►
Description
Diane Mueller and Joe Fernandes from Red Hat give an introduction to the OpenShift Commons Gathering Boston on May 1, 2017.
See more sessions from the day here: https://blog.openshift.com/openshift-commons-gathering-at-red-hat-summit-2017-video-recap-with-slides/
A
B
A
That
you
hear
today
on
Monday,
a
number
of
the
folks
who
are
speaking
here
are
doing
additional
sessions
at
the
rest.
So
if
you
have
questions
you
can
go
into
that,
but
there
are
you
know:
I'm,
just
I
think
80
different
open
shift
sessions
throughout
the
whole
week.
So
I'd
like
you
to
think
of
this
session
today
as
a
way
to
kick
off
the
conversations
and
get
some
of
the
background
and
start
meeting
some
of
the
other,
your
peers
across
the
open
shift,
commons
community.
A
A
Origin
codebase
that
we're
working
with
it's
a
lot
of
other
code
bases
that
get
up
streamed
into
open
shift
and
we'll
talk
a
little
bit
about
this
and
it's
about
openly
collaborating
with
all
of
the
upstream
projects,
as
well
as
all
of
the
ISPs
and
integrators,
and
you
folks
who
are
using
open
shift
to
make
this
the
best
container
platform
possible
and
continue
to
drive
innovation
into
it.
And
your
feedback
today
is
going
to
be
part
of
the
important
ingredient
in
making
sure
that
we
continuously
innovate
and
open
shift.
A
So
a
lot
of
you
have
seen
this
diagram
before,
but
and
that
there's
no
way
that
I
could
put
all
of
the
balloons
of
all
of
the
things
I
just
gave
up
about
six
months
ago.
But
we
pull
in
to
open
shift
a
wide
variety
of
open
source
projects,
and
we
really
need
to
acknowledge
that
and
all
of
the
communities
that
we
work
with,
because
we
built
on
the
backs
of
the
shoulders
of
giants.
A
My
voice
keeps
going
up
and
down,
but
that's
okay
and
we
put
out
a
whole
lot
of
other
great
wonderful
projects
and
products
with
that.
As
well
as
a
lot
of
you
are
host
operators
and
service
providers
in
the
room
and
you're,
also
using
this
same
codebase
and
doing
it
in
your
in
unique
value-added
ways
and
everything
is
done
in
the
open.
So
we
really
are
doing
open
source
first
here
and
and
I
want
to
emphasize
a
number
of
the
other
folks
that
are
here.
A
Service
providers
are
in
the
room
and
partners
and
people
are
building
and
integrating
services
that
you
need
for
your
enterprises
and
for
your
project
are
also
in
the
room.
So
this
is
really
about
not
about
OpenShift
itself
or
RedHat
itself.
It
is
about
what
the
future
of
open-source
looks
like.
It
looks
like
open
collaboration
and
really
what
you're,
seeing
in
the
container
industry
in
the
cloud
native
space
and
in
all
of
technology
today
is
this
new
model
of
open
source
collaboration,
and
we
really
have
been
the
beneficiaries
I.
A
Think
of
this
new
approach
to
open
source
as
opposed
to
building
everything
we
need
for
open
shift
ourselves.
We
really
partner
with
and
collaborate
with,
a
lot
of
other
communities,
so
I'm
going
to
start
with.
Some
of
you
are
members
of
the
open
shift.
Commons
and
some
of
you
aren't
Commons
is
a
slightly
different
community
model.
It
is
really
about
creating
those
peer-to-peer
community
connections
and
making
sure
that
we
have
a
really
open
communications
channel
with
all
of
you.
A
So
to
that
end,
we've
really
tried
to
change
the
way
the
open
source
communities
work
and
make
and
take
red
hat
as
the
connective
tissue
and
allow
you
to
connect
to
each
other
directly
through
our
slack
channels
through
the
open
chef,
Commons
briefings
that
happen
at
least
once
a
week
and
we're
going
to
two
days
a
week,
because
there's
that
many
members
soon
and
we
may
have
to
do
three
so
I-
may
never
travel
again.
The
virtua
will
be
virtual
Diane,
but
you
well.
A
Today
there
are
45
member
organizations
from
OpenShift
Commons
already.
So,
if
you're,
not
in
the
OpenShift
Commons
you'll
hear
me
all
week,
long
and
I'll
have
a
pod
out
on
the
dev
zone,
where
you
can
sign
up
and
join.
Officially,
there
are
a
hundred
and
133
at
last
count
organizations
in
the
room,
so
you're
all
unique
snowflakes,
but
a
lot
of
you
still
can
come
and
join
in.
Some
of
you.
A
I
understand
have
issues
in
terms
of
being
government
organizations
that
can't
officially
join
things,
but
we
really
encourage
you
to
join
so
that
you
can
get
in
on
the
communications
channels
that
we
have
and
connect
with
your
peers
not,
and
it
really
helps
we
also
the
last
gathering
we
did
was
in
Berlin
was
just
30
days
ago.
In
the
last
30
days,
we've
had
over
10
new
members
join.
So
this
is
this:
we're
beyond
the
hockey
stick
I'm
Canadian,
so
everything's
a
hockey.
A
A
B
A
A
I'm
going
to
say
is
also,
if
you're
sitting
next
to
somebody
you
came
with
at
the
next
break,
switch
it
up
sit
next
to
somebody,
you
don't
know
and
introduce
yourself
one
of
the
things.
That's
amazed
me
in
Berlin
there
were
a
ton
of
people
from
the
automotive
industry.
Now
BMW
Volvo
was
in
the
house.
It
was
just
amazing
who
came
at
this
event.
There
are
so
many
banks
and
finance
people
here,
I'm
a
little
afraid
to
check
my
checkbook
and.
A
A
But
really
it
is
one
of
the
things
we
talk
about
a
lot
as
an
open
shift
and
as
a
community
manager
is
in
the
past,
community
managers
really
focused
on
coercing
all
of
you
into
contributing
code
to
my
code
base
and
we
don't
love
or
do
that
because
it
just
happens
naturally.
So
a
lot
of
Amadeus
is
in
the
room,
McCreary
Bank
a
whole
bunch
of
people.
A
A
A
Cohen
is
here,
who
is
the
executive
director
of
the
cloud
native
computing
foundation,
which
is
the
umbrella
organization
that
kubernetes
is
in
as
well
as
a
whole
host
of
other
tools
from
Prometheus
to
fluency
and
things
that
are
integral
to
our
offerings
and
our
enterprise
deployments
of
openshift.
So
we
really
are
trying
to
make
sure
that
we
are
the
connective
tissue.
We
can
connect
you
with
the
other
crews.
You
can
give
feedback
on
it
and
make
it
all
work.
A
There's
tons
of
stuff
going
on
on
our
mailing
list
on
our
slack
Channel,
all
over
the
place
right
now,
I
cut
out
the
the
openness
that
the
open
shifters
who
did
this,
but
there
are
over
50
organizations
that
are
currently
contributing
to
open
shipped
origin.
So
we
say
thank
you
and
you
should
thank
each
other.
There
are
about
not
yet,
and
there
I
think
that
were
27
individuals
who
were
not
associated
yet
with
an
organization,
so
they
are
looking
for
jobs.
A
Probably
so
we
continue
and
it's
just
ramping
up
the
amount
of
participation
in
the
project
and
so
I'm
really
pleased
and
I'm
really
grateful
for
that
from
all
of
you
and
I
look
forward
to
more
of
it.
So
I
should
hope
of
the
133
of
you,
the
45,
who
aren't
in
the
room
that
after
today,
you'll
going
forward
you'll
see
some
benefit
in
joining
into
this
conversation
and
join
us.
You
can
find
me
in
the
openshift
Commons
pod
in
the
dev
zone
and
I
will
hook
you
up
with
whatever
you
need
and
I'm
going
to.
B
Thanks
everybody,
it's
a
real
pleasure
to
be
here
almost
four
years
ago.
Now
we
may
pivot
around
openshift
and
around
what
we're
focusing
on
on
standards-based
containers.
We
made
the
choice
for
kubernetes.
We
were
part
of
that
launch
and
two
years
ago
here
in
Boston,
we
launched
open
three
so
to
be
back
here
today
and
see
all
of
these
customers.
In
fact,
if
you're
a
customer
of
OpenShift
or
somebody
who's
using
open
ships
who's
not
from
red
X,
could
you
raise
your
hand
so
take
a
look
around?
B
These
are
the
people
that
you
want
to
talk
to
and
you
know
find
out
what
they're
doing.
We
have
I
believe
eight
of
these
folks
speaking
here
today.
So
this
is
our
agenda,
so
you'll
be
hearing
from
customers
like
Macquarie,
ATP,
Co,
Oh
point:
seventy
two
Swiss
rail,
a
Cisco
CA
la
post,
Mass,
General,
Hospital,
Partners,
HealthCare
and
Inmarsat
they're,
going
to
be
talking
about
open
shift
in
their
environment,
some
of
the
problems
they're
trying
to
solve
they're
specific
to
to
their
organizations
some
of
the
challenges
they
face.
B
How
they've
thinking
about
openshift
in
that
context
and
then
really
where
they
want
to
go
with
it
and
so
forth?
So,
hopefully
you'll
learn
as
much
from
from
each
other,
as
you
will
from
us
and
then,
as
Diane
mentioned
at
Red
Hat
summit,
which
starts
tomorrow.
We
have
over
80
sessions
that
are
focused
on
OpenShift.
Many
of
them
are
with
customers
as
well,
so
there's
additional
customers.
B
Some
of
the
logos
are
here
who
will
be
speaking
at
Red
Hat
summit,
either
in
the
keynotes
or
in
the
breakout
sessions,
or
both
in
some
cases
so
definitely
check
those
out
again.
You
know
we
can
talk
to
you
all
day
about
openshift.
We
live
this
stuff
about
containers,
but
it's
really
when
you
start
hearing
about
actual
implementations,
devtest
and
production.
B
Some
of
the
analysts
still
think
that
containers
aren't
a
thing
in
production,
we're
here
to
prove
them
wrong
right,
because
there's
a
lot
of
production
deployments
of
containers
and
we're
really
helping
drive
that
with
a
lot
of
customers.
You
see
here
at
the
end
of
day
it's
not
about
containers
right,
it's
about
what
you
do
with
those
things
right.
So
the
conversations
that
I
have
with
customers
are
about
these
three
things:
one:
how
are
they
thinking
about
their
applications?
How
are
they
evolving
to
new
architectures?
B
What
are
they
thinking
about
in
terms
of
Micra
services
in
terms
of
distributed
application
patterns
and
so
forth,
but
then
also
recognizing
that,
where
most
of
us
are
part
of
enterprise
organizations
that
have
a
pretty
long
base
of
apps
already
in
existence
right,
so
we
can't
just
throw
all
that
out
and
do
micro
services.
You
know
in
Greenfield
that
would
be
nice,
but
that's
not
the
reality.
So
it's
how
you
basically
deal
with
the
applications
you
have,
as
well
as
the
new
Apple
that
you're
thinking
about
building
right
on
the
platform
on
infrastructure
side.
B
B
So
everybody
is
deploying
up
stuff
out
on
Amazon
or
a
juror
or
Google,
but
everybody
still
has
stuff
running
on
VMware
or
OpenStack,
or
bare
metal
infrastructure
and
then,
lastly,
the
process
right-
and
this
isn't
as
much
a
technology
issue
as
it
is
a
people
in
process
issue.
But
things
like
how
do
you
evolve?
Your
processes
towards
more
agile
methods
towards
more
automation
may
be
enabling
continuous
deployment,
continuous
delivery
and
so
forth
and
again.
These
are
these
are
what
make
our
conversations
interesting,
because
it's
not
about
open
shifts,
not
about
containers.
B
It's
about
all
these
things
and
then
what
we're
trying
to
do
is
figure
out.
How
can
we
help
right?
How
can
we
leverage
containers
technology
and
kubernetes
and
open
ship
to
help
you
move
across
the
spectrum
to
help
you
take
advantage
to
evolve
your
application
architectures
to
evolve
your
infrastructure
to
evolve
your
processes
and
what
are
the
features
and
functions
and
new
capabilities
that
we
need
to
work
on
to
make
that
easier
for
all
of
you?
B
So
so,
when
we
think
about
the
the
product,
it's
a
challenging
product
to
manage
I've
been
doing
product
management
now
for
17
years,
the
definitely
the
most
interesting
product
I've
ever
worked
on,
and
so
there's
a
lot
of
moving
pieces.
We've
structured
today's
Red
Hat
sessions,
they're
called
ask
me
anything,
and
literally
we
want
you
to
ask
us
anything
that
you
can
think
of
around
these
areas.
We
break
them
up
into
three
categories,
so
the
third
session
today
is
is
about
the
foundation.
B
We
always
start
with
this
part,
so
we
figured
we
put
them
last
today,
but
this
is
a.
This
is
Linux.
This
is
the
container
runtime
container,
packaging
and
so
forth.
Ultimately,
you
know
rel
is
the
foundation
of
OpenShift,
but
moreover,
Linux
is
the
foundation
of
every
container
platform
in
existence.
Right
because
containers
are
actually
Linux,
there
are
just
features
of
Linux
features
of
the
Linux
kernel,
and
then
you
have
a
container
runtime
that
basically
helps
manage
that
so
read
headers
in
the
room
who
work
on
this
layer
on
Linux
on
containers.
B
Could
you
guys
raise
your
hands
all
right?
So
there's
several
of
them
here.
If
you
even
will
be
up
on
stage,
seek
these
folks
out,
ask
them
questions,
but
at
the
other
day--
containers
right
is
that's
just
the
first
piece
we
need
to.
We
need
to
scale
those
containers
right.
We
need
to
basically
deploy
complex
applications
that
are
going
to
run
across
multiple
containers
across
many
hosts,
hundreds,
if
not
thousands,
of
hosting
cases,
some
of
the
larger
deployments.
B
So
as
Diane
mentioned
it's
actually
over
three
years
ago
now
we
made
a
strategic
bet
on
kubernetes,
one
of
the
best
decisions.
I
think
that
Red
Hat's
made
and
we've
become
top
contributors
to
this
project
number
two
in
terms
of
contribution
count
to
Google,
but
we're
really
focused
beyond
Google
in
terms
of
running
it
anywhere,
and
to
do
that,
it's
not
just
work
on
kubernetes.
It's
work
on
how
does
kubernetes
intersect
with
your
networking,
environment
and
Sdn?
How
does
it?
B
How
do
you
tie
it
into
your
storage
for
stateful
services,
your
registries,
to
manage
the
images
and
containers
that
run
on
that
platform,
logging
and
metrics
security
authentication
authorization
right,
so
we
have
a
whole
team
of
folks
that
work
upstream
in
kubernetes,
but
then
are
also
working
on
all
of
these
touch
points
and
interfaces
and
for
the
engineers
and
product
managers
in
the
room.
Could
you
raise
your
hand
if
you're
working
on
this
layer
of
the
stack
I
know
you're
out
there
come
on
there's
more
than
these
down.
B
In
the
back,
getting
coffee
but
but
we'll
have
our
second
session
today
will
be
focused
on
this
area.
Talking
about
things
like
some
of
the
new
things
like
Federation,
some
of
the
expanded
workload
support
as
well
as
some
of
the
existing
stuff
that
that
we're
continuing
to
enhance
and
then
the
last
piece
right,
it's
all
about
the
applications
right,
because
at
the
end
of
the
day,
containers
and
kubernetes
and
orchestration-
it's
all
interesting,
but
it's
there
to
serve
the
needs
of
your
applications
to
serve
the
needs
of
your
application
developers.
B
And
so
we
need
to
connect
that,
via
things
like
self-service
and
service
catalogs
and
tying
in
to
your
build
systems
and
see
I
and
automating
the
deployments
and
enabling
CD
pipelines
and
so
forth.
So
we
have
a
lot
of
features
that
go
beyond
sort
of
the
orchestration
layer
to
do
those
times
and
whether
you're
leveraging
our
services
or
tying
our
stuff
to
what
you
already
have
in
place.
This
is
really
important.
B
So,
lastly,
I'll
ask
the
Red
Hatters,
who
are
working
on
the
green
boxes,
raise
your
hands
all
right,
they're,
all
sleeping
weather
is
play
out.
There
you'll
see
them
in
the
first
session,
we'll
be
talking
about
this,
so
this
is
sort
of
the
open
ship
universe
slide
day
and
just
showed
a
version.
This
shows
customer
logos
as
well
as
Commons
members
and
partners,
I'm
happy
to
say
we
have
two
retired,
this
version
of
the
slide,
because
there's
actually
all
these
new
customers
and
new
Commons
members
that
we
have
to
bring
on
board.