►
From YouTube: What is OKD? Charro Gruver (Red Hat)
Description
2021-03-20
Narrator: Charro Gruver (Red Hat)
from OKD Working Group's OKD Testing and Deployment Workshop
https://www.okd.io/blog/2021/03/16/save-the-date-okd-testing-deployment-workshop.html
http://okd.io
A
Well,
thank
you,
everybody
for
joining
us
today
and
good
morning,
good
afternoon
and
good
evening,
wherever
you
are
in
the
world.
Welcome
to
the
testing
and
deployment
workshop,
I'm
going
to
give
you
a
quick
overview
of
okd
we're
gonna
start
with
an
overview
talk
a
little
bit
about
where
we
are
current
state
of
okd
spend
a
little
bit
of
time
talking
about
operators
in
the
operator
hub
and
then
finally,
leave
you
with
a
whole
bunch
of
links
and
references
so
for
how
you
can
get
in
contact
with
us
so
okd.
A
What
is
it?
It
is
a
community
distribution
of
kubernetes,
but
it's
actually
more
than
that.
It's
a
community
distribution
of
kubernetes
that
is
actually
built
off
of
the
openshift
code
base.
So
it's
it
is
the
same
code
that
you
are
running
in
your
data
center
or
on
your
cloud
provider.
If
you
are
a
red
hat,
openshift
subscriber
this
code
base
is
what
we
build
okd
from
with,
with
very
little,
if
any
variation.
A
The
only
variation
really
is
the
fact
that,
rather
than
running
on
the
red
hat
core
os
we're
running
on
the
upstream
of
red
hat
core
os,
which
is
the
fedora
core
os,
so
you've
got
the
open
shift
code
base
with
fedora
core
os
as
the
underlying
operating
system,
and
as
diane
mentioned
earlier,
you
can
reach
us
at
okd,
dot,
io
to
find
documentation
reference,
materials
and
code
ready
containers
built
from
okd,
which
I'll
talk
about
here
in
just
a
minute.
A
The
the
whole
premise
behind
openshift,
as
sort
of
a
kubernetes
plus
distribution,
is
that
automation
is
king
automation
for
installation,
automation
for
patching
and
updates
and
automation
for
resiliency
and
recovery
in
your
data
center
or
your
cloud
platform.
A
The
like
any
other
kubernetes
distribution,
its
heart
and
soul,
is
really
the
orchestration
of
applications
and
services
that
provide
value
for
your
business
or
your
organization
underlying
that
is
base
kubernetes
the
the
platform,
the
cluster
management,
the
security,
the
monitoring
embedded
registry.
A
Everything
that
you
expect
from
from
a
kubernetes
distribution,
a
a
twist
of
additional
automation
provided
by
the
the
open
shift
plus
plus,
as
I
mentioned
fedora
core
os-
is
the
underlying
operating
system
on
which
the
whole
thing
is
built
and
fedora
core
os
itself
brings
a
lot
of
what
provides
the
automation
and
the
resiliency
to
okd
as
a
kubernetes
distribution.
A
You
can
run
this
on
just
about
any
platform.
You
can
imagine
we're
not
quite
to
arm
64,
but
you
can
bet
there
are
people
who
care
about
arm
64
and
would
love
to
see
this
thing
running
on
the
edge.
So
right
now
all
of
the
major
cloud
platforms,
amazon,
web
services,
microsoft,
azure,
gcp,
the
google
cloud
platform-
you
can
run
this
on
openstack,
you
can
run
it
on
overt
and,
as
some
folks
are
going
to
demonstrate
today,
you
can
run
it
on
vmware
and
bare
metal.
A
A
A
There
are
quite
a
number
of
bespoke
operators
that
are
now
available
for
okd
to
provide
all
kinds
of
value.
Add
for
your
clusters
and
one
of
the
things
that
this
platform
really
allows
you
to
do
outside
of,
like
a
subscription-based
open
shift
is
enabling
early
adoption
of
upcoming
technologies,
especially
with
the
underlying
fedora
core
os.
You
get
a
preview
of
of
what's
coming
down
the
road
which
sometimes
can
bring
a
extra
level
of
excitement,
but
always
brings
an
extra
level
of
functionality
that
you
can
take
advantage
of
and
we've
also
just
recently.
A
I
was
probably
six
months
ago:
I'm
I
believe
it
was
this
summer
we
we
got
code,
ready
containers
finally
released
for
okd4
code.
Ready
containers
for
okd
is
based
on
the
code
ready
containers
code
base
for
openshift.
So
so,
just
like
everything
else
that
we
do
with
red
hat,
it's
all
open
source.
It
all
accepts
community
contributions.
A
It
enables
you
to
run
a
single
node,
openshift
cluster,
on
your
laptop
or
workstation.
So
it
gives
you
all,
the
goodness
that
you
get
with
an
okd4
cluster
and
fedora
core
os
on
your
local
workstation.
You
just
have
to
add
your
code.
One
quick
note
on
that.
The
the
code
ready
containers
release
that
is
currently
hanging
off
of
our
okd.io
site
is
still
built
on
4.6.
A
So
those
of
you
who
are
watching
us
live
look
for
the
4.7
of
code,
ready
containers
to
to
be
available
here
within
the
next
week
or
two,
hopefully
within
the
next
couple
of
days,
but
deem-
and
I
are
working
on
a
couple
of
things
that
that
we
got
to
get
in
place
so
that
the
build
will
run
off
of
some
fairly
significant
changes
to
the
underlying
fedora
core
os
and
a
couple
of
the
operators
that
we
need
to
update
the
the
code
base
to
support
crc.
So
look
for
that
to
come
very
soon.
A
A
So
operators
are
like
a
a
bundled
system
administrator
that
is
always
with
you
always
watching
the
application
and
ensuring
that
it
continues
to
run.
The
core
of
okd
is
built
on
operators,
so
everything
that
provides
the
functionality
from
etsy
d
up
is
is
controlled
by
operators,
but
operators
also
bring
value
adds.
So
if
you
need
rook
ceph
as
a
storage,
provisioner
well,
there's
an
operator
for
that.
Your
internal
image
registry
is
an
operator.
A
If
you
need
a
kafka
cluster,
there's
a
strimzy
operator.
If
you
need
a
service
mesh.
Well,
there's
an
operator
for
that
too.
So
operators
are
a
way
to
bundle
the
capabilities
that
give
your
applications
the
the
added
richness,
resiliency
and
capability
that
you
need
so
that,
as
a
provider
of
software
solutions,
all
you
have
to
focus
on
is
your
code
and
let
the
operator
take
care
of
everything
else.
A
The
operator
hub
is
where
you
can
go
to
to
retrieve
these
and
install
them
into
your
local
cluster.
When
you
have
a
cluster
up
and
running
the
operator
hub
will
be
there
and
from
the
console
you
can
navigate
to
the
operator
hub
and
go
shopping.
When
you
stand
up
in
okd
for
cluster,
all
of
the
operators
that
are
available,
you
will
be
able
to
install
free
of
charge.
There
are
not
subscription
based
operators
in
there.
A
They
will
be
the
community
supported
versions
of
the
operators
that
you
would
see
if
you
had
a
subscription-based
open
shift
cluster.
So
if
you
need
grafana
or
strimzy
or
service
mesh
with
istio,
they
will
all
be
there
and
installable
from
the
operator
hub.
Now,
another
quick
caveat
on
that.
We,
we
are
still
working
with
several
of
the
the
operator
providers
to
ensure
that
the
community
version
of
the
operator
is
available
in
operator
hub.
A
So
some
of
them
you
do
still
have
to
go
to
the
the
github
repo
or
wherever
the
operator
lives,
to
get
the
installation
materials
for
it.
But
as
we
continue
to
evolve
this
ecosystem,
more
and
more
of
those
operators
will
be
there
and
when
you
get
your
cluster
up
and
running,
you'll
see
that
there's
already
a
very,
very
rich
set
of
operators
available.