►
Description
CD Events, Supply Chain, and Reference Architecture are just a few projects that Fatih has started evangelizing since he began his new GM position in June. Join us for a proper introduction to this forward-thinking technologist who has taken on the role of managing the people and projects of the Continuous Delivery Foundation. Learn how you can get involved in one of the many Working Groups, Special Interest Groups, or Open-Source Projects. Fatih will give us a roadmap of the year to come and where you can make the most significant impact as a contributing member of the CDF Community.
A
A
All
right,
so
everybody
thank
you
for
attending
our
first
CDF
online
Meetup
in,
like
I,
don't
know
over
a
year.
I'm
super
excited
to
be
getting
them
going
again.
This
is
our
September
22nd
edition
of
our
CDF
online
Meetup
and
we
have
Fati
at
dagamitsi,
who
is
our
amazing,
general
manager
for
the
CD
foundation.
For
many
of
you
who
may
not
know
the
CD
Foundation
brought
him
on
just
before
our
travels
into
Austin.
A
He
started
in
June
and
he
took
took
the
house
so
to
speak
and
it
started
sort
of
getting
us
all
back
together,
getting
the
band
back
together,
so
to
speak
and
getting
us
getting
our
heads
back
into
what
we
need
to
do
around
the
continuous
delivery
Foundation.
So
Fati,
why
don't
you?
Why?
Don't
you
introduce
yourself
and
tell
us
a
little
bit
about
the
job
that
you're
doing
and
what's
next
for
the
CD
Foundation.
B
Thanks
Tracy
hi
everyone,
as
Tracy
mentioned
I,
started
working
at
the
explanation
leading
Congress
data
Foundation
first
of
June,
and
the
first
thing
I've
done
was
sailing
to
Austin
to
meet
with
our
awesome
community
members
about
before
during
the
CD
quantities.
I
worked
for
a
telecom
member
Erickson.
As
an
engineer
software
engineer
and
last
seven,
eight
years,
I've
been
hundred
percent
Upstream,
open
source
developer
and
I
contribute
to
various
open
source
companies,
mainly
around
configuration
countries.
B
They
will
devops
infrastructure
and
automation
and
I
met
with
content,
sale
foundation
around
2019
and
since
then,
I've
been
contributing
this
community.
So
it's
kind
of
like
it's
I,
feel
like
I,
haven't
changed
jobs
to
be
honest
because
I've
been
part
of
the
community
and
contributing
to
it
across
different
initiatives
and
cultivating
or
side
committee.
So
it's
kind
of
just
changing
one
head
with
the
other
and
continuing
what
I've
been
doing
so
that
is
who
I
am
and
like.
B
Maybe
I
should
highlight
the
fact
that
I
believe
in
this
Foundation
a
lot
because,
like
content,
integration,
contents
literally,
these
are
common
constants
for
different
types
of
you
know:
organizations,
regardless
of
their
industry
and
because
of
the
importance
and
how
critical
this
ecosystem
is
come
to
their
foundation
will
have
a
big
role
play
coming
years,
because
our
journey
will
never
end
with
you
know,
especially
within
the
domain.
So
that's
who
I
am
and
why
I
joined
I
believe
in
this
Foundation
I
believe
in
confidence,
Theory
I
believe
in
community.
A
So
since
you
have
joined,
we've
had
some
discussions
on
kind
of
some
new
projects
that
the
CD
Foundation
is
working
on.
Why
don't
you
kind
of
go
through
how
folks
can
get
involved
in
the
CD
Foundation?
What
the
working
groups
are?
Some
of
the
projects
Mike
ortelius
I
always
like
to
talk
about
artillius.
A
B
By
joining
there,
you
know
select
channels
or
joining
their
mail
list
or
subscribing
to
or
watching
repo
stories,
and
we
have
eight
projects
within
the
foundation
and
Portuguese
is
one
of
them.
As
you
mentioned
Tracy,
apart
from
all
the
videos,
we
have
Jenkins
Jenkins,
X,
screwdriver,
shipwright,
Spinnaker
and
CD
rights,
so
people
if
they
want
to
go.
B
In
addition
to
that
and
I'm
coming
back
to
what
I
just
mentioned,
it
may
feel
like
it
is
too
big
and
effort,
and
it
may
become
difficult
to
join
those
communities
because
they're
gonna
learn
for
quite
some
time
and
they
are
pretty
involved
and
new
to
each
other.
But
what
I
can
say
is
like
just
go
there
you
know,
say
hi
on
their
slack
channels
or
pick
an
easy
issue
from
their
backload.
B
As
you
mentioned
today,
we
have
special
test
groups
within
contents,
their
foundation
and
within
those
groups
we
come
together
and
discuss
different
types
of
challenges,
use
cases
requirements
we
might
have
within
our
communities
or
organizations
to
find
ways
to
address
those
challenges,
and
one
way
to
take
part
in
those
conversations
is.
A
B
B
An
issued
scalability
of
a
certain
tool-
you
can
just
summarize
the
issue
you're
hearing
and
you
can
ask
okay,
how
can
I
start
conversation
around
this
topic
and
then
people
will
point
you
to
one
of
the
special
entire
school,
for
example,
and
we
have
five
interest
groups
of
special
interest
groups
within
our
community
and
if
we
go
to
our
webpage,
yeah
Tracy,
you
are
showing
our
projects.
These
are
our
projects
and,
if
you
perhaps
maybe
I
can
take
all
the
sharing
and
both
to
our
website
sure.
B
So
if
you
look
at,
for
example,
the
technology
tab,
you
will
see
our
project
style
and
all
of
the
cards
here.
They
will
give
you
information
of
where
you
can
find
their
GitHub
repository
and
Stone
Light.
Let's
look
at
or
tell
us
website
is
linked
there,
so
you
can
go
and
read
about
or
tell
you
what
this
project
aims
to.
So
you
can
look
at
the
guitar
favorites.
Sorry,
you
cannot
no
look
at
issues,
find
an
issue
and
start
working
with
it
or
you
can
join
their
black
channels.
B
B
So
if
we
need
to
summarize
our
special
test
groups,
the
first
question-
the
group
is
called
interlovel
Situation
test
group
and
it
is
one
of
the
key
initiatives
we
have
been
working
with
in
contact
with
their
Foundation
and
in
addition
to
that,
that
group
actually
results
in
two
new
special
periscopes
as
well
as
one
project.
So
if
you
are
an
organization
who
uses
multiple
tools
as
part
of
computer
pipelines-
and
if
you
are,
you
know
having
difficulties
getting
these
tools
working
with
each
other
in
terrible,
especially
in
desktop,
could
be
the
place.
A
A
We
have
everybody
knows
the
struggles
that
we've
had
with
plugins,
and
that
is
what
the
interoperability
team
Sig
was
initially
working
on
and
the
event
Sig
was
born
out
of
the
interoperability
to
really
work
on
defining
what
CD
events
would
actually
look
like.
So
if
that's
an
interest
to
anybody
out
there,
I
would
highly
encourage
them
to
join
that
Sig
yeah.
That's
a
really
important
one.
B
Yeah
and
I
I
think
this
is
also
like
this
six
like
there
are
other
things
this
across
other
communities
as
well.
This
group
is
I
think
a
clear
example
of
how
you
can
impact
the
entire
ecosystem,
because
this
group
must
start,
as
you
mentioned
basically
I-
think
diverse
three
or
four
people
who
came
together
with
a
special
interest
group
interview
and
said
we
want
to
work
with
Iran
and
they
went
ahead
with
their
work.
B
By
bringing
this
interability
as
first
class
citizen
to
different
Technologies,
we
have
we
have
an
ecosystem
and
from
there's
a
journey
with
events
is
just
starting
actually,
because
that,
without
information,
the
device
project
which
I
can
probably
show-
and
this
is
like
two
years-
I-
thought
without
two
years
effort-
just
getting
the
idea
understood
by
different
types
of
people
coming
from
different
Industries
different
organizations
and
different
communities.
And
it
is
really
important
to
say
that
the
people
who
are
contributing
these
efforts.
B
They
are
really
passionate
about
this
topic
because
it
is
sometimes
working
within
communities
is
difficult
and
it
is
tiring.
But
I
think
that
passion
actually
seeing
things
becoming
real
is
very
rewarding,
because
people
realize
how
big
and
impact
this
project
and
the
situations
could
make
within
the
ecosystem.
B
B
Yeah
I
think
like
if
we
look
at
what
they
have
done
until
now,
I
think
one
of
the
proof
of
Concepts
the
special
interests
were
created
that
allowed
four
different
Technologies
to
interpret
with
each
other
using
their
stock
certification.
It's
not
even
released
yet,
even
without
the
release
specification,
the
group
and
the
project
actually
achieved
and
demonstrated
that
the
interability
is
something
that
can
be
achieved
within
the
quantitative
ecosystem.
So
that
is
a
big
contribution.
Yes,
we
have
a
long
way
to
go.
B
Yes,
we
need
to
release
the
spec
like
point
one
release,
but
regardless
of
when
that
happens,
the
group
already
made
a
big
impact
and
different
communities
outside
of
contest.
Their
Foundation
is
also
looking
into
this
airport,
but
I
can't
agree
more
like
Trace
what
we
are
saying:
Advanced,
state
and
city
events,
I
think
you'll
be
seeing
more
and
more
adoption
to
Mr
pack
and
the
project
coming
months,
I'm,
not
even
saying
years
months.
I
think
2023
will
be
pretty
interesting
from
this
aspect
and.
A
I
want
to
point
out
these
six,
they
begin
and
and
their
primary
work,
even
though
the
the
event
sake
has
now
graduated
into
a
proper
project.
The
City
events
project.
These
cigs
are
oftentimes
almost
like
open
discussion
forums
where
these
ideas
are
incubated
and
sorted
out
and
and
I
think
all
three,
the
interoperability,
the
event
Sig
and
the
best
practices.
Sig
is
very
much
to
that.
A
A
Can
you
talk
to
us
a
little
bit
about
what
we're
doing
with
vocabulary
and
potentially
a
new
Sig
around
a
reference
architecture
where
vocabulary
will
be
really
critical?
Yeah.
B
So,
let's
go
back
about
two
years:
two
and
a
half
years
like
when
we
first
formed
a
special
interest
group
interview
which
I
am
showing
its
repository
on
GitHub.
We
started
talking
about
the
issues
we
are
having
with
our
company
they're
pipeline,
but
we
quickly
realized
that,
even
though
we
are
talking
about
our
problems,
we
are
using
different
words
even
between
humans.
We
use
different
words
to
describe
same
thing
most
of
the
time
and
that
comes
from
the
terminal
is
used
by
the
tools
and
that
actually
gave
us
a
pause.
B
I
think
this
was
like
March
2020,
you
said:
let's
talk
everything
and
start
focusing
on
vocabulary:
I,
don't
know
what
you
mean
when
you
say
pipeline
I,
call
that
thing
activity
or
step
is
called
task
or
whatever,
and
that
results
in
creation
of
some
kind
of
a
vocabulary
document
that
actually
brought
in
terms
used
by
different
tools
together,
and
this
gave
us
some
kind
of
a
Rolex
of
the
phone.
You
know
like
I
am
using
Project
X
and
you
are
using
project.
B
A
Vocabulary
is
so
incredibly
important,
I
know
in
having
these
discussions.
We
we
sometimes
don't
understand
what
each
other
are
saying,
because
we
haven't
defined
a
common
vocabulary.
It's
sort
of
like
the
term
inflammable
used
to
be
you'd,
see
a
truck
a
truck
hold
that
carrying
gasoline
go
down
the
road.
It
said
inflammable,
meaning
that
it
could
become
inflamed,
but
people
misunderstood
what
that
meant,
meaning
that
thinking
that
maybe
it
wasn't
flammable
right,
so
they
just
turned
they.
They
took
that
term
inflammable.
A
Now,
as
a
new
word,
a
new
word
is
flammable,
so
people
understand
no,
it's
flammable
inflammable
music
can
become
inflamed,
and
sometimes
these
terms
can
be
critical.
That
way
when
we're
when
we're
discussing
these
Concepts
in
particular,
we
ran
into
this
during
events
and,
as
you
pointed
out,
we
ran
into
it
during
interoperability.
So
if
you're
a
word
person-
and
if
you
like
these
kinds
of
discussions,
these
these
cigs
would
be
a
really
good
place
for
you
to
contribute.
A
If
you
feel
like
you
could
help
with
really
defining
the
vocabulary,
because
there's
not
not
all
of
us
are
word
people
and
not
all
of
us
are
communicators,
and
we
need
more
of
those
folks
to
help
us
building
this
to
build
this
vocabulary,
and
the
vocabulary
too
could
potentially
Define
how
we
manage
the
landscape,
because
the
landscape
tells
us
it
is
part
of
the
vocabulary.
So
these
things
are
all
super
interconnected
and
much
of
it
has
nothing
to
do
with
coding.
A
If
you're
a
coder
one
of
the
projects
is
a
great
place
for
you,
but
if
you're
not
a
coder,
and
you
want
to
get
involved
and
you're
a
communicator,
and
you
really
understand
the
devops
process
and
understand
how
important
vocabulary
is
that
this
is
a
an
area.
The
interoperability
Sig,
the
event
Sig
or
the
best
practice
would
be
a
good
spot
for
you.
Yeah.
B
So
you
mentioned
Landscapes
like
even
on
the
landscape,
like
we
don't
have
that
vocabulary
type
of
thing
here,
but
there
are
some
keywords
there
that
are
like
basics
for
sponsors:
they're,
like
builds,
you
know,
tests
like
security
scanning
and
so
on
and
I
think
the
CDA
events
and
broader
interability
efforts.
We
have
within
the
controller
Foundation
laid
groundwork
for
the
future,
which
will
hopefully
help
more
projects
than
just
what
is
the
what
we
have
in
the
city
Foundation
to
adopt
these
terms,
because
in
the
end,
what
users
experience
when
they
use
these
different
projects?
B
B
Is
supposed
to
be
called
Inland
once
organization
starts
and
basic
contextually,
they
also
stopped
looking
different
Technologies
and
they
need
to
make
techno
installations
and
if
the
projects
are
actually
taking
part
in
these
conversations
we
enter
with
the
best
practice
and
events
groups
and
adopting
what
is
coming
out
of
these
groups.
Then
it
will
give
them
Leading
Edge
bands,
different
organizations
start
making
it's
not
taking
risk
selections.
That
is
the
natural
thing
like.
B
But
what
we
realized
is
like.
Yes,
we
are
all
doing
our
best
contribute
domain,
but
sometimes
it
might
become
a
difficult
thing
for
new
people
to
understand
how
these
different
initiatives
could
help
them
to.
You
know
achieve
continuous
delivery.
That
gave
us
a
starting
point
when
it
comes
to
what
we
call
reference
architecture,
because
the
starting
point
for
reference
architecture
is
to
have
something
like
or
arcing
effort
above
different
groups.
We
have
within
contents
that
are
formulation
consuming
what
is
developed
by
these
different
groups
and
putting
them
together
in
an
easily
consumable
manner.
B
So
if
I
am
coming
from
a
large
organization
and
if
I
want
to
take
a
look
at
something
and
take
that
as
a
Blu-ray
print
to
bring
contacts,
my
organization
reference
architecture
could
serve
that
role.
Giving
a
top-down
look
at
the
you
know,
typical
content.
Is
there
a
pipeline
saying?
Okay,
we
have
a
vocabulary
there.
B
So
I
can
take
a
look
at
that
vocabulary,
because
vocabulary
is
foundational
for
reference
architecture
as
well,
and
that
could
make
lives
of
those
people
who
are
trying
to
transform
their
organizations
to
start
their
journey
in
an
easy
way,
rather
than
looking
at
five
different
things.
They
can
look
at
one
thing
that
gives
all
this
information
in
any
easier,
easily
accessible
manner,
and
that
is
the
web
page.
I
am
storing
at
the
moment
and.
A
We
are
in
a
point
of
inflection
I
guess
you
would
say
we
are.
There
is
a
there's,
there's
obvious
tension
on
our
pipeline,
it's
being
stretched
in
the
way
we
currently
run
rcd
workflows.
A
A
What's
missing
and
that's
why
this
reference
architecture,
that's
coming
out
of
this
best
practices
group
will
be
super
helpful
because
there
is
a
maturity
level
that
we
need
to
achieve,
especially
as
we
move
from
monolithic
style
applications
to
lots
of
microservices
being
pushed
all
day
long
across
the
pipeline
with
security
involved
in
that
so
this
is.
This
is
a
really
good
time
to
have
this
discussion
and
again,
if
it's
an
area
that
you
have
expertise
in
that
we
can
use
you
on
this
project.
Yeah.
B
They're
different,
you
know,
stages
of
their
transformation
or
continuity
journal
or
whatever,
and
regardless
of
where
those
organizations
are,
they
could
be
just
starting
or
they
could
be
very
mature
when
it
comes
continuity.
I
think
this
type
of
effort
reference
architecture
could
be
valuable
from
many
different
perspective
slides.
You
might
think
you
are
ahead
of
everyone,
but
you
can
look
at
what
is
happening
within
the
communities
and
Benchmark
yourself
against
what
is
discussed
in
comedies.
It
could
confirm
your
thinking
when
it
comes
to.
B
You
are
being
ahead
of
others,
which
is
actually
a
good
thing,
because
then
you
can
come
and
hype
others
within
the
community
by
considering
this
effort-
or
you
might
realize.
Oh,
we
have
this
cool
pipeline
there,
but
we
type
integrate
all
these
things
together,
but
within
reference
architecture,
the
events
are
highlighted
as
something
to
address
interrelated
things.
B
That
could
give
you
a
different
look
at
the
same
problem
and
could
change
your
life,
because
then
that
would
bring
scalability
to
your
environment
when
it
comes
to
conductivity,
and
that
would
give
you
a
chance
to
bring
in
other
types
of
techniques
and
have
complete
a
little
bit
to
what
you
are
doing.
Because
again,
if
you
go
back
to
events,
one
of
discussions
that's
taking
place,
that
is
introducing
obserability
into
CD
events,
and
you
might
not
have
authority
within
your
pipelines
today,
but
by
contributing
to
cd1c
device
and
reference
architectures.
B
You
might
actually
bring
those
things
back
to
your
organization,
as
you
know,
learnings
and
things
to
adopt.
So
again,
there
are
different.
Based
contributes,
you
can
just
read
to
the
documentation
you
can
just
you
know,
send
a
publicist
update,
documentation
or
again.
If
we
look
at
the
viewer
mu
points,
for
example,
you
might
be
working
as
like
product
managers
and
you
might
come
and
contribute
your
perspective
into
this
document.
Sharing
your
you
know,
posts
and
uncertain
things.
A
As
you
pointed
out,
and
we
want
to
use,
we
want
to
add
observability
or
we
want
to
add
the
scanning
of
an
s-bomb.
You
know
that
can
be
a
major
project
for
a
company
who
has
hundreds
and
hundreds
of
of
workflows
that
they
have
to
update
every
single
one.
So
if
you're
going
to
update
it,
you
better,
maybe
it's
a
good
time
to
look
at
your
entire
Pipeline
and
see
what
needs
to
be
fixed
before
going
in
there
and
doing
them
doing
each
one
at
a
time.
A
And
this
again
is
why
that
reference
architecture
project
is
timely,
to
say
the
least.
B
That
reminded
me
supply
chain
security,
I
think,
because
everyone
is
talking
about
it,
we
have
to
talk
about
it
as
well.
What
we
are
doing
within
the
community
when
it
comes
to
office
supply
chain
is
now.
If
you
look
at
what's
happening
to
different
organizations.
Lately
many
Bad
actors
are
hijacking
Pipelines,
like
you
might
have
your
content
in
which
you
know
built-in
air
gap
environment
as
time
and
so
on.
B
You
might
have
s-bombs
and
so
on,
but
if
you
are
not
taking
enough
care
to
secure
your
pipelines,
someone
could
come
and
inject
malicious
code
through
your
pipelines
and
pipelines,
especially
in
contact
with
context.
They
give
you
direct
access
to
production.
That
is
the
whole
point
like
bringing
new
features.
Bug
fixes
to
Android
users
as
quickly
as
possible
in
a
sustainable
manner.
Security
and
speed
security
is
key
that,
if
it
is
not
taken,
care
of
credit
actors
could
actually
use
the
pipelines
to.
B
Some
people
may
I'm
not
focus
on
how
critical
content
theory
is
when
it
comes
to
software
supply
chain.
Because
again,
if
we
don't
secure
our
pipelines,
that
could
result
in
a
lot
of
big
issues
for
our
users
and
once
under
their
Foundation,
is
not
just
looking
at
lists
security
topic
just
beginning
of
this
year,
I
think
special
interest.
Group
security
was
one
of
the
first
six
that
was
established
in
CDF,
like
2019,
perhaps,
and
all
those
compilations
were
taking
place
within
that
seek.
B
So
what
we
actually
did
was
like,
we
just
renamed
plastic
and
continued
that
work.
So
it's
like.
We
are
not
just
realizing
the
importance
of
security
Now.
What
we
are.
Actually
you
know
focusing
on
controversary
aspects,
a
bit
more
than
how
it
was
in
the
past,
because
now
we
have
other
communities
looking
at
Shoppers
by
Chain
security,
openness
steps.
So
we
don't
want
to
Arrangement
things,
but
actually
we
want
to
take
part
in
those
conversations
and
contribute.
A
And
I'm
wondering
if,
in
in
the
end
having
City
events,
will
it
be
easier
to
protect
the
pipeline
itself
with
events?
Do
you
think
I
think.
B
A
Audit
it
and
because
you'd
have
somebody
would
have
to
audit
the
you
know
the
process
and
the
payload,
and
if
somebody's
touching,
that
I'm
wondering
if
it
would
be
hard,
it's
harder
to
pack
a
pipeline
if
it's
based
on
events
as
opposed
to
a
script.
B
Yeah
I
think
the
events
bring
in
loose
coupling
and
low
coupling
means.
You
can
make
sure
that
certain
tools
within
your
pipeline
focuses
on
certain
things
and
when
that
is
done,
they
can
tell
what
that
tool
did
at
that
stage
of
the
pipeline
at
any
human
and
that
actually
opens
up
other
opportunities,
because
then
you
can
hook
in
different
parts
in
your
pipeline
and
see
what
that
part
or
stated
in
the
pipeline
is
actually
doing,
and
if
you
notice
some
anomalies,
because
all
these
things
are
published
on
message.
B
Bus,
for
example,
you
can
add
some
auditing
capabilities
there
and
if
you
notice
some
things
that
happened,
that
you
don't
expect
and
you
can
quickly
react
because
those
events
are
published
in
real
time.
You
don't
actually
have
to
wait
or
explore
realizing
that
something
is
going
on,
which
you
are
not
sure.
What
so
you
can
actually
is
the
pinpoint
where
that
thing
is
happening
with
the
help
of
events.
B
So
events
itself
is
not
going
to
solve
the
issues,
but
it
will
make
those
issues
more
obvious
and
easily
accessible,
because
you
are
simply
hooking
into
like
if
you
think
this
as
a
real,
you
are
putting
different
like
like.
We
are
fishing.
For
example,
we
are
putting
things
next
different
place
and
you
are
catching
fishes.
That
is
events
like
that.
B
A
Gonna
step
back
and
when
we
first
started
talking
about
to
you
and
I,
we
were
both
talking
about
policies
and
opa
and
how
we
can
build
policies
into
this
I
think
that
policies
are
based
on
two
activities:
data
and
actions
around
that
data.
A
A
Have
we
gotten
back
to
or
will
we
start
talking
about
in
the
CD
Foundation,
the
the
policies,
and
maybe
the
CD
events
is
a
way
that
we
can
start
building
those
policies.
B
I
think
that's
what
actually
still
continuous
in
a
somehow
different
men
are
now
I'm
going
back
to
our
vocabulary.
Discussion
again,
one
of
the
one
of
our
community
members
actually
put
a
lot
of
effort
in
coming
up
with
documenting
different
pipeline
status
and
steps,
and
if
we
look
at
a
pipeline
terminal
here
in
this
pipeline
stages
and
steps,
there
are
certain
things
that
could
actually
help
people
to
see
where
policies
can
be
enforced.
B
For
example
like
if
you
are
committing
a
code
and
if
you
are
using
an
updated
dependency,
you
might
want
to
block
that
for
getting
merged
right
at
that
moment,
rather
than
identifying
that
update
and
be
right
up
validate
in
a
pipeline
after
it.
This
is
spontaneous
and
using
events
or
to
carry
this
information
like
what
commit
it
happens
and
what
you
know
in
which
way
or
and
what
changes
or
what
is
that
in
previous
commit
and
the
upcoming
Comet,
then
that
can
that
can
help
you
to
bring
in
policies
there.
B
You
know
patients
direct
part
and
forcing
policies,
but
it
will
be
an
enabler
to
bring
those
policies
in
play
by
giving
a
common
vocabulary
or
you
can,
let's
say,
open
policy
agents,
get
adopted,
CD
runs,
for
example,
it
says
it
can
consume
CD
events
from
any
pipeline
that
and
then
open
police
agents
and
stuff
directly,
integrating
that
with
certain
tools
and
Technology
it
can
actually
use.
B
Events
to
you
know,
enforce
the
policies
written
by
the
organizations,
but
this
is
how
I
see
it's
like
3D
events
is
like
fitting
abstracting
the
details
of
different
tools
within
the
pipelines
during
easier
way
to
express,
what's
happening
with
the
pipelines
for
other
Technologies
to
come
in.
You
know,
enforce
policies
for
example,
or
observe,
what's
happening
again,.
A
It
creates
a
more
agile
Pipeline
and
that's
why
I
I'm
such
a
fan
of
that
potential
technology
well
before
we
we're
we're
we're
headed
up
to
the
closing
in
on
our
hour,
and
we
do
have
some
questions.
Here's
a
one,
interesting
question
is,
you
know:
is
there
a
way
to
host
the
CDF
landscape
in
our
organization
and
I
really
think
what
that
question
is
is
how
you
know
that
that
goes
back
to
what
should
our
reference
architecture
look
like?
A
A
Foreign
of
these
categories
is
a
has
potential
tools
that
you
can't
use
within
that
we
don't
the
city.
Foundation
doesn't
right
now
have
a
sort
of
a
pre-packaged
pipeline
that
you
can
host
within
your
organization,
but
that
reference
architecture
is
what
we're
working
towards
right.
Yeah.
B
Yeah
different
architecture,
actually
now
we
need
to
because
when
we
talk
about
Air
Force
architecture,
sometimes
some
people
might
mix
it
with
reference
implementation,
so
reference
architecture
gives
a
blueprint
or
anyone
to
implement
that
it
could
be
open
source
Community
if
it
could
be
organizations
like
movies.
You
are
asking
questions
like.
If
you
want
to
have
your
organization's
pipeline
to
you
know
progress
towards
future.
B
You
can
take
reference
architectures
as
a
baseline
or
as
a
blueprint
and
then
start
implementing
that
architecture
in
your
organization
or
start
contributing
to
organizations
or
con
communities
who
are
actually
implementing
that
architecture.
So
it's
like
kind
of
collaborative
collectively
developed.
B
You
know
future
looking
pipeline
if
we
put
that
way,
because
it
will
bring
in
different
types
of
developments
within
our
community
together.
B
So
yeah,
you
can
bring
reference
architecture
to
your
organization,
but
if
your
question
is
actually
bringing
continuously
landscape
as
I
am
displaying
on
my
screen
within
your
organization,
I
believe
this
framework
is
an
open
source
framework,
and
we
can
talk
about
this
like
how
you
can
bring
this
landscape
within
your
organization
and
host
it
internally
on
our
selection,
because
I
need
to
look
into
details,
but
well.
B
A
Yeah
yeah,
so
the
next
question
is
about
hacktoberfest
and
I
think
this
is
a
fitting
way
to
end
this,
our
first
CDF
online
Meetup.
Just
so
everybody
knows
the
next
online
Meetup
will
just
be
around
the
corner.
A
On
October
5th,
we
will
be
two
of
the
ortillas
contributors,
we'll
be
talking
about
how
to
get
a
local
development
environment
set
up
and
some
of
the
tools
that
you
might
use.
If
you
want
to
become
a
contributor
you
there
is
some
work
to
do.
A
If
you
want
to
become
a
contributor
on
any
of
these
projects
and
having
the
tool
sets
kind
of
already
understood
and
downloaded
gets,
you
started
so
that
will
be
on
October
5th
and
it
will
be,
is
advertised
and
you
can
sign
up
in
the
same
way
as
you
did
here
on
the
CDF
online
Meetup.
A
B
Yeah
orthodist
is
one
of
them,
as
you
mentioned,
and
Jenkins
is
running
Hector
first
line
Jenkins
X
is
working
on
it
as
well.
B
So
we
are
working
with
our
projects
who
have
plans
to
run
Hector
fests,
and
we
will
publish
a
blog
post
during
next
week
where
people
can
go
and
take
a
look
at
it
like
how
they
can
take
part
in
Oktoberfest
in
which
projects
are
parts
of
it
again
and
so
on
so
yeah
we
are
I,
I'm,
not
sure
if
I
should
say
we
are
doing,
but
we
are
coordinating
these
different
efforts
like
or
tell
us.
A
A
If,
if
you,
if
a
product,
you
just
need
to
tag
your
pull,
request,
hacktoberfest
and
then
whoever
approves
the
pull
request.
You'll
get
credit
for
that
particular
for
that
particular
pull
request.
I
believe
that's
how
it
works
now
at
in
the
artillius
GitHub
repository
we've
already
marked
many
of
them
hacktoberfest
and
we've
also
marked
them
a
good,
first-time
issue.
A
So
that's
to
help
you
get
started
on
the
in
the
process,
but
just
be
sure
if
you
are
doing
any
work
during
that
month
and
you've
signed
up
for
the
hacktoberfest
celebration.
Just
make
sure
you
tag
it
hacktoberfest
and
I'm
glad
to
hear
Jenkins,
X
and
Jenkins
is
I
already
gotten
their
stuff
set
up.
It
takes
a
while
for
the
open
source
side
to
set
up
the
their
environments
for
Oktoberfest,
but
it's
a
lot
of
fun
once
it's
done.
B
B
B
B
Open
source
like
there
are
lots
of
grades,
you
know
Sports,
it's
not
a
great
components
of
great
people,
so
it
really
like
just
start
going
back
to
your
very
first
question:
I
think
how
you
can
join
the
communities,
regardless
of
which
country
like
it
could
be
considered
a
foundation
or
other
communities.
Just
saying
hi
makes
you
part
of
that
Community,
like
just
say,
hi
and
someone.
A
Just
about
showing
up
showing
up
is
is
literally
50
of
the
battle,
and
sometimes
it's
hard
women
in
particular
I.
We
have
found
that
we
struggle
hanging
on
to
women
in
the
open
source
Community.
They
have
family
obligations,
not
only
raising
children,
but
they
tend
to
take
care
of
their
parents,
so
it
can
be.
You
know
showing
up
is
half
the
battle,
but
you
know
just
show
up
and
we'll
make
sure
you
get.
We
help
you
get
to
work
on
a
project
that
would
be
fun
and
interesting.
A
For
example,
the
artillius
project
got
a
grant
for
building
out
an
immutable
blockchain
of
of
s-bomb
data,
an
s-bomb
ledger
so
to
speak,
and
you
know
if
that,
if
you
want
to
learn
blockchain,
it's
a
really
good
place
to
to
do
that
so
open
source
people
don't
realize
in
when
you
are
contributing
to
open
source.
It
doesn't
mean
that
you're,
an
expert
programmer
and
in
many
cases
open
source,
is
a
way
for
you
to
learn
how
to
code.
A
It
is
a
really
good
platform
for
it's
almost
like
a
you
know,
it's
a
it's
a
it's
a
platform
for
kicking
off
your
career.
In
areas
that
you
have
not
worked
in
before
or
you
get
recognition
because
you
have
worked
in
it
and
you
have
something
to
bring
to
the
table
in
some
of
these
open
forms,
these
discussion
groups
so
either
side
of
the
coin.
We're
happy
to
have
you,
so
you
know
don't
think
you
have
to
be
a
pro.
B
A
Thank
you
for
saying
that
and
I
I
love
the
CD
Foundation.
As
you
know,
I've
always
supported
it,
and
devops
has
always
been
a
a
something
I've
been
fascinated
by
and
now
you
know,
morphing
everybody
from
devops
to
devsecops
is
now
my
next
kind
of
cattle
and
all
of
these
things
we're
doing
at
the
city
Foundation
the
events,
the
interoperability,
the
reference
architecture
and
the
supply
chain.
A
It
all
has
to
do
with
morphing
us
into
a
better
all
of
us
into
being
able
to
manage
code
across
the
pipeline
at
a
much
more
efficient
and
faster
way
come
on
well.
Thank
you,
Fatiha.
So
much
appreciate
you
about
being
in
our
our
first
to
kick
off
this
kind
of
new
season
of
CDF
online
meetups.
Again,
October
5th
will
be
our
next.
A
One
join
two
of
the
ortillas
committers
Sasha
Wharton
is
working
with
a
university
student
by
the
name
of
arvind
and
they
were
able
to
get
Arvin
really
set
up
to
become
a
contributor
and
they're
going
to
go
through
that
process
of
how
they
set.
How
to
get
your
get
yourself
set
up
and
what
tools
you
should
be
looking
at,
using
for
becoming
a
rock
star
in
that
and
as
a
contributor,
so
I
hope
you
can
all
join
us
for
our
next
episode
of
CDF
online
meetups.