►
From YouTube: Keptn public demo: a quick walk through
Description
We are providing a hosted Keptn installation that you can explore without installing anything. Head over to keptn.public.demo.keptn.sh and have a look around to explore 4 different projects that we are currently hosting: Litmus, Podtatohead, Sockshop, Unleash.
Learn more: https://keptn.sh
Get started with tutorials: https://tutorials.keptn.sh
Join us in Slack: https://slack.keptn.sh
Star us on Github: https://github.com/keptn/keptn
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/keptnProject
Sign up to our community newsletter: https://keptn.sh/community/newsletter/
A
Hi
everyone
and
welcome
to
the
captain
public
demo
installation
on
this
cluster.
We
can
explore
a
couple
of
different
projects
and
this
cluster
is
open
for
you
to
explore.
So
there
is
no
need
to
install
anything.
We
host
a
couple
of
projects
there
for
you
to
explore
them
and
in
this
video
I
just
want
to
take
a
look
at
a
couple
of
them.
So
let
us
start
with
our
sockshot
application.
A
This
application,
you
might
already
heard
of
if
you
work
with
captain
it's
kind
of
our
standard
demo,
application
that
we
currently
use
and
it
has
a
three
stage-
delivery
sequence
defined.
So
we
have
a
depth
staging
and
production
environment
and
we
move
our
stock
shop
application
through
all
these
different
stages,
with
quality
gates
between
these
stages.
So
we
can
have
a
look
at,
for
example,
at
our
latest
delivery
sequence.
For
this,
let
me
have
a
look
in
the
sequence
frame
and
we
can
see
that
there
was
just
a
delivery.
A
Sequence
succeeded
a
couple
of
minutes
to
go
and
it
took
around
13
minutes
for
it
to
finish.
By
clicking
on
it,
we
can
explore
the
whole
delivery
sequence.
We
can
see
all
the
tasks
that
have
been
executed.
We
can
see
the
evaluation
of
the
quality
gates.
We
can
jump
through
all
the
different
stages,
having
a
look
also
on
the
evaluations
of
the
previous
stages
of
the
quality
gates,
and
we
can
even
explore
previous
delivery
sequences
so
feel
free
to
take
a
look
yourself
in
the
structure
project.
Another
project
we
have
is
our
potato
identification.
A
So
in
this
we
do
have
again
a
multi-stage
delivery
pipeline
this
time,
two
different
stages,
a
hardening
and
a
production
stage
and
again
a
quality
gate
between
the
stages.
Again,
we
can
have
a
look
here
at
the
delivery
sequence
or
just
at
the
service
screen
screen,
which
is
our
overview
screen
on
all
the
different
versions.
We
have
deployed
of
services
belonging
to
this
application.
A
So
in
this
case
it's
only
one
service
belonging
to
the
application,
and
we
can
have
a
look
here,
for
example,
on
the
quality
gate
in
the
hardening
environment,
and
we
can
see
all
the
different
evaluations
that
have
been
done
by
captain.
The
data
here
is
coming
from
ethos.
So
all
the
quarterly
gate
evaluations
are
based
on
prometheus
data
and
we
can
see
what
has
been
evaluated.
A
We
can
even
jump
back
to
some
of
the
quality
gate
regulations
that
failed
and
we
can
have
a
look
here
why
they
failed
and
we
can
ensure
that
they
did
not
make
it
their
way
to
production
and
another
project
that
we
can
take.
A
look
here
is
currently
our
litmus
project,
so
in
this
case
it's
a
single
stage
environment,
because
the
whole
purpose
of
this
project
is
to
evaluate
the
resilience
of
micro
services
and
therefore
we
only
need
one
stage.
A
What
we
do
in
this
one
stage
is
we
execute
load
tests,
plus
chaos,
tests
and,
after
both
of
them
are
finished,
we
evaluate
them
with
capital
quality
gates
to
get
a
recipient
score.
So,
having
a
look
at
this,
for
example,
one
of
those
sequences
failed
and
we
can
have
a
look.
A
We
can
see
the
literal
service
and
the
cheerleader
service
has
been
executed
and
we
can
have
a
look
at
the
quality
evaluation.
It
gets
score
of
zero
percent
because
two
of
our
slos
actually
fail,
and
we
can
even
have
a
look.
How
we
or
what
we
did
to
increase
the
recipients
where
you
can
have
a
look,
is
in
the
public
kit
repository
and
there
is
one
repository
linked
to
each
application
so
feel
free
to
also
take
a
look
there.
A
If
you
want
to
learn
more,
go
to
captain.sph
or
try
you'll
try
some
tutorials
yourself
on
tutorials.cat.ssh.
If
you
have
any
questions,
feel
free
to
reach
out
on
slack.captain.sh
and
don't
forget
to
follow
us
on
twitter.
See
you
next.