►
From YouTube: OKD Community Development Meeting 06-27-2023
Description
The OKD Working Group's purpose is to discuss, give guidance to, and enable collaboration on current development efforts for OKD, Kubernetes, and related CNCF projects. The OKD Working Group includes the discussion of shared community goals for OKD 4 and beyond. Additionally, the Working Group produces supporting materials and best practices for end-users and provides guidance and coordination for CNCF projects working within the SIG's scope.
https://okd.io
A
B
Folks
to
the
okd
Community
Development
meeting
for
June
27th
of
2023
and
we're
going
to
start
out
by
getting
on
the
planning
board
and
see
what
we
can
we
can
tackle
here.
So
Brian
is
out
this
week.
I
see
that
in
new
we
still
have
the
review
and
refresh
home
landing
page,
so
that
has
been
placed
yet
Brian
still
hasn't
backlog
move
guides
to
blog
posts.
My
tecton
document
is
still
in
backlog.
I
haven't
had
a
chance
to
revisit
that
the
past
couple
weeks
but
hope
to
we
haven't.
B
Had
anyone
reach
out
to
us
about
video
content,
yet
Mike
I
didn't
want
to
one
thing
that
had
at
the
last
meeting
at
the
at
the
regular
meeting
last
week
that
I
wanted
to
bring
up
to.
You
is
so
the
idea
of
a
session
well
three
sessions
on
basically
the
fundamentals
of
a
cluster
install
and
bringing
up
a
cluster
in
the
sense
of
a
session
on
F
costs
and
and
that's
cause
and
and
how
those
get
tweaked
during
installation.
B
Then
the
machine
config
operator
a
session
on
that
and
then
a
session
on
looking
at,
must
gathers
to
understand
where
those
processes
fail
and
you
had
talked
before
about
must
gather
and
whatnot,
and
so
we
we
had
a
conversation
last
week
where
it's
it
we
landed
on
it.
It
sounded
like
it
might
be
helpful
if
we
did
machine
config
operator
and
F
costs
in
in,
like
an
hour
like
a
half
an
hour
for
one
half
an
hour
for
the
other.
A
Mean
I
think
no
I
think
that's
probably
good,
like
third
I
mean
I,
think
keeping
the
videos
to
30
minutes
or
less
was
kind
of
Ideal
anyways
and
yeah.
Like
you
know,
I
guess
it
really
depends
on
what
you're
getting
into
the
F
cause.
One
might
be
even
shorter
than
that,
because
I'm
not
I'm,
just
not
sure
how
much
you
know
there
is
to
cover
topically.
The
machine
config
operator
can
be
a
very
deep
topic,
depending
on
what
you
want
to
get
into
with
it.
A
I
mean
I,
think
from
a
user
perspective
or
even
from
a
kind
of
an
administrator
or
operator
perspective,
there's
probably
a
good
30-minute
video
covering
like
how
to
create
machine
configs
and
exactly
what
the
machine
config
operator
does
and
how
you
could
use
it
to
customize
the
deployment
of,
like
you,
know
the
kubelet,
or
something
like
that
on
a
on
a
node
so
and
probably
just
covering
generally
like
what?
What
does
the
machine
config
operator?
Do?
A
That's
probably
like
a
good
30
minutes
on
its
own,
but
if
you
started
to
really
get
into
the
deeper
behaviors
of
the
MCO
and
like
you
know
what
you
can
do
with
it,
that
would
I
mean
there's
probably
an
advanced
30
minutes.
You
could
do
as
well.
Okay,
Amy
Amy
as
our
end
up.
C
Yeah
I
used
to
teach
online
shorter
videos
the
better
you
here
so
you'd
be
better
off
splitting
that
15
minute
a
30
minute
video
into
two
15s,
for
example,
because
people
aren't
going
to
watch
30
minutes.
D
Yeah
a
question
Mike
I'm,
going
through
a
knowledge
base
thing
on,
you
know,
failed
to
update
during
upgrade
and
it
talks
about
the
this
is
an
ocp
one.
Okay,
it
talks
about
the
SOS
report,
which
I'd
never
heard
of
before.
Is
that
something
that's
only
useful
for
preparing
issues
for
support
or
what
is
that.
A
Yeah
I
am
not
an
expert
on
we.
We
just
call
them
sauce
reports,
I'm,
not
an
expert
on
that,
but
I
think
that
is
actually
tied
to
Rel.
That's
like
those
are
the
artifacts
that
we
generate
when
there's
like
problems
that
people
are
trying
to
bring
support
cases
for
we'll
have
them
run
the
like
sauce
reporting
tool
to
generate
those
things
so
I
think
that's
Rel,
specific
I,
don't
think
there's
any
I,
don't
think
there's
an
equivalent
in
Fedora
core
OS
I'm,
not
sure
about
the
Centos
streams.
Part
though.
B
Yeah
it's
it
comes
from
a
tool
like
a
container
image
that
gets
downloaded
and
I
actually
just
use
it
for
an
open
shift
for
nocp
cluster
on
the
other
day,
and
it
it
does
look
like
it's.
The
tooling
is
specific
to
ocp
and
it
asks
you
even
for
your
bug
report
number
to
pair
with
the
report
and
stuff
like
that.
So
I
think
we
wouldn't
be
able
to
use
it
because
there's
it
asks
for
information
that
obviously
people
wouldn't
have
if
they
were
doing
it
on
okd.
B
B
I
got
it
for
you
all
right,
so
does
that
so
does
it
make
sense,
then
folks
to
do
like
a
a
15
minute
core
OS
like
how
does
core
OS
get
tweaked
on
installation?
Then
50
then
like
two
15
minutes
of
machine
config
operator,
the
first
15
minute,
one
being.
A
A
You
know
the
deployment
and
creation
of
like
some
of
the
low-level
objects
that
go
on
the
machines
and
then
from
the
Fedora
or
from
the
core
OS
side.
Probably
what
you're
looking
at
is
like
a
15
minute
video
about
like
how
does
core
OS
work
with
respect
to
ignition
right,
because
that's
like
the
main,
the
main
way
that
you're
going
to
be
doing
anything
with
it
right.
A
So
that's
probably
the
first
entry
level
to
do
and
then
with
respect
to
the
other
ones,
like
the
must-gather
video
I'd,
put
together
a
kind
of
a
storyboard
for
what
I
wanted
to
talk
about,
but
like
going
with
Amy's
suggestion
splitting
that
down
into
like
even
a
15
minute,
video
might
be
even
easier
and
then
you
know,
could
just
really
attack
like
a
couple
key
points
of
what's
going
on
there.
So
you
know
yeah
now.
B
The
question
then,
is:
do
we
want
these
to
be
prepared
videos,
or
do
we
want
to
have
events
where
we
invite
people,
and
you
record
and
ask
questions
like?
Do
you
want
to
spend
your
time
to
focus
on
spend
their
time
on
their
own
doing
it,
or
should
we
make
this
like
a
group
effort
for
the
videos,
but
what's
the
Thought
on
that.
A
I
mean
my
feeling
is:
I
want
to
do
prepared,
videos
to
share,
but
I
think
if
we
get
into
like
a
live
streaming
type
situation
where
you
have
like
content
going
back
and
forth.
That
almost
sounds
more
like
you
know
that
almost
sounds
more
like
an
event
of
some
sort
right
where
it's
like:
okay,
we're
gonna
get
together,
we'll
have
a
presentation
and
then
we'll
have
like
this
q
a
session
or
whatever
I.
You
know,
I,
don't
know
how
that
goes
over,
but
that
would
you
know
that's
also
kind
of
an
interesting
topic.
I.
B
And
Amy
said,
and
I
can
edit
videos
if
needed,
yeah
both
of
us
can
edit
videos
so
we've
got.
We've
got
good
video
editing
shops
here
amongst
this
group.
B
So
does
it
make
sense,
then,
to
have
these
basic
videos
and
then,
if
there
seems
like
there's
interest
on
top
of
them
do
live
event
because
I
I,
my
sense
is
that
time
is
probably
hard
to
find
for
the
core
OS
folks
to
do
like
a
live
thing
that
we
would
probably
get
have
more
luck.
If
we
said
to
you
know
any
one
of
them:
hey.
Can
you
do
a
15-minute
recording
as
opposed
to
hey?
Can
you
set
aside,
you
know
half
an
hour
or
an
hour
on
this
specific
date
or
whatever?
B
So
that's
that
would
be
my
reading
of
things
from
the
core
OS
side
and,
like
you
said
you
sort
of
prefer
to
do.
You
know
planned
recordings.
I,
don't
know
what
do
other
folks
think.
D
Yeah
I
think
planned
recording
sounds
like
a
good
way
to
start.
It's
definitely
easier
for
to
organize,
since
you'll
only
have
to
organize
one
person,
yeah
and
I
think
that
some
of
the
topics
that
Mike
is
saying
would
be
really
good
to.
You
know
basically
stick
links
to
them
somewhere,
so
that
people
can
find
them,
because
I
think
we
still
have
an
issue
of
people
coming
in
and
finding
things
in
the
you
know.
Vast
Multiverse
is
okay,
D
yeah.
B
Yeah
and
for
context
for
folks
that
are
watching
this
video
reason
that
this
came
up
is
well.
We
want
to
share
sort
of
what
okd
is
and
whatnot,
but
more
specifically,
training
people
to
provide
support
in
the
community
by
understanding
these
things
at
a
deeper
level,
so
that
people
aren't
always
tagging
Vadim
for
support
questions
and
and
that
other
team
other
community
members
can
participate
in
supporting
okd
out
in
the
world
or
not
supporting.
B
But
you
know
providing
help
out
in
the
world
and
answering
questions
so
that
Vadim
isn't
the
sole
source
of
knowledge
and
assistance
in
the
okd
community
and
so
covering
those
three
aspects
seems
like
the
way
to
start.
You
know
because
once
folks
understand
how
quarter
West
goes
and
the
Anderson
held
machine
config
operator
goes
in
that
initial
process
and
then
know
how
to
dig
through
a
must
gather
efficiently
to
get
through.
All
of
the
then
I
think
that
that's
a
good
foundation
for
helping
folks
troubleshoot.
B
All
right
so
I
guess
the
next
question
would
be
Mike.
When,
when
do
you
think
you
might
be
able
to
get
something
together
for
for
an
initial
machine,
MCO
video.
A
Well,
I,
don't
know
if
I'm
the
best
person
for
MCU,
like
I,
was
gonna
plan
on
doing
the
musky
other
one,
hopefully
sometime
in
the
next
month,
I
could
get
the
first
one
of
those
out
who
do
you
think
would
be
good
for
MCO.
That's
a
good
question.
I
mean
I,
know
a
couple
red
Hatters
internally
who
work
on
the
MCO,
but
I.
B
B
That
sounds
good
at
least
an
initial
one
and
then
I'll
reach
out
to
I
said
last
week,
I
was
going
to
reach
out
to
to
you
Mike
and
then
Timothy
and
the
demon
Christian,
so
I
think
now
I'll
reach
out
to
Timothy
and
see
if
he
can
do
like
a
15
minute
core
OS
like
but
I,
think
we
need
to
have
for
the
coral
West
part
I
think
we
need
to
have
Vadim
as
well
or
maybe
have
Vadim
do
the
core
OS
tweaks
part,
because
it's
really
okd
does
some
very
specific,
unique
stuff
in
terms
of
replacing
the
core
OS
version
with
a
okd,
specifically
tweet
version,
and
that's
really
the
where
we
need
to
to
narrow
in
on.
B
So
it
might
be
good
to
maybe
ask
Vadim
if
he
could
do
that
so
reach
out
to
him,
but
I'll
reach
out
to
Timothy
as
well
and
see
what
he
thinks
and
then
we'll
see
if
we
can
find
amongst
all
of
our
contacts,
someone
to
do
MCO
I.
A
Mean
it
should
prop
I
mean
it
sounds
like
there's,
probably
like
two
like,
if
we're
talking,
15
minute,
videos
and
I
think
that's
probably
good
in
terms
of
keeping
like
if
we
keep
them
smaller,
we
can
probably
also
have
a
better
Cadence
of
content
like
I
would
almost
say
like
if
we
could
get
Timothy
to
do
a
video
on.
You
know
just
kind
of
like
what
is
Fedora
core
OS
like
what
does
ignition
mean?
A
A
You
know
those
are
probably
the
good
things
that
we
can
share,
but
there
is
still
going
to
come
down
to
a
point
where,
like
people
are
going
to
have
to
figure
out
like
okay,
like
something
messed
up
here
and
you're
gonna
have
to
like
unwind
this
and
figure
out
like
how
do
you
get
it?
You
know
back
on
track
or
whatever
and
I
just
think
I
just
think
it's
tough,
you
know
just
it
just
takes
experience.
You
know.
B
A
Mean
there's
a
good
idea
for
a
q,
a
discussion
kind
of
video
right
like
look
through
the
issues
that
we
have
now
and
kind
of
the
slack
logs
and
say
like?
Are
there
some
general
questions
that
have
come
up
multiple
times
or
is
there
a
question?
That's
been
answered
several
times
like
and
then
could
we
use
that
as
the
basis
for
like
a
kind
of
like
a
us
not
a
stage
but
like
a
set
up,
Ride
Along,
where
we
say
okay,
look.
A
This
is
a
question
that
we
see
people
asking
a
lot
about
how
to
configure
some
piece
or
whatever,
let's
walk
through
the
steps
of
like.
If
you
saw
this
error,
what
would
you
do
next?
You
know,
and
maybe
that's
the
kind
of
video
where
we
could.
We
could
kind
of
say,
look
we're
going
to
Prime
this
with
questions
that
we
know
are
very
relevant
and
use
that
as
the
basis
for
like
a
q,
a
kind
of
thing,
yeah
I,
like
it.
C
That
could
also
be
a
good
live
stream.
The
trouble
with
wide
streams
is
it's
great.
If
we
do
them
as
an
event
like
Hey.
Would
this
week
work?
You
know
next
Thursday
we've
decided
we're
going
to
do
a
troubleshooting
live
stream,
but
if
you
don't
have
a
regular
Cadence
on
a
show,
you
don't
get
a
lot
of
people,
but
I
think
this
could
be
something
we
could
do
as
an
event.
B
B
All
right,
let's
see
what
else
we
have
in
the
backlog
here
write
a
project
board
guidelines,
that's
in
backlog,
no
one's
taken
that
yet
update
the
installing
openshift
on
a
single
node
instructions
in
the
end
user
docs.
We
don't
that's
still
in
the
backlog.
B
Backlog
also
create
page
outline,
release
cycle
and
support
assistance.
I
started
working
on
that,
but
it's
it's
just
ideas
thrown
on
a
page,
nothing
yet
substantial
all
right.
What
do
we
have
for
ready,
investigate
available
tutorials
for
setting
up
okay
D
to
determine
if
we
have
good
options
for
people
too?
B
I
have
not
seen
any
movement
on
that,
but
really
we
just
need
to
prune
through
the
stuff
from
the
stuff
that
Mr
Branch
organized
for
us
and
he
hasn't
been.
He
wasn't
I,
don't
think
it
was
at
last
week's
meeting,
but
we
can
bring
this
up
at
the
next
meeting
to
just
say:
okay,
which
which
of
these
do,
you
think,
are
the
most
helpful
to
just
point
people
to
like
have
on
a
page
or
something
like
that.
B
What
is
okd's
section
of
getting
started?
Page
Diane
still
has
a
she
popped
into
the
last
meeting,
but
then
I
haven't
seen
her.
She
said
she
might
pop
in
today,
but
I,
don't
I,
don't
think
we're
gonna
see
her.
Maybe
we'll
have
other
folks
take
that
over.
We.
B
So
we're
talking
about
the
so
drafting
what
is
okd's
section
of
the
getting
started
page,
so
this
is
Planning
number
eight.
B
So
using
the
what
is
kubernetes
guide
and
then
we
talked
about
basically
so
Christian
chipped
in
some
ideas
two
weeks
ago.
Basically,
but
you
know
stealing
text
from
the
charter
and
also
from
the
kubernetes,
what
is
kubernetes
document?
That's
on
kubernetes
dot,
IO
and
creating
something
that
basically
is
putting
in
a
nutshell,
the
elevator
pitch
of
what
okd
is
right.
So
and
again,
that's
number,
eight
and
I
think
you.
B
B
B
I
think
I
think
we're
good,
so
yeah
we'll
if
we
need
you
we'll
drag
you
in,
but
we
just
need
a
something.
That's
like
in
a
nutshell
like
what
is
okd
and
that
isn't
like
total
Market
speak
because
that's
one
of
the
criticisms.
That's
come
out
of
the
web
pages
that
the
front
page
is
very
sort
of
markety
speaking
and
not
really
sort
of
a
core
statement
of
what
it
is.
C
A
B
Cool
then
the
next
one
that's
ready
is
Brian's
got
this
with
Christian,
which
is
creating
a
community
catalog
of
operators
for
operator
Hub.
We
had
the
work
group
meeting.
We
had
this
meeting
two
weeks
ago,
where
we
had
the
discussion
on
that,
and
that
was
super
helpful
I'll
get
the
video
up
shortly
for
folks
that
I
don't
know
folks
notice,
but
I
actually
got
like
five
videos
up
in
the
past
like
two
days
I'm
getting
through
the
backlog
of
videos.
B
So
the
one
from
two
weeks
ago
should
be
up
by
the
end
of
the
week,
and
that
was
super
helpful
for
everyone
that
wants
to
work
on
operators,
and
so
we
just
need
to
come
up
with
next
steps
for
that.
So
we'll
wait
for
Christian
and
Brian
to
get
on
the
same
page.
B
For
that
and
then
a
bunch
of
us
are
on
the
one
for
investigating
CRC
and
okd
option
from
the
red
hat
team
need
to
Ping
those
folks
again
to
find
out
how
we
can
sort
of
contribute
more
directly
to
CRC
I
haven't
gotten
a
response
from
my
last
one.
We'll
do
that
again,
Brian's
going
to
do
the
Define
community
processes
using
projects
in
git
lab,
so
the
process
for
giving
folks
access
to
start
contributing
stuff.
B
As
we
get
all
of
these
projects
going,
we
don't
have
someone
to
help
redesign
with
the
okd
homepage,
so
folks
know
anyone
with
HTML
skills
and
web
design
type
skills
and
and
putting
elements
moving
elements
around
and
stuff
like
that.
We
could
use
some
some
help
for
that
one
and
that's
a
good
sort
of
first
issue,
I
think
for
anyone
that
does
web
stuff.
So
so
in
terms
of
volunteers.
That's
we
really
need
someone
to
do
web
stuff
right
now.
B
We
do
in
that
item.
So
if
we
look
at
and
then
this
is
planning
item
number
24.,
there's
a
discussion
thread
there
where
we
started
to
get
or
we
encourage
folks
to
give
feedback.
It
doesn't
look
actually
doesn't
look
like
anyone's
given
any
feedback,
but
we
did
have
a
meeting
I
think
you
were
at
that
meeting
like
maybe
about
a
month
and
a
half
ago
where
we
talked
about
things
that
we
wanted
to
change.
B
I'll,
get
that
make
sure
that
video
is
up
and
we
need
to
codify
the
things
that
we
talked
about.
I
mean
Brian,
took
notes,
but
I
don't
know
that
he's
actually
turned
that
or
added
that
into
the
discussion
thread
there.
B
But
you
know
basically
the
stuff
from
the
meeting
from
you
know
a
month
and
a
half
ago
about
ditching
certain
elements
and
bringing
other
elements
to
the
Forefront
getting
rid
of
that
list
at
the
bottom.
That's
like
the
the
commons
participants
and
stuff
like
that.
There.
C
A
Like
because
here,
like
my
feeling
as
we're
looking
through
these
issues
on
the
board
now,
and
especially,
you
know
because
I
know
we're
talking
about
like
how
do
we
get
more
people
involved?
How
do
we
kind
of,
like
you
know,
get
things
moving
and
stuff
here,
like
I,
think
you
know
something
like
that
card.
A
The
redesigning
okd
homepage
card
I
mean
it
sounds
like
a
great
epic,
you
know,
but
if
we
were
able
to
decompose
that
card
into
you
know
a
bunch
of
sub
tasks
that
were
like,
like,
for
example,
I'll
go
with
the
last
one.
You
said
like
taking
off
the
contributors
on
the
bottom
or
something
like
that
right
and
when
you
say
this
is
a
good
first
issue
like
all.
We
just
need
someone
to
go
in
here
and
kind
of
edit
these
things
and
take
this
out.
A
B
B
We
can
move
into
doing
that
because
he
took
notes,
but
they
weren't
added
to
this
so
I'm,
not
sure
exactly
where
they
are
add.
Latest
news
section
to
the
home
page
of
okidd,
that's
sort
of
tied
to
the
to
the
redirect
one.
B
So
it's
it's
I
think
part
of
that
documentation,
thing
and
review
survey
responses,
so
I'm,
gonna,
I'm
gonna
put
that
one
to
backlog,
because
at
this
point
we're
going
to
want
to
review
the
survey
responses
for
the
2023
survey,
which
is
out
and
I
looked,
and
we
now
have
actually
I
can
check
right
now
to
see
if
we've
gotten
any
more.
B
The
survey
now
has
15
responses.
So
that's
good
if
we
could
promote
the
survey
so
I'll
post,
something
again
in
the
various
forums,
but
if
we
could
get
folks
to
promote
the
survey
for
anyone
that
you
know
that's
using
okd
so
that
we
can
get
that
feedback.
That
would
be
super
awesome
and
again
the
link
to
it.
B
I'll
put
it
here
in
the
chat,
so
there
so
I've
moved
the
review
survey
responses
to
backlog
because
we'll
focus
on
the
2023
survey
responses
and
glean
what
we
can
from
those
Mr
Branch
hasn't
been
around
for
defining
the
diary
calendar
process
to
update
roadmap
guide
guides
and
glossaries
I've
got
some
ideas.
I
I
did
want
to
bring
him
along
for
the
ride
to
hash
out
my
ideas,
so
once
he's
back
to
attending
meetings,
we'll
work
with
him
on
that
ready
is
reaching
out
to
volunteers.
B
I've
reached
out
to
a
couple.
Interestingly
enough.
None
of
the
ways
I've
tried
to
reach
out
to
people
have
actually
got
us
volunteers.
The
way
we've
gotten
volunteers
is
people
like
randomly
showing
up
at
meetings
after
I've
posted
or
after
they've.
Seen
that
there's
a
meeting
happening
so
that's
sort
of
how
we're
getting
volunteers
right
now.
So
if
anyone
has
suggestions
on
other
ways,
we
can
Round
Up
volunteers
for
this.
B
That
would
be
awesome.
What
are
we
missing
in
terms
of
ways
to
reach
out
to
people?
So
we
we
do
social
media
right.
B
Should
we
be
hitting
up
like
Community
spaces
associated
with
Fedora
or
Community
spaces
associated
with
kubernetes?
What
what?
Where
should
we
go?
Go
to
try
to
so
we're
going
to
try
to
like,
for
example,
bite
size,
the
web
development
stuff?
Where
do
we?
Where
do
we
go
to
to
talk
to
people
about
this
and
try
to
get
them
interested
once
we've
done
that.
A
It's
like
there
are
just
a
lot
of
people
who
are
very
hungry
to
like
find
projects
to
get
into,
and
whatnot
and
I
think
that's
cool,
and
it
definitely
helps
us
to
get
more
volunteers
and
whatnot,
but
it
I
think
like.
Ideally,
we
want
to
be
connecting
with
people
who
have
an
interest
in
like
becoming
more
involved
in
like
okd
right,
like
people
who
want
to
use
it
or
run
it
or
want
to
do
something
with
it.
C
A
C
Some
ways
of
doing
stuff
like
this
is
someone
goes
and
gives
a
talk.
You
spend
a
couple
minutes
afterwards
talking
to
the
people.
If
we
have
documentation,
that's
good
for
onboarding,
you
know
you
can
definitely
hand
them
a
link.
If
not
you
actually
take
the
time,
you
know
to
sit
with
them
and
tell
them
how
to
get
involved
and
how
you
know
what
we're
looking
for.
You
know
so,
there's
you
could
even
at
a
kubernetes
conference
or
a
meet-up
which
are
good
places
as
well.
C
C
B
Foreign
thanks
Amy
all
right.
Let's
consolidate
that
feedback
into
that
item.
If
folks
want
to
chip
in
their
comments,
that's
number:
what
was
the
volunteer
One
reach
out
to
volunteers?
So
that's
Planning
number
15.
If
anyone
can
add
comments
to
planning
board
item
15,
that
would
be
helpful
when
you
get
a
chance
and
Planning
number
35
to
find
the
process
to
create
a
doc
PR
right.
So
that's
and
we
have
someone
assigned
to
that.
B
That's
still
in
the
ready
stage
and
the
gist
is
to
to
to
basically
how
to
do
PRS
for
the
page
builds
in
our
system
and
that'll
be
helpful
once
we
get
that
done.
So,
we've
got
that
one
assigned
that
one's
in
ready
in
progress
create
documentation
for
single
node
installer.
We've
got
a
bunch
of
people
on
that
Bruce
Brian
Mr
Branch.
B
Has
there
been
any
movement
on
that
Bruce?
Do
you
know.
C
D
B
B
Right
right,
I'm,
not
seeing
as
much
CRC
stuff
the
past
couple
months
and
I'm
not
sure
what
what
what
the
deal
is
with
that
yeah.
D
So
one
of
the
things
that
just
sort
of
came
up
to
me
but
I
was
chasing
the
dog,
so
I
didn't
quite
get
in
the
conversation
on
a
previous
conversation
is
that
we
always
sort
of
have
the
idea
that
the
people
that
are
trying
to
attract
were
already
into
okd
potentially.
D
But
if
you're
trying
to
look
for
somebody
that
isn't
into
anything.
Yet
there
are
a
number
of
competitors
that
they
might
get
into.
First
I
recently
spent
an
hour
at
work
with
somebody
that
had
stumbled
onto
Rancher
and
I
I,
also
discovered
deep
in
RIT
services
that
there
were
a
couple
of
uses
of
okd
that
I
hadn't
been
aware
of
including
running
our
main
website.
D
And
although
I
talked
to
the
the
people
in
our
IT
services
about
five
years
ago,
so
it
didn't
surprise
me
that
they
were
going
in
that
direction,
but
our
the
other
guy
that
has
stumbled
into
Rancher
in
a
way
like
I
had
to
look
into
it,
just
to
see
sort
of.
D
What's
the
differences
pros
and
cons,
and
so
on
and
I'm,
not
I
wasn't
convinced
that
I
had
fear
of
losing
out
for
not
using
Rancher,
okay
after
I
looked
into
it,
but
somebody
that's
just
starting
is
going
to
stumble
into
whatever
looks
the
flashiest
and
the
easiest
to
get
into
and
I
I.
Don't
know
if
somebody
is
looking
Beyond
like
if
they
want
to
install
something.
D
Do
you
even
know
what
the
you
know
like
what
the
search
engines
would
direct
them
to,
depending
on
how
they
were
searching
for
it?
You
know
that
that's
way
outside
of
my
area
of
expertise,
because
I'm,
more
techie
and
I
think
a
lot
of
us
are
coming
from
the
techie
side
of
things,
not
the
marketing
side
of
things.
B
Yeah
and
we
we
do
have
so
when
you
go
to
the
website-
it's
not
obvious,
because
you
have
to
sort
of
reveal
it,
but
we
do
have
installation
CRC
and
guides
under
the
getting
started,
but
it
would
be
nice
to
have
that
exposed
like
CRC
and
single
node
installation,
like
as
visible
things
that
people
could
click
on
so
that
when
they
go
to
the
website
or
search
engines,
we
promote
those
pages,
respect
to
pages
and
with.
B
To
make
it
so
that,
when
someone
Googles,
you
know,
does
a
web
search
for
single
node
kubernetes
cluster,
like
that,
would
pop
up
you
know,
and
so
I
think
these
things
are
all
tied
together.
The
website
redesign,
concise
text
and
marketing
basically
targeted
marketing
to
get
folks
interested
in
this
when
they're,
when
they're,
not
when
they
haven't
selected
anything
yet
right.
They
just
know
that
they
want
to
play
with
kubernetes
and
containers.
A
I
mean
I
tend
to
agree
with
what
Bruce
was
saying
like,
but
and
I
think
it's
going
to
be
tough
I
think
this
is
like
a
difficulty
that
we
have
in
general
in
terms
of
what
okd
is
and
where
it
sits
in
terms
of
the
kubernetes
ecosystem.
It's
like,
if
you
look
at
kind
of
like
our
our
upstream
or
whatever,
like
our
our
ancestor
of
you,
know,
ocp
the
openshift
you
know
like
openshift
is
meant
like
in
its
most
basic
way.
It's
meant
to
be
like
this
kind
of
heavyweight
Enterprise
kubernetes
right.
A
A
Unless
we
really
push
the
CRC
angle
and
say
okay
here,
if
you
want
to
just
set
it
up
right
now
and
start
playing
with
it
like
here's,
what
you
can
do
right,
but
that
all
that
really
does
is
get
you
into
like
kind
of
the
basic
kubernetes
level
of
it.
I
think
like
we
need
to
talk
about.
You
know
what
what
are
the
advantages
of
okd?
What
are
some
of
the
things
that
it
gives
you
in
terms
of,
like
you
know,
being
able
to
use
like
build
configuration,
pipelines
and
kind
of.
C
A
A
Installer,
a
three
machine
install
to
see
what
this
really
looks
like
when
I
kick
the
wheels
or
whatever,
like
I,
think
it's
a
difficult
path,
because
either
we
have
users
who
know
all
about
the
Enterprise
world
and
so
they're,
making
an
informed
choice
about
okd,
because
they
already
kind
of
know
about
this
stuff
or
we're
attracting
kind
of
new
people
who
don't
know,
and
it's
like
yeah.
They
want
to
be
up
and
running
something
they
want
to.
A
You
know:
have
the
web
server
deploy
and
serving
a
web
page
from
their
their
git
repo
or
whatever,
like
I,
can
imagine
demonstrations
that
we
could
do
that?
Would
get
people
interested
in
it,
but
they
kind
of
come
back
to
the
notion
of
someone
has
to
be
able
to
like
install
okd
in
a
very
small
footprint
in
not
a
lot
of
time
so
that
they
could
start
doing
something
with
it
right
and
then
you
know
for
and
then
the
new
user
could
go
on
to
do
other
things.
D
Yeah
I
think
one
point
of
entry
is
also
the
the
from
the
sort
of
get
up
side,
although
that's
a
buzzword,
but
I
was
noticing
that
it's
sort
of
gotten
to
the
place
of
where
just
about
everybody
is
familiar
with
Git
these
days,
okay
and
either
gitlab
or
GitHub,
and
both
of
those
are
pushing
cicd
capabilities,
and
so
then
the.
If
that's
your
entry
point,
then
the
next
question
is
well
okay.
So
where
is
all
this
deployed?
D
And
that's
where
the
okd
comes
in?
Okay
and
we've
been
thinking
about
it
from
the
okd
side
of
things
and
then
adding
in
these
other
entry
points,
but
that
may
not
be
where
potential
users
are
coming
from
and
certainly
like,
the
the
guy
that
I
was
talking
to
that
wound
up
in
Rancher
land.
D
D
You
know
virtual
machines
and
he
had
sort
of
set
up
a
whole
bunch
of
clusters,
IDE
idea,
which
is
an
interesting
architect
that
well
you
had
to
have
a
separate
cluster
for
tests
and
development
and
so
on,
and
if
you
have
adequate
multi-tenancy,
then
the
question
would
be
what
why
you
know
why
not
just
have
a
development
project
and
a
test
project
and
all
those
things
and
so
on
and
so
on
and
the
so
I
I
think
we
could
expand.
D
How
we
look
at
this
I
guess
it's
part
of
why
I'm
rambling
you
know
like,
and
there
are
you
know
if
you
look
at
the
Alternatives
like
Rancher,
you
know
there
are
some
things
that
are
sort
of
nice
like
listed
projects
which,
presumably
you
could
do.
You
could
roll
your
own
with
labels,
which
is
probably
how
how
they
do
it.
D
But
you
know
that
that
like
it
might
help
us
to
look
afar
and
see
what
the
competition
is
doing
rather
than
just
restricting
ourselves
only
to
looking
at
our
way
of
doing
things.
B
This
has
all
been
a
really
healthy
discussion,
I
think
for
moving
us
forward.
It's
the
area
where
we
struggle
the
most
I
think
is
in
reaching
out
to
people
right
everybody.
Everyone
on
this
call,
almost
everyone
Amy
is
new,
but
everyone
else
has
sort
of
been
here
for
a
couple
of
years.
At
this
point
right,
we've
only
had
a
handful
of
of
new
folks
come
in
and
you
know
it's.
We
don't
really
have
a
handle
on
usage
statistics
for
okd.
You
know
so
it's
kind
of
hard
to
tell
like.
B
Are
we
moving
the
needle
at
all
in
terms
of
volunteers
and
in
terms
of
just
the
usage
of
okd?
So
all
right
next
up
is
Planning
number
32,
investigate
blog
plugin
Brian's
got
that
and
after
that
is,
and
Brian
is
working
on
that
and
then
in
progress.
Is
that
remove
support
section
from
the
okd
docs
Mr
Burke?
Did
that
happen,
yeah
removing
the
support
section
from
the
okd
docs,
the
the
section
about
getting
support.
D
B
To
get
help
okay
great
and
we
need
to
get
help
for
blog
posts
for
the
current
okd
roadmap.
Vadim
has
a
has
a
git
discussion
item
that
he'll
start
for
getting
to
particular
releases,
but
it's
not
a
cohesive,
encompassing
documents
of
where
okd
wants
to
go
overall
right.
It's
just
sort
of
these
are
the
technical
things
that
we
need
to
get
from.
B
You
know
12
to
13
13
to
14
Etc,
so
we
could
build
on
that
for
the
technical
side,
but
we
still
need
some
volunteers
to
help
with
that
sort
of.
Overall,
where
are
we
going
type
of
thing
or
where
do
we
want
to
go.
B
And
Brian
is
reviewing
licensing
copyright
stuff
and
hasn't
been
an
update
on
that,
and
then
we
did
move
some
things
to
the
done
recently
like
getting
the
2023
survey
out
Etc.
So
we
have
moved
a
handful
of
ones
to
done
anything
else
on
planning
board
stuff.
Before
we
move,
we've
got
just
a
couple
of
of
other
items
to
tackle
beyond
the
planning
board
that
were
added
anything
planning,
more
related.
B
And
it
looks
like
we've
got
a
fork
of
the
website.
That's
there.
B
So
you
log
in
with
your
GitHub
I'm,
not
going
to
log
in
with
GitHub
right
now,
but
essentially
we've
got
a
fork
on
the
website.
Up
that
you
can
in
gitpod
make
changes
very
quickly
and
and
visualize
them
I
think
that's
quite
sense
of
what
this
is
about.
B
B
Okay,
all
right!
Well,
let's
take
a
look
and
we'll
talk
about
it
at
the
next
meeting
in
the
last
few
minutes,
I
wanted
to
ask
or
provide
an
opportunity
for
anyone
if
they
wanted
to
weigh
in
and
I'll
ask
this
at
the
next
week's
working
group
meeting
weigh
in
on
the
announcement
from
Red
Hat
in
terms
of
Repository
Source
replacement
and
repositories,
and
for
folks
that
don't
have
the
context.
There
was
a
blog
post.
Now,
there's
been
two
blog
posts
from
Mike
McGrath
said
his
name
about.
B
Basically,
the
focus
is
Shifting
to
Centos
stream,
and
that
will
be
where
folks
can
pull
Source
from
for
their
derivative
projects
and
red
Red
Hats
Rel
source
is
going
to
be
available
to
registered
developers
and
registered
customers
and
whatnot
on
the
Red
Hat
portal,
like
within
the
red
hat
portal.
Some
folks
are
really
upset
about
this
because
it
changes
the
dynamic
of,
in
particular,
the
Rel.
B
Derivative
distributions
right,
Alma,
Linux
stuff,
like
that
I,
don't
know
that
there's
any
implications
for
us,
but
I
wanted
to
I
mean
we're
working
off
of
Centos
stream.
Now,
anyway,
with
our
builds
so
I
don't
see
that
this
impacts
Us
in
any
way,
but
I
wanted
to
give
folks
an
opportunity
if
they
wanted
to
to
say
anything
and
if
they
think
that
this
impacts
Us
in
any
way
to
say
something.
There.
C
Shouldn't
be
any
impact
to
okd,
as
you
already
mentioned,
were
using
stream
and
also
Fedora.
This
is
mainly
impacting
how
the
redistributors
would
have
to
package
their
bills.
D
Yeah,
it
could
affect
you
know
some
of
the
the
third
party
operators,
things
like
that,
so
I
I
guess
what
would
be
implied
by
all
this
is
the
the
unified
base
images
are
going
poof
anything
built
on
them
because
they're
all
real
based
right.
D
C
B
Any
other
thoughts
all
right
doesn't
seem
like
folks
had
anything
they
wanted
to
say.
I
was
reached
out
a
couple
folks
reached
out
to
me
and
said
you
know:
how
does
this
affect
okd?
B
Is
this
gonna
change
your
direction
or
anything
like
that,
and
it
doesn't
sound
like
anyone
has
a
consensus
here
that
it
will.
It
doesn't
sound
like
anyone
in
any
way
feels
that's
going
to
really
impact
us
too
much
I'll
bring
this
up
and
give
folks
an
opportunity
at
the
working
group
meeting
next
week
and
then
it's
it
might
be
just
a
non-issue,
so
all
right
cool
any
last
minute
thoughts
in
the
last
few
minutes
that
we
had
for
the
meeting.
A
A
C
B
A
C
C
B
B
Let's
get
a
conversation
going
in
the
chat
in
regards
to
organizing
these
video
sessions
so
that
we
can
keep
that
momentum
going
because
I
think
that'll
be
helpful
in
terms
of
providing
assistance
to
our
to
our
community
of
users
and
then
we'll
also
maybe
have
a
side
discussion
about
sort
of
organizing
these
thoughts
that
we
had
about
getting
volunteers
and
whatnot.