►
Description
Blog: https://everyonecancontribute.com/post/2021-07-21-cafe-39-civo-cloud-k3s-gitlab/
Website: https://www.civo.com/
Follow Anaïs Urlichs on https://twitter.com/urlichsanais
Twitter thread: https://twitter.com/dnsmichi/status/1417878884217991177
A
And
we're
live
again
welcome
everyone
to
our
number
nine
39
of
the
everyone
can
contribute
cafe,
and
today
we
thought
about
learning
a
little
bit
in
more
about
kubernetes,
specifically
k3s
and
cybercloud,
and
how
it
works,
and
it
is
my
pleasure
to
welcome
anas
to
our
group
and
hopefully
learn
something
new
today.
B
Yeah
definitely
yeah
thank
you
for
inviting
me.
Finally,
we
managed
for
me
to
to
join
so
really
excited,
and
it's
great
that
you
do
these
these
sessions,
where
just
you
get
together
and
you
get
to
ask
questions
and
just
share
content.
I
hope
you
don't
have
too
high
expectations.
B
I'm
just
sharing
some
of
the
tools
that
I'm
working
with
and
provide
introduction
to
k3s,
and
also
to
see
the
cloud
which
is
built
on
k3s
and
how
it
maybe
differs
from
how
it
differs
from
some
other
providers
and
just
how
how
you
can
use
it,
how
you
can
get
started
of
it.
B
It's
also
a
bit
more
about
me
sharing
my
own
learning
experience
of
of
getting
started
with
gitlab,
because,
to
be
honest,
until
until
I
was
like
preparing
for
some
content
regarding
sibo
and
using
sibo
and
integrating
with
gitlab,
I
haven't
really
used
skip
before.
So
I'm
sharing
some
stories
on
that
as
well,
and
some
of
my
experience
getting
started.
B
So
if
you
have
at
any
point
during
my,
I
have
have
like
a
quick
presentation
at
the
beginning
and
then
like
a
kind
of
like
demo
on
on
sibo
itself
and
how
it
looks
like
and
how
you
use
it,
and-
and
maybe
there
are
some
differences,
how
it
differs.
But
if
there's
any
any
comments
any
thoughts,
anything
you
want
to
jump
in
with
then
please
feel
free
to
do
so
like
make
it
a
conversation.
B
I
would
appreciate
that
also.
If
there
are
any
questions
from
anybody
watching
right
now,
then
yeah
would
be
happy
to
get
questions.
I'm
just
going
to
go
ahead
and
share
my
screen.
I
hope
it's
kind
of
what
you
were
expecting
from
from
the
from
my
presentation
or
like
the
content
that
I'm
going
to
show
yeah.
So
I
thought
I'm
just
going
to
give
an
overview
of
k3s
and
what
it
actually
is-
and
I
don't
know
have
you
heard
of
k3s
before
have
you
used
anything
related
to
k3s
before?
C
Oh
yeah
yeah
we
used
so
first,
we
started
so
a
lot
of.
We
have
a
lot
of
instances
with
docker.
We
had
also
ren
rancher
in
some
parts,
so
we
have
franchi
clusters,
but
we
need
to
have
a
dedicated
instance
only
for
having
some
operational
services
so,
for
example,
like
running
hashtag,
vault
running
consul
for
service
discovery
in
some
parts,
because
we
have
also
our
old
infrastructure
that
not
running
currently
to
anita
so
for
service
discovery.
Also
tronso
needs
to
be
there
and
so
for
setting
up
all
these
components.
C
It
was
quite
straightforward
to
use
helm
charts
and
using
all
this
concept
instead
of
doing
work
around
so
building
all
our
own
data
images
to
industrial,
compose
fights,
doing
static
configurations,
because,
right
now
the
ecosystem
is
more
focused
on
kubernetes
as
platform,
and
this
was
quite
simple
and
the
cruel
point
about
k3
is
k3s
is
mostly
it's
very
resource
efficient.
So
it
means
that
you
don't
need
to
have
a
big
machine
on
that
when
you're
running
a
lot
of
services
and
let's
try
it
right
ahead,
so
you
can
run
it
with
one
command.
D
D
B
I'll
see
it
sounds
like
you
have
some
more
experience
with
kps
than
I
do
actually,
because
for
me,
it's
like
I
know
I
haven't
like
experienced
a
real
difference
using
k3s
versus,
let's
say
normal
cubanitas
before
so
so
yeah,
I'm
just
I
guess
I'm
gonna,
like
especially
like.
I
guess
people
watching
this.
They
might
not
be
too
familiar
with
k3s
and
gonna
share
some
of
the
details.
B
This
is
also
focused
on
like
what
I
found
looking
going
through
different
documents
and,
like
other
blog
posts,
I'd
say
that's
what
I
like
when
I
start
learning
about
something
new,
and
some
of
this
was
new
to
me
as
well
like
this
is
the
first
time
I'm
actually
talking
about
kcs,
so
yeah
like
what
whatever
people
basically
detail
but
using
k3s
like
for
demos
specifically,
I
haven't,
I
haven't,
experienced
a
difference
yet,
but
that
might
also
be
because
I'm
using
siva
for
everything
so
anyway
we'll
get
to
that.
B
So
I
guess
for
people
who
do
not
know
me,
this
is
my
name
anais,
and
this
is
my
twitter
handle.
B
So
a
lot
of
the
things
that
you're
saying
right
now
is
also
still
really
new
to
me,
which
is
always
interesting
at
meetups
and
yeah,
I'm
also
still
studying
for
my
computer
science
degree
and
before
I
joined
or
like
before
I
got
set
in
the
devops
space.
I
was
working
for
several
years
in
the
blockchain
space
as
community
manager
and
well
various
positions
from
technical
analyst
to
community
manager
to
developer,
advocate
and
then
got
started
in
devops
and
started
learning
about
all
these
things.
B
So
it's
a
lot
of
it
is
my
learning
experience
and
yeah.
I
think
that's
kind
of
also
how
I
approach
things
and
I
think
it's
some
of
the
value
that
I
guess
I
add
in
those
meetups
and
then
where
I
want
to
expand
a
bit
if
you
haven't
like
seen
100
days
of
kubernetes,
that's
kind
of
how
I
got
started
that
I
saw
this
map
and
I
was
like
hey.
B
But
when
you
first
get
started,
you
don't
really
know
where
to
start,
because,
especially
if
you're
not
working
in
the
space
right,
you
don't
know
like
which
tools
to
use
to
explore
and
to
learn
about,
and
that's
kind
of
where
the
idea
of
100
days
of
kubernetes
came
from
and
how
I
then
got
started
in
the
space
and
yeah
some
of
the
approach
they
still
take.
When
I
learn
about,
I
like
that,
I'm
taking
when
I
learn
about
new
tools.
B
So
these
are
some
of
the
resources
I
don't
know
if
you've
seen
them
already,
but
if
you
want
to
contribute
with
your
own
learning
guides,
I
would
highly
appreciate
it.
It's
like
here
is
a
at
100
days
of
kubernetes
dot,
io,
there's
a
kind
of
an
open
source
book
that
you
can
add
to
contribute
to
on
github
with
your
own
tutorials
or
if
you
see
any
spelling
mistakes
or
anything,
then
that
would
be
highly
appreciated
as
well.
B
If
you're
in
the
space
and
yeah
there's
also,
we
have
a
community
chat
as
well,
which
is
small
as
active,
but
where
you
can
basically
also
share
any
content
that
you
produce,
whether
that's
company
related
or
personal
content
that
you
create
just
because
there
are
lots
of.
There
are
a
lot
of
people
who
are
getting
started
with
these
tools
and
it's
it's
obviously
always
highly
appreciate.
B
When
people
get
started
and
yeah
there's
some,
I
I
wasn't
sure
like
if
you're
interested
in
more
of
that
stuff,
I
can
talk
more
about
it
or
straight
go
into
k3s,
because
I
wasn't
100
sure
of
what
you
want
to
see
at
this
meetup.
So
if
you
have
like
some
feedback
of
what
you
would
prefer
to
talk
about,
then
then
that
would
be
highly
appreciated.
I
can
talk
about
what
I
prepared,
or
we
can
talk
straight
about
k3s
depending
on
what's
what
your
mortgage.
B
You
planned
yeah,
okay,
cool,
so
yeah.
B
I
was
thinking
of
talking
a
bit
more
about
just
when
you
get
started
with
new
tools
or
or,
for
example,
with
with
this
meet
up
group
right
like
you,
are
you're
learning
together
about
different
tools,
and
you
kind
of
you
see,
obviously,
each
other's
learning
curve
right
in
a
way
you
you
see
what
each
other
producing
in
terms
of
content
or
what
they
are
working
on
similar
when
you
work
with
different
colleagues
right,
you
see
what
they're
working
on,
but
the
thing
is
when
you
get
started
with
a
new
tool
in
any
space-
and
you
don't
have
this
network
either
professional
or
personal,
then
you
don't
really
know
what
others
are
working
on.
B
I
mean
there's
some
ways
of
you
showing
what
you're
working
on
then
from
starting
out
there
working
in
public,
but
a
lot
of
times
like
we
have
like,
I
guess
when
we
get
started
with
something
we
have
like
this
goal
of
whether
that's
wrecking
a
book
or
something
some
end
goal
where
we
want
to
work
towards
and
there's
actually
a
lot
of
different
aspects
that
go
into
this
end
goal,
and
this
is
kind
of
where
the
story
of
like
where
the
idea
is
well
for
100
days
of
cuban
he
just
came
from,
and
just
also
why
I
encourage
people
to
work
in
public
and
how
working
public
helped
me,
because
people
get
to
see
from
these
little
meet-ups
to
everything
that
went
into
some
end
goal
that
you
had
right
so
yeah.
B
If
you
ever
come
across
somebody
who
is
new
to
this,
then
yeah,
referring
them
to
100
days
of
kubernetes
or
different
different
resources
from
other
community
members.
It's
just
generally
highly
valuable
for
them.
Also,
like
a
lot
of
questions
I
sent
around,
how
do
I
get
started?
B
Where
do
I
get
started
with
what
content
do
I
get
started,
and
I
guess
making
this
more
visible
with
these
also
these
kind
of
meetup
groups
and
normalizing
that
there's
a
lot
of
different
input
that
goes
into
somebody
actually
talking
about
a
subject
or
getting
both
now
subject:
yeah,
and
if
you,
if
you
have
not
seen
this,
this
is
100
days
of
kiwanis,
just
some
self-promotion
and
yeah
more
people
getting
involved
and
and
learning
about
100
days
of
like
cubanitas
itself
and
getting
started
with
different
humanities
providers
and
tools,
and
this
is
kind
of
how
I
got
started
with
k3s
as
well.
B
The
first
time
was
on
a
on
a
live
stream
with
alex
ellis.
I
think
that's
how
he
pronounced
his
name,
and
he
was
telling
me
about
k3s,
and
that
was
kind
of
the
first
time
I
was
hearing
about
him
was
asking
lots
and
lots
of
basic
questions,
and
I
probably
still
have
the
same
kind
of
basic
questions,
there's
a
lot
of
things
that
I
don't
really
understand
about
it
still
and
that
I'm
still
learning
about.
So
I
guess
this
also.
B
This
meetup
was
kind
of
incentive
for
me
to
learn
about
some
of
these
things,
which
was
cool,
and
so
I
hope
that
maybe
some
of
the
information
is
also
new
for
you
we'll
see.
B
But,
yes,
I
was
planning
to
basically
talk
first,
a
bit
about
k3s
and
you
can
also
at
any
point,
if
you
have
anything
to
add,
please
do
jump
in
just
interrupt
me.
I
don't
take
it
hard
in
any
way.
If
you
interrupt
me
so
and
then
just
showing
a
bit
more
about
sivo
and
how
civil
currently
works
and
obviously
at
any
point
we
would
love
to
get
feedback
also
on
siva
itself
and
the
service
we
provide
so
kfbs.
What
is
it?
B
I
see
it
kind
of
as
a
little
brother
of
of
ka
dust
of
normal.
You
just
distribute
that's
how
I
kind
of
call
it
if
you
would
call
it
differently.
Let
me
know
but
yeah.
So
it's
interesting,
I
was
wondering
when
I
got
started
with
kps.
Why
is
it
called
kps
and
not
anything
else,
and
the
explanation
seems
to
be
just
that
in
kubernetes
you
have
eight
letters
between
the
k
and
the
s,
and
three
is
just
smaller
than
eight
and
that's
why
it's
called
k3s
fun
fact
yeah.
B
So
it's
an
overview
most
of
the
information
I
found
actually
most
useful
from
the
github
repository
itself,
so
I
would
actually,
if
I
would
prefer
somebody
to
learn
about
kcs.
I
would
suggest
them
to
check
out
the
github
repository
versus
checking
out
the
the
website
itself
or
the
documentation
if
they
don't
necessarily
want
to
dive
too
deep
into
it.
It's
not
a
fork
of
kubernetes.
B
It
was
kind
of
developed
by
rancher
from
what
I
understood
as
a
by
accident
of
them
developing
another
tool
or
platform
called
rio
and
then
from
there
forking
k3s
out
of
it,
and
there
has
been
some
design
choices
that
are
different
to
normal
kubernetes,
which
makes
it
to
be
able
to
pack
it
in
a
really
small
binary
and
that
allows
for
different
use
cases
that
yeah
that
allows
it
to
be
optimized
for
different
use
cases.
B
It's
also
currently
a
sincere
sandbox
project.
If
you
are
not
familiar
with,
I
guess
also.
This
is
mainly
like
also
some
information.
I
guess
for
people
who
are
potentially
listening
when
a
project,
an
open
source
project
is
donated
to
the
cncf.
They
start
in
sandbox
projects
and
then
gear
from
there
as
they
advance
go
into
incubation
and
then
graduation,
graduation
stage.
B
So
right
now,
it's
part
of
the
cncf
and
it's
kind
of
providing
a
mutual
ground
for
the
project
itself
to
to
evolve,
and
so
far
all
of
the
cloud
native
tools
that
I've
used
with
kps
worked.
So
I
didn't
run
into
any
limitations
from
that
site.
Maybe
there's
some
use
cases
that
I
didn't
try
out
and
maybe
didn't
just
don't
work
or
are
not
as
effective
in
cases
yes,
but
yeah,
that's
just
a
high-level
overview.
B
What
you
get
with
kcs
is
one
of
the
things
if,
when
you
run
it
as
like
the
binary,
I
think
itself,
which
I
did
like
only
a
few
times
so
far-
you
it
automatically
installs
any
kubernetes,
manifest
that
you
have
within
the
same
repository
on
that
cluster,
so
it
just
spins
a
lot
of
resources
up
on
the
go
at
once.
B
No
it's
using
by
default
sqlite
and
you
can
also
use
it
with
other
data
storage,
say:
data
storage
instead
of
at
cd,
no
normal
communications
uses
fcd
as
its
storage,
but
so
the
default
version
comes
with
sqlite
and
then,
if
you
want
to
make
it
more
reliable,
you
can
use
other
data
storage
solutions
that
are
external.
C
D
C
F
C
From
the
yeah
I
don't
know
from
which
to
come,
I
think
from
the
source
of
guys,
but.
C
C
So
you
need
to
start
with
the
estria
light
in
first
of
all,
and
then
you
can
easily
upgrade
your
notes,
for
example,
when
you
want
to
have
instead
of
a
single
node,
you
want
to
extend
your
control
pane.
So
that
means
like
that.
You
would
have
three
masters
so
that
you
can
have
a
high
availability
so
and
with
ester
light.
It's
not
proper
working
directly,
but
that
would
be
helping
with
yesterday.
B
C
Yeah,
we
should
do
because
last
time
we
have
already
a
session
where
we
did
setting
up
js3s
here
in
some
way
and
I
was
checking
for
the
lcd
and
there
was
no
lcd
and
then
we
checked
okay,
it's
like
it's
an
asteroid
database,
but
it's
not
the
standard
estro
light.
Okay,.
B
B
Yeah
and
then
you
get
also
from
with
k3
as
you
get
some
out
of
the
box
default
functionality
vivid
that
which
also
confused
me
at
the
beginning,
when
I
first
used
civo,
because
those
comes
like
metrics
traffic
comes
automatically
when
you're
setting
up
a
new
cluster
with
sibo
and
at
the
beginning.
I
didn't
understand
why
that
was
the
case,
but
it's
part
of
when
you're
spinning
up
a
k3s
cluster.
B
So
it's
it's
just
we
made
it
at
the
beginning,
part
of
it
by
default,
so
yeah,
some
of
the
use
cases
I
mean
we
mentioned
it
kind
of
before
development
environments.
So
I
guess
I
haven't
used
it,
but
you
I
guess
you
can
also
like
spin
it
up
in
your
ci
cd
pipeline.
B
If
you
want
to
want
to
run
any
tests
like
there
are
lots
of
examples
with
kind
clusters,
so
I
imagine
you
can
just
do
the
same
with
k3s
as
well:
experiments,
test
environments,
learning
environments
and
also
like
constrain
resource-constrained
environments,
but
then
with
sibo
you
don't
have
you
don't
have
that,
so
it's
like.
Sometimes
it
kind
of
it.
Has
this
negative
annotation
case
here,
so
you
can't
use
it
for
large-scale
use
cases.
That's
let's
say,
but
I
guess
that's
also
changing
as
it's
being
more
used
and
obviously
with
platforms
like
sibo
yeah.
E
So
one
second
coming
back
to
the
escolite
discussion.
I
think
it's
escolite
and
the
q
lite
was
experimental,
but
it
was
removed.
B
B
B
You
know
what
I
mean,
what
I
refer
to
when
I
say
normal
cubanitas
that
are
kind
of
combined
within
k3s
to
make
them
more
effective,
more
efficient
and
then
also
normal
cubans
has
a
lot
of
by
default
storage
providers
that
are
not
csi
compliant
as
like.
I
know
I
forgot
what
csi
refers
to.
We
have
like
on
sibo,
we
have
on
the
youtube
channel.
We
have
a
whole
video
that
explains
csi
drivers
and
how
to
create
them
and
what
they
are
used
for.
B
So,
if
you're
curious
on
that,
that
might
be
the
next
topic
that
you
can
look
into
one
of
the
next
ones
but
yeah.
So
a
lot
of
the
stuff,
that's
kind
of
by
default,
packaged
into
normal
kubernetes,
is
kind
of
a
move
taken
out
since
it's
not
supporting
a
specific
provider
and
the
resources
that
they
need.
B
I
guess,
and
that
makes
it
smaller
that
makes
that
makes
it
possible
to
to
make
it
smaller
and
more
efficient
and
quicker,
which
I
will
get
to,
but
this
is
when
you
want
to
set
it
up
as
like:
more
scalable,
okay.
Yes,
this
is
the
image
that
they
show
where
you
have
instead
of
masternode,
they
call
it
omega,
they
call
it
server
nodes
and
then
the
worker
nodes
are
called
agent
notes
and
they
operate
in
a
kind
of
similar
manner.
B
Here
this
image
really
confused
me,
because
when
you
normally
draw
kubernetes
clusters,
you
usually
have
like
one
main
note,
and
then
you
have
the
worker
notes,
and
here
they
kind
of
looks
different,
so
yeah,
and
then
you
can
implement
an
external
database
too,
instead
of
having
sqlite
from
within
the
notes
themselves
from
what
I've
read,
which
might
stand,
corrected,
yeah
and
then
you
just
access
it
like
you
and
access
kps
classes
like
you
access
any
other
cuban
in
this
class
at
least,
I
have
really
not
seen
a
difference
so
far
like
if
there's
something
that
doesn't
work
on
k3s
that
I
would
be
curious
to
know
in
that
case.
E
B
Well,
if
they
took
all
of
that
out,
then
it
probably
doesn't
work
right,
but
at
least
like
you're
paying.
The
thing
is,
and
I
haven't
looked
in
detail.
I
should
probably
look
into
more
detail
into
that,
but
when
you're
spinning
up
on
other
providers-
and
I
don't
want
to
call
out
any
specific
providers-
but
if
you
spin
up
clusters
and
other
providers
you're
paying
also
for
other
resources
that
are
within
that
cluster-
that
you
don't
even
use-
maybe
I
guess
some
other
people
know
more
about
that.
B
But
that's
what
I've
been
told
a
lot
and
that's
also
why
the
price
might
be
different
when
you're
using
siva
to
other
club
providers.
Anyway,
you
don't
have
to
use
opacivo.
B
B
If
I
guess,
if
you
don't
have
a,
if
you
don't
have
a
raspberry
pi
cluster,
that's
one
way
to
experiment
around
with
it
and
if
you
have
credits
on
those
providers
but
yeah
and
then
there's
something
called
k3d,
which
I
use
only
a
bit
which
is
kind
of
like
to
me.
It's
entirely
similar
to
kind
just
using
basically
kind
classes
locally
for
local
development
and
testing.
B
The
thing
is,
those
seem
like
anything
related
to
k3s
seems
a
lot
faster,
like
I
experience
the
difference
when
I'm
using
k3s
versus
spinning
up
yeah,
spinning
up
a
kind
cluster,
for
instance,
even
if
it's
a
simple
one
yeah
and
then
obviously
you
can
use
civil
code
from
managed
giving
you
these
clusters,
which
we
take
a
look
at
now.
So
if
you
sign
up
right
now
to
zebra,
you
get
250
of
free
credit.
B
When
you
first
sign
up
so
you
can
you
have
a
lot
of
time
to
experiment
around
with
it,
because
the
pricing
you
can,
if
you
go
to
the
pricing
page,
it's
quite
you
can
see
that
it's
quite
straightforward,
let's
say
yeah,
so
you
can
spin
up
on
on
sivo
see
what
is
primarily
focused
on
kubernetes
and
native
tools,
and
you
can
spin
up
classes
either
through
the
ui,
which
I
will
show
you
in
a
second,
but
then
we're
going
to
use
the
cli.
B
You
can
use
also
terraform
for
lumi
and
we're
just
adding
support
for
quest
point
as
well.
So
if
you
are
into
some
tools
like
that,
then
you
can
totally
use
them
with
sibo
as
well,
so
you
don't
have
to
click
buttons
in
the
ui.
If
you
don't
want
to.
If
that
makes
sense,
how
do
I
exit
okay
cool
yeah?
So
this
is:
let's
go
here
to
dashboard
yeah,
let's
start
here.
B
So
when
you
first
get
started,
you
see
here
basically
an
overview
of
the
resource
that
you're
currently
using
and
your
latest
activity,
and
then
you
can
head
over
to
kubernetes
and
right
now,
I'm
in
the
london
region.
We
have
currently
two
regions
in
new
york
and
in
london.
We
are
also
adding
support
for
further
regions
throughout
this
year.
So
right
now
I'm
and
select
the
london.
So
I
have
one
class
to
set
up
right
now
and
basically
creating
a
new
cluster
is
pretty
straightforward.
You
just
provide
a
name.
B
You
provide
the
number
of
instances
that
you
would
like
to
use
and
the
size
of
your
cluster.
This
is
just
blocked
for
me
because
I'm
my
employer
resource
constrains
me
of
that.
No
because
yeah,
I
don't
know
I
haven't
figured
out
yet
how
to
properly
increase
the
resource
limits
that
I
have
for
my
account.
So.
B
Not
going
too
crazy
about
this,
I
hope
they
are
not
watching.
Well,
kai
is
watching
anyway,
and
then,
when
you
scroll
down
this
is
one
of
the.
I
guess
something
that
I
find
most
interesting
personally
on
zevo.
Then
you
have
this
marketplace,
which
is
completely
open
source.
B
So
if
you
have,
if
you're
working
with
any
any
any
cloud
native
tool
that
can
be
packed
up
in
a
helm,
chart
then-
or
I
think
also
if
it
can't
well-
I
guess
most
of
them
are
packed
up
in
home,
charts
and
then
ultimately
added
to
the
github
repository
for
the
marketplace.
So
you
have
like
all
of
these
different
applications
that
you
can
install
when
you
spin
up
a
new
cluster
and
they
are
basically
installed
on
it
right
away.
B
So,
for
instance,
it's
quite
practical
because,
for
example,
for
prometheus
there
are
several
there's
a
prometheus
operator.
There
are
different,
actually
different
operators
to
install
prometheus,
so
figuring
that
out
and
setting
it
up
is,
if
you
just
want
to
try
it
out
even
or
if
it's
just
for
demo.
B
It
can
be
quite
time
consuming
and
like
this,
you
can
just
spin
it
up
and
use
it
within
like
one
and
a
half
minutes
so
yeah
normal
cluster
creation
is
about,
I
would
say,
like
80
seconds
something
like
that,
depending
depending
on,
but
usually
it's
quite
quick,
but
I
actually
want
to
use
the
cli.
B
If
you
have
a
zebra
account,
you
could
follow
along
setting
up
a
cluster.
If
not,
you
could
do
that
later.
This
is
the
I
don't
know
should
I
can
I
share
this
in
the
chat
just
to
see.
I
think
this
is
the
best
place
to
get
started
with
the
cli
itself,
so
I'm
just
going
to
post
it
here
in
the
chat
and
then
maybe
you
can
share
it
on
youtube
as
well
for
people
to
have
it.
E
Yeah
awesome
question:
there's
a
question
from
the
youtube
chat:
is
there
any
constraints
for
the
250
when
they're
expiring,
so
was
it
like?
So
is
it?
Are
there
forever?
Are
there
limited
to
12
months.
B
Good
question:
I
think
I.
F
B
B
Yeah
all
good
okay
cool
moving
on
yeah,
so
we
also
have.
If
you
want
to
contribute,
we
have
a
learn
section
where
you
can
contribute
with
your
own
guides
and
if
you
write
a
few
guides,
then
you
can
also
become
an
ambassador
and
with
becoming
an
ambassador,
you
get
free
credit
and
other
cool
perks
and
collaboration
opportunities,
and
here
are
some
of
our
amazing
ambassadors.
So
if
you're
interested,
then
please
reach
out.
Also,
if
you
do
some
demos
on
a
regular
basis,
please
do
reach
out
yeah
and
yeah.
B
We
are
adding
basically
more
more
content
here,
as
well
as
we
go
along,
but
it's
highly
community
focused
and
you
can
also
provide
suggestions
in
the
suggestions
area
and
just
add
content.
We
have
a
content
section
where
you
can
contribute
with
your
own
guides,
so
you
can
really
like
get
involved
in
advancing
this
platform
as
well
like
this.
Is
the
startup
and
there's
there's
a
lot
of
room
for
community
members
to
get
involved,
let's
say
so,
but
adding
what.
C
C
A
B
A
I
also
don't
want
to
spoil
it,
but
I
think
it's
amazing.
It's
a
it's.
A
super
cool
learning
experience
other
than
following
a
tutorial,
no
offense
on
tutorials
like
making
making
it
like
giving
you
a
goal
and
saying
hey:
this
is
how
you
can
achieve
it
and
then
you
play
around
and
say:
oh,
I
can
scale
a
cluster
with
the
notes
interesting.
So
it's
like
interactive
learning
and
I
really
appreciate
that.
C
A
Yeah,
these
two
are
always
doing
insider
jokes,
but
please
please
go
ahead
and
dive
into.
B
Quest
okay:
this
is
the
cube
quest
as
you
can
see,
and
anyway.
So
we
also
have.
We
have
more
educational
content
coming
out
so
especially
if
you're
just
getting
started
with
kubernetes.
If
you
want
to
become
more
confident
using
kubernetes
and
more
production,
similar
environments
that
you
might
not
get
the
same
experience
when
you're
using
local
kubernetes
classes,
then
this
is
definitely
also
for
you
not
saying
that
you
can't
use
it
for
more
advanced
use
cases
as
well.
B
We
have
definitely
people
doing
that,
but
and
companies
doing
that,
but
if
you're
getting
started,
then
I
mean
it's
really
like
simple
and
straightforward
to
spin
up
a
cluster.
So
if
there's
anything
scary
about
it,
then
please
let
us
know,
because
there
definitely
should
not
be
anything
scary
about
this,
but
this
is
yeah.
This
is
an
example
because
I
spin
up
earlier
for
my
gitlab
example,
because
I
wanted
to
make
it
work
after
procrastinating
about
it.
But
what
I
want
to
show
you
is
basically
with
the
cli.
B
So
right
now
I
have
here
my
example
repository
that
I
use
for
various
examples
and
with
sivo
once
you're
connected.
You
just
provide
like
once
you
have
installed
it,
you
just
provide
the
api
key
and
then
right
now
I
have
two
api
keys
connected.
You
can
find
the
api
keys
when
you
go
to
the
account
section
and
then
you
go
to
settings
and
there's
a
security
section
which
I'm
not
gonna
go
to
right
now,
because
then
you
see
my
api
token,
my
api
key,
but
that's
how
you
connect
it.
B
So
it
knows
that
and
then
you
can
set
the
region.
So
in
this
case
we
right
now
have
two
regions,
I'm
connected
to
the
london
one
region.
By
default.
Now
I
can
also
specify
other
regions
and
creating
a
cluster
is
as
forward
as
saying
sivo,
cubernitas
and
then
create
in
this
case
example
customer
I'm
going
to
create
another
cluster
because
I
already
have
a
cluster
with
this
name.
So
just
maybe
demo
was.
E
B
Soon,
provided
in
the
suggestion
section
right
so
and
then
you
just
well,
you
don't
need
these
commands,
I
just
add
them,
so
I
have
it
directly
in
my
cube
config
and
I
can
connect
to
the
cluster
right
away
and
in
this
case
I'm
specifying
the
region,
but
I
don't
think
you
have
to
do
that
at
the
end
here
and
yeah.
You
can
specify
the
note
size
and
then
it's
as
straightforward
as
that,
and
it
should
go
ahead
and
not
create
a
cluster
custom
name
cannot
be
longer
than
63
characters.
Okay,
let's.
D
D
C
From
the
dns
so
because
dns
can
be
only
about
64
characters
or
63.
B
F
C
D
A
A
B
C
B
E
B
I
can
try,
you
mean,
maybe
I'm
resist
constrained,
not.
B
C
Or
we
can
open
issue
on
the
cli
afterwards.
B
Anyway,
if
you
set
it
up,
if
you
manage
to
set
it
up,
you
can
also
use
the
the
cli
to
install
any.
B
D
E
B
B
At
least
people
are
gonna
fix
it
right
away,
so
all
good
all
good
anyway.
This
was
just
basically
me
showing
that
you
can
use
the
ci
for
everything
if
you
want
to
and
it's
pretty
straightforward
and
then
you
have
a
beautiful
cluster
here
and
you
can
then
download
the
cube,
config
and
actually
connect
to
that
cluster.
If
you
fancy
doing
that,
no
it's
pretty
straightforward,
but.
B
B
The
release
pipeline
a
lot,
but
anyway
he's
gonna
fix
it.
So,
hopefully,
once
you
finish
watching
this,
it's
gonna
be
finished
anyway.
So
this
is
what
I
wanted
to
show
you
that's
just
as
it's
really
straightforward
and
easy
to
set
up.
If
that's
what
you
fancy-
and
you
can
also
once
you
set
it
up,
you
can
add
new
apps
from
the
marketplace
and
then
install
them
just
here
for
the
ui
or
through
the
cri.
B
Now,
if
you
use
something
like
crossbrain,
for
example,
you
can't
do
that
like
you
would
have
to
do
it
so,
while
setting
up
the
cluster
in
somewhere,
which
is
a
different
story.
So
if
you're
interested
in
cosplaying
and
setting
up
a
cluster
through
cosplay,
then
you
can
join
me
next
week
for
meetup
anyway.
B
So
this
is
the
tutorial
I
was
kind
of
using
and
when
I
was
using
it,
I
found
out
how
you
have
to
connect
it
to
gitlab
and
you
need
like
basically,
the
service
account
yaml
file,
that
you
don't
need
any
other
tools:
the
crci
cd
tools
that
I've
been
using
anyway.
So,
there's
a
process
that
I've
detailed
that
we've
detailed
in
a
guide
where
you
can
on
how
you
can
connect
it
and
then
yeah.
You
just
basically
need
some
environment
variables
or
you
need
to
connect
your
your
cluster
now.
B
The
interesting
thing
is,
I
first
used
the
cluster
in
on
the
group
level
and
then
I
didn't
know
how
to
connect
it
like
also
here
I
didn't
know
how
to
use
like
how
to
once
I
connected
the
cluster
on
how
I
can
actually
then
use
it
within
my
ci
cd
pipeline.
If
that
makes
sense.
So
if
you
have
any
guides
on
that
or
any
like
specific
documentation,
I'd
show
that
would
be
really
helpful
but
yeah.
I
basically
just
wanted
to
set
up
my
ci
cd
pipe
blindness.
D
B
Okay,
so
that
basically
creates
a
new
container
image
and
then
updates
the
deployment
of
that
container
image
with
that
container
image-
and
here
I've
just
basically
done
set
the
well
the
the
url
to
the
cluster
and
the
certificate
authority
token
and
the
service
token
for
the
cluster
and
yeah,
and
then
to
connect
basically
to
connect
my
pipeline
to
my
cluster
and
it's
right
now,
it's
in
the
other
cluster,
it's
all
set
up
but
yeah.
If
it's
just
normal.
B
I
guess
cuban
needs
deployment
in
this
case
yeah,
so
I
mean
so
far.
I
really
like,
using
especially
like
just
using
these
plant
native
tools.
I
haven't
really
experienced
a
difference
between
using
civo
to
using,
for
example,
azure
or
google.
D
C
The
detailed
so
what
you
show.
C
B
C
B
C
B
B
B
E
D
E
C
E
F
C
B
C
C
C
Yeah
yeah
go
in
the
deployment
variable,
so
there's
a
very
cute
conflict
and
that's
the
default
tube
config.
When
you
do
what
to
hey,
I
want
to
work
with
different
config
files
on
my
local
system
and
then
you
would
do
something
like
export.
F
D
C
H
D
H
I
one
one
of
my
personal
projects.
I've
been
working
on
recently
is
moving
all
my
hosting
applications
that
that
I'm
having
for
my
private
stuff,
like
own
cloud
and
a
couple
of
other
things
into
docker
containers
and
one
of
the
missing
pieces,
was
how
I
keep
them
up
to
date
and
deploy
them
and
run
them
somewhere
without
having
to
maintain
a
whole
server.
H
And-
and
this
seems
like
a
great
thing
for
that
right
like
I-
I
could
just
copy
all
the
helm
charts
into
a
repository
and
then
when
I
update
the
version
it
just
pushes
it
out
again
to
sql
to
have
it
run.
There.
B
We
actually
do
that.
Well,
we
do
that
on
a
larger
scale
for
civil
itself.
We,
where
we
push
the
updated
images
and
into
or
like
the
updated,
manifest
into
home
charts
and
then
update
the
reference
and
terraform
to
those
hand,
charts,
and
it's
just
once
you
update
anything
within
the
original
repository.
It
just
updates
it
automatically.
H
Triggers
yeah
exactly
yeah
yeah,
that's
cool.
B
C
D
E
B
G
E
E
A
C
A
A
And
to
add
promises
metrics
to
it,
and
this
only
worked.
One
thing
was
innately
unstable
and
the
other
thing
needed
stable
from
the
package
manager,
and
this
was
a
dependency
loop
and
we
tried
so
many
things
that
in
the
end,
we
didn't
know
how
to
fix
it
or
what
the
fix
was
but
like
it
was
writing
the
blog
post
and
watch
watching
the
video
again.
Okay.
A
A
A
E
Thing
is
david:
how
you
define
production,
there's
no
general
term,
how
how
we
define
production,
I
mean.
E
And
one
second:
in
the
meantime,
when
you
use
the
clive
cri
version,
726
0.726,
the
issue
is
not
there,
it's
already
downgraded.
Maybe
this
was
confirmed
by
nico
and
by
kai
also
on
youtube.
A
I've
I've
already
commented
on
the
on
the
gitlab
source
code.
B
B
F
B
H
Can
you
can
you
open
this
section
of
the
preparing
environment
on
line
96
in
the
log
there
that
could.
F
H
H
B
D
C
H
Yeah,
but
that's
that's
all
I've
been
trying
to
say
is
that
maybe
we
can
see
if
there
is
a
value
there,
even
in
github,
in
in
git,
lab
micro
future
requests
better
debugging
utilities
for
for
deployment
variables.
F
E
C
I
had
done
this
before
and
I
was
wondering
why
it's
not
working
so,
can
you
go
into
infrastructure
so.
E
C
D
B
C
D
E
Everything
everything
is
prepared
for
you,
you
just
have.
C
C
G
E
C
And
it
doesn't
have
yeah
yeah.
I
provide
the
proof
in
the
next
three
to
four
hours
and
then
you
and
probably
I
make
out
the
independent
recording.
Then
you
can
see
it
and
it
works
with
the
philips
code.
F
C
C
Only
to
rename
the
crm
yes
because
it's
not
the
default
name,
so
that
doesn't
run
in
the
same
project.
C
A
Also,
an
insider
choke,
it
happened
before.
C
C
Him,
okay,
so,
where
we're
talking
about
anises
like
philip,
did
work
on
integrating
this
into
terraform,
we
can
also
run
this
on
gitlab
directly.
You
would
create
a
cluster
directly.
What
we
now
need
to
do
would
be
to
rename
the
clip
ciamer
to
a
project.
C
I
need
to
choose
okay
and
then
we
would
use
for
full
integration
with
teraform
and
siebel
cloud
and
gitlab.
So
we
would
write
directly
into
the
back
end
of
gitlab,
the
terraform
state,
and
then
we
would
execute
the
civil
with
cluster
and
the
funny
interesting
point
or
the
point
that
I
see
white.
I
currently
don't
know
why
it's
not
working
but
invitation
mutation
is
also
mentioned
that,
when
you're
having
the
the
protein,
if
you
need
this
cluster,
that
means
only
when
you
have
to
need
this
integration
by
default.
C
You
get
the
following
variables
so
and
I'm
wondering
why
you
don't
get
this
variable,
so
it
could
be
a
bug,
but
I
don't
think
so.
I
think
it's
like
we
have
somewhere
a
misconfiguration
of
something
or
we
I
didn't
saw
it
correctly.
So
it
could
be
also
the
case
because,
because
when
you're
using
vd
clip
cluster
integration,
it
will
give
you
the
benefit
of
having
the
following
variables.
And
then
you
don't
need
to
specify
anything.
C
C
C
A
See
yeah.
Meanwhile,
I
think,
unless
you
also
wrote
a
tutorial
on
how
to
connect
kcs
cyber
cloud
and
gitlab
right.
B
A
Yeah
I'm
asking
for,
like
writing
a
summary
blog
post,
sharing
it
on
twitter
and
then
stuff
like
that,
so
that
we
keep
all
the
resources
shared
with
everyone
so
that
they
can
benefit.
Yes,.
G
Just
one
idea
in
the
integration
there's
the
environment,
flag
or
part,
I'm
not
sure
if
there
was
a
white
card
in
it
or
the
environment,
we
are
using
that
that's
just
an
issue
of
the
environment,
name.
F
C
Do
you
mean,
can
you
show
us
the
settings
so
when
we
find
the.
F
D
D
D
B
E
It's
new
talking
it's
there
already,
it's
like
just
it's
like
remo,
but
maybe
you
can
like
nico,
suggested,
mark
the
environment
as
production
and
then
specify
in
the
in
the
stage
the
production
environment.
G
C
Yeah
and
then
colon
and
then
a
new
sub
key,
it's
called
name,
and
then
the
value
of
this
is
prod.
D
C
Probably
we
can,
we
can
comment
out
a
bit
step
right.
I
know,
then
we
would
get
in
the
latest
image.
So
then
we
would
be
a
little
bit
faster
to
test
this.
Instead
of
waiting
with
the
image.
F
B
Please
do
sounds
good.
Let
me
know.
E
A
H
Yes,
there
is,
there
is
zero.
H
D
H
B
D
C
I
probably
I'm
pretty
sure
now
that
is
working
off
the
kubernetes,
so.
C
G
B
C
But
how
is
now
the
official
way?
Do
you
know
it
because
the
github
apps
are
done,
so
I
can't
install
it
by
clicking
and
then,
since.
A
A
H
B
A
B
B
If
you
have
any
again,
you
can
get
250
of
freight
credit
for
the
first
month
that
you're
using
it
and
from
then
onwards
it's
like
as
low
as
I
think
six
dollars
per
month
for
the
smallest
clusters,
or
something
like
that,
and
if
there's
any
applications
that
you
would
like
to
see
or
any
tools
and
that
you
would
like
to
see
integration,
then
please,
let
us
know
we
just
got
the
crossplane
provider
into
their
repository
into
their
accounts.
So
that's
something
that's
gonna
be
happening
now
as
well.
B
That
can
be
used
as
well.
Now
we
have
a
meet
up
next
week
on
cross
plane
and
using
cross
plane
spin
up
clusters
on
sievo
if
you're
interested
in
that
and
yeah.
There
are
multiple
based
on
how
you
can
get
involved,
if
you're,
using
cuban
these
classes,
for
demos
or
for
your
tutorials,
and
you
want
to
use
civo
for
it
then
write
your
first
tutorials
and
apply
to
become
an
ambassador,
and
then
you
can
also
get
free
credit
for
the
long
term.
B
A
How
we
can
manage
that
things
we
fixed
now,
but
maybe
looking
a
little
a
little
bit
further
yeah
just
see
seeing
how
things
are
going
could
also
imagine
that
we
use
what
has
the
captain
application,
which
is
available
in
the
in
the
marketplace
or
the
premises
operator,
which
did
I
try
that
I
think
so,
but
yeah
everything
which
is
possible
and
like
seeing
what
is
missing
and
looking
forward
to
to
seeing
success
of
sima
cloud,
of
course,
and
yeah.
Thanks
thanks
for
making
time
for
for
us
today,
and
also
thank.
A
Bearing
with
unexpected,
let's
try
to
optimize
this
and
fix
this,
I
think
we
had
a
lot
of.
A
Live
demos
always
break
that's
common
commander
for
life,
I
think,
but
in
the
end
you
have
an
audience
or
community
who
wants
to
fix
it
and
help
solve
the
problem,
and
this.
This
is
what
is
amazing,
I
think
yeah.
That
being
said,
I
am
writing
a
blog
post
later
on
or
just
summarizing
what
we've
learned
today,
at
least
providing
all
the
urls
which
are
not
linked.
Yet
I've
been
tweeting
a
bit
as
well
and
yeah.
A
Next
week
we
will
look
into
gitlab
purchases
around
helm
and
terraform,
which
have
been
added
in
the
past
few
major
releases.
This
will
be
done
by
philip
and
nicholas
as
far
as
I
know,
yeah,
and
with
that
I
would
just
say
thanks
thanks
for
watching,
thanks
for
engaging
also
on
the
youtube
chat
and
looking
forward
to
what
comes
next
bye,
bye.
Everyone.