►
From YouTube: 2022-01-19 meeting
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
A
A
I
updated
the
zoom
link
for
the
reminder
and
in
everywhere
else
so
hopefully
we'll
be
upset.
Now.
C
B
It
means
how
can
I
explain
it?
Well,
it's
hard
to
explain
it's
just
a
silly
saying
which
means
it's
not
like
people
don't
have
anything
to
do.
B
A
B
A
Okay,
well,
we
can
start
with
the
pr's
that
are
open.
I
normally
find
that
to
be
a
pretty
good
place
to
start.
Let
me
take
a
look
at
what's
open.
A
B
A
All
right
all
right
and
then
there's
one
for
bug
fix
with
the
incorrect
use
class.
I
agree
with
you
on
this
one.
I
saw
your
review
about
it
being
incorrect,
but
I
think
that
I
don't
I
don't
know
what
what's
his
name:
s.a.j.j
a.d,
sad
jad,.
B
B
Yeah,
I
think
he
was
following
this
quote-unquote
integration
guide.
B
And
yeah,
I
think
it's
a
little
bit
outdated
and
that's
another
problem
of
those
guides
that,
besides
the
other
ones,
we
talked
about
that
they
confuse
people
a
little
bit
and
the
code
is
actually
outdated,
that
it's
using
all
this
should
sample
stuff,
that's
which
shouldn't
be
used
anymore
or
shouldn't
be
used
in
the
first
case.
But
now
you
don't
really
have
to
use
it
anymore,
and
now
I
think,
those
as
nice
as
they
are
as
an
introductory
tutorial
how
to
get
things
up
and
running.
A
B
Yeah
I
mean
for
the
symphony
one.
We
have
the
bundle,
so
that's
actually
not
because
I
made
it,
but
it's
actually
better
than
the
solution
which
is
to
be
found
in
this
introduction
but
yeah.
I.
C
B
Yes,
I
don't
know
what's
about
that,
if
he's
still
working
on
this,
because
I
think
it's
probably
outdated
as
well
and
maybe
a
little
bit
rough
on
the
edges,
but
otherwise
we
could
yeah.
We
could
at
least
investigate
what's
up
with
this
one
and
otherwise
maybe
update
a
ticket
or
create
a
ticket,
but
we
you
know.
B
Basically
I
had
a
quick
look
into
it.
It's
used
using
a
middleware,
so
that
could
be
also
integration.
It
works
for
other
frameworks
as
well,
because
I
think
laravel
is
using
the
symphony
middlewares
as
well
or
the
standard.
So
I
don't
know
how
much
of
it
is
really
laravel
specific,
so
yeah,
but
might
be
something
we
should
look
into
because
some
people
are
using
laravel.
B
C
Yeah
another
point
I
would
like
to
like
to
add
about
the
laravel
integration,
but
buck
six
is
like
I
was
doing
the
integration
myself
as
well
like
few
days
back,
so
the
issue
is
from
the
release,
but
the
one
which
is
on
the
composer
release.
C
That's
actually
working
fine
with
the
present
the
indic
our
documentation,
but
when
you
update
it
with
the
when
you
update
it
with
the
present
repo,
there
are
lots
of
like
the
api,
has
completely
changed
and
the
how
we
call
the
tracer
provider
so
and
the
bug
fix
also
I'm
seeing
the
similar
issue.
So
I
think
we
need
to
it
will
change
that
or
something.
B
Yeah
the
problems
we
don't
the
the
example
code
is
living
somewhere
else
and
it's
kind
of
hard,
because
it's
very
very
much
a
lot
of
this
is
very
static
in
there.
So
I
I
don't
know
you
can.
B
This
is
not
actually
that's,
not
something
you
should
do
ever
to
get
it
quick
quickly
up
and
running.
That's
okay,
but
actually
it's
not
an
integration
at
all.
You
know
what
I
mean,
because
both
those
examples
are
basically
circumventing
every
extension
point.
There
is
in
the
framework-
and
this
would
work
with
everything
you
know-
writing
something
in
global
scope
and
then
pulling
it
from
there.
That's
that's,
actually,
not
integration
so,
and
that's
really
not
something
people
should
do
in
production.
B
So
that's
because
there,
a
lot
of
things
could
go
wrong
there,
but
you're
right,
yeah,
that's
one
of
the
problems.
I
think
those
tutorials
are
relying
from
all
codes,
which
is
nearly
one
year
old.
A
Yeah,
it's
it's
one
of
those
things
that
we
need
to
get
in
the
we
either
need
to
get
in
the
habit
of
updating
things
when
we
update
the
code
or
not
have
integration
guides
like
this
or
do
something
because
we're
starting
to
see
versions
drift
and
that
you
know
that
just
gets
sticky
all
together,
never
gonna.
It's
always
going
to
be
trying
to
fit
a
square
peg
in
around
tall.
E
C
Yeah
one
one
more
thing
like
I
was
about
to
like
thinking
of
raising
the
payout,
but
that
another
problem
I
thought
was
like:
do
we
have
one
default
composer
release
now?
If
we
update
the
docs
with
the
update
the
docs,
then
the
default
composer
release
gets
like
is
not
matching
with
that.
So
it's
like
we
are
stuck
in
a
conan
drum.
If
we
we
don't,
the
default
composer
release
is
different.
So
even
if
we
raise
the
pr
that
those
who
will
use
the
default
release
will
face
problems.
B
A
B
Yeah
yeah
well
anyway,
there
should
be
anyway
documentation
so
because,
at
the
moment
it's
rather
slim
what
people
can
read.
So
I
mean
we
have
all
these
examples,
but
it
would
be.
I
guess
everybody
knows,
would
be
better
if
we
had
some
more
documentation.
What
actually
those
things
are
and
not
just
having
some
code
examples,
but
you
know,
there's
a
simple
batch
processor
and
a
simple
one
and
that's
nice
to
know,
but
that
doesn't
show
people
what
they.
What
actually
the
difference
is
there
yeah.
A
A
We
should
have
examples
on
how
to
integrate
with
particular
libraries,
whether
it
be
laravel
or
symphony
or
wordpress
or
whatever
it
might
be.
I
mean
we
should
also
have
more
documentation
on
how
our
api
works,
but
these
are
all
efforts
that
we
probably
need
to
put
in
it's.
Not
these
things
don't
just
show
up
out
of
nowhere.
So
it's
something
that
we
need
to
make
a
concerted
effort
to
do.
B
B
Okay,
so
there's
another
pr
which
I
opened
the.
B
Yes,
so
the
problem
is
the
official
apache
thrift
composer
package
is
downloading
the
internet,
not
really,
but
it's
downloading
the
whole
code
base
of
the
thrift
repository
which
includes.
B
It's
gigantic:
it's
5
15
megabytes,
which
doesn't
sound
very
much,
but
for
a
package.
It's
really
really
big
and
I
have
on
my
personal
fork
of
the
of
our
repository
of
some
security,
stuff
and
they're
running,
because
it's
easier
to
integrate
there
and
they
all
cried
out.
So
now
you
have
java
dependencies
there
and
there's
an
issue
in
there
at
first.
I
didn't
know
what
are
they
talking
about?
Why?
Why
do
we
have
java
dependencies
so
yeah?
It's
because
of
this
package,
it's
pulling
in
all
the
stuff.
B
So
it's
not
even
a
lot
of
issues
with
that,
and
actually
I
talked
with
with
sadiq
a
while
ago
in
the
comment
I
mentioned
so
that
we
could
just
create
like
a
mirror
which
is
just
composer
packages
and
then
a
few
days
ago
I
found
this
actually
already
exists,
so
we
don't
have
to
create
it,
and
I
just
you
know,
thought
this
is
a
very
simple
pr,
because
I
basically
just
changed
one
one
name
of
the
organization,
but
for
some
strange
reason,
fun
seems
to
have
a
problem
with
it
and
still
is
expecting
apache
thrift
to
be
there,
and
I
tried
locally,
with
no
cash
running
fun
with
more
cash,
but
it
didn't
make
any
difference
so
yeah.
B
B
Okay
should
be
otherwise.
Maybe
we
can
just
force
virtue
if,
if
it
doesn't
create
any
issues
after
after
it
but
yeah,
I
want
to
better
be
safe
than
sorry.
E
B
I
actually
wanted
to
create
this
package
as
well.
You
know
I'm
cloning,
the
stuff
and
then
extracting
the
php
code
and
publishing
it
so
that
would
have
been
more
effort
than
just
changing
one
one
single
line.
B
B
A
It
we're
at
a
good,
stop
quote-unquote
stopping
point
for
a
release,
so
I'll
do
0.05.
Today,
yeah.
B
Because
I
think
we
talked
about
some
weeks
ago
that
you
want
to
go
for
at
least
a
monthly
release
or
something.
A
B
Yeah,
okay,
what
else
do
I
have
oh
yeah,
one
more
thing:
php
7.4.
A
And
life
life.
A
It's
I
think
that
I
think
that
php
74
is
that's
at
least
to
me.
That's
one
of
those
things.
I
think
we
need
to
support
it
until
the
security
release
isn't
supported,
and
I
think
we
need
to
do
best
effort,
but
I
know
that,
at
least
for
an
example
I
know
my
company
is
not
going
to
move
away
from
php
74
anytime
soon.
B
Yeah,
I
mean,
I
know
the
problem
with
with
older
code
bases,
sometimes
not
so
easy.
I
mean
in
that
case
it
might
be,
but
I've
been
working
two
years
ago
with
code
basis
which
at
5.4
or
some
or
5.3,
or
something
really
bad
and
yeah.
A
A
Sorry
november
it
says
november
28
2022.
B
Yeah
so
yeah
until
the
end
of
this
year.
So
I
think
we
should
at
least
yeah
during
this
period-
support
php
7.4
as
well.
A
I
think
we
should
support
php's
again.
This
is
my
vested
interest.
My
wish
report
support
php
7.4
until
it
becomes
time
prohibitive
to
do
so
right.
We
should.
D
D
A
B
Yeah
well
at
least
I
should
I
think
we
should
aim
for
a
stable
release
with
7.4
and
then,
from
that
point
on,
we
can
could
leave
a
branch
open.
You
know
which.
C
B
So
we
could
backport
or
something
like
this
as
much
as
I
would
love
to
have
a
php
just
php,
8.0
or
one,
because
it
makes
a
lot
of
stuff
easier,
but
yeah.
I
see
that,
on
the
other
on
the
taking
side,
with
a
lot
of
I
know
a
lot
of
libraries
when
they
just
switch
to
you
know
a
stable
release.
Php
number
and
a
lot
of
people
have
problems,
and
I
had
a
lot
of
problems
when
I
had
to
get
older
code
bases.
B
You
know
to
use
some
stuff
because
it's
yeah,
they
just
didn't
support
any
older
php
version
and
can
be
quite
a
hassle.
A
Yeah,
we
actually
had
a
discussion
about
this
in
the
maintainers
meeting
a
couple
weeks
ago
and
all
the
maintainers
sort
of
kept
the
same
mentality.
It's
like
it
stinks
to
try
and
support
old
versions
when
they
don't
have.
The
language
features
that
you
look
for.
You
have
to
like
carefully
weigh.
You
have
to
carefully
weigh
your
your
your
environment
versus
the
environment
of
you
know
your
ecosystem,
every
language
handles
these
upgrades
very
differently.
It's
tough
right
there.
You
know
there
are
so.
I
was
listening.
A
A
B
Yeah,
well
then
we
could.
You
know,
I
used
this
rector
tool
to
upgrade
most
of
the
stuff
from
7.3
to
7.4,
so
adding
all
the
the
typed
attributes
and
so
on.
We
could
actually
then
investigate
how
reliable
we
could
backport
something
to
7.4.
You
know
if
we
I
mean
there's
still
some
time,
but
that's
something
we
could
look
into
how
yeah.
B
Could
handle
this
automatically
so
we
could
evolve
a
code
base
with
eight,
but
then
you
know
still
provide
back
parts
or
something
like
that.
D
But
I
think
it
gets
harder,
as
you
have
more
dependencies,
though,
because
your
director
may
need
to
downgrade
third-party
code,
which
is
sort
of
outside
of
your
control.
B
Yeah,
but
that's
true,
but
we
we
could
still,
you
know,
have
the
dependencies
more
relaxed
so,
for
example,
a
lot
of
times
when
I'm
nowadays
when
I
use
some
symphony
stuff,
you
know
because
I
can
use
this
super
fast
and
symphony-
has
the
newer
versions
as
there's
five
and
then
there's
six
they're,
both
or
five
four
and
they're.
Both
music
only
uses
8.1
or
something,
and
then
I
just
say
I
want
to
either
have
symphony
4
5
or
you
know
the
with
the
arrow.
B
I
don't
know
what
it's
called
carrots
yeah
yeah
with
that
thing
you
know
then,
then
a
pipe
in
between
say
I
want
either
four
or
five
or
six
give
me
the
one
which
just
fits
and
then
usually,
of
course,
it's
going
for
the
the
highest
number,
but
otherwise
it
would
just
downgrade
things
if
it
doesn't
fit.
So
so
that's
something
we
could
do
there
and
so
the
same
which
we
did
or
I
did
with
the
psr,
I
think,
was
lock
or
whatever
it
was
through
your
remembrance
so
because
he
merged
it.
B
You
match
the
pr,
so
I
don't
know
one
of
the
packages
has
a
little.
I
had
exactly
that
problem
that
our
we
were
relying
on
psr
one
yeah,
one.
B
Yeah
and
they
they
actually
updated
most
of
the
psr
packages
to
be
more
strict
with
new
version
numbers.
So
if
you
use
php,
8.1
is
pulling
up
in
the
three
versions
and
then,
if
you
add
something
else,
you
know
which
ones
are
one
version,
then
you
have
to
downgrade
stuff.
So,
let's
that's
basically
yeah
we
could
could
handle
it
like
this
and
then
yeah
go
for
some
automation
and
that's
actually
yeah
something
I'm
working
at
at
the
moment.
B
So
I
will
give
you
a
little
bit
an
update
on
the
kubernetes
front,
so
you
haven't
been
there
brett
in
the
last
time.
So
I,
if
you
have
any
questions,
then
feel
free
to
ask.
Otherwise
I
have
most
of
the
stuff
up
and
running.
B
And
what's
actually
thing
that
at
the
moment
I'm
really
working
and
working
on
what
we
talked
about
on
this
temporal
stuff.
You
know
to
actually
because
I'm
a
lazy
person
I
rather
write
code,
eight
hours
than
doing
something
manually,
one
r,
I
think
most
software
developers
can
relate
to
this.
B
One
of
the
things
is,
for
example,
creating
repositories,
or
you
know,
publishing
the
packages,
packages
and
stuff
like
this,
so
especially,
and
that's
really
cool
to
do
with
this
temporal
because
you
can
just
create
this
workflows.
You
know
then
there's
a
task
and
if,
if
there's
not
a
repository,
create
the
repository
and
we
will
just
work
with
any
retry,
so
that's
really
cool
to
do
stuff
like
this.
B
So
that's
what
I'm
working
at
at
the
moment
generally
most
of
the
stuff,
is
done
on
the
kubernetes
side,
and
actually
it
would
be
nice
if
we
could,
in
the
next
days
with
three
maintainers.
If
I
could
show
you
or
walk
you
through
some
stuff
there-
and
I
don't
want
to
do
it
here
because
for
security
reasons,
I
want
some
of
the
don't
want
the
stuff
to
be
recorded,
because
I
don't
want
people
to
get
ideas.
How
to
you
know,
attack
something
you
never
know.
B
Security
is
not
something
put
out
in
the
open,
but
and
then
when
we
have
all
the
stuff
I
when
everything
is
set
up-
and
I
will
do,
of
course,
a
presentation
here
for
all
the
stuff
that
is
relevant
to
everybody.
But
there
are
some.
You
know
internal
stuff,
it's
not
so
super
interesting
anyway,
but
I
want
to
you
guys
to
actually
know
what
I
did
there.
So
it's
in
case
something
happens
with
me.
You
know,
you
know
at
least
what
I
did
there
and
how
to
use
argo,
cd
and
all
this
stuff.
B
Yeah,
we
just
have
to
find
what
does
that
mean
in
english,
the
date.
B
B
Yeah,
that
would
be
great,
then
I
can
can
prepare
some
stuff.
You
know
close
some
200
taps
on
my
browser
and
things
like
that.
You
don't
get
confused.
Well,
I'm
not
even
kidding
I
can
at
the
moment.
I
have
350
open
tabs
and
that's
not
even
a
lot
for
me
so,
but
for
other
people
it
can
be
quite
confusing
yeah.
I
know
how
to
to
fill
the
the
ram
of
computers,
no
problem.
You
just
have
to
open
as
many
tabs
as
you
can.
B
Yeah
and
that's
not
the
only
thing
I'm
running
on
my
computer
yeah,
then
I
can,
but
then
I
can
prepare
some
stuff
and
then
walk
you
through
how
all
the
stuff
works,
how
the
setup
works,
what
components
are
used
there
and
then
yeah
and
especially,
show
you
a
little
bit
how
august
city
works
as
it's
quite
unintuitive
once
I
have
shown
you,
but
it
makes
it
very
easy
to
maintain
all
the
stuff,
so
you
can
actually
look
into
what's
actually
there
in
the
cluster
and
what
is
you
know?
B
So
it's
very
visual,
a
good
visualization
of
all
the
stuff
which
was
happening.
Wonderful
yeah.
The
only
thing
then
I
did
another
thing
which
I
did
is
since
we're
using
doppler
there's
a
little
bit
of
a
chicken
and
an
egg
problem.
B
You
have
to
create
like
a
secret
where
this
doppler
token
is
in.
You
know
to
use
it,
and
if
you
do
the
different
configurations,
then
you
have
to
manually
set
up
those
secrets
and
that's
something
I
didn't
want
to
well
in
the
update
script.
It's
okay!
It's
setting
setting
up
one
secret,
but
I
wanted
to
have
something
more
organic,
which
works.
B
If
we
add
more
configurations,
I
will
show
you
then,
but
a
few
days
ago,
when
I
had
a
little
bit
of
time,
I
created
a
funky
note
node-red
application,
which
actually
takes
any
change,
because
in
doppler
you
can
set
up
a
weapon
whenever
a
secret
changes,
and
that's
also,
if
you
add
new
stuff
and
then
it
calls
the
the
web
hook,
and
this
one
is
checking
then
kubernetes.
If
there's
a
secret
and
there's
no
secret,
it
automatically
creates
the
secret,
creates
a
token
on
doppler
and
then
creates
the
secrets
on
kubernetes.
With
a
token.
B
Yeah,
I
can
show
you
but
there's
a
because
it
was
like
just
easy
to
do
in
notre
dame
if
you
guys
do.
Does
everybody
know
I'm
not
red.
D
A
I'm
I'm
definitely
looking
I'm
definitely
thinking
of
a
different
node
red,
I'm
thinking
of
the
node
exporter,
red
metrics,
which
are
which
is
something
completely
different.
A
B
It
doesn't
sound
as
exciting
as
this
node
red
is.
A
B
B
Well,
okay,
yeah,
I
mean
you're,
surely
correct,
but
I
was.
It
was
a
little
bit
tongue-in-cheek,
because
this
node
is
like
it's
like
a
visual
programming
tool.
It's
not
good
for
everything,
but
it's
good
for
some
little
flow
based
where
you
have
some
messages.
I
wouldn't
just
have
to
connect
some
apis
or
stuff
like
this.
It's
actually
really
great
for
stuff
like
this
to
set
up
and
and
do
some
flow
programming,
it's
quite
a
nice
tool.
B
I
love
it
and
for
some
stuff
it's
really
nice
and
it
works
actually
everywhere
on
a
raspberry,
pi
and
and
on
kubernetes.
So
and
it's
really
the
thing
is
I've
seen
a
lot
of
like
flow
programming
tools
or
which
have
a
really
nice
visualization.
You
know
a
very
nice
user
interface
and
usually
with
applications
like
that.
If
you
look
under
the
hood,
it's
nothing
like
this.
It's
you
know
a
spaghetti
code
or
very,
not
really
clean,
so
to
speak,
but
for
node-red
it's
actually.
B
The
code
base
is
really
clean.
It's
very
thoughtful
and
yeah,
it's
just
a
nice
little
tool
to
create
some
little
applications
and
yeah.
As
I
mentioned,
it
actually
came
out
of
ibr
ibm,
so
this
has
been
some
ibm
people
who
created
it
initially.
So
there's
a
really
good
foundation.
B
I
recommend
to
take
a
look
into
it.
If
you
don't
know
it
and
play
a
little
bit
around
with
it,
it's
really
nice
things
you
can
do,
because
you
can,
for
example,
and
there
are
a
lot
of
plugins
for
it,
so
you
can
easily
set
up
a
web
socket
or
actually
there
are
plugins
for
nearly
everything
nowadays,
so
as
well
as
kubernetes.
So
it's
that's
just
what
I
did
and
hooked
earlier
three
apis
up
and
there
you
go.
A
B
A
All
right
with
time
check,
we
got
20
more
minutes,
but
just
wanted
to
make
sure
we
had
time
to
talk
about
things
that
make
sure
everybody
gets
in
what
they
want
to
talk
about.
D
Not
really
I
no,
I,
I
was
just
we
sort
of
skipped
through
a
couple
of
pull
requests.
A
couple
of
the
ones
from
neve
looks
like
he's
gone.
Quiet
again,
probably
had
a
few
days
off
over
over
the
sort
of
holiday
break,
at
least
one
of
them
we
sort
of
had
approved,
and
I
wonder
whether
he
could
just
the.
D
A
A
B
And
I
know
native
english
speakers
like
to
pronounce
foreign
names
in
english,
but
that's
not
hot.
That's
not
positive.
D
B
B
The
the
name
spiel,
which
you
know
and
use
in
english,
that
actually,
if
my
spiel,
that
always
yeah
so
that's,
actually
comes
from
yiddish,
which
is
another
germanic
language,
but
actually
spiel
means
not
how
you
use
it
in
english,
but
it
means
a
game
or
something
like
this,
so
I
don't
know
how
why
they
in
here
is
used
like
that.
I
guess,
because
it's
like
a
game,
you
know
you're
talking
about
stuff
and
what
the
original
so
spielberg
actually
means
game
hill,
for
example,.
A
B
Another
thing
is
maybe
because
I
looked
into
some
stuff,
maybe
we
can
set
up
some.
Actually,
it's
in
the.
Let
me
start
at
the
beginning,
so
I've
seen
that
sometimes
people
are
confused
with
this.
With
the.
B
Copy
left
thingy.
We
have
to
what's
called
the
cla
cla,
yes
yeah,
so
maybe
we
could
set
up
some.
B
Github
action,
which
actually
you
know,
adds
the
information
there
and
says
hello.
Thank
you
for
contributing
the
yada
yada,
and
you
have
to
sign
this.
Please
and
you
know
the
stuff
which
I
put
just
copy
and
paste
it
and
and
there's
actually,
you
know
and
github
action.
There's
like
a
tutorial
how
to
set
up
this
option
and
to
look
if
somebody
is
a
first-time
contributor
or
first-time.
B
First
time
creating
issue
or
about
report,
or
something
like
this
to
guide
people
a
little
bit
better.
That
I
mean
some
people
seem
to
create
pr
something
for
to
forget
about
them.
I
don't
know,
but
at
least
we
could.
You
know,
guide
people
a
little
bit
more
because
that's
yeah
a
little
bit
unusual
for
most
people
to
find
something
like
that.
A
B
Yeah
and
when
we
create
because
the
the
command
from
uccla
doesn't
use,
if
you
use
a
if
you
tag
the
person,
it's
probably
better
that
they
get,
you
know
noticed
by
it,
but
because
otherwise
it
depends
on
what
people
have
set
up
for
the
notifications,
but
yeah
github
can
often
spam
a
lot
of
updates.
B
For
example,
if
you
set
up
like
a
mirror,
like
you
know,
I've
showed
you
guys
my
mirror
and
this
pipe
mirror
repository.
I
have
with
all
the
clothes
stuff
and
it's
just
flooding
me
with
notifications
every
day
and
because
this
dependency
bot,
I
cannot
turn
him
off
for
some
reason
and
he's
always
trying
to
fix
stuff
there,
which
I
don't
I
just
it's
just
you
know
from
here,
mirror
I
don't
want
to
fix
stuff
there
and
it's
driving
me
nuts
yeah.
It
is,
and
I
don't
know
there.
A
B
Yeah
for
us
it
doesn't
really
work
because
we
don't
have
strict
composer
json.
We
don't
use
strict
version
numbers
so
there's
nothing
to
bump
through
them.
D
Okay,
I
had
one
other
thing
which
was
protobuf,
so
we
know
our
eight
one
tests
are
failing
with
well
just
with
the
protobuf
extension.
D
Now
I've
got
a
full
request
going
over
it,
the
google
protobuf
repo.
I
think
it's
all
working
I've
just
run
into
some,
because
I
had
to
sort
of
implement
influence,
bc,
break
and
drop
like
php,
seven,
zero
support
and
they
were
a
little
bit
I
need
to-
I
don't
know,
go
and
bug
some
more
people
and
and
just
get
approval
from
someone
at
google
that
that's,
okay,
I'm
trying
to
work
through
that.
A
Hey
brad,
if
you
send
me
a
link
to
that
pr,
I
can.
I
have
a
direct
line
to
the
google
people,
because
we
have
a
gcp
support
contract
with
them.
I
can.
I
can
try
and
bump
that.
B
Yeah
but
they
sound
cool
because
for
the
temporal
stuff
I
was,
I
had
to
deal
with
all
those
decoration
motors
as
well,
so
I
had
to
turn
them
actually
off.
Yeah
yeah
they're,
really
like
this
wall.
D
B
Open
telemetry
php
repository
because
I
was
a
little
bit
tired
on
working
on
grpc
extensions
to
compile
the
100th
time,
and
so
I
created
a
little
experiment
with
actually
creating
pre-compiled
extensions
of
all,
not
of
all
of
most
of
the
php
extensions
and
automatically
with
the
github
action
and
actually
works
you
can.
I
was
surprised
that
github
lets
you
spin
up
over
200
parallel
tasks
or
workflows,
and
then
you
can
just
pull
in
the
binaries.
B
You
know
if
you're
in
your
docker
file
and
you
can
create
a
very
fast
setup
or
a
docker
container
creation.
So
I
will
put
this
on
the
php
or
open
telemetry
thing,
and
then
I
will
use
this
to
create
some
some
of
the
testing
and
containers
and
stuff
like
this.
You
will
see
so
it's
a
little
bit
different
approach,
but
you
don't
have
to
wait
on
grpc
anymore,
which
I
really
like.
B
A
C
B
A
B
B
No,
actually,
I
want
to
use
this
icon,
it's
not.
I
just
want
to
have
it.
You
know
you've
seen
I
created
this,
these
other
icons,
but
actually
I
have
a
use
case
for
it.
B
Oh
yeah
and
then
another
thing
which
yeah
how
we,
which
actually
is
a
little
bit,
not
a
road
map,
but
I
think
we
talked
a
little
bit
about
this
last
week,
though,
we
should
take
a
look,
how
we
stand
in
terms
of
the.
B
Compliance
matrix
so
that's
easier
to
ground,
yeah
and
then
maybe
create
some
tickets,
because
that's
actually
something
we
then
you
know,
could
create
tickets
for,
and
we
actually
have
some
somewhat
of
a
roadmap.
What
things
we
still
have
to
do,
or
not
to
do
to
actually
go
to
some
more
indirectness
for
more
steady
release.
A
B
Yeah,
okay,
that
would
be
great
yeah
one
I
created
for
the
v3
headers
thing
which
I
took
over
and
actually
I
just
have
to
finish
some
some
tests
there.
It's
actually
done,
but
I
had
some
other
stuff
to
do
so.