
upcoming
events,
you
can
even
publish
SL
O's
for
the
service
which
dive
will
track
automatically
for
you,
based
on
real
performance,
which
will
be
available
to
everyone
else
in
your
organization
right,
but
dive
is
not
just
a
read-only
tool.
A
You
can
also
use
it
to
define
policies,
policies
in
terms
of
SL,
OS
and
people
and
teams.
If
you
deploy
a
service,
that
is
a
dependency
of
a
critical
service
that
is
out
of
SLO,
then
someone
should
be
notified.
Maybe
you
should
request
approval
from
them.
This
I
don't
know
it's
up
to
you
right,
but
all
of
this
stuff
is
fundamentally
the
sorts
of
things
that
dyes
can
enable
dive
is
available
in
waitlist
form.
A
Only
you
only
get
a
waitlist,
but
we
are
rolling
it
out
slowly
to
people,
please
go
to
dive,
COO
and
sign
up,
and
so
the
message
I
want
to
leave
you
with
as
we
enjoy
the
rest
of
this
conference
is
yes,
the
service
mesh
does
matter
right.
It
is
important,
but
it's
important
not
because
of
how
it
works.
It's
not
important
because
of
what
it
is
it's
important,
because
what
it
enables.
Thank
you
very
much.
My
name
is
William
Morgan
and
please
enjoy
the
rest
of
the
conference.