►
From YouTube: Introduction to CentOS Stream CoreOS for OKD Zack Zlotnik Neal Gompa Diane Mueller OKD Working Group
Description
Introduction to CentOS Stream CoreOS for OKD (SCOS for OKD)
OKD Working Group Guest Speakers:
Zack Zlotnik (Red Hat)
Neal Gompa (Datto)
Diane Mueller (Red Hat)
more details at https://okd.io
A
Today
we
have
with
us
zach
zlotnick
and
neil
gamba,
two
members
of
the
okd
working
group
zach's
been
an
engineer
and
a
devops
and
doing
all
kinds
of
things
here
at
red
hat
and
neil
you
probably
if
you
haven't,
met
neil,
you
probably
haven't
been
in
the
community
too
much
because
he's
been
in
the
fedora
community,
the
centos
community
and
probably
a
bazillion
other
ones
that
I
don't
know
but
they've
been
very
active
in
this
new
initiative
that
we're
going
to
have
them
introduce
today.
A
That
brings
together
the
centos
stream
community,
the
coreos
communities
and
the
okd
community
to
introduce
something
called
centos
stream
core
os
for
okd,
otherwise
known
as
s
cos
for
okd,
I'm
going
to
let
zach
take
it
away
and
we
will
have
some
q
a
at
the
end
in
a
little
conversation.
But
please
do
take
it
away.
Thanks
zack.
B
Yeah,
so
so
neil
and
I
today
are
introducing
centos
stream
core
os
s,
costs
for
okd
just
to
get
started
just
a
quick
refresher.
What
is
okd
okd
is
the
community
distribution
of
kubernetes
that
powers,
red
hat
openshift
optimized
for
continuous
application,
development
and
multi-tenant
deployment.
B
Okd
adds
developer
and
operation-centric
tools
on
top
of
kubernetes
to
enable
rapid
application,
development,
easy
deployment
and
scaling
and
long-term
life
cycle
maintenance
for
small
and
large
teams.
Okd
provides
a
complete,
open
source
container
application
platform,
including
its
bundled
operating
system,
fedora
core
os.
B
What
is
centos
stream
centos
stream
is
a
free,
open
source
project
that
takes
about
80
to
90
percent
of
the
work
we
were
doing
on
rel
in
private
and
makes
that
work
public.
This
makes
our
development
process
much
more
transparent
and
allows
partners,
customers
and
developers
to
see
where
rel
is
going
in
the
next
minor
version.
It
enables
them
to
collaborate
with
us
and
potentially
affect
change
in
the
next
minor
release
before
it
gets
released
to
the
public.
B
So
this
is
an
overview
of
what
the
enterprise
linux
ecosystem
looks
like
today
on
the
left
is
fedora,
which
is
a
community
owned
space
focused
primarily
on
os
innovation,
architecture,
changes
and
other
use
cases
and
experiments,
and
things
like
that
fedora
releases,
a
new
major
release
every
six
months
in
the
middle
is
centos
stream.
It's
a
shared
space
between
the
community
and
red
hat,
it's
which
is
focused
on
the
future
of
enterprise
linux
by
including
a
newer
kernel
version
and
newer
user
space
packages.
B
Centos
stream
provides
a
continuous
release
stream,
which
will
eventually
become
the
next
rel
minor
version
release
and
then
on
the
right
we
have
rail,
which
is,
which
is
a
private
space
focused
on
today's
enterprise.
It
prioritizes
stability,
security
and
performance,
as
well
as
a
more
measured
release,
cadence
of
a
minor
version
every
six
months
in
a
major
release.
Every
three
years.
Additionally,
rail
has
errata
feeds
which
only
provide
bug,
fixes
and
security
updates,
but
not
new
features.
B
B
The
base
operating
system
itself
comes
with
popular
container
tools
such
as
podband,
scopio
and
cryo
configuration
customization
of
of
one's
core
os
installation
is
possible
via
the
ignition
configuration
utility
which
supplies
those
configs
and
customizations
the
first
time.
The
operating
system
is
booted
tools
which
make
coreos
possible,
such
as
ignition
and
rpm.
Os
free
are
themselves
open,
source
projects
which
which
fully
welcome
community
contributions.
B
Centos
stream,
core
os,
brings
all
the
popular
features
from
core
os
to
centos
stream.
Centos
stream.
Core
os
itself
is
a
direct
upstream
of
archos,
which
is
red
hat
enterprise
linux,
core
os.
It
provides
a
middle
ground
between
fedora's,
rapid
release,
cadence
and
rel's.
More
measured
pace,
centos
stream,
core
os
itself
is
also
an
open
source
project
which
welcomes
contributions
from
the
community.
B
Fedora
receives,
updates
and
changes
first,
and
that
includes
the
latest
coreos
components
latest
container
tools,
in
addition
to
the
latest
kernel
and
user
space
packages,
centos
stream
core
os,
receives
those
updates
and
aims
to
track
just
the
head
of
of
our
costs,
which
can
eventually
become
the
next
r
cost
release.
Our
cost
itself
is
the
core
os
based
enterprise.
Linux
operating
system
that
is
bundled
with
openshift,
and
so
what
does
all
this
mean
for
okd?
B
So
what
does
this
mean
for
okd
on
fedora
core
os?
In
short,
nothing
will
change.
Okd
on
fedora
coreos
will
continue
to
be
available.
It
will
remain
under
active
development,
it
will
receive
bug,
updates
security,
fixes,
etc,
and
the
underlying
operating
system
itself,
indoor
core
os,
will
continue
to
be
available
completely
independently
of
okd.
C
Yeah,
so
thanks
zack,
so
in
terms
of
how
okay,
with
how
centos
stream
core
os
fits
with
the
community
and
okd
on
s,
cos
fits
it's
going
to
be
not
too
different
from
what
you
see
today,
with
okay
on
f
cause.
So
s
cost
development
is
happening
under
the
centos
cloud.
C
Sig
folks,
from
the
store
core
os
working
group
as
well
as
okady
working
group,
people
will
work
with
the
centos
community
under
the
cloud
sig
to
support
centos
stream
core
os,
and
it
will
be
built
in
through
a
transparent
pipeline
through
the
operate
first
community
cloud.
Each
of
these
components-
okd,
f
cause
and
s
cos-
will
be
developed
and
managed
separately
through
their
own
communities,
though
there
will
be
tight
collaboration
across
all
three
with
all
that
said,
how
do
we
get
involved?
C
So,
with
the
okay
working
group,
we've
got
our
websites
with
okadi,
I
o
and
the
documentation
on
doc's,
okay
io.
All
this
is
managed
on
github
at
github.com,
openshift
okd.
If
you
are
a
member
of
the
kubernetes
slack,
you
can
check
out
openshift
users.
The
working
group
members,
as
well
as
the
larger
community.
We're
talking
about
here
are
available
on
matrix
at
ocdcolandfedoraproject.org.
C
And
we
have
video
conference
meetings
every
couple
of
weeks
and
you
can
see
the
calendar
there
at
the
calendar,
fedora
project.org
okd
for
the
centos
cloud
special
interest
group.
The
main
communication
vehicle
is
through
irc
on
libero.chat
on
the
channel
being
found
centos
cloud.
You
can
also
interact
with
the
centas
community
through
the
mailing
list
on
santos
devel
and
there
they
have
regular
meetings
on
irc,
which
can
be
found
on
the
centos
community
calendar.
C
For
fedora
core
os,
we
have
a
matrix
room
as
well
core
os
colon
fedoraproject.org.
They
are
managing
their
project
on
github
at
coral
github.com,
coreos
fedora
gore
os
tracker.
There
is
also
a
discussion
forum
and
mailing
lists,
as
well
as
weekly
meetings.
C
So
a
great
way
to
get
started
and
help
out
join
the
cloud
sig
or
the
centos
cloud
sig
and
the
opt
working
group
consider
deploying
okd
on
the
s
cos
mvp,
that's
coming
real
soon
now
and
we'd
love
to
hear
from
you
and
all
the
folks
that
are
excited
about
running
okd
in
their
next
in
the
next
project
or
the
next
environment,
or
all
that
sort
of
thing.
A
Awesome
well
that
actually
it's
a
really
great
place
to
land,
because
I
think
one
of
the
things
that
this
project
and
this
initiative
highlights
is
the
collaboration
across
so
many
different
communities
and
the
communication
that
we
need
to
continue
to
have
around
road
maps
for
coreos,
with
fedora
core
os
centos
stream,
core
os
southwest
stream.
Okd
and
osap
ocp
itself
gets
complex.
A
So
I
I
think
one
of
the
things
that
we're
trying
to
do
here
is
to
make
sure
people
all
know
where
they
can
get
in
touch
with
us
if
they
have
questions
and
to
to
make
sure
that
there
is
a
flavor
of
okd
that
works
for
them.
A
And
you
know
one
thing
we
might
ask
ourselves
is
why
now
why
now
are
we
doing
okd
s
cos?
And
why
is
this
important,
and
one
of
the
things
that
I've
heard
over
and
over
both
internally
at
red,
hat
and
outside,
is
trying
to
get
a
better
signal
and
feedback
or
open
shift
on
rel
core
os
and
a
better
signal
and
feedback
for
rel
itself,
as
we
iterate
as
we
try
and
get
kubernetes
and
ocp
working
with
the
new
releases?
A
And
so
it's
really
important
to
all
of
us
in
the
community
and
at
red
hat
and
wherever
you're
deploying
okd
to
get
your
feedback,
and
so
we
we're
not
just
joking
when
we
say
we'd
love
to
hear
from
you.
We
need
to
hear
from
you
on
this
and
around
I'm
told
mid-september
end
of
september.
A
We
should
have
this
mvp
build
of
okd
for
centos
stream
coreos,
and
we're
really
looking
for
people
to
give
us
do
some
testing
deploy
it,
deploy
it
at
scale,
deploy
it
on
different,
different
clouds,
different
infrastructures
bare
metal,
whatever
you
have
and
give
us
your
feedback
and
part
of
doing
that,
you'll
be
able
to
see
if
you
go
to
any
of
these
sites
with
each
of
the
communities
places
where
you
can
post
issues
and
join
discussions
online,
we
do
almost
everything
using
github
issues
and
discussions.
A
So
if
you
go
to
okd.io,
you'll
find
all
the
the
trails
and
paths
to
give
your
input,
and
so
I
think,
for
me
one
of
the
the
key
things
here
is
making
sure
that
we
have
lots
of
different
flavors
of
okd.
Hence
the
idea,
the
the
concept
of
okd
as
a
stream
we're
looking
forward
to
next
week,
we're
going
to
record
yet
another
video
briefing
with
the
folks
who
are
building
the
tectonic
build
pipelines
that
are
deploying
on
operate
first.
A
So
you
have
a
chance
at
multiple
layers
to
learn
about
how
we
build
centos
stream,
how
we
then
add
the
payload
for
okd
and
how
to
debug
that
and
how
to
get
involved
at
whether
it's
testing
and
deploying
okd,
it's
adding
feedback
finding
bugs
looking
for
new
features.
A
All
of
that
stuff
is,
I
I
can't
emphasize
enough
get
involved,
give
us
your
feedback
and
reach
out
to
us
because,
neil
you
know,
you're
you're
wonderful,
you've
been
in
the
fedora
community
you're
in
the
centos
community.
I
I
just
expect
that
you
know
you
feel
like
a
red
hatter
to
me.
Most
of
the
time
you.
A
From
your
point
of
view,
what
is
the
impact
of
having
these
multiple
streams
of
okd
is
something
you
you
know
we
should
be
watching
or
how
is
that
going
to
impact
where
you
are
use?
It.
C
So,
from
my
point
of
view
like
looking
at
this
as
a
an
okd
consumer
and
using
this,
I
personally
prefer
running
okd
on
fedora
core
os,
because
I
feel
that
the
best
value
of
running
it
with
the
door
core
os
is
you
get
to
see
the
far
future.
You
get
to
see
all
the
integration
points
and
you
get
to
play
with
a
lot
of
the
fresher
tech
that
just
isn't
flowing
down
into
the
enterprise
space
just
yet.
C
But,
like
some
people
get
catchy,
when
you
try
to
run
things
that,
were,
you
know
targeted
for
relish
centossy
things
on
fedora
and
they
get
kind
of
mad
and
putting
okd
on
top
of
centos
stream
gives
you
the
ability
to
run
that
same
stack
and
make
people
less
mad
at
you,
and
you
can
use
it
easier
in
production
deployments
and
things
like
that.
C
I
also
feel
that
you
know
having
a
centos
stream
core
os
is
going
to
engender
a
larger
group
of
people
who
have
been
interested
in
this
sort
of
thing,
going
all
the
way
back
to
the
fedora
atomic
days
where
they
wanted
to
have
something
like
this
from
the
centos
project.
You
know
having
this
now
in
in
this
in
the
sentence.
Project
means
those
people
have
something
that
they
are
interested
and
able
to
work
on,
and
I
love
to
see
those
people
contribute
to
centos
stream
and
improve
container
tooling
immutable
platform
stuff.
C
It
actually
uses
for
not
just
for
okd
and
not
just
for
kubernetes,
but
I
want
to
see
more
of
all
the
things
that
people
can
do
with
this
with
this
technology
and
so
like
from
my
perspective,
I
think
that
this
is
going
to
be
great,
because
it
helps
people
be
able
to
do
more
with
it.
It
opens
up
the
window
in
in
in
people
who
are
going
to
be
willing
and
able
to
run
okd
and
crossing
my
fingers
here
a
little
bit.
C
I'm
kind
of
hoping
that
this
means
that
openshift
as
a
product
and
as
a
project
becomes
more
transparent
and
more
open
to
contribution
across
the
board,
because,
that's
you
know
like
I,
as
a
as
a
community
contributor
and
a
community
user
like
to
see
those
things,
because
they
make
me
have
better
confidence
in
all
of
this,
and
so
at
the
end
of
it.
For
me,
this
is
all
about
improving
the
confidence
in
okd
kubernetes
platforms
and
helping
everyone
like
feel
more
comfortable
with
what
is,
admittedly,
a
really
big
and
complicated
system.
A
All
right
and
zach
any
final
words
about
the
impact
of
this,
even
internally
on
on
red
hat,
all
the
different
projects
that
have
been
looking
for
this.
B
Yeah,
so
so
the
so.
The
part
that
I
work
on,
which
is
the
machine
config
operator,
there's
a
lot
of
it's
it's
one
of
those
things
where
I,
where,
where
we
want
to
make
where
we
want
to
make
that,
as
as
as
good
as
it
can
be
and
so
being
able
to
test
it
in
a
variety
of
different
contexts
in
a
variety
of
different
situations,
is,
is
only
going
to
help
us.
B
It's
only
going
to
help
us
make
it's
only
going
to
help
us
make
that
better,
and
in
addition
to
that,
it's
not
just
that
that
particular
component,
it's
it's
the
ecosystem
as
a
whole
like
like
some
of
the
like,
for
example,
some
of
the
some
of
the
ci
stuff.
That's
that
that's
around
it
like,
for
example,
open
shift
pipelines,
tech
time.
That's
that's
something
that's
kind
of
near
and
dear
to
me
as
a
as
kind
of
a
former
dev
ops.
B
If
you
will
it's
something
I
kind
of
got
involved
with
there,
it
still
kind
of
piques
my
interest,
and
not
only
that
it
also
will
help
not
only
that,
but
also
since
we're
building
this
on
operate.
First,
it
it
it
will
allow
us
to
get
a
better.
It
will
allow
us
to
learn
more
about
about
what
it's
like
to
put
something
like
that
together
and
to
and
to
build
it
in
the
open,
so
to
speak.
A
A
If
we
can
do
that,
we're
also
planning
on
taking
all
these
tectonic
tecton
pipelines
and
pushing
them
out
to
tecton
hub
and
so
we'll
as
soon
as
they're
available,
we'll
be
pushing
them
there
and
making
them
available
for
other
people
to
explore,
learn
about
and
help
debug
hopefully
and
operate
first.
We'll
definitely
have
another
talk
about
that
coming
up
soon
and
demo
that
and
how
you
can
get
involved
in
in
that
community
as
well.
A
So
thank
you
guys
for
taking
the
time
today
and
thank
you
if
you're
listening
and
watching
this
and
out
there
for
taking
the
time
to
listen
all
the
way
through
and
we'd
love
to
get
you
involved.
So
please
do
come
to
okd
dot,
io
or
the
center
stream
cloud
sig
or
the
fedora
core
os
world
find
us
we're
around.
A
Lots
of
us
are
in
all
three
places,
so
you'll
definitely
find
us,
and
please
do
let
us
know
if
you
have
any
feedback
or
input
on
the
okd
s-cos
mvp
we're
eager
to
hear
your
feedback.
So
thanks
all
and
thanks
neil
and
zach
for
joining
me
today.
Take
care.
Thank.