►
From YouTube: Layer5 Newcomers Meeting (Nov 19th, 2020)
Description
Welcome @Sudhan_aruna, Arpit Karnatak, and Ekansh Bansal!
A
Welcome
everybody
to
the
newcomers
meeting
it's
19th
november
and
we'll
be
starting
in
about
a
minute.
So
while
we
wait
for
the
late
comers
to
join
in,
please
go
ahead.
Add
your
name
to
the
attendees
list
here.
A
A
Enough,
let
me
introduce
myself,
which
I
always
forget
to
do
in
these
calls.
My
name
is
shruti
you'll
find
me
with
the
same
slack
username.
If
you
want
to
contact
me
on
slack,
which
basically
means
that
you're
not
completely
annoyed
by
my
ramblings
in
this
call,
which
is
great
and
quite
an
achievement.
A
I'll
be
hosting
the
call
for
you
today
and
I'll
also
be
hosting
a
couple
of
the
other
calls
for
the
other.
Five
community
calls
that
you
might
want
to
join
and
that
you
should
join
if
you're
interested
in
the
projects
or,
if
you
want
to
get
started,
either
with
open
source
or
with
the
life
projects
or
with
service
meshes
or
with
cloud
or
well,
with
a
lot
of
things.
A
C
Okay,
thanks
sweetie
hi
everyone,
I'm
ruth
yeah
and
I'm
a
mesh
meat
and
feel
free
to
and
welcome
everyone.
First
welcome
to
the
five
community.
It's
good
to
have
you
and
thanks
for
thanks
for
making
it
to
this
newcomers
meeting.
We
appreciate
your
presence
so,
like
I
said,
I'm
ruth
and
I'm
a
mesh
mate
and
I
am
a
python
developer
and
I
also
contribute
via
documentation
in
their
five.
C
So
just
in
case
you
have
any
documentation
issues
or
just
if
you
have
any
question
you
could
hit
me
up
on
slack
on
the
same
name,
rudy
kaga
and
I
will
do
well
to
answer
your
questions.
If
I
do
not
have
any
answer
to
them
at
the
moment,
I'll
move
you
to
shriti
or
someone
else
that
would
properly
answer
your
questions.
C
Yeah
so
I'll
be
talking
about
the
five,
an
intro
to
project
india.
Five
very
soon
should
you
try
go
ahead
now
or
I
think
we
have
not
done
our
usual,
our
usual
culture
with
everyone
introducing
themselves.
So
just
let's
switch
to
do
that.
Yeah.
A
All
right,
thank
you
ruth
well
time
for
some
embarrassing
intros,
a
fair
entry
point.
However
bad
yours
goes,
mine
was
worse.
Trust
me:
do
you
want
to
go
first.
D
B
A
Yeah,
I
know
I've
been
working
with
it
myself
for
the
past
four
months,
not
that
long
time
still
completely
a
beginner
but
yeah
definitely
exciting.
Who
wants
to
go
first?
Who
wants
to
go
next.
D
Go
ahead:
hey
folks,
my
name
is
I'm
a
final
year
engineering
student
at
triple
it
alabad
I
like
to
get
my
hands
dirty
with
a
lot
of
stuff
like
python
javascript
code
and
I'm
just
looking
to
contribute.
D
I
actually
came
across
this
project
by
accident
yesterday
and
I
just
thought
I'd
give
it
a
look
and
it
looked
kinda
interesting,
so
I
dropped
in
to
say
hi
and
yeah.
I'm
really
looking
forward
to
knowing
the
project
and
all
of
you,
people.
A
All
right
who's,
next,
sudan-
I
don't
know.
A
All
right
I'll
move
on
for
now,
but
if
you
can't
speak,
please
do
speak
up
at
any
point
during
the
meeting
and
we'll
come
back
to
you
all
right.
I
can
see
a
couple
of
old
timers,
hey
josh
and
thank
you,
sir.
A
C
C
Okay,
once
you
can
see,
please
let
me
know.
A
C
Is
it
visible,
yep,
okay,
okay,
so,
like
I
said,
I
welcome
everyone
and
thanks
for
being
here
so
I'll,
do
like
a
brief
intro
to
all
the
five
projects
that
we
have.
But
usually
I
I
like
I
like
using
this
meeting
minutes
as
a
reference,
because
there
are
like
so
many
resources
here
that
you
could
look
at
and
really
get
so
much
context
on
their
five
community.
C
So
I'll
start
with
this
part,
the
information
area
you
could
find
like
the
calendar.
If
you
click
on
this
link,
you'd
see
like
calendar
where
you
can
check
up,
like
you,
can
add
up
the
meeting
the
meeting
or
details
to
your
own
calendar
and
you
see
all
the
upcoming
meetings
or
events
we
have
set
up.
Then
there's
a
link
to
the
slack
channel
and
there's
a
link
to
the
github
repository.
C
Then
you
have
like
the
youtube
channel
so
usually
on
the
new
commerce
meeting
we
just
like
have
tutorials,
but
unfortunately,
today
we're
not
going
to
be
having
any
tutorial
due
to
the
kubecon
conference
currently
going
on.
So
we
usually
like
have
tutorials
every
every
newcomers,
meetings
like
better
onboard
their
five
projects.
So
if
you
we've
had
like
a
couple
very
interesting
and
interactive
and
engaging
ones,
so
if
you
check
out
the
youtube
channel,
you
like
see
a
lot
of
them.
C
C
Then
we
have
a
link
to
the
drive
here.
So
if
you
click
on
here,
you
see
like
google
drive
and
you
get
a
drive
driveway.
We
have
like
so
many
materials
on
their
five
books
and
all
the
materials
you
can
access
drive
through
this
link.
Then
we
have
the
guides.
So
as
a
newcomer
and
as
a
first
timer,
these
guys
are
really
really
very,
very
important
and
very
necessary
that
you'd
look
at
them
and
go
through
them.
C
So
the
first
one
here
is
like
the
first
and
the
newcomers
welcome
guide,
which
is
a
very
good
resource
for
you
to
get
on
board
and
know
how
to
pick
up
an
issue
or
what's
what
to
do
when
you
come
into
the
community,
how
to
find
a
good
first
issue.
So
they're
like
a
whole
lot
of
there,
are
some
steps
here
on
how
to
get
you
picking
up
an
issue
and
actually
solving
them.
So
you
should
kindly
look
at
this
this
resource.
C
Then
we
have
the
layer
5
repository
overview,
but
I
see
shriti
shriti
kindly
did
something
very
great
and
she
actually
mentioned
the.
There
are
five
projects
here
that
are
running
on
jikkel
and
the
ones
running
on
gatsby.
So,
as
you
can
see,
all
these
projects
listed
here
are
running
original.
So,
if
you
are,
you
are
in
the
front
end
space.
If
you
like
a
front-end
developer
and
we
could
really
need
your
help.
So
gcl
is
a
static
site
generator.
C
So
this
side,
this
listed
here
this
stuff,
we
said
here
all
the
sites
here
run
on
gql
and
we
have
a
size
being
developed
right
now.
There
are
five
ng
that
runs
on
gatsby,
so
if
you
want
to
contribute
via
gatsby,
you
can
quickly
check
on
this
project
and
you
you
get
much.
You
will
be
able
to
contribute
effectively,
so
I'll
go
back
up
yeah.
C
So
then,
there's
also
like,
if
you
want
to
go
to
the
repository
overviews
like
more
context
on
the
different
projects
and
the
stack
like
there's
it's
like
the
more
context
here,
the
front
end
project
you'd
see
the
back
end
projects
listed
and
the
adapter
dedicated
repositories.
You
see
everything
we
said
in
this
resource.
C
C
So
if
you
click
on
either
the
help
wanted
or
or
the
good
first
issue,
it
actually
takes
you
to
a
list
of
open
issues
that
are
with
the
either
the
good
first
issue
label
or
like
the
help
wanted
label.
So
you
can
see
like
a
whole
lot
of
open
issues
that
are
here
and
you
could
vm.
You
could
kindly
make
a
comment
that
you
want
to
take
up
the
issue
after
like
reading
through
it.
C
So
then
there's
another
thing
that
is
really
very
necessary.
So
there's
the
open
source
question
yeah,
so
yeah,
so
usually
we
want
to.
C
Actually,
if
I
want
to
like
save
you
best,
the
way
you
want
to
whatever
tutorial
or
whatever
or
whatever
part
of
the
project
or
whatever
part
of
whatever
repository
or
whatever,
together
you
want
to
like
and
really
see,
because
usually
on
the
newcomers
call,
we
have
like
all
these
tutorials
being
done
here
on
the
newcomers
code,
so
this
open
source
contributor
questionnaire,
I'm
shooting,
if
you
can
just
place
it
in
the
chat
again,
so
it
just
basically
you
come
in
put
in
whatever
tutorials
you
like
to
receive,
they
will
listen
to
three
hours
or
if
you
want
to
receive,
is
naturally
here
you
can
put
it
up
on
other,
so
we
usually
curate
from
these
responses
from
responses
got
in
here.
C
We
actually
like
know
the
next
tutorial
we
want
to
take
up
on
or
what
we
want
to
do.
So.
Please
do
kindly
feel
this
if
you've
not
filled
it
before,
and
we
would
appreciate
that
so
I
think
so.
Lastly,
I
want
to
just
quickly
add
in
that
when,
whenever
you
are
solving
an
issue,
whenever
you
are
you
hop
on
a
repository
that
you
want
to
contribute
to,
please
kindly
start
the
repository
right.
C
Then,
if
you
have
any
questions,
feel
free
to
always
ask
you,
could
either
or
mute
yourself
ask
questions
out
loud,
but
if
you
do
not
want
to
ask
out
loud,
you
can
pop
up
the
question
here
in
the
in
the
meeting
minutes
and
we
will
do
well
to
answer
your
questions
and
I
think
that'll
be
all
from
my
end.
If
you
have
any
questions
I'll
be
happy
to
get
that.
C
A
A
A
I'll
run
mystery
for
you
in
a
little
bit.
My
system
is
still
wiring
up
and
I'll
also
show
you
how
to
run
it
on
your
local
system.
A
For
the
moment,
if
we
move
on
another,
one
of
life
is
really
good
projects,
and
this
is
one
of
my
personal
favorites
is
the
landscape,
which
basically
accounts
and
documents
a
large
array
of
service
meshes
and
their
features,
their
performance
tests,
the
their
categories,
their
functional
properties
and
another
amazing
feature
of
measuring.
A
It
is
one
of
the
not
one
of
the
it
is
the
biggest
mesh
management
plane
that
currently
supports
up
to
eight
meshes
and
we
are
working
on
adding
about
three
more
you'll
find
most
of
the
industry
standards
here,
not
industry
standards,
but
the
most
well-known
projects,
for
example,
istio
or
console,
or
kuma,
or
anderson,
osm,
etc.
Linkedin.
A
All
right,
another
one
product
that
you
should
probably
know
about
is
the
s
p
and
the
smi
interfaces
both
are
well.
They
are
measurements
on
how
to
analyze
and
compare
between
service
measures,
which
is
deployed
and
used
by
mystery
to
do
the
same.
A
A
Let
me
ask
you
this:
how
many
people
here
are
planning
to
work
with
either
golang
docker,
cubilities
or
any
cloud
native
tech
speak
up,
raise
your
hands
anything.
A
A
Nice
all
right,
so
if
you
want
to
work
with
golang,
one
of
the
first
projects
that
you
should
be
focusing
on
is
the
mesh
dc
line
that
is
meshita.
A
It's
a
small
project
written
in
go
and
because
it's
a
smart
small
project,
you
will
be
much
better
accustomated
to
who
actually
go
contribute
to
it,
because
the
use
cases
are
less
and
well
it'll,
be
a
good
beginner
project
for
anybody,
who's,
either
learning
godang
or
well
already
knows
it.
E
A
This
is
probably
a
good
way
to
get
you
started,
even
if
you're
planning
to
just
contribute
to
either
web
dev
or
some
other
domain,
because
this
is
the
central
project
around
which
most
of
flair,
5's
efforts
are
coagulated
and
well
it'll,
be
a
really
good
thing
for
you
to
go
run
it
because
you
know
what
what
you're
working
with
you
would
have
learned
something
at
the
end
of
it.
I
really
hope
all
right.
So,
let's
go
run
it.
A
Another
cool
feature
of
mystery:
all
you
need
to
go
do
is
run
a
single
command
and
it
will
download
the
repo
for
you,
it'll,
install
any
side,
I'll
use,
very
simple
language
here
and
just
say,
site
things
that
it
might
need
to
run
on
your
system.
All
you
need
to
do
is
have
a
docker
enable
system
on
windows.
A
That
means
having
the
docker
windows
application
installed
and
I'm
mentioning
windows
separately,
because
it's
a
little
hard
to
get
docker
running
up
and
successfully
on
windows,
and
I
can
say
that
because
I
am
using
windows
myself
so
to
use
this,
you
should
also
have
ws
installed
if
you
are
not
working
in
a
dev
environment
and
you
need
to
get
it
set
up
for
windows.
Your
best
fit
bet.
If
you
do
have
wso
would
probably
be
the
bash
command.
A
If
you
do
not
have
wso,
then
you
need
to
go
download
and
unzip
the
mesh
tctl
folder,
which
is
a
small
release
file
from
the
memory
serial
page
there's
a
link
here.
It
should
already
be
in
your
path
once
you
download
it,
but
if
it's
not,
and
if
it
doesn't
work
then
well,
this
is
the
background.
You
just
need
to
go.
A
Add
it
to
your
path,
which
is
basically
means
just
going
and
adding
it
to
your
to
one
small
file,
but
that's
for
later,
and
then
you
just
need
to
go
down
this
single
command
and
I'll
repeat
myself.
It
will
download
the
repo
it
install
any
of
the
buy
things
needed
and
it
will
fire
up
battery
and
open
it
up
locally
in
your
browser
on
a
particular
host.
A
A
A
Yeah
josh,
you
fall
right
into
a
category
and
I'm
not
exactly
sure
if
podman
would
be
the
same
as
docker
so
then
or
would
work
the
same
as
docker
for
mystery
I'll
have
to
check
actually,
which
os
do
you
work
with?
If
I
can
ask
at
the
chat,
is
fine
if
you
can't
speak.
A
A
A
No
shoes,
I'm
back:
oh
okay!
Okay,
really!
Sorry!
Okay,
I'm
just
a
second
all
right!
Let
me
just
scream.
A
All
right
is
my
screen.
A
A
So
currently
it
works
in
docker
communities,
aks,
ecos,
jakey,
we're
working
on
him,
kindy
cubities
mini
cube
windows
and
I'm
just
reciting
a
cup,
a
random
bunch
of
words.
Now
all
right,
moving
on
back
to
the
imagery
ui,
which
will
be
pulled
up
after
you
go
run
that
command.
I'm
not
running
it
right
now,
because
my
system
is
not
shutting
docker
for
some
reason,
but
I
was
working
in
a
lab
before
and
this
has
been
fully
configured.
So,
let's
just
go
with
this
after
you
have
the
mesh
ui
up.
A
So
basically
what
meshi
does
is
it
will
go
and
try
to.
A
A
A
It
currently
does
not
have
the
ability
to
tell
you
whether
you're
running
outside
a
cluster
or
inside
a
cluster,
but
that's
a
topic
for
you
won't
be
needing
it.
Unless
you
are
running
some
specific
function
which
I'll
explain
later
moving
on,
you
can
go
ahead
and
try
pinging
any
of
the
adapters.
A
Again,
it'll
run
an
ad
hoc
test
and
tell
you
whether
you
can
successfully
ping
it
or
not
moving
forward,
let's
go
ahead
and
try
to
install
a
service
mesh
all
right,
let's
go
ahead
and
go
to
the
management
page
of
any
specific
service
mesh,
rename
the
lenses
to
anything
that
you
want
I'll
name
it
istio.
A
A
A
The
ui
looks
pretty
thank
you.
I
will
tell
our
ui
team
and
you
can
go-
tell
them
yourself
on
any
of
the
community
meetings
and
how
does
it
work
all
right?
I
really
should
be
more
specific
with
the
questions
I
give
out.
A
Be
a
little
specific
about
anything
and
I'll,
explain
it
to
you,
how
does
the
adapters
work
or
how
does
the
operations
work
or
how
does
the
add-on
test
work?
A
A
E
All
right:
hello,
hey,
okay,
so
I
I
have
a
understanding
of
console,
basically
using
it
for
service
discovery
and
endpoints
and
various
reasons
in
an
application,
but
like
the
measure
right,
how
like
what's
the
use,
because,
like
I've,
been
trying
to
wrap
my
head
around
it
like?
What
do
you
actually
measure
does
like?
What
does
it
do
and
why.
A
I
will
go
back
to
my
original
question
and
you
can
completely
say
no
to
this
and
come
more
than
okay.
If
you
say
no
to
this,
do
you
know
how
service
pressures
work
or
what
service
meshes
are.
D
I
did
some
reading
like
about
this
and,
like
from
what
I
read
it
was
you.
It
is.
Service
meshes,
are
used
for
load
balancing
in
clusters
like
docker
or
kubernetes.
Am
I
right.
A
Yep
yeah,
based
in
the
reading
you
did.
Let
me
ask
you
one
question
that
will
make
it
a
lot
more
clear.
What
do
you
think
the
difference
is
between
a
service
mesh
and
a
microservice,
because
what
you're
defining
what
you're
explaining
sounds
equally
appropriate
for
a
microservice.
A
That's
completely
fine,
so
the
difference
is
a
service
mesh
is
not
a
separate
layer
which
basically
means
that
it's
inbuilt
into
your
cloud
architecture
and
you
do
not
have
to
go
rebuild
the
entire
network
or
rebuild
the
entire
architecture
to
suit
its
a
service
mesh,
will
integrate
into
itself
into
the
architecture
and
perform
any
or
all
of
the
functions
that
you
just
described.
A
It
can
be
used
for
a
vast
majority
of
things.
Load
balancing
is
just
a
small
example
and
a
very
good
example.
Thank
you
for
that.
A
Yep
and
what
mastery
does
so,
if
you
have
read
about
service
meshes,
you
might
have
also
come
or
maybe
had
time
to
wrap
your
head
around
the
particular
architecture
that
it
supports.
So
service
measures
have
three
planes:
a
data
plane,
a
control
plane
and
a
management
plane.
A
The
management
plane
sits
on
top
of
the
data
in
the
control,
plane
and
well.
It
manages
and
meshi
is
an
epitome
of
a
service
mesh
management
plane
and
what
it
does
is
it
allows
you
sure
they
can't
see
you
in
five
all
right
and
what
it
does
is:
damn,
never
really
all
right,
yeah,
it's
the
epitome
of
a
service,
mesh
management
plane
and
what
it
does
is.
Well,
it
does
this.
A
It
manages
the
performance
of
your
service
mesh
and
its
workloads
and
again
those
are
a
couple
of
big
words
that
don't
actually
explain
much.
So
let
me
break
it
down
for
you.
What
it
does
is
it
manages
allows
you
to
manage.
Allows
you
to
analyze,
allows
you
to
go
track,
configure
baseline
your
service,
mesh
performance
and
analyze
it
based
on
well
industry
standards,
or
which
is
the
smi
or
the
smp
spec.
A
Yeah
right,
the
smp
spec,
which
is
the
service
pledge
performance,
spec
and
the
smi
spec,
which
is
the
service
mesh
interface
spec,
and
it
allows
you
to
access
those
configurations.
It
allows
you
to
run
performance
tests,
load,
balancing
tests
and
it
uses
a
sample.
App
called
learn.
Layer
5,
which
we
developed
ourselves
for
the
same,
or
to
give
you
a
consistent
workload
across
which
you
can
go,
conduct
performance
tests
and
you
can
analyze
your
service
mesh
so
that
you
can
get
the
best
performance
results
out
of
it.
A
It
also
allows
you
to
compare,
for
example.
This
is
a
very
good
gif
explaining
how
performances
work
in
addition
to
all
those
features
it
meshi
also
allows
you
to
compare
or
analyze
your
service
mesh
based
or
compar
in
comparison
to
other
service
meshes
and
figure
out
which
one's
the
best
which
one
you
can
employ
for
your
own
benefits
or
for
your
own
improvement.
B
A
A
All
right:
let's
chat
about
distance
slack
and
I'll,
try
to
explain
it
in
a
bit
more
depth
or
I'll
pass
on
some
resources
to
you,
which
will
hopefully
explain
the
same
thing.
A
That's
not
a
stupid
question.
We
don't
believe
in
stupid
questions
on
this
particular
meeting
and
no,
we
do
not
provide
service
measures.
Service
meshes,
for
example,
istio
or
console
or
kuma,
are
completely
separate
projects
that
are
huge
projects
and
are
governed
by
their
own
committee
by
their
own
organizations.
A
Nice
all
right
so
remember
about
10
minutes
five
minutes
ago,
when
we
installed
a
service
mesh.
Well,
it
has
been
installed
and
you
didn't
have
to
run
a
single
command
bandwidth
for
it.
That's
it
stu
has
been
deployed.
You
can
go
ahead
and
run
any
sample
app
supported
by
us
on
it.
A
So
the
server
that
I
was
working
with
and
on
which
this
particular
instance
of
mastery
is
running
already,
has
ingress
installed,
which
is
just
a
way
of
exposing
your
cluster.
You
can
use
anything
as
opposed
to
ingress
or
whatever
you
are
comfortable
with
or
partial
to,
and
you
can
go
ahead
and
well
install.
A
Let's
go
install
bookinfo
any
of
the
sample
apps,
which
again
give
you
a
consistent
workload
to
compare
against.
I
realize
a
lot
of
these
words
might
not
be
making
sense
at
the
moment,
but
they
definitely
will.
If
you
go
read
up
a
little
bit
about
either
service
measures
or
even
go
to
the
mastery
documentation.
A
A
Or
you
can
also
go
validate
your
service
mesh
by
running
any
performance
test
that
you
want.
You
can
also
go
integrate,
grifana
or
grafana
boats,
charts
or
prometheus
metrics
and
go
compare
it
against
it.
A
If
you
go
read
up
on
it
and
again,
the
book
info
app
is
deployed
successfully,
which
basically
means
that
you
can
go
implement
a
couple
of
the
features
of
any
generic
service
mesh,
for
example,
load
deployment
or
http
request,
or
anything
that
can
help.
You
understand
the
service
measures
features
better
and
yeah,
that's
it
that
should
suffice
for
the
basic
tutorial
anything
else
that
you
need
to
go
understand
on
anything
else
that
you
need
to
go
or
that
you
can't
understand.
A
A
And
again,
if
you
are
interested
with
golang,
let
me
pull
up
something
here.
A
A
I
definitely
recommend
you
to
go
and
try
running
this
on
your
local
system.
If
you
can't
or
if
you
hit
any
road
blocks,
fingers
and
slack
and
we'll
definitely
definitely
help
you
out
and
yeah,
that's
it.
That's
it
for
the
mystery
tutorial.
A
A
Well,
we
recommend
you
go
get
yourself
a
meshmate
which
is
basically
a
mentor
within
the
life
community.
These
people
have
been
pillars
in
centric
projects
and
are
very
well
versed
with
their
own
domains.
You'll
find
the
domains
that
people
have
worked
with
or
their
position
in
the
community,
not
exactly
position
but.
A
You
will
find
their
domains
here
and
if
your
domain
sync
up
with
these
and
if
your
timezone
syncs
up
with
the
same,
go
contact
them
and
go,
ask
them
on
the
newcomers
channel
to
be
a
mesh
mate
to
be
a
mentor
and
I'm
more
than
sure
they'll
say.
Yes,
they
might
say
yes
before
you
ask
actually
and
yeah.
That's
it
I'll,
give
a
small
intro.
If
you
want
to
work
with.
A
Messi
cto
go
contact
nipper
if
you
want
to
go
with
webday
projects
or
any
of
these
side.
Projects,
nikhil
or
tanoj
might
be
your
best
bet.
If
you
want
to
get
a
lay
of
the
land
and
start
slowly,
working
out
with
messi,
cto
or
mystery,
go
contact
video.
A
If
you
want
to
work
with
documentation
or
site
projects,
go
contact
root,
go
contact
kalichi
if
you
want
to
work
with
mashri
smi,
smp
or
other
of
any
of
the
big
sounding
words,
go
contact,
kush
or
nicole,
nipper
or
vida,
or
spanish,
or
ruth
or
kelichi,
and
I'm
more
than
sure,
they'll
help
you
out.
A
Apart
from
these
particular
people
that
who
have
been
highlighted
here,
you
can
also
go
contact.
Basically
anybody
in
the
community,
if
you
want
some
help,
and
if
these,
if
you
do
not
get
an
immediate
response
from
any
of
these
people,
contact
me
I'll
help
you
get
connected
I'll
help.
You
I'll
either
help
you
out
or
if
I
can't
for
any
particular
reason
I'll
help
you
connect
the
person
or
the
next
best
person
who
can
help
you.
A
And
yeah,
that's
it!
That's
it
for
the
mesh
mates
and
I'll
give
in
five
minutes
here
and
allow
you
to
speak
up
or
allow
you
to
get
a
burden.
Any
other
questions.
Anybody
can
find
something
to
get
started
with.
A
A
D
D
Like
like
not
just
that
but
whoa
when
I
started
when
I
started
working
on
this,
like
I
explored
the
code
base,
and
so
unlike
I,
I
used
to
work
on
react
apps
like
before
this,
like
very
small
react
projects,
and
but
in
this
project
I
don't
know
like
where
to
start
from
like
if
I
want
to
start
reading
the,
if
I
want
to
have
an
idea
key
where
it's
starting
from
like
what
is
what's
the
component
that
I
have
to
work
on,
or
I
have
to
tweak
I'm
having
a
little
hard
time.
A
Right
well,
let's
go
have
a
look
at
it
instead
of
talking
about
it,
which
issue
is
this?
Could
you
point
it
out
to
me.
A
All
right,
I
do
not
remember
the
exact
issue,
I'm
sorry
to
say.
I
definitely
can.
D
D
A
Yeah
yeah,
I
got
your
question
just
a
sec.
How
are
you
building
mystery.
D
Like
yeah,
I
I
used
using
the
make
file
commands
here.
I
did.
A
A
Okay
and
it's
not
rebuilding
on
its
own.
D
A
No,
not
every
time,
not
every
time.
So
if
you
please,
please,
please
do
make
sure
that
you
run
the
first
two
commands
before
running
make
run
local
because
well
your
site
won't
be
redirected
and
which
means
that
it
won't
reload.
Every
time
you
make
a
change
and
it's
a
huge
pain
to
go
around
the
same
command
every
time
you
make
a
small
change
and
that's
you
can't
work
that
way.
Even
I
can't
work
that
way
so
yeah,
that's
it!
So
after
you.
A
Actually
it's
pretty
well
laid
out
here
so
to
access
the
master,
ui
development
server
on
pro
3000.
You
need
to
go,
select
a
cloud
provider
by
navigating
9081,
which
basically
means
that
after
you
run
make
run
local,
it
basically
allows
you
to
go
work
on
the
master
ui
and
allows
you
to
reload
it
so
that
you
can
actually
go
make
some
changes
and
see
the
changes
in
real
time.
And
what
will
do
is
it
will
forward
the
port
from
9081
to
3000
so
that
you
can
do
the
same.
A
So
if
you're
running
all
these
three
commands,
I'm
more
than
sure
this
will
happen
for
you.
If
you're
not.
I
suggest
you
go
run
these
again
and
if
you
can't
then
send
me
a
screenshot
I'll
help
you
out.
Okay,.
A
A
All
right,
if
you're
thinking
of
working
with
patricia
well
everything
I
just
blabbered
on
for
about
the
last
40
minutes,
should
help
you,
if
you're
still
stuck
or
if
you're
still
not
very
sure
how
to
work
with
it.
I'll
recommend
go
run
mystery,
go
work
for
the
cli
for
a
bit
and
figure
out
how
it
works.
A
Let
me
just
open
it
up
again.
Yeah!
All
you
need
is
a
documentation
here,
which
os
are
you
working
with.
A
Windows:
linux,
mac,
some
fancy,
yep,
okay,
so
fedora
great,
I
think
brew-
would
work
with
you.
Then
I'm
actually
more
than
sure
brew
would
work
with
you.
A
So
if
you're
working
with
drew
it's
a
simple
two
line
command
and
that
should
get
messy
up
and
running
on
your
system,
if
you
already
have
docker
enabled,
if
you
don't,
then
you
will
have
to
do
a
little
bit
of
dev
setup,
which
basically
means
that
you'll
have
to
go,
run,
install
docker
and
get
a
cluster
up
and
running
which
you
will
be
able
to
do.
If
you
make
your
way
to
the
supported
platforms
and
then
go.
A
With
just
sec.
A
Yep
go
with
mini
cube
if
you
haven't,
or
if
you
haven't
worked
for
kubernetes
before
it's
one
of
the
easiest
things
to
manage,
because
it
only
spins
up
a
single
node
cluster
and
you
should
be
good
to
go
and
after
you
have
played
around
with
battery
for
a
bit
or
at
least
have
it
up
and
running
on
your
own
local
go
try
out
any
of
the
issues
or
any
of
the
open
issues.
A
On
the
mystery
repo
focused
on
mystery
series,
I
think
we
have
a
couple
of
open
ones
still
and
if
we
don't
issues
added
pretty
frequently,
so
I'm
more
than
sure
that
you'll
find
something.
If
you
don't
ping
me
I'll
help
you
out.
A
All
right
well
seeing
that
it's
just
the
three
of
us
or
the
photographers.
E
Okay,
so
I'm
pretty
interested
in
working
with
the
adapters.
A
Sure,
if
you
planning,
are
you
talking
about
working
with
gokut.
E
Yeah
yeah
working
with
yeah
big,
broken
mesh
kit,
yeah.
A
Okay:
okay,
all
right,
if
you
are
familiar
with
the
project
and
even
if
you're
not
go
contact
abhishek,
that
is
the
best
source
point
source.
If
you
can't
find
him
on
slack,
let
me
know
I
will
help
you
find
him
or
I'll
help
you
get
connected
with
the
next
best
person.
If
he
is
busy
for
this
particular
week,.
A
Great
all
right,
that's
it
folks!
A
A
A
If
you
want
to
join
up,
if
you
don't
want
to
or
if
you
think
you
graduated
from
the
newcomers
meeting,
go
ahead
and
join
any
of
the
community
meetings
based
on
the
domains
that
you're
interested
in
you'll
find
links
to
the
meetings
to
the
meeting
minutes
to
the
channels
associated
to
those
particular
working
groups
and
well.
Thank
you
for
coming
in.
Thank
you
for
attending
a
newcomer
session
and
hearing
me
talk
on
for
about
an
hour.