►
Description
Sneak preview of 4.6 Dev Exp in OpenShift Console - focusing on Topology
A
Good
morning,
good
evening,
good
afternoon,
wherever
you're
healing
from
welcome
to
openshift.tv,
I
am
chris
short
principal
technical
marketing
manager
at
redhead.
I'm
sorry
for
the
echo
that's
coming
through
my
microphone
right
now.
My
tv
is
a
monitor
and
it's
really
loud,
my
bad.
I
was
actually
off
yesterday.
I
was
laid
up
after
a
medical
procedure
and
I
was
watching
the
stream
on
my
tv
through
my
apple
tv,
so
the
volume
was
rather
loud
across
the
office.
A
As
I
said,
my
recliner
I
seen
myself
today,
we
are
joined
by
two
of
my
fun
and
favorite
friends.
Serena
nichols
correct
pronunciation
and
naming
this
week,
I'm
glad
that
zoom
was
able
to
allow
you
to
change
your
last
name.
Finally,
thank
you
zoom
and
then
ryan
jarvanin,
the
one
and
only
fantastic
brian
jarvin,
and
today
we're
going
to
be
talking
about
what
serena
please
introduce
yourself
and
you
know,
share
what
we're
talking
about.
B
Sure,
hey
my
name's
serena
nichols.
Well
thanks
for
having
me
back
on
twitch
with
the
office
hour,
we're
going
to
be
focusing
on
the
openshift
developer
experience
as
usual,
and
today
we're
going
to
look
at
a
number
of
the
new
features
that
will
be
coming
out
in
4.6
and
further
so
specifically
kind
of
on
getting
started
experience
as
well
as
some
of
the
new
improvements
and
changes
that
we've
made
in
topology.
C
Yeah
yeah,
thank
you!
I'm
ryan
jarvanan.
You
can
find
me
online
most
places
as
ryan
jay
to
just
re
brief
transportation
back
in
time
to
last
week
and
I'm
not
sure
if
we're
going
to
cover
this.
But
last
week
we
were
talking
about
service,
binding
and
serena
offered
to
show
us
some
updates
in
the
ui
that
may
go
along
with
service
binding.
So
I'm
curious
to
see
if
that's
on
the
lineup
today
we'll
see
what
we
get
to
yeah,
but.
B
C
Yeah
well
either
way,
welcome
welcome
to
everyone
in
the
audience
and
if
you
have
questions
or
feedback
or
thoughts
during
the
show,
please
drop
them
into
chat
and
we'll
do
our
best
to
answer
them.
A
Yes,
and
if
you
drop
it
into
any
chat,
wherever
you
are
watching
from,
we
will
be
able
to
capture
it
and
get
it
answered
so
feel
free
to
drop
it
in
youtube,
chat,
facebook,
chat
or
twitch
chat.
We
can
gather
them
up
and
get
them
answered.
Thank
you
so
much
for
joining
us
today,
so
serena
you've
got
some
screens
to
share
right
here.
B
I
do
so,
let's
try
to
get
started
here,
so
I
am
first
going
to
make
sure
that
I'm
sharing
the
correct
screen.
Do
you
see
a
oh?
Do
you
looks
like.
B
Excellent,
so
that's
great
okay,
so
what
I'm?
What
I'm
going
to
be
focusing
on
in
the
beginning
is
just
what
our
onboarding
is
for
new
developers
right.
So
I'm
going
to
log
into
this
cluster
as
a
developer
whoops.
I
have
to
sell
it
right
and
what
I
want
to
show
you
if
it
works
properly,
is
that
when
I
come
in
for
the
first
time
what
you'll
see
is
it
will
bring
me
directly
to
that
developer
perspective,
which
it
did
so.
B
I
think
what
we
talked
about
previously
is
that
in
previous
releases,
regardless
of
who
you
were
what
your
role
was,
what
your,
what
your
user
id
was,
it
always
initially
brought
you
into
the
admin
perspective,
and
now
this
is
a
change
that
we've
made
and
we're
hoping
that
helps
with
discoverability
awareness,
all
that
kind
of
stuff
going
forward.
B
So
so
this
is
great.
You
come
in
you're
immediately
brought
into
the
developer
perspective,
and
I'm
going
to
show
you
that
there
are
a
bunch
of
new
things
that
we
have
on
the
ad
page
as
well.
So
what
I'm
going
to
first
do
is
just
create
a
new
test
project
and
we'll
see
what
comes
up
on
my
app
page.
So
we
have
a
number
of.
A
Can
I
can,
I
just
want
to
interrupt
real,
quick,
please
there's
a
story
here.
Serena
is
the
person
that
we
call
so
we
say
serena
lives
in
the
future.
So
just
to
keep
in
mind,
this
is
for
open
shift
4.6.
A
And
you
know
any
number
of
tweaks
and
things
you
know
from
what
you
see
today
might
be
different
between
what
actually
ends
up
getting
released.
So
just
putting
that
caveat
out
there,
when
you
see
serena,
remember
that
serena
lives
in
the
future.
I.
B
A
B
Thank
you,
and
so,
and
actually
some
of
the
things
you
see
here
are
pretty
cool
too,
because
two
weeks
ago
we
did
have
jay,
do
a
demo
on
serverless
and
eventing,
which
was
awesome,
and
so
you
can
see
some
of
those
things
are
here
as
well.
Right
we've
got
the
event
sourcing
and
the
channel
stuff
that
he
had
demoed
last
time
but,
like
I
said,
like
I
mentioned
earlier,
one
of
the
things
I
want
to
focus
on
today
is
kind
of
around
our
are
getting
started
experience.
B
D
B
See
the
icon,
so
we
just
uncovered
a
little
bug
which
is
okay.
That's.
B
B
So,
let's
see
I
am
going
to-
I
had
tried
this
previously
as
cluster
admin,
so
it
says
that
it
was
in
progress,
but
I'm
going
to
just
say:
hey.
I
want
to
restart
this
tour.
I
want
to
create
I'm
sorry.
I
want
to
import
an
application
and
associate
a
pipeline
with
it.
Okay,
so
here
here
is
my
quick
start.
I'm
going
to
hit
reset
restart
this
the
tour,
so
it
kind
of
tells
me
for
each
one
of
these
quick
starts.
What
I'm
going
to
be
able
to
do,
I'm
going
to
create
an
application.
B
B
And
now
I'm
going
to
go
to
import
from
git
I'm
going
to
create
an
application,
I'm
going
to
take
that
django
application.
I
have
that
already
saved
in
my
browser
history
there
and
what
I'm
going
to
do
is
in
the
pipeline
section,
where
I
scroll
down
below
it's
telling
me
to
check
out
check
click,
the
check
box
to
add
a
pipeline
to
my
application.
So
I'm
going
to
do
that
and
I
hit
create.
B
So
now,
let's
see
now
I'm
going
to
explore
my
application
in
topology
I'm
going
to
click
on
the
deployment,
and
when
I
do
that,
I
see
a
side
panel.
You
can
see
now
I've
got
a
lot
of
stuff
on
this
screen.
B
I
can
just
hit
this
hamburger
menu
up
on
the
top
and
make
my
navigation
kind
of
go
away.
So
I
have
a
little
bit
more
room
for
anybody
who
wants
to
do
that
and
what
I'll
do
here
is
just
kind
of
look
at
the
resources
section
where
it
tells
me
what
I
have
going
on.
I've
got
related,
pods,
related,
builds,
related
pipeline
runs
services
and
routes.
So
again,
it
just
asks
me
to
make
sure
that
there's
a
pipeline
named
django
ex
get
it's
there.
B
So
I
hit
next
and
now
just
kind
of
telling
me,
let's
kind
of
look
and
click
on
the
pipeline
line.
The
pipeline
link
that
should
bring
me
to
the
pipeline
details
page
which
it
does,
and
here
you
can
see,
I
have
a
visualization
that
has
the
pipeline
run
status.
B
B
A
B
So
you
know
again,
there's
more
information
down
here
around
checking
your
work,
and
this
is
kind
of
trying
to
just
step
you
through
that
process.
If
you
don't
know
what
you
know
trying
to
get
you
to
learn
how
things
work,
so
I
can
also
click
on
the
lag
logs
tab
here
and
see
the
details
of
that
run
as
well
and
go
back
over
to
the
details
and
be
like.
Oh,
okay.
D
C
B
C
C
Word:
yeah
yeah!
So
that's
that's
a
really
cool!
I
have
heard
rumors
from
the
future,
but
since
I'm
at
red
hat,
but
this
is
really
cool
getting
to
see
this
instructional
material
kind
of
lined
up
on
the
right
and
I'm
assuming
that
this
is
maybe
what
a
architect
or
team
lead
might
populate
in
order
to
help
people
get
started
or
or
more
appropriately.
Maybe
we're
doing
it
first
off.
C
These
quick
starts:
are
they
something
that
people
can
customize
and
upload
eventually
or
is
it.
B
B
Our
initial,
what
we're
what
we're
anticipating
initially
is
that
we
are
going
to
ship
a
number
of
quick
starts
a
couple
to
how
do
you
install
serverless?
How
do
you
install
pipelines,
then?
How
might
you
create
a
serverless
application?
B
How
do
you
add
a
pipeline
to
an
application
and,
let's
see
this
is
not
being
great
and
then
we're
gonna
have
a
couple
others
around
building
applications,
but
then,
in
the
future,
what
we're
going
to
have
is
more
of
an
extensible
model
where
operators
can
provide
their
own
quick
starts
and
even
having
some
crd
extensions
so
that
you
can
possibly
do
it
like
you're
saying
in
the
future,
there
might
be.
C
B
Finally,
so
now
we've
looked
here
and
what
you
can
see
is
when
the
pipeline
run
is
complete.
You
can
even
see
that
up
here
on
the
page
title
we
now
have
a
succeeded
status
right
or
a
badge
up
there.
So
you
know
that
it's
complete
it's
a
good
story,
so.
A
Yes,
if
you
want
to
take
it
real
quick,
can
I
check
the
quick
start
output
into
git
for
my
project,
so
yeah?
What
what
is
the
all
the
artifacts
from
this
quick
start
like?
Are
they
collected
somewhere
where
people
can
save
them?
So
if
they
have
to
like
stand
their
project
up
brand
new
on
a
new
cluster
somewhere,
where.
B
Pms
always
do
say
that,
but
it
is
something
in
the
backlog
that
we've
been
talking
about
quite
a
bit
in
the
last
couple
of
weeks
around.
How
can
you
export
your
application?
It's
not
necessarily
tied
with
the
quickstart
itself,
but
how
can
I.
A
A
Yeah,
so
that
is
definitely
james.
Cassell
is
interested
in
that
feature.
Yeah
yeah,
that's
great.
I
would
be
too
because,
if,
if
I'm
going
to,
if
I'm
on
openshift
I'm
on
openshift
for
a
while,
so
I
would
in
theory,
have
clusters
potentially
popping
up
in
the
future
in
other
places,
potentially
so
yeah
like
I
would.
I
would
definitely
want
to
be
able
to
have
some
kind
of
way
to
export
this
and
shift
it
over.
B
Yeah
makes
sense,
yep,
okay,
so
when
I'm
done
with
that,
I
can
always
go
back
and
access.
You
know
more
quick
starts
if
I
wanted
to
through
the
help
menu,
there's
a
quick
start
link
there.
That
brings
me
back
to
that
page.
If
I
wanted
to
go
take
more,
but
what
you
can
see
now
is
that
that's
the
one
I
just
did,
and
it
now
says
complete,
so
it's
kind
of
nice
to
be
able
to
and
again
in
the
future
we're
thinking
about.
Is
there
a
way
to
say?
B
Oh
show
me
all
the
quick
starts.
I
have
not
yet
started
or
haven't
tried
yet
things
like
that,
but
but
it's
a
pretty
cool
feature
that
we
are
helping,
hoping
that
enables
people
to
start
understanding
some
of
the
functionality
that
we
are
offering
here.
So,
let's
see
the
next
thing
I
wanted
to
do
here
is
look
what
we
can
do
with
samples.
B
So
I
think,
last
time
we
were
here,
I
kind
of
showed
an
animated
gif
around
this
a
little
bit,
but
I
did
want
to
go
through
this
a
little
bit
again,
so
this
is
kind
of
somebody
who's
brand
new
who
might
want
to
kick
the
tires
and
see
what's
going
on
with
samples.
So
this
is
you
don't
have
to
have
your
own
code
or
anything
at
all
right,
I'm
just
going
to
come
in
and
say
hey.
I
want
to
create
a
node.js
sample
everything's
given
to
me
by
default.
B
I
just
hit
create
and
what
happens
in
here,
which
is
kind
of
neat,
is
it
creates
an
application?
That's
literally
called
sample
app
and
it
puts
that
node.js
deployment
inside
there
for
me
and
if
I
wanted
to
add
another
one,
what's
really
kind
of
cool
is,
I
think
we
might
have
talked
about
this
in
the
past,
but
we
do
have.
B
D
B
Puts
all
of
my
sample
apps
in
that
same
sample
application?
So
if
I
want
to
then
delete
it
later
on,
I
can.
But
this
is
a
nice
way
again.
Like
I
mentioned,
just
be
able
to
kind
of
kick
the
tires
come
in
and
see.
How
do
I
deploy
a
sample
app
and
then
what
you
know
is
there
other
details?
I
might
want
to
look
at
around
that
kind
of
thing,
so
we're
hoping
that
those
samples
kind
of
help
again
for
the
onboarding.
B
So,
let's
see
the
next
thing
is
around
importing
from
git.
So
I
think
we
all
know,
probably
that
you
can
do
this
already.
So
this
is
what
I'm
gonna
show.
There
is
a
right-click
menu
that
you
can
use
kind
of
anywhere
right
like
if
I'm
over
the
canvas
that
there's
no
nodes.
If
I
do
right
click,
I
just
get
something:
that's
going
to
put
it
right
side.
B
You
know
it
won't
be
in
context,
but
if
I
wanted
to
do
something
in
context,
I
can
also
click
on
an
item
and
do
right
click
and
then
I
get
in
context
menus.
So
here
I'm
just
going
to
hit
control
right,
click
do
add
to
project
from
get,
and
what
I
wanted
to
show
here
was.
B
So
I'm
just
kind
of
building
this
up
a
little
bit
to
show
what's
going
to
happen
in
in
the
future
and
how
it
differs
from
deploy
image,
but
for
this
example,
let's
just
say:
okay,
I
do
an
import
for
from
git
and
for
some
reason
I
decide
not
to
add
a
route
by
default.
B
This
is
a
question.
This
is
questions
that
have
come
up
in
the
last
couple
weeks,
so
I
wanted
to
show
how
you
can
kind
of
rectify
that
after
the
fact.
So
here's
my
node.js
deployment
and
what
I
can
do
you
can
see
that
there's
no
route
indicator
up
here
on
the
top
right
hand
side.
So
what
I
can
do
is
I
can
again
either
select
this
item
and
see
the
actions
menu
on
the
right
hand,
side
or
I
could
do
the
right-click
menu.
B
But
what
I
can
see
here
is
that
there
is
something
called
edit
with
the
name
of
that
resource,
so
there's
an
edit
node.js
ex
get
right
that
matches
the
name
of
the
node
here.
If
I
click
on
that,
what
that
will
do
is
it
will
bring
me
back
to
that
form-based,
a
form-based
edit.
So
now
I
come
back
into
that
import
from
git
flow,
and
what
I
can
do
is,
I
can
you
know,
click
hey
now.
I
want
to
add
a
route
so
create
a
route
for
this.
B
For
me
and
as
soon
as
I
hit
save
there,
you
go
it's
available
immediately.
So
this
is
one
of
the
questions
that
has
come
up
quite
a
bit.
Lately
is
that
you
know,
is
there
an
ability
for
me
to
add
a
route
to
something
that
already
exists?
Is
there
a
way
for
me
to
maybe
change
some
of
my
advanced
options
so
I'll
show
you
that
as
well.
So
if
I
go
back
again
and
say
edit
node.js
ex
get
brings
me
back
to
that
form
kind
of
go
down.
C
It
looks
like
on
that
this
edit
screen-
oh
the
edit
screen
you
were
just
on,
had
the
ability
to
select
the
base
image.
Is
that
something
that
makes
sense
to
swap
out
the
base
image.
C
That
is
that
that
would
totally
make
sense,
yeah
yeah
and
I
could
even
maybe
see
going
from
like
node.js
to
the
static
web
image
depending,
although
that
was
like.
I
was
surprised
to
see
this
here,
but
yeah
that
definitely
makes
sense
for
switching
between
no
runtime
versions.
Okay,
yeah
for
sure.
B
C
B
Cool,
so
the
other
thing
I
was
just
going
to
show
like
just
another
example
is
okay.
What
if
I
wanted
to
change
my
scaling
options
and
I
had
initially
took
the
default,
which
was
one
I
want
to
switch
it
to
three.
I
hit
save
and
again
immediately
you'll
see
that
thing
automatically
scales
up
to
three
and
now
that
it's
set
to
three,
so
there
are
shortcuts,
with
the
form
based
edit
and
again
it
is
a
little
there's
quite
a
few
of
these
edit
commands.
B
But
just
to
note
the
one
that
says
edit
and
it's
the
name
of
your
resource
is
what
will
bring
you
back
to
the
form.
If
I
say
edit
deployment,
it's
gonna
bring
me
right
to
ammo,
so
you
yama
lovers,
go
for
it
ones,
who
don't
make
sure
you
say
edit
with
the
resource
name
and
you'll,
get
get
back
to
that
form?
B
Okay.
So
if.
A
B
B
So
the
next
thing
I
want
to
show
is
just
a
small
change
that
we've
made
to
deploying
an
image,
but
it's
pretty
cool.
I
think
I
think
we've
showed
this
in
the
past,
where
you
can
change
the
icon,
that's
associated
with
something
through
labels,
but
now
what
we've
done
is
we're
offering
that
through
a
form
as
well.
So
I'm
going
to
take
a
corkus
image
here
and
what
you
see
now
is
this
new
runtime
icon
section
so
by
default,
when
you
do
a
deployment,
we're
always
providing
that
openshift
icon.
B
What
this
allows
me
now
to
do
is
it
gives
me
a
list
of
predefined
icons,
so
you're
still
limited
to
a
set,
but
I
can
type
in
here
and
say:
oh
is
corkus
here.
Yes,
it
is
I'm
going
to
select
quercus
and
I'm
going
to
also
make
this
a
communicative
service
being
like
really
trying
to
test
things,
and
let's
see
what
happens
so
what
you
would
assume
now
that's
going
to
happen
is,
let's
see
if
it's
a
screen,
my
k
native
service
is
starting
to
be
created
and
there
we
go.
There's
my
revision.
B
A
B
B
This
is
something
more
that
people
would
want
to
use
like
for
a
demo,
but
not
necessarily
right,
because,
if
you're
creating
an
application-
and
you
want
other
people
who
you're
sharing
that
app
with
to
have
more
insight
as
to
what
it
is
that
I
would
assume
that
that
icon's
pretty
pretty
helpful
okay,
so
we've
got
quite
a
few
things
going
on
here.
I'm
like
my
goal
is
to
be
building
up
what's
in
this
project,
not
necessarily
to
have
a
working
application
but
more
to
have
a
bunch
of
things
in
the
project.
B
So
I
can
then
show
you
what
what's
going
on
in
topology,
so
I'm
going
to
kind
of
quickly
go
over
to
the
helm,
chart
area
and
add
a
couple
more
helm,
charts
and.
B
B
A
B
B
This
helm
chart
into
twitch
test
can.
C
C
C
I
thought
I
saw
some
stuff
below
this
image
section,
but
I
could
be
wrong.
Yeah.
A
Okay,
I
don't
I
don't
know
how
I'm
charging
darn.
C
B
To
I'm
gonna
do
this,
I'm
gonna
go
to
twitch
test,
I'm
to
go
to
project,
I'm
going
to
delete
this
project,
see
if
that
helps,
and
because
you
know,
since
we
let's
go
back
to
where
did
I
say.
B
C
A
B
A
B
Okay,
all
right!
Well,
we're
not
gonna
be
able
to
that's
okay,
one
more
thing
I'm
gonna
do
is
we
could.
B
So
this
is
for
kona
database
form
view
super
easy
hit,
create
and
let's
see
there,
it
is
so,
let's
see,
let's
try
this
one
more
time.
Let's
go
back
over
oh
looks
like
it's
been
deleted.
Okay,.
A
D
A
B
All
right
well
sorry
about
that,
but
you
know
as
usual,
when
I'm
demoing,
it's
not
a
good
demo.
Unless
I
fail
with
something.
B
We're
really
on
the
cutting
edge
here
with
working
off
the
daily
build
so
yeah,
it's
all
good
stuff,
though
okay.
So
what
I
wanted
to
show
next
was
what
we
are
doing
in
topology,
which
is
we
are
trying
to
kind
of
provide
parity
between
the
graphical
topology
view
and
the
list
topology
view.
So
I
don't
know
if
you
guys
are
all
aware,
but
there
is
a
little
icon
up
here
on
the
top
right.
That
shows
me
that
I
can
go
over
and
switch
to
go
to
the
list
view.
I
didn't
know
that
no.
B
So
yeah,
so
I
don't
know
if
people
remember
in
openshift
3.x
there
was
something
called
the
project
overview
right.
A
B
Kind
of
started
with
that
that
type
of
format
of
a
view
and
has
evolved,
I
would
say,
going
forward
so
so
now
what
we
do
think
so
I'll
show
you
an
example.
If
I
have
this
pearl
sample
deployment
selected
and
I've
got
the
side
panel
here
hypothetically,
if
I
click
on
list
view,
I
should
still
see
pearl
sample
selected
with
the
selection
on
the
right-hand
side.
So
we'll
remember
in
context,
as
we
flip
that
back
and
forth.
In
addition
to
that,
we're
also
sharing
all
of
the
filter
capabilities
between
the
two
views.
B
So
if
I
go
back
over
to
the
list
view
and
say,
okay,
I
only
want
to
show-
and
this
is
why
I
was
trying
to
get
more
than
one
home
release.
I
only
want
to
show
home
releases,
so
there
we
go,
I'm
just
showing
a
single
helm
release.
If
I
go
over
to
the
list
view
now,
you'll
also
only
see
the
single
home
release
right,
so
we're
again
trying
to
provide
parity
between
those
two
things.
B
B
I
also
want
to
show
my
operator
backed
percolating
a
database,
or
maybe
I
also
want
to
show
my
canadian
service
as
well,
so
we
can
show
all
those
kind
of
things
and
then,
if
I
want
to
clear
those
filters
I'll
do
this,
I
think
one
of
the
other
things
which
is
nice
about
being
able
to
switch
back
and
forth
is
even
if
I
did
something
like
a
find
so
say
I
want
I'm
going
to
use
that
purl
sample
as
exact
as
an
example
again
right.
B
What
you
can
see
here
is
it
highlights
it
with
kind
of
like
that
orange
treatment.
If
I
switch
over
to
the
list
view,
it's
doing
the
same
thing
for
me,
one
of
the
things
I
think
would
be
nice
to
get
feedback
on
here.
Is
that,
typically,
when
we've
been
in
a
list
view-
and
we
do
kind
of
like
this-
find
flash
search
type
of
capability
instead
of
doing
a
highlight-
we've
been
limiting
what
you
show
and
only
show
the
matches.
B
B
So,
let's
see
I'm
going
to
clear
that
now,
I'm
going
to
go
back
over
to
topology
again
and
now,
I'm
just
going
to
really
quickly
show
that
we
do
have
a
couple
of
different
modes.
I
would
say
in
in
in
topology
overall
this
kind
of
basic
mode
that
we
start
with
is
if
you
hit
display
options,
we
have
show
groups
right
so,
when
you're
showing
groups,
it's
kind
of
showing
the
composition
of
your
application,
both
on
how
it's
managed
and
how
it's
connected.
B
So
I'm
going
to
give
the
example
like
I
know
that
service
binding
right
now
is
not
working
for
us,
but
if
I
create
a
couple
of
visual
connectors
at
least
what
you'll
see
here
like
pretend
some
of
these
are
service
binding,
connectors
as
well
right
where
I'm
able
to
show
I'm
able
to
show
how
things
are
connected.
B
B
B
So
again
now
you
can
see
right.
I've
got
a
visual
connector
here.
I've
got
a
sync
connector
here.
When
I
have
my
my
mode
is
showing
groups,
I
see
all
those
connections
and
I
and
I'm
seeing
everything
as
as
they're
connected
to
each
other.
So
the
revision
is
part
of
the
k-native
service.
B
I'm
going
to
zoom
back
out
a
little
bit
and
I
can
see
that
things
are
inside
of
my
application.
If
I
wanted
to
shut
groups
off,
what
I'm
going
to
be
able
to
do,
is
I'm
going
to
be
able
to
focus
on
the
components
consuming
resources
not
necessarily
around
how
the
application
is
all
connected.
B
I'm
able
to
see
everything
flat
in
all
the
resources
that
are
components,
consuming
resources
and
again,
if
I
switch
back
over
to
show
groups
what
you'll
see
here
is
that
things
are
now
kind
of
grouped
by
part
of
a
k-native
service
or
I'm
part
of
a
helm
release.
So
there's
there's
quite
a
lot
of
difference
between
those
two
modes
and
we
are
expecting
that
you
might
utilize
the
two
the
two
modes
differently,
based
on
what
your
use
cases
are.
B
A
C
B
Super
cool:
I
love
the
toggle
button
being
able.
B
C
Super
useful
I
hadn't
seen
that
before
so
that
was
super
impressive
and
I
have
attended
meetings
from
the
future
so
hey.
I
have
seen
this
previews
of
the
filtering
before,
but
this.
B
C
Super
super
useful
when
you're
trying
to
conceptualize
all
the
differences
between
all
these
different
resources
that
are
floating
around
in
the
kubernetes
space,
that
you're
trying
to
conceptualize
all
in
your
head.
And
you
have
things
like
application
groupings
and
helm
releases
and
serverless
tecton-backed
things
and
and.
B
C
It's
almost
hard
to
know
where
to
go
or
what
to
focus
on,
and
this
set
of
filtering
gives
me
the
way
to
if
my
particular
shop
is,
is
really
keen
on
using
tecton,
because
that's
how
they
are
currently
deriving
their
productivity
or,
if
they're,
really
keen
on
serverless
or
if
they're,
really
keen
on
operator
back
or
helm
charts
any
of
the
above,
I
can
make
filters
to
stay
focused,
but
still
play
around
with
the
other
ways
of
finding
productivity
and
hopefully
discover
something,
that's
optimal
for
my
use
cases
and,
and
something
that's
easy
for
me
to
recommend
to
other
folks
on
the
team.
C
So
I
I
love
the
new
filters
and
ability
to
to
help
focus
my
attention
as
I'm
trying
to
keep
all
of
this
in
my
brain.
So
that's
really
great
thanks
for
showing
this
awesome.
B
Glad
to
hear
that
yeah
and
there's
a
couple
other
things
too.
Let
me
just
show
you
so
don't
forget
about
the
application
selector
right
in
that
secondary
bar,
so
I
can
always
say:
hey.
I'm
really
only
concerned
with
django
this
django
application,
so
I
can
select
that
there,
so
I'm
just
able
to
focus
on
that.
B
It
looks
like
we're
doing
the
same
thing.
Yes,
it's
only
showing
me
the
things
in
django
x.
So
that's
great.
Now
I'm
going
to
go
back
to
all
applications
and
the
other
feature
that
I
forgot
to
show
you
guys
is
underneath
that
display
options.
We
do
have
this
expand
capability
right,
so
I
can
say
I
want
to
collapse
everything,
and
what
this
is
going
to
do
is
show
me
like
a
summary
of
all
of
the
the
groupings
that
I
have
so
I
have
a
sample
app.
B
I
have
an
application
called
sample
app
with
two
deployments.
I
have
another
application
with
a
k
native
service
and
two
deployments,
and
then
I
have
a
standalone,
helm,
release
and
a
standalone
operator
back
service,
and
those
are
the
contents
of
it
which
is
kind
of
cool.
So
again,
there's
different
levels
of
I
can
say:
oh
expand
everything
again,
but
just
collapse,
k98
of
service,
my
k
native
services.
B
That
might
not
be
as
important
when
you
only
have
a
single
revision.
But
if
you
got
a
bunch
of
revisions,
it
might
be
kind
of
nice
to
see
that
collapse
at
times,
but
those
are
some
of
the
other
features
and
now
don't
forget
if
I
collapse
things
here
and
pop
back
over
to
the
list
view,
you'll
also
see
that
I've
got
that
collapsed
here
as
well.
So
I
can
see
this
application
has
two
deployments
in
a
k,
native
service,
etc.
A
A
A
B
C
Yeah,
that's
that's
if
you
want
the
builds
to
be
run
on
the
cluster.
B
C
A
great
way
to
get
it
done
another
way
to
get
it
done.
You
could
start
using
something
like
odo
if
you
have
a
local
repo
or
a
thick
ide.
That's
on
your
laptop
that
that
is
really
critical
to
your
productivity.
C
You
could
sometimes
use
ide
plugins
in
order
to
push
your
jar
files
or
your
files
or
what
what
not
your
binary
artifacts.
So
we
definitely
have
workflows
for
that
as
well,
but
I
think,
by
default,
you're
going
to
get
a
kind
of
build
from
get
built
from
a
git
repo
and
do
the
build
on
the
cluster
is,
is
usually
our
default
for
java
from.
B
Inside
the
console,
yeah
yeah
and
I
think,
like
I
think
it
was
about
a
month
ago
that
we
had
mohit.
I
had
done
some
of
the
demos
with
the
ide
plugins
and
that
might
not
be
another.
We
might
want
to
have
him
come
on
again
because
I
think
there's
a
lot
more
functionality
that
exists
that
he
didn't
show
that
day
as
well.
We
might
want
to
have
a
follow-on
yeah
in
conjunction
with
odo,
too.
A
It
might
just
be
a
good
idea
just
from
like
a
feature
perspective
right,
like
yeah,
what
we've
added
on
so
steve
kind
of
dropped,
a
softball
and
chat
here
for
you,
serena
quick,
starts,
can't
be
customized
yet
as
far
as
hiding
them
and
unhiding
them
as
playing
four
six,
but
that
is
almost
number
one
on
the
list
to
do
next,
maybe
serena
has
more
info.
B
Yes,
maybe
serena
has
more
info,
yes,
okay,
so
right,
like
I
mentioned
before
as
planned
at
this
moment,
we
think
that
what
is
coming
in
4.6
will
be
shipped
with
the
console
and
there
will
be
no
no
way.
A
A
Yeah,
so
stewart
wanted
the
ability
to
like
have
it
in
training
clusters
and
not
have
it
in
other
clusters,
which
is
which
I
thought
was
an
interesting
concept
right,
like
yeah.
B
That's
a
great
thing:
yeah,
that's
a
good
suggestion.
I
don't
know
that
we
have
that
feature
flag
set
for
46,
but
that's
something
that
we
can
bring
back
and
see
if
there's
a
way
that
we
might
be
able
to
do
that.
I
do
know
post
4.6.
There
are
like
I
mentioned
earlier.
There
are
ways
that
we're
talking
about.
B
How
do
we
contribute
additional
ones?
How
can
you
not
show
others
the
other
thing
right
now
for
4.6
in
this
in
this
build
environment
today,
even
as
a
developer,
I'm
also
going
to
see
the
ones
that
are
that
are
about
operator
installs
and
we're
trying
to
figure
out
if
there's
a
way
that
we
can
hide
those
ones.
B
So
if
you
don't
have
access
to
operator
hub,
let's
try
not
to
show
them
inside
the
console,
and
I
know
that
in
or
I
think
in
post
four
seven
that
will
be
all
taken
care
of
the
question
is:
can
we
get
that
taken
care
of
in
serena's,
4.6
future.
A
B
B
Exactly
exactly
yeah,
okay,
sorry.
A
Go
ahead.
No,
please
do
there's
some
questions
about
corcus
that
we're
handling
so
yeah.
B
Okay,
cool
all
right,
there's
just
a
couple
of
other
things
that
I
did
want
to
show.
Let's
see
if
I'm
gonna
be
able
to
find
it.
B
B
I'll
be
able
to
do
it
all
right,
so
instead,
what
I'm
going
to
do
is
this:
if
this
is
a
question
for
people
on
watching,
but
if
nobody
is
able
to
answer,
maybe
we
could
just
talk
through
it
between
the
two
of
us,
the
three
of
us
rather,
which
is
if
I
was
to
share
a
url
of
the
topology
view
with
a
co-worker.
B
Would
you
assume
that
it
would
automatically
show
up
in
context
of
the
developer
console?
So
let
me
so
let
me
show
you
what
happens
so.
D
B
I
am
copying
this
url.
What
happens
is
with
our
urls.
We
do
not
show
which
perspective
you
are
in,
so
we
don't
save
that
data
inside
the
url
or
it's
not
part
of
the
url
today.
So
if
I
I
just
copied
that
right.
So
if
I
come
over
here
and
I
go
to
admin
and
I'm
like,
oh
I'm
going
to
go,
look
at
the
explore
view,
and
now
I'm
just
going
to
go
back
and
I'm
going
to
paste
that
url.
B
I
will
see
topology,
but
it's
in
it's
in
context
of
the
administrator
perspective,
because
that
was
the
perspective
I
had
set
when
I
put
the
new
link
in.
So
it's
really
important,
I
think,
for
us
to
try
to
understand
from
users
and
advocates
on
what
the
expectations
would
be
from
when
sharing
urls.
B
And
would
you
expect
that
if
you
took
a
link
from
topology
when
you're
in
developer
perspective,
if
you
shared
that
with
somebody,
they
would
be
brought
to
the
appropriate
perspective
as
well.
So
I
don't
know
if
you
guys
have
opinions
on
that
or
pros
or
cons
if
we
took
one
approach
or
the
other,
but
might
be
kind
of
interesting
to
chat
about.
C
B
C
I
would
love
that
sharing
of
urls
to
be
something
that's
easily
done.
I
know
it
seems
to
me,
like
that
use
case,
isn't
necessarily
something
that
generally
works
for
most
people
in
the
kubernetes
world.
A
lot
of
folks
all
have
their
own
cluster
and
aren't
sharing
clusters
with
other
teammates.
So.
B
C
Kind
of
a
unique
thing
to
open
shift
clusters
a
bit
that
you
would
even
expect
to
have
the
same
project
or
access
to
a
shared
project.
But
I
love
the
idea.
I
would
probably
add
a
query
string
element
like
james
castle
said
fragment,
so
you
could
do
question
mark
view
equals
top
for
topology
view
something
like
that.
That's
a
minor
part
of
the
url
that
yeah
that'd
be
my
my
take
on
it.
But
yeah.
B
Gotcha,
okay,
all
right,
that's
good!
To
know!
Thanks
for
your
input
there,
with
that,
I'm
trying
to
think
I
don't
think
we
have
a
ton
more
for
me
to
be
able
to
show
today.
B
I
think
in
two
weeks,
I'm
hoping
that
we
can
do
this
service
binding
piece
and
also
we've
been
working
on
a
new
get
ops
view
which
is
kind
of
a
dev
preview
of
some
of
the
getups
work
that
we're
looking
at
for
four
six
slash
future
and
if
the
system
is
willing,
we'll
definitely
be
bringing
on
some
a
couple
of
our
developers
to
help
share
share
where
that's
going.
B
So
I
guess
I'm
gonna,
I'm
gonna
step
back
again
and
thank
my
the
the
ui
development
team,
specifically
jay
and
vikram
and
rohit
for
getting
this
system
ready
for
me,
because
about
an
hour
and
a
half
ago
we
didn't
have
much
to
demo
on
so.
C
B
For
the
applause,
I
feel
like
I'm
at
a
red
sox
game
with
nobody
in
the.
D
C
B
A
B
C
At
80
folks,
currently
according
to
to
twitch
so.
B
C
You
all
in
the
audience,
definitely
for
bringing
your
questions
and
your
energy,
and
we
will
be
we
plan
on
being
here
every
week
at
11
a.m.
So
come
back
with
further
questions
topics,
if
there's
other
things
that
you
want
to
see
on
the
stream,
let
us
know
throw
it
in
chat.
Serena's
got
some
feedback
forms
that
we'd
love
to
get
your
perspective
on
things,
yeah
yeah,.
B
B
You
know
this
office
hour
continues
to
be
helpful
and
it's
as
well
like
the
more
feedback
we
get
from
you,
the
better
off
our
products
going
to
be-
and
I
know
with
without
the
ability
for
you
guys
to
be
able
to
talk
to
us-
it's
a
little
bit
more
difficult,
but
utilizing
chat
and
the
surveys
and
well
this
online
form.
But
I
think
chris,
we
might
have
a
goal
to
try
to
have
a
live
survey
next
time
right
that.
A
Is
the
goal
so
yeah?
I
just
I
just
mentioned
in
our
streaming
slack
channel
that
some
of
the
polling,
the
polling
features
and
twitch
are
a
little
lackluster,
not
lackluster,
limited
I'll,
just
say
right,
like
there's
text
limitations
and
some
time
limitations
I
don't
necessarily
like.
A
So
there
are
third-party
services
out
there,
we'll
get
some
polling
and
some
surveys
stuff
going
just
give
me
the
right
amount
of
time
to
find
it
we'll
get
it
going,
but
we
can
run
some
really
simple
polls
right
now
with
twitch
no
problem,
but
I
would,
I
would
want
a
little
bit
more
like
the
time
limit
is
only
10
minutes
right,
like
I'd,
want
to
run
multiple
polls
like
potentially
throughout
the
entire
stream
right,
like
so.
B
A
Some
kind
of
external
tool
to
do
that
would
be
cool
so
yeah,
that's
just
my
thing,
so
yeah.
Thank
you.
Everybody
for
joining
us
come
back
at
the
top
of
the
hour
for
openshift
commons
briefing.
We
will
be
having
devops
at
the
speed
of
architecture
with
eric
minnick
and
a
few
other
folks
from
ibm
and
red
hat,
including
the
one
and
only
brian
gracely
friend,
of
mine,
from
red
hat,
so
yeah
that'll
be
fun.
So
yeah
come
back
in
about
seven
minutes
and
we'll
see
you
then
thank
you.
Serena.