►
From YouTube: Kubernetes UG VMware 20221201
Description
December 1, 2022 meeting of the Kubernetes VMware User Group. Addressed recent v.2.7.0 release of the vSphere CSI plugin
1.25 release of the vSphere cloud provider. Antrea Egress - see blog post https://blogs.vmware.com/networkvirtualization/2022/11/antrea-egress-vsphere8-with-tanzu.html/
A
Score:
okay:
welcome
to
the
December
1st
meeting
of
the
kubernetes
VMware
user
group
on
the
agenda
today,
we've
I'll
present
briefly
on
a
couple
updates
that
happened
since
the
last
meeting.
Those
are
updates
to
the
vsphere,
CSI
storage,
plugin
and
also
the
vsphere
cloud
provider,
there's
likely
to
be
a
lot
of
time
after
so,
we
can
just
have
free
form,
birds
of
a
feather
discussion,
whatever
people
like
after
that
and
I
see,
we
got
a
third
person
who
just
joined.
A
So
let
me
I
prepared
a
deck
for
these
changes.
So
let
me
bring
that
up
just
a
minute.
A
Okay
and
I
assume:
can
you
see
the
slide
deck
yep?
Okay,
so
I?
Guess
that
will
cover
the
storage
driver.
The
cloud
provider
briefly
touched
on
vsphere
8.,
an
update
to
the
CSI
driver
came
out
I
think
about
a
month
ago.
A
The
key
feature
was
adding
support
for
kubernetes
1.25.
That's
the
latest
version
of
kubernetes
that
is
currently
in
GA
right
now,
and
it
supports
one
two:
five,
with
a
minimum
of
one
two:
three
one
thing
that
I
want
to
throw
out
there.
The
reason
I
mentioned
the
minimum
is
that
datadog.
A
Does
this
annual
survey
of
kubernetes
users
and
it
came
out
in
November-
found
it
quite
interesting
that,
according
to
the
survey,
which
had
quite
a
large
participation,
the
most
commonly
deployed
kubernetes
release
out
there
in
the
wild
is
1.21
which
reached
ends
of
Life
earlier
this
year?
So
there's
a
big
difference,
I
think
between
aspirations
in
the
real
world
and
reality,
but
in
any
event,
support
for
125
is
out
there.
A
If
you
want
to
be
in
that
group
of
apparently
what
our
early
adopters
and
by
the
way
the
126
release
is
due
out
later
this
month
so
and
I'd
expect
that
VMware
will
publish
storage,
plugins
and
a
cloud
provider
sometime
after
that
release.
Wouldn't
surprise
me
if
that
doesn't
come
out
until
early
next
year,
but
anyway
here's
the
CSI
driver
update.
A
It
enabled
the
feature
gate.
Well,
you
you
can
read
the
things
in
the
slide.
A
key
resolved
issue
was
fixing
an
issue
that
occurred
when
a
kubernetes
node
VM
was
deleted.
Well,
volume
mounts
were
mounted
to
that
VM
and
that
should
make
the
world
a
better
place
to
live.
A
Fixing
that
issue
patch
releases
also
came
out
if
you're
on
older
kubernetes
releases
to
262
and
2.54,
and
you
can
see
the
list
of
those
patches
here
by
the
way
I
think
I
listed
in
the
earlier
slide,
that
if
you
want
any
of
these,
including
the
latest
issues,
go
to
this
link
at
the
top
here
and
then
the
latest
documentation
is
found
here.
A
So
known
issues
you
should
go
to
the
GitHub
for
the
very
latest
as
the
release
notes,
publish
the
known
issues
as
of
the
date
of
the
release
and
there's
a
few
of
them
there.
The
ones
that
are
in
the
release
notes
often
have
workarounds
if
you're
unfamiliar
with
it.
If
you
go
to
GitHub,
those
can
be
very
fresh
issues.
A
Maybe
that
haven't
been
investigated
yet
I
just
looked
this
morning,
for
example,
on
the
last
one
it
was
reported
just
two
days
ago
with
regard
to
the
cloud
provider,
we've
got
a
similar
thing
going
on
where
support
for
kubernetes
1.25
came
out.
There
was
a
the
recommended
means
of
deploying
that
cloud
provider.
If
you're
on
a
generic
kubernetes
release
that
doesn't
have
an
installer
for
vsphere.
B
A
Chart
would
be
recommended
for
installing
that
cloud
provider
if
you're
on
a
commercial
distribution,
they
would
typically
take
care
of
this
for
you,
but
for
people
who
are
on
Upstream,
open
source
or
kubernetes
distros
without
an
installer
that
held
chart
should
be
useful.
There
haven't
been
any
recent
patch
releases
and
just
for
completeness,
your
latest
docs
are
here
and
current
issues
are
there
I
looked
this
morning
and
there
hasn't
been
an
issue
open
for
22
days,
so
there's
not
a
whole
lot
fresh
going
on
there
other
than
that
kubernetes
1.25
release.
A
These
are
some
additional.
In
addition
to
supporting
one
two
five
here
is
the
list
of
issues
resolved
in
that
1.25
rupees.
A
Finally,
vsphere
8
was
announced
at
VMware
Explorer
earlier
this
year
was
originally
projected
to
go
ga
in
late
September,
but
issues
were
found
in
that
process.
It
got
delayed
a
bit,
but
it
did
go.
Ga
on
November,
17th
I've
got
a
link
here
and
by
the
way,
I'll
publish
I'll
drop
a
link
to
this
slide
deck
after
after
this
meeting.
In
the
agenda
notes
document,
so
you
can
find
clickable
versions
of
these
links
appear
not
keeping
up
with
me
taking
notes
now,
I'll
put
them
in
there
a
little.
A
Meeting
ends,
if
you're
not
familiar
with
what
is,
in
vsphere
rate,
I
recommend
this
Cormac
Hogan
blog
post
as
a
good
summary
and
then
for
the
North
America
version
of
the
Explorer
William.
Lamb
has
posted
a
list
of
links
to
video
recordings
of
those
sessions.
He
usually
does
one
for
kubecon
or
for
VMware
Explorer
Europe
as
well,
but
I
don't
believe
that.
B
A
Out
yet,
but
maybe
soon,
however,
I
don't
think
with
regard
to
be
sphere
rate,
much
changed
in
between
the
two
of
them,
so
you
should
be
able
to
find
sessions
on
vsphere
8
in
Explorer.
A
Unfortunately,
I
can't
tell
you
a
lot
more
about
vsphere
8,
based
on
personal
experience,
because
I
haven't
had
a
chance
to
use
it
myself.
Yet
I
normally
play
around
with
these
things
in
my
home
lab,
but
I'm
either
going
to
have
to
spend
some
money
to
upgrade
my
home
lab
or
do
without
because
right
now,
I,
don't
have
modern
enough
equipment
to
deploy
vsphere
8
on
my
own
lab
I
think
that
was
the
end
of
my
deck.
So
let
me
stop
sharing
here.
A
So
anyway,
that
was
the
end
of
my
the
the
presentation
on
the
agenda,
but
as
usual
and
we've
got
a
lot
of
time
left
here,
we
can
go
into
just
freeform
birds
of
a
feather
discussion
or
if
anybody's
got
any
questions,
inquiries,
Curiosities
you're
welcome
to
go
for
it.
A
Maybe
if
you
want
I'm,
you
know
we
can
eat.
We
can
all
introduce
each
other
as
well.
I'm
Steve
long
I
work
for
VMware.
As
a
software
engineer,
I'm
assigned
to
work
on
open
source
projects,
including
kubernetes
I'm,
also
fairly
active
in
the
edge
space
and
I've,
been
active
on
the
kubernetes
project.
Since
2016.
B
A
B
One
point
or
another
yeah,
so
I
worked
on
tanzi
when
it
was
in
its
infancy
and
then
when
it
became
like
a
full-fledged
product
to
move
to
that
support
team.
A
And
I
see
you
Damien.
If
you
don't
want
to
talk
or
aren't,
are
able
to
that's
fine,
but
if
you'd
like
to
introduce
yourself
go
for
it.
A
Okay,
I'll
take
silences
unavailable,
yeah
speaking
of
tons
of
young
until
recently
I
was
working
on
the
tanzu
Community
Edition
that
was
recently
end
of
life
in
favor
of
recommending
the
people
just
go
for
the
free
edition
of
tkg
instead
and
I've
also
had
experience
just
evaluating
other
distros
of
kubernetes
when
I
was
at
kubecon
North
America
I
was
originally
slanted
to
give
a
talk
where
I
chose
to
use
tonzu
Community
Edition,
but
when
it
became
apparent,
it
was
going
to
be
end
of
Lifetime
flipped
over
at
the
last
minute
to
use
eks
anywhere
on
top
of
vsphere
and
it
it
was
interesting
and
it
worked
nicely
for
demo
purposes.
B
Do
they
still
have
like
an
active
channel
in
the
kubernetes
slack
for
tce.
A
You
know
I,
don't
know
how
active
it
is.
Let
me
click
on
it
now
that
you
mentioned
it.
I
haven't
gone
there
myself
recently
and
I
suspect
that
it
isn't
active,
but
I
don't
actually
know.
B
A
I
doubt
it
because
pretty
much
most
of
the
staff
that
was
assigned
to
it
has
moved
on
so
and
I
I
would
suspect
that
there
isn't
any.
You
know
unless
the
community
goes
in
there
and
does
it,
which
is
probably
in
the
long
term,
unlikely
I.
I
think
this
is
just
going
to
flip
over
to
people
with
use
the
the
free
commercial
version
of
tanzu
or
some
other
kubernetes
solution.
A
A
A
But
it
it
gives
links
to
the
recommendation
of
using
the
free
edition
and
instructions
on
where
to
download
it.
A
I
don't
know
if
it's
been
resolved,
but
I
think
the
at
as
of
early
October
I
had
heard
people
indicate
that
one
of
the
potential
things
with
impediments
to
moving
over
to
the
tkg
might
be
the
solution.
With
regard
to
the
load
balancer,
where
the
Community
Edition
had
some
solutions
built
in,
and
you
know
it
isn't
as
apparent
as
to
what
you'd
do
to
swap
those
parts
out.
If
you
were
to
move
to
the
free
edition
of
tkg.
B
A
B
A
Yeah
I
think
that
that
space
inside
kubernetes
is
kind
of
interesting,
where
both
egress
and
Ingress
are
have
a
fair
amount
of
activity
going
on.
A
B
A
Yeah
I
think
that
there's
a
also
an
opportunity
with
Andrea
to
potentially
use
some
of
the
features
found
in
it
to
do
things
that
might
ordinarily
fall
into
the
space
of
load.
Balancers
and
Ingress
and
I
was
just
talking
to
somebody
trying
to
put
together
a
cfp
for
upcoming
conference
about
the
Gateway
API.
That's
coming
out
in
kubernetes.
A
So
there's
some
value
in
multiplexing
those
and
the
Ingress
spec
came
out
in
kubernetes,
hasn't
been
out
there
for
years,
but
I
think
some
could
make
the
argument
that
it
was
not
full
featured
enough
or
maybe
in
other,
regards
a
little
too
loose
so
that
you
had
variations
that
cause
situations
where
you
know
things
really
weren't
that
portable
you'd
end
up
having
your
yaml
specs
for
services
locked
into
your
particular
Ingress
provider.
And
if
you
move
to
some
alternate
location,
they
use
the
different
Ingress.
A
B
B
A
Yeah
I
think
I'm
gonna
have
to
take
a
pass
and
go
do
some
personal
education
on
playing
around
with
Andrea
again
to
explore
some
of
these
because
they
seem
to
be
pretty
aggressive
at
adding
features
to
that
more
aggressive
than
I
am
at
taking
the
time
to
deploy
it
and
try
it
out.
B
B
I
I
live
in
Denver
and
I
work
out
of
like
either
the
Denver
office
or
the
Broomfield
office.
So
like
the
Broomfield
office,
is
the
global
support
main
office
in
right
outside
of
Denver
like
in
America.
So.
A
I'm
kind
of
curious
and
bring
it
up
because
I
am
a
program
committee,
chair
of
an
open
source
conference
called
scale
that
is
based
in
Los
Angeles,
and
we've
got
cfps
open
till
the
end
of
the
week.
If
you
have
an
inkling
to
present
at
an
open
source
conference,
Denver
to
La
is
a
too
big
of
a
trip.
I.
A
A
You
can
come
up
with
kind
of
a
best
practices.
Talk
on
kubernetes
generically
that
could
apply
to
anything
and
entry
is,
of
course,
open
source.
You
could
go
for
that,
we're
aspiring
to
it
coming
back
to
the
pre-covered
days
where
the
registration
peaked
at
about
4
500
people,
so
it
it's
fairly.
Big
I
think
it's
described
as
the
largest
independent
open
source
conference
in
North
America
and
there's
a
two-day
track
on
containers
that
is
also
being
labeled
as
a
kubernetes
community
day.
So
it's
going
to
be
cross-promoted
by
the
cncf.
B
Yeah,
that's
interesting
because,
like
you
know,
like
I
joined
this
one
and
like
in
the
beginning,
there's
a
lot
of
different
people
who
had
different
ideas
and
it
wasn't
all
about
tanzu,
which
is
like
you
know.
Sometimes
you
get
stuck
in
the
loop
of
like
oh
I
work
on
tansu
stuff.
So
all
I
want
to
talk
about,
is
tansy
stuff
but
like.
B
Like
Scott,
when
he
would
come,
Scott
Rosenberg
like
and
come
and
talk
about
like
different
things,
he's
done
in
tansy
like
that
was
always
like
the
drive
to
make
sure
to
attend
the
meetings
and
make
and
meet
like
people
like
that
who
have
taken
like
yeah.
They
use
tanzu,
but
they
use
everything
else
around.
It.
A
Yeah,
and
the
fact
is
that
the
bulk
of
tanzu
I
would
contend
is
built
on
Upstream
open
source.
It's
just
you
know
something
where
you've
got
vetted
controlled
builds
of
these
things
with
support,
but
by
and
large
the
things
you
can
do
in
there
should
be
reproducible
in
generic
open
source
kubernetes.
You
know
it
that
isn't
quite
true
when
you
drift
into
things
like
using
NSX
or
vsphan
sand
specific
features,
but
much
of
what
would
go
on
there
is
is
applicable
across
the
board.
A
But
anyway,
I
dropped
a
link
to
that
scale.
Conference
cfp
in
the
chat.
If
you
might
be
curious
and
definitely
take,
take
a
look
at
it
there,
there
are
actually
I
think
a
dozen
tracks.
One
of
them
is
just
labeled
General.
So
as
long
as
it's
open
source,
if
you've
got
anything,
you
should
be
able
to
fit
it
in
one
of
those
categories
and
it's
kind
of
a
fun
conference.
A
One
of
the
other
things
that's
a
a
little
different
about
it
is
that
it
goes
Thursday
through
the
weekend
and
on
the
weekend,
people
are
actually
encouraged
to
bring
along
their
families.
So
there's
a
track
for
under
18
people
on
Saturday
that
has
presenters
who
are
under
age
18,
and
there
are
also
sessions
intended
to
appeal
to
people
just
getting
started
and
learning.
A
B
Yeah,
that's
that's
really
interesting.
It's
kind
of
like
I,
don't
know
the
only
other
thing
that
I
have
relation
to
that
actually
does
that
is
probably
like
Defcon
or
they
have
like
kids
days.