►
From YouTube: Lighting Talk: Meet Sysdig
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
Hi,
my
name
is
Tony
I'm,
a
sales
engineer
at
Cystic,
so
I'd
like
you
to
meet
Cystic
today,
really
happy
to
be
here
at
OpenShift,
Commons
really
happy
to
have
sponsored
the
event
really
great,
to
see
all
of
you
and
to
share
the
stage
with
some
of
the
great
people
we've
had
talking
already
this
morning
and
some
of
the
panels
that
will
happen
this
afternoon.
If
you're
interested
in
assisting
I
know,
there's
some
folks
of
Commons
material.
A
We've
done
some
talks
previously
on
chef
Commons
that
Dianna's
put
up
on
the
website,
so
that
might
be
a
good
place
to
start
looking
if
you're
interested.
So
what
we're
building
at
systick
is
what
we
like
to
call
a
container
intelligence
platform.
So
containers,
especially
running
at
scale,
can
be
difficult
to
manage.
There's
the
traditional
tools
you
might
have
used
previously
for
hosts
and
VMs.
A
Don't
really
work
too
well
in
that
world
of
microservices
and
containers,
so
we're
building
a
platform
which
does
monitoring
security
enforcement
at
runtime
and
also
deep
inspection
and
analysis
for
forensics,
and
also
for
troubleshooting
issues
that
you
might
see
in
your
containers.
So
that's
the
three
legs
of
our
current
platform:
it's
all
driven
by
a
single
introspection
agent
that
runs
in
the
kernel
a
little
bit
about
the
company,
assisting
where
SAN
francisco-based
we
were
our
founder
and
current
CEO
is
Louis
de
Gianni.
A
He
he
was
the
co-creator
of
Wireshark,
which
some
of
you
in
the
room
may
have
used
and
if
you
think
about
what
Wireshark
does
with
TCP
dumps,
we
like
to
think
that
we're
doing
the
similar
sort
of
thing
with
cystic
around
system
calls.
So
we
can
collect
a
whole
lot
of
information
and
then
present
that
to
you
in
an
easy
to
use
and
easy
to
consume
format.
A
It's
open
source
in
the
core,
so
core
I
guess
is
rare.
Describe
it,
the
kernel
module
is
open
source
and
some
of
the
tools
are
open
source
and
we
have
commercial
products
that
build
on
top
of
that.
I've
got
about
300
enterprise
customers
today
and
we
partner
with
lots
of
people
in
the
container
ecosystem.
A
Obviously
Red,
Hat
and
OpenShift
I
won't
say
the
D
word,
Kuban
80s
Jesus
we'd
still
see
some
users
and
AWS
as
well.
So
we
partnered
with
anybody
really.
Okay,
so
what
we've
got?
If
you
think
about
the
two
layers,
we've
got
an
open
source
set
of
components
and
then
some
commercial
tools,
commercially
licensed
tools
that
we
build
on
top
open
source,
Cystic
command
line
and
a
curse
is
interface
for
cystic
the
capture
file.
Libraries.
All
of
those
things
are
open
source.
We
welcome
contributions.
A
A
So
if
your
instrumented,
you
coded
stats,
D
or
Prometheus
JMX,
whatever
we
can
ingest
that
automatically
with
zero
configuration,
changes,
iroko
changes
because
we
sit
at
the
system
call
level,
and
so
that's
our
monitoring
product
and
our
Cystic
secure
product
is
all
about
runtime
enforcement
of
policy
on
your
running
containers
and
again
you
want
to
see
a
demo
of
that.
Please
come
downstairs
and
take
a
look.
A
You
don't
want
to
be
talking
about
individual
containers
on
an
individual
hosts
and
all
of
that
information
is
pulled
from
the
api's
of
your
Orchestrator
and
we
use
that
to
construct
our
monitor
product
so
that
it's
very
rich
in
terms
of
what
you
can
see
that
all
inform,
assisting
you
can
deploy
or
on
premise
and
the
three
the
three
things
that
this
idea
of
secure
the
security
monitor
for
monitoring
and
inspect
for
troubleshooting.
Please
come
downstairs.
We've
got
t-shirts
and
modeling
and
also
a
Star
Wars
drone,
which
apparently
will
excite
people
thanks
very
much.