►
From YouTube: OpenShift Coffee Break: KubeCon 2021 NA Recap!
Description
Get your espresso ready for the EMEA OpenShift Coffee Break together with Jaafar, Natale and Tero. In this session we will go through all big announcements from KubeCon NA last week. We will also go through all the new features of OpenShift 4.9 that is GA from this week.
Twitch: https://red.ht/twitch
A
Good
morning
welcome
everyone
to
this
other
session
of
openshift
tv
coffee
break
this
morning,
I'm
here
with
my
colleague
and
friend,
jafar
hey.
How
are
you
jafar.
B
Hey
natalie,
I'm
I'm
good!
Thank
you
very
much
so
yeah,
I'm
glad
to
be
here
again.
As
you
know,
I've
been
away
for
some
time
and
I'm
I'm
good
to
be
back
here
with
you
today.
We're
missing
our
dear
friend
terror,
but
I'm
sure
yeah.
B
A
Care,
thank
you
and
we'll
come
back
soon
in
in
our
next
episode
in
two
weeks,
but
today
jafar
we're
we
we
go
where
we're
gonna,
do
a
little
recap
about
what
happened
in
the
kubecon
north
america,
and
also
we
have
some
very
nice
announcement
from
that.
We
did
some
announcement
from
from
red
dot
for
openshift.
There
are
lots
of
stuff
openshift
for
the
nine
openshift
for
edge,
correct.
B
B
Yeah
and
yes-
and
it's
also
yeah,
not
only
the
coop
con,
but
also
the
new
release.
I
think
we
have
packed
a
lot
of
things
there
that
we
have
been
waiting
for
for
quite
some
time.
So
that's
that's
great
and
I
hope
people
are
gonna
enjoy
the
the
content.
A
B
A
Couldn't
join
kubecon
north
america
is.
Is
there
anyone
from
the
chat
that
had
the
chance
to
attend
kucom
north
america
on
site?
This
is
a
a
kind
of
emea
time
zone
show.
So
I
don't
know
if
any
one
of
you
has
the
opportunity
the
chance
to
do
that.
Please
share
with
us
in
the
chat.
We
would
like
to
hear
from
you
the
feedback,
because
jafar
I've,
I've
seen
from
twitter
all
the
people
were
excited
and
to
see
us
about
being
there.
A
Finally,
in
person
acts
and
five
up
and
shaking
hands
in
the
safe
way,
of
course,
but
it
was
amazing.
B
Yeah
yeah,
so
indeed
it's
so
everything
we
say
now
is
only
hearsay.
We
heard
that
we
haven't
been
there
so
yeah,
but
I
I
heard
from
some
of
my
colleagues
that
it
was
weird
actually
to
be
in
an
on-site
conference
event.
B
So
after
almost
two
years
of
the
pandemic,
they
have
gotten
used
to
doing
virtual
things
like
this,
and
he
told
me
that
the
first,
like
you
know
first
maybe
10
minutes.
It
was
weird
for
him
to
be
like
surrounded
by
people
and
but
but
weird,
in
a
good
way,
like
it's
good
to
be
back
to
to
normal
life
and
real
onsite
events,
etc.
B
So
yeah,
maybe
next
week
or
yeah
next
kubecon
we'll
be
able
to
make
it
there.
But
for
now
it's
gonna
be
hearsay.
A
Yeah
yeah
and
please
let
us
know
in
the
chat
if
anyone
also
attended
the
virtual
element,
because
this
was
an
hybrid
event.
It
was
in
person
and
and
virtual
so
like
like
us,
we
we
were
there
virtually.
We
also
joined
the
virtual
office
hour
for
in
our
case,
that
was
a
red
that
has
some
virtual
office
hour.
One
was
for
the
kidops
that
was,
I
can
share.
That
was
very
participated:
lots
of
people
lots
of
questions,
many
interesting
questions
that
we
we
should.
B
Exactly
so
as
a
product
vendor
or
software
vendor,
we
we
of
course
have
our
our
ways
of
presenting
things
and
we
present
features
etc,
and
what's
nice
in
these
events
also,
is
that
you
have
also
people
that
share
sometimes
best
practices.
You
have
the
the
customers
who
explain
how
they
are
using
the
tooling
to
accomplish
what
they
need
to
do
in
their
day-to-day
business.
B
So
yeah,
if
you
look
at
things
like
openshift
commons,
for
instance,
there's
a
lot
of
tons
of
valuable
information
that
you
get
from
how
people
actually
do
their
job
so
yeah.
It's
always
nice
to
have
both
sides
of
things
so
how
the
software
ecosystem
evolves,
but
also
how
the
usage
of
anything
also
evolves
and
how
people
come
to
to
best
practices
and
from
what
I
heard
in
fact,
there's
a
lot
of
talk
about
get
ups
and
our
get
ups
con
attendance
was
was
very
good.
B
We
had
a
lot
of
people
attending
and
from
what
I
heard
they
were
also
you
know
asking
about
how
to
embrace
get
ups,
so
the
the
concept
of
get
ups
is
becoming
understood,
what
it
allows
you
to
do,
etc.
But
so
it's
the
same
situation
as
when
people
started
to
talk
about
devops,
so
we
know
we
knew
what
devops
was,
but
we
rarely
knew
how
to
put
it
effectively
in
in
in
an
enterprise
scope.
B
So
so
that's
probably
one
of
the
things
that
you
you
will
hear
more
and
more
from
red
hat,
but
we
have
our
dear
colleague
christian
hernandez,
who
has
his
his
gear
ups
guide
to
the
galaxy,
which
has
been
airing
for
quite
some
time
now,
and
I
think
he
does
a
great
job
at
sharing.
B
A
That's
a
great
point
jafar,
and
actually
I
was
putting
the
chat
I
was
looking
for
hey.
We
have
the
link
for
the
github's
guide
to
the
galaxy.
It's
a
show
that
we
have
here
at
openshift
tv
made
by
our
colleague
and
christian
hernandez.
If
you
want
to
get
started
with
g
tops.
This
show
is
very
interesting.
A
It's
a
series
of
episodes
where
a
christian
and
some
guests
explore
on
some
topic
of
githubs,
and
it's
very
interesting
because
there
is
a
lot
of
to
learn
and,
as
you
say,
java
is
having
great
momentum,
but
people
also
would
like
to
understand
what
what
we,
what
we
collect
from
as
feedback
people
would
like
to
understand
where
to
start
to
learn
hitops.
A
I
think
we
have
some
resources.
Also
in
our
website.
I
put
in
the
chat
the
the
landing
page
to
understand
what
is
key
tops
how
red
that
implements
keytops
in
openshift,
and
we
have
also
some
labs
to
start
learning
git
ups,
if
you
are
interested
but
yeah,
definitely
recommend
joining
and
jafar.
Thanks
for
saying
that,
because
I
think
the
one
of
the
coolest
thing
of
the
of
the
of
the
cubicle
in
north
america
was
the
zero
day
event.
The
co-located
event
for
those.
B
A
A
Those
collocators
are
mondays
or
tuesdays
kind
of
so
usually
on
monday,
those
those
event
happens
and
I
can
share
jafar
the
the
the
most
the
most
participated.
One
was
openshift
commons
that
you
mention
it
as
well
with
git
with
yeah
for
those
of
you
that
that
couldn't
watch
the
openshift
comments,
I
put
the
link
in
the
chat.
I
hope
you
will
get
soon.
I
I
read
that
there's
some
issue
with
the
chat
with
restream
but
should
arrive
soon.
A
Yes,
I
can
see
that
so
this
is
the
recording.
There
was
a
session
on
very
interesting
session,
like
what
is
the
life
of
a
site
relative
engineer
by
our
colleague,
sasha
rosenbaum,
and
some
openshift
roadmap
and
also
other
interesting
talk
about
kubernetes
helm.
So
I
really
recommend
you
to
check
out
the
video
and
from
the
chat.
There's
vikas,
hey,
read
that
I'm
hoping
where
could
you
help
to
join
up
with
your
company?
Of
course
we
guess
I
we
have
our
job
portal.
A
Let
me
check
if
I
have
a
handy,
the
the
link
as
carrier
or
job,
you
can
check
out
our
job
portal,
for
we
have
lots
of
open
position.
We
are
hiring
a
lot.
Moreover,
in
this
you
know,
cloud
native,
kubernetes
landscape,
so
definitely
check
out
this.
Our
carrier
website
and
I
hope,
to
see
you
soon
in
the
family
here
so
to
make
great
things
together
with
us.
A
B
B
Five
or
six
open
positions,
just
within
our
team,
my
team
at
least
so
yeah
just
go
ahead
and
and
crawl
that
portal
and
see,
if
you
think,
if
you
find
something
interesting
and
yeah,
let
us
know
if
we
can.
You
know.
A
That
that's
fantastic!
So
if
you
want
to
become
a
technical
marketing
manager
as
jafar
doing
a
very
cool
thing
to
openshift,
you
working
with
customers
joining
community
check
out.
Definitely
the
open
position
for
for
that
role.
If
you
like
to
join
now,
we
have
a
lots
of
in
places
in
engineering
site,
reliability,
engineer
jafar
to
come
back
to
the
to
the
kubecon.
I
think
site
will
be
the
engineer
what
the
hot
topic
of
the
conference.
A
B
So
the
the
way
I
think
about
it
is
in
terms
of
momentum.
Kubernetes
has
has
now
become
a
de
facto
platform
like
it's.
It's
becoming
part
of
the
core
iq
systems
of
many
customers,
I'm
not
speaking
about
only
openshift
but
as
kubernetes
at
large,
and
I
think
that
now
people
are,
you
know
in
a
position
where
they
need
to
have
reliable
systems
because
they
have
put
critical
applications
on
top
of
their
kubernetes
platforms.
B
And,
of
course
we
have
many
customers,
thousands
of
customers
who
are
using
openshift
as
a
critical
business
platform,
and
what
comes
with
that
is
of
course
it.
B
It
gives
you
great
value
in
terms
of
you
know,
being
able
to
deploy
new
applications
faster,
etc,
but
you
have
to
make
sure
that
everything
stays
green,
almost
all
the
time.
So
that's
why?
Probably
the
sre
responsibility
is
becoming
predominant
and
such
an
important
aspect,
because
probably
the
customers
have
reached
this
level
of
maturity.
B
Where
now
the
kubernetes
platform
is
becoming
critical
and
it
needs
to
stay
up
all
the
time,
so
yeah
shifting
from
a
concept
that
was
introduced
by
some
people,
like
google,
etc
to
a
more
broadly
accepted
kind
of
you
know
responsibility,
because
it's
not
a
job
as
per
say
it's
a
responsibility
spanning
across
many
areas,
and
that's
probably
why
it
has
become.
B
You
know
one
of
the
hot
topics
in
the
kubernetes
ecosystem,
or
or
at
least
in
cubicon
this
this
this
year
so
and
and
the
other
thing
that
I
heard
was
security.
I
think
one
of
the
the
hardest
topics
also
but
yeah.
Maybe
we
can
speak
about
that
a
bit
later
on
so
yeah.
That's
that's!
That's
my
my
view
about
the
sre
thing
why
it's
becoming
so
you
know
critical
and
widely
talked
about.
B
A
B
A
We're
having
more
and
more
attention
security
for
devsecops
or
any
security
aspect,
because
it's
becoming
a
crucial.
No
any
company
need
to
keep
security
in
mind
for
the
first
time,
and
I
I
catch
the
opportunity
also
to
share
in
the
chat
our
red
dot
presence
at
kubecon,
because
we
have
a
session.
We
had
a
session
at
the
keynote
by
luke
hid
a
security
supply
chain
chain
vision,
and
that
was
interesting
because
the
security,
the
idea,
is
to
put
the
security
in
the
wall
in
in
the
wall
pipeline.
A
Let's
say
you
know,
we
started
developing
with
the
inner
loop
and
then
we
we
go
into
the
outer
loop
with
git
ups
and
all
these
tools,
but
we
need
to
put
security
from
the
first
for
the
first.
The
action
like
scanning
the
code
checking
the
static
analysis,
then
scanning
the
container
and
the
scanning
the
process
running
with
the
vulnerability
assessment.
So
this
is
an
overall
security
and
kubernetes
ecosystem.
It's
also
embracing
it.
There
are
the
sig
group
for
security.
A
There
are
many
open
source
project
and
also
a
cncf
project
that
can
be
sandboxed,
so
the
security
area
is
getting
lots
of
attention
and
this
is
important.
Yeah.
B
Correct
and
so
just
what
we
we
saw
as
an
evolution
in
the
past
years
is
security,
so
if
you
think
about
a
dev,
devops
backline
and
I'm
not
seeing
dev
secops,
you
know
voluntarily,
because
I'm
introducing
the
concept.
B
So
I'm
just
you
know
summarizing,
but
but
security
ev.
Everybody
now
becomes
aware
that
security
is
not
just
a
box.
It's
not
just
a
step
in
your
debt
pipeline.
That's
why
they
they
started
calling
the
devsecops
pipeline
because
it
needs
to
be
taken
care
of
in
the
whole
life
cycle
from
every
step
within
your
pipeline.
B
Security
is
something
that
is
like.
You
know,
spread
everywhere
and
not
just
one
gateway
at
some
time
where
you
say,
okay,
did
you
pass
security
checks
for
your
container,
or
did
you
pass
security
checks
for
your
application,
functional
tests,
or
did
you
pass
security
for
your
code,
etc?
So
security
is
everywhere
within
the
the
the
pipeline
and
and
that's
probably,
why
also
it's
becoming
a
hot
topic,
because
there's
not
one
single
security
tool.
There's
you
know
a
whole
chain
of
of
things
that
can
be
used.
B
So
yeah,
I
think
it's
becoming
one
of
the
also
hardest
topics,
because
it's
it's
fundamental
to
have
your
critical
apps
deployed
in
a
secure
way
in
production,
and
you
need
to
take
care
of
that
along
every
step
in
the
pipeline.
A
I
I
agree:
that's
why
jafar,
probably
one
of
the
reason
that
red
dot
also
acquired
stack,
rocks
a
company
that
was
working
already
in
security
for
the
wall
wall
chain.
No,
and
there
are
many
other
companies
right
now
focusing
on
on
that
part,
because
it's
something
that
we
need
to
take
care.
A
As
jafar
said
from
from
the
first
time
from
the
from
the
beginning
and
the
integration
with
in
our
case,
where
already
that
acquired
stack
rocks,
is
open
sourcing,
the
the
stack
rock
software
and
it's
part
of
our
offering
in
the
red
open
shift.
B
A
An
example
on
how
ike
is
the
attention
now
in
devsecops
and
security
topics.
B
Yeah
sure
so
yeah
go
ahead.
A
No
no,
I
was
I
was
saying.
Let
me
let
me
say
that
security
has
been
since
we
are
on
openshift
tv
security
has
been
the
from
the
beginning,
the
focus
of
openshift
from
with
sc
linux,
from
the
host
sc
linux
of
the
container
and
the
container
runtime,
which
is
cryo
now
in
version
1
2022,
together
with
kubernetes
122..
A
This
is
part
of
the
the
the
new
stuff
that
new
cool
stuff
that
we
have
an
open
sheet
for
the
night,
but
I
just
wanted
to
mention
that
security
has
been
present
for
the
first
time
in
openshift
and
now
also
the
kubernetes
community
is
embracing
this
with
opa
and
other
gatekeeper.
So
there
are
lots
of
projects
that
help
enforcing
and
keeping
secure
your
kubernetes
cluster.
A
Then
other
project
can
help
just
making
sure
that
everything
in
the
cluster
and
everything
that
runs
in
the
cluster
is
secure
as
well.
B
Yeah
yeah
correct,
and
so
in
fact
you
know
what
you
you
mentioned
about
ses
is
is
a
is
a
great
example
of
how
security
you
know
can
be
thought
about
from
different
perspectives
and
and
of
course,
as
you
said,
openshift
had
security
in
mind
from
day
one
because
it
was
built
on
our
foundation,
which
is
real
and
which
has
been
known
for
for
many.
B
You
know
for
decades
as
a
secure
linux
platform
to
run
the
applications,
and
we
had
things
like
you
know
very
sophisticated
things
like
the
secs,
like
the
security,
you
know
the
the
secs
that
allowed
us
to
define
what
pods
could
do
or
not,
etc,
and
that
went
then
upstream
in
the
upstream
kubernetes
so
from
the
downstream
open
shift
where
we
implemented
that
into
upstream
kubernetes
as
the
psps
port
security
polar
policies.
B
So
those
were
very
like
technical
things
that
are
built
in
the
the
the
you
know,
the
underlying
layers,
but
as
we,
you
know,
moved
forward
and
customers
started
adopting
it
and
some
security
vendors
started
to
you
know.
You
know,
build
specific
things
for
kubernetes.
B
We
saw
that
there
was
a
strong
shift
into
like
providing
great
tooling
to
to
be
able
to
not
only
scan
the
the
containers
but
scan.
You
know,
scan
the
the
images
the
static
images
in
in
the
registries
for
cves
and
stuff
like
that,
but
also
do
like,
like
runtime
scans,
for
processes
that
are
happening
within
the
the
containers
and
be
able
to
isolate
them.
B
If
you
are
suspecting,
you
know,
untrusted
behavior
in
in
in
cyber
containers
and
stuff
like
that,
but
also
be
able
to
secure
communications
between
containers
and
check,
like
with
network
policies.
If
you
some
container,
is
allowed
to
speak
to
another
one
or
if
it
should
be
prevented
to
do
so
et
cetera
and
as
we
acquired
acs,
you
know,
formerly,
sec
rocks
and
it's
become
part
of
the
openshift
plus
family
product.
It
really,
you
know,
took
security
to
another
level.
B
Well,
not
only
we
had
the
deep
rooted
security
features
in
the
platform,
but
now
we
provided
also
the
top
the
on
on
top
security
features
that
allows
you,
as
an
administrator
or
as
a
security
engineer
to
be
able
to.
You
know
provide
feedback
and
check,
what's
happening
at
runtime
and
act
upon
what's
happening
in
your
cluster
and
not
just
static
things
like
when
you
build
an
image
or
when
you,
when
you
push
an
image
right,
a
registry
or
something
like
that.
A
Right,
this
is
a
complementary.
I
think
it's
complementary
from
also
what
we
could
have
the
secure
inner
loop,
because
we
have
an
extension
for
modern
ide
dependency
analytics,
so
you
can
download
from
for
intellij
for
visual
studio
code
when
you
download
the
red
that
dependency
analytics
extension,
you
have
there's
an
integration
with
sneak
sneak
is
a
sas
for
creating
bringing
security
scan
in
your
software.
So
when,
when
you
use
this
extension,
it's
gonna
scan
your
software
locally
and
look
for
any
any
things.
A
That
may
be
wrong
any
well-known
security
issue,
so
you
can
start
scanning
your
software
before
you
bring,
as
you
say,
to
the
platform
and
the
platform
can
start
the
loop
like
creating
the
container
image
and
scanning
so
there's
an
overall
ecosystem
in
kubernetes
that
help
you
bring
in
security
on
the
first
step
but
java.
This
was
one
of
the
topics
that
we
have
a
kubecon
other
good
things
that
we
heard
from
keynotes
from
session
is
that
most
many
companies
started
donating
project
to
to
to
the
to
the
community.
A
A
So
this
this
is
an
example
that
how
companies
working
in
together
in
the
community
can
can
can
share
the
the
best
that
they
produce,
and
then
everyone
can
take
benefit
for
those
of
you
who
are
not
aware
of
what
is
ebpf
is
a
protocol
that
modern
protocol
is
a
is
a
networking
system
that
help
improving
the
network
performance
in
your
operating
system
and
in
this
case
in
kubernetes.
A
We
know
why
I
say
this
because
observability
mattering
is
one
of
the
other
hottest
points
in
in
kubernetes
since
you're
supposed
to
manage
lots
of
workloads,
lots
of
microservices.
Probably
so
you
need
to
take
care,
you
need
to
track
consumption,
you
need
to
track
usage.
We
we
mentioned
at
the
site
relevant
engineering.
A
Well,
this
is
the
bread
of
sre.
I
know
metrics
observability
and
it's
cool
that
we
have
many
tools
like
this
for
the
open,
telemetry,
the
this
open
telemetry
project
open
in
in
the
community
to
to
to
get
support
to
kubernetes
for
for
metrics
and
observability.
A
A
We
announced
two
two
things:
one
is
the
enhanced
developer
experience
with
kubernetes
because
in
red
dot,
openshift
4.9
the
new
version
that
is
ga
from
from
this
week,
we
have
an
enhanced
developer
experience,
because
there
is
more
and
more
integration
in
the
web,
console
for
helm,
chart
argo,
cds
or
githubs
and
and
other
other
stuff
that
that
that
came
like
operators
and
also
so
this.
This
wasn't
an
I
put
in
the
chat
the
link
for
this
announcement
for
the
developer
experience.
A
The
other
thing
jafar,
which
is
very
interesting
and
cool,
is
that
we
announced
red
that
announced
the
support
for
single
node
openshift.
For
for
those
of
you
that
were
waiting
for
this,
I
know
that
the
many
of
you
were
was
where
they
were
waiting
for
this
for
a
long
time.
I.
A
B
So
so
for
for
those
who
have
been
familiar
with
openshift,
so
natalie,
I'm
good,
I'm
glad
I'm
back
because
I
think
I
dropped.
B
B
Okay,
okay,
cool,
so
yeah.
So
for
those
of
you
who
have
been
familiar
with
openshift
and
with
the
with
kubernetes
in
general,
you
know
that
there
are
some
components.
You
know
some
very
important
components
like
hcd
that
need
to
be
in
you
know,
at
least
you
know,
have
three
atvs,
and
so
that's
why
we,
we
came
up
with
the
with
the
the
architecture
where
you
have.
B
Actually
you
have
three
masters
for
openshift
four,
and
you
know
as
many
workers
as
you
want,
then,
but
that
was
like
the
strict
minimum
and
some
people
who
who
had
some
edge
use
cases
or
who
didn't
want
to
invest
much
more
infrastructure
to
have
a
minimal
cluster.
We're
asking.
How
can
I
reduce
the
size
of
my
openshift
cluster
or
even
my
kubernetes
cluster,
and
still
benefit
from
everything
that
you
provide,
like
you
know:
the
operators,
the
monitoring,
the
ci
cd,
etc.
B
So
we
have
worked
on
that
heavily
and
the
first
step
towards
that
was
the
compact
cluster,
which
was
a
minimum
of
three
masters
who
are
already
also
workers.
So
that
was
a
first
step
towards
minimizing
the
number
of
resources
needed
for
openshift
to
work,
and
then
some
other
work
was
done
to
be
able
to.
B
You
know
compact,
all
of
that
and
be
able
to
provide
all
those
services
into
one
single
instance
and
of
course
what
it
means
is
because
so
so
the
the
primary
reason
when
you
are
duplicating
the
instances
of
like
hcd
and
stuff
like
that
is
the
to
to
have
the
ability
to
have
the
the
quorum,
for
instance
in
case
of
malfunction
somewhere
in
order
to
provide
h
a.
B
But
when
you
you
move
to
a
single
node
cluster.
So
there
are
benefits
which
are
you
have
all
the
features
of
openshift,
and
now
I
see
all
the
features
compared
to
code
ready
containers,
for
instance,
where
you
had
some
things
that
were
not
available.
Now,
it's
like
a
fully
deployable
openshift
cluster
that
you
can
use
for
production
and
where
you
have
all
the
services
you
have
the
marketplace.
You
have
the
monitoring,
you
have
telemetry
if
you
choose
to
etc.
B
The
only
thing
is
that
it's
not
going
to
be,
of
course,
because
it's
already
into
a
single
cluster,
but
I
was
really
very
pleased
when
I
tried
it
so
I
deployed
openshift
on
a
single
node
where
I
had,
I
think
something
like
32
gigs
of
ram
and
it
worked
very
nicely
and
I
was
able
to
to
consume
many
services
so
yeah.
That's
a
very
nice
announcement
for
all
of
our
customers
who
are
looking
to
have
you
know
remote,
so
autonomous
openshift
clusters
in
remote
locations
or
stuff
like
that.
B
B
It's
just
a
worker
that
has
been
designed
to
to
cope
with
with
latency
issues
or
disconnections
and
stuff
like
that,
and
now
it's
really
a
different
pattern
where
you
can
have
a
fully
running
openshift
cluster
in
just
one
node
and
have
all
the
services
working
there.
So
that's
that's
a
great
addition
and
it's
so
you
know
I
I
tried
doing
it
with
the
assisted
installer,
which
is
still
I
think
beta
for
now,
but
yeah.
It
generates
an
iso
file.
B
You
deploy
it
on
your
instance
or
you
can
also
run
it
on
bare
metal
and
then
everything
works
so
yeah.
It
was
a
very
pleasant
experience
and
I'm
really
happy
to
you
know
to
even
for
my
experiment
in
labs.
I
I
can
now
strip
down
my
infrastructure
and
have
many
clusters.
You
know
five
six
clusters
running
on
my
own
lab,
instead
of
maybe
five
six
vms
for
one
openshift
cluster,
so.
A
Well,
jafar:
this
is
a
thanks
for
for
this,
because
it
gave
me
the
opportunity
to
talk
about
also
enactfest
that
we're
going
to
deliver
for
for
with
using
openshift
for
edge.
But
I
was
wondering,
do
you
have
any
you
know?
Twitch
and
openshift
is
very
informal.
Do
you
have
any
cluster?
A
I
mean
that
that
you
can
show
us
with
a
single
node
openshift
on
the
fly.
B
Or
as
of
now,
it's
not
started
and
if
I
started
the
server
is
like
next
to
my
computer
here.
So
it's
gonna,
it's
gonna
do
a
lot
of.
B
We
can
plan
for
that
for
our
next
session
and
yes,
please,
let's
present
that
and
yeah,
we
can
also
show
you
know
different
steps
from
how
you
install
it
and
how
you
use
it.
The
great
thing
is
that
you
know
installation
is
more
or
less
like
a
a
standard,
openshift
cluster,
but
the
features
are
exactly
the
same.
So
that's
what
I
really
liked
is,
I
have
all
of
the
openshift
functionalities,
except
that
they
are
all
running
inside
one
one
note.
So
that's.
A
A
To
share
in
the
chat
the
act,
fest,
there's
gonna
be
november,
the
second
an
access
around
open
shift,
single
dot,
open
shift,
so
openshift
for
edge
and
edge
computing.
This
is
an
access
using
quarkus
for
iot.
A
Quercus
technology
for
a
java
running
java,
optimized
application
for
the
edge
and
using
openshift
to
make
an
iot
a
project
which
is,
in
this
case
collecting
and
gathering
data
from
the
pollution
from
outside
and
gathering
all
this
data
to
monitor
and
track
the
pollution,
and
so
the
the
idea
around
this
access
is
that
this
is
for
red
that
partners,
but
this
the
com,
it's
an
community
project.
This
community
project
is
is
available
on
git
and
I
I
can
also
share
the
link
in
a
in
a
moment.
A
The
idea
is
really
to
use
openshift
single
node
openshift
to
have
those
entities
at
the
edge
and
we're
talking
to
sensor
sensor
will
connect
data
for
from
the
from
the
outside,
and
then
they
will
send
all
the
data
to
a
central,
open
shift,
which
is
a
something
which
is
controlling
the
let's
say
super
setting
the
other
open
shift
at
the
edge.
So
I
think
it's
a
nice
example
on
how
you
can
use
single
node,
open
shift,
edge
computing
and
also
there's
a
java
technology.
A
A
I
think
this
is
an
example
on
how
you
can
take
benefit
of
this
single
node
open
shift
yeah,
so
that
that
this
is
what
we
announced
in
the
in
in
the
in
at
uconn
yeah.
Another
announce
jafar
was
for
the
enhanced
the
capability
of
the
advanced
cluster
manager
for
kubernetes,
so
the
the
new
version,
the
2.4,
is
able
to
work
more
and
more
closely
to
argo,
cd
and
openshift
get
ups.
A
So
openshift
guidops
is
our
implementation
around
argo
cd,
which
is
the
upstream
project
implementing
europe's
the
2.4,
is
having
more
support
for
edge
capability
for
deploying
single
node
cluster
or
zero
touch
provisioning
and
also,
as
we
said,
more
and
more
support
for
github's
app
jafar.
Do
you
have
any
photo
any
any
any
feedback
about
acm
and
gitops
and
edge?
Can
you
foresee
some
architecture
that
may
be
interesting.
B
So
yeah
it's
it's
not
a
topic
that
I
have.
You
know
digged
so
much
for
for
the
moment,
but
yeah.
Of
course,
what
it
means
is,
as
you're
going
to
grow
your
fleet
of
remote
on-site,
single
nodes
or
workers,
etc,
you're
going
to
to
to
want
to
industrialize
the
way
that
you
are
going
to
manage
those
because
say,
for
instance,
you
had
one
central
or
five
central
clusters
that
you
managed
prior
to
that,
and
you
had
hundreds
of
nodes.
B
B
B
That
means
that
now
you
are
managing
hundreds
of
you
know
hundred
clusters
and
not
just
a
hundred
nodes
part
of
five
clusters,
so
it
becomes
a
whole
another
level
of
of
scaling,
and
I
believe
that
acm
is
going
to
play
a
great
role
in
you
know,
providing
an
easy
way
to
manage
those
hundreds
of
single
node
clusters
or
edge
clusters
in
a
centralized
way
where
you
can
define
so
here's
everything
I
want
to
be
applied
to
all
my
clusters,
like
policies
whenever
I
create
a
new
cluster
here
here
are
the
set
of
settings
and
policies
that
need
to
be
applied.
B
If
anything
is
not
compliant,
then
I
can
enforce
compliance
by
modifying
stuff
on
on
those
remote
clusters.
So
that's
one
of
the
I'd
say
first
patterns
that
acm
is
going
to
help
a
lot
with
and,
of
course,
with
the
get
up
sting.
B
So
you
can
again.
As
I
mentioned,
you
can
either
choose
to
have
a
central,
argo
or
openshift
getups
instance
that
is
located
on
your
central
point
of
management
or
you
can
with
acm,
manage
those
openshift
get
up
instances
on
all
of
those
remote
clusters
and
then
each
of
those
openshift
get
ups,
meaning
argo
cd
instances
is
going
to
locally
maintain
what
is
running
on
that
single
node
cluster,
so
meaning.
B
If
something
wrong
happens,
if
your
configuration
is
tampered
with,
the
local,
argo,
cd
or
openshift
instance
is
going
to
to
correct
that
and
you
are
minimizing
you
know,
the
communication
between
you
know
back
and
forth
your
central
argo,
cd
instances
and
all
of
those
hundred
clusters.
B
So
it's
really
you
know
in
in
an
age
mentality,
things
are
autonomous
where
they
are
so
yeah.
I
think
that's
one
of
the
patterns
that
are
going
to
be
you
know
most
yeah.
B
Yeah
adopted
having
autonomous
remote
clusters,
single,
maybe
single,
node
clusters.
So
again
it
depends.
You
can
have
compact
clusters,
you
can
have
signal
node
clusters.
You
can
have
a
real
full
openshift
cluster,
with
three
masters
and
as
many
workers
as
you
need
it
depends
on.
You
know.
If
you
are
you
you're
running
a
huge
facility
or
if
you
are
like
chick-fil-a
having
hundreds
of
restaurants,
where
you
want
to
have
your
local
kubernetes
instance,
it
depends
on
on
the
use
cases
but
yeah.
B
I
think
that's
going
to
be
a
pattern,
and
the
good
thing
is
that
if
you
are
using
acm
to
manage
that
you
can
apply
all
the
same
things
to
your
full
openshift,
regular
clusters
and
just
likewise
to
your
single
node,
openshift
clusters,
etc.
So
I
think
that's
how
these
things
are
going
to
play
together.
A
A
So
just
a
reminder
that
everything
we
do
here
is
open
source,
so
you
can
use
open
cluster
manager
in
any
kubernetes
in
an
openshift.
You
can
use
advanced
cluster
manager
and
management
viva
operator,
so
you
you,
you
can
just
select
your
cluster
as
a
controller
of
other
cluster,
so
one
cluster
is
created
managing
other
clusters.
A
Another
interesting
use
case,
since
we
are
talking
about
edge,
is
the
remote
workers
use
cases
so
and
jafar.
This
is
interesting
because
we
got
this
question
about
latency.
So
what
should
be
the
latency
in
all
this
kubernetes
class?
If
there
is
a
kubernetes
cluster
control,
plane
somewhere
and
the
worker
somewhere
at
the
far
edge?
What
is
the
latency?
It's
a
it's
a
question
which
is
not
is
you
know?
A
I
think
it's.
I
don't
know
if
you
have
any
any
technical
insight
about
this,
but
my
impression
is
that
the
the
workers
has
not
that
strict
requirement
like
the
the
control
plane
in
terms
of
latency.
B
Yeah
so
indeed.
A
B
You
talk
about
the
control
plane.
I
believe
that
in
the
early
days
of
kubernetes,
we
used
to
say
that
the
minimum
latency
or
the
maximum
latency
actually
needed
to
be
around
five
milliseconds,
and
so
that's
for
the
control
planes.
But
there
wasn't
a
strict,
I
would
say,
latency
issue
for
for
the
workers,
except
when
you
know
when
they
report
back
to
the
to
the
to
the
work
to
the
masters.
B
In
order
to
know
you
know
how
many
pods
are
running
and
and
stuff
like
that,
so
there's
back
and
forth
communication
between
the
masters,
of
course,
to
synchronize
the
lcds
and
stuff
like
that
and
there's
back
and
forth
communication
between
the
masters
and
the
and
the
workers.
But
there
isn't
indeed
as
much.
You
know,
latency,
I
would
say
contingencies
between
the
worker
and
the
masters
as
sorry
and
the
control
plane,
because
we
we
we
shouldn't,
say
masters
anymore
as
between
the
control
planes
themselves.
B
But
what
I
know
is
that
some
specific
work
has
been
done
on
the
remote
workers
to
be
able
to
cope
with
the
with
with
latency
in
case.
So
it's
much
more
than
what
was
tolerable
with
a
traditional,
I
would
say
worker.
B
I
don't
have
the
figures
exactly,
but
that's
something
that
we
can
find,
but
I
know
that
there
was
there
were
some
specific
tunings
for
the
remote
workers
to
to
be
able
to
cope
with.
You
know,
intempestive
connection
drops
between
the
worker
and
the
the
control
planes
and
if
there
was
also
latency
issues
so
so
yeah
there
was
some
specific
work
done
for
that.
B
I
just
don't
have
exactly
the
figures,
but
we
can
find
that.
I
think
if
we
go
back
to
one
of
the
what's
new
sessions
where,
where
we
introduced
the
remote
workers,
maybe
it
was
four
six.
B
We
can
find
you
know
those
those
those
details
in
there.
A
Yeah
yeah
yeah,
so
yeah,
that's
was
just
a
note
because
we
have
a
lots
of
interesting
use
cases
with
edge
now
single
node,
but
also
remote
workers.
So
you
can
compose
your
kubernetes
topology
at
your
convenience.
That
was
super
interesting.
I
think
we
have.
We
discovered
two
things
that
we
need
to
investigate.
One
is
the
single
node
openshift
in
the
next
session,
and
also
we
should
do
a
session
about
the
new
feature.
A
Our
operation
tonight
today
was
just
a
recap
of
what's
new,
but
we
can
do
another
session
where
we
show
in
a
demo
all
the
new
feature
on
for
the
night.
Please,
if
you
want
to
try
it,
please
try
it
out.
Go
in.
I
put
in
the
chat
the
link
to
go
to
this,
to
this
link
to
try
open
for
the
nine
you
can
download
with
a
crc
locally
or
you
can
try
on
in
our
managed
offering.
A
So
you
can
try
right
now.
All
for
the
night.
I
I
tried
myself
yesterday
on
rosa,
read
that
open
shift
on
aws,
very
nice
and
smooth
experience.
So
definitely
we
have
a
material
for
the
next
session,
but
for
today's
session,
another
feedback
that
we
I
saw
a
lot
in
cubecon
lots
of
people
would
like
to
learn.
Kubernetes
I
would
like
to
get
started
would
like
to
get
guidance.
We
have
this
website,
which
is
cube
by
example,
that
I
would
like
to
also
share
in
the
chat.
A
If
you
go
to
the
the
website
that
I
put
in
the
chat
cube
by
example,
this
website
is
really
nice
webs,
a
nice
reference
where
you
can
start
to
start
learning
kubernetes
and
also
investigate
additional
topics
that
you
want
to
investigate.
So
you
can
get
started
with
the
kubernetes
basics,
but
also
you
can
understand
the
linux,
essential,
kubernetes
fundamentals,
application
development
of
kubernetes
developing
a
application
on
kubernetes.
A
A
Let
me
share
also
in
the
chat,
because
it
contains
nice
videos,
three
minutes,
videos
explaining
core
concepts
like
pod
deployment
demonstrate
stateful
set
those
those
are
the
core
concepts
of
kubernetes
and
then
you
can
go
and
and
explore
more
and
I
saw
jafar
also
in
a
cubicle
and
lots
of
people
were
interested
on.
You
know
getting
experienced
in
kubernetes,
I
think
they're.
Now
there
there
is
lots
of
how
to
get
started.
A
Probably
what
is
still
missing,
how
I
get
proficient
with
kubernetes.
B
Well,
so,
if
I'm
speaking
from
you
know
my
proper
experience,
I
know
that
the
you
know
the
the
best
way
to
to
to
learn
things
is
to
really
experiment
them,
so
I'm
I'm
a
very
hands-on
guy.
So
if
I
see
there's
a
new
topic,
I'm
gonna
try
to
you
know,
play
with
it,
deploy
it
and
see
how
things
work
rather
than
read
how
they
work.
So
that's
basically
how
I
was
you
know
how
I've
been
working
in
the
past
15
years
or
so
so.
B
That's
how
I
would
recommend
to
do
things.
You
know,
of
course,
it's
good
to
read
how
things
work,
but
whenever
you
get
a
chance
spin
up
a
cluster
and
you
know,
do
some
exercises.
Do
some
examples
go
through
some
examples,
and
and
that's
how
you
know
you
really
start
to
understand
how
how
things
work
yeah.
That's
my
my
suggestion.
Suggestion
is
always
hands-on.
A
Hands-On,
hands-on
yeah
definitely
definitely
hands-on.
It's
a
great
suggestion.
Another
thing
that
I
would
like
to
recommend
is
joining
the
kubernetes
community,
which
is
very
active.
So
there
are
the
the
sikh
group,
so
the
group
of
where
the
community
meets.
If
you
like,
to
get
more,
you
go
in
the
kubernetes
website
you
go
into
in
the
group.
You
go
in
the
join
the
community
and
you
can
join
these
these
meetings
that
the
community
are
you,
you
can't
select
your
favorite
topic.
A
Kubernetes
is
very
as
a
lots
of
area
where
you
can
investigate
you
like
metering,
you,
like
security,
you
like
application
development.
You
can
join
one
of
this
group
of
interests
and
join
the
community.
It's
one
of
the
most
important
thing
that
may
speed
up
your
kubernetes
journey.
This
is
my
yeah
by
final,
a
recommendation
on
that.
A
So
what
the
what
we
got
from
cubecon
or
north
america,
jafar
older
than
we
had
we
were
in
there,
unfortunately,
is
that
there
are
lots
of
cool
stuff
going
on
the
kubernetes
development
is
is,
is
going
very
fast.
A
There
are
things
to
please
catch
up
with
the
official
announcement
where
they
will
wrap
up
all
the
an
announcement
that
we're
there
and,
and
also
the
other
thing
cool
that
they
announced
is
that
the
new
kubecon
is
going
to
be
in
valencia
in
spain
in
may.
If
I
recall
correctly,
we.
B
A
Can
be
there
to
in
person
this
time
if,
if
you
are
in,
if
you
can,
please
join
because
this
is
the
coolest
event
for
kubernetes
and
cloud
native.
B
A
B
Yeah,
so
so
one
of
the
hardest
topics,
if
you
look
at
the
service
mesh
in
general,
is
has
been
for
the
past,
maybe
year
or
so
how
you
manage
cross-cluster
communications,
so
multi-cluster
deployments,
and
so
I'm
happy
to
to
say
that,
with
the
the
the
new
release
of
openshift
service
mesh,
we
have
announced
support
for
multi-cluster
mesh
meshes.
B
B
A
B
A
Multiple
clouds,
multiple
clusters,
we
need
something
that
keeps
all
in
sync
can
be
in
our
acm
for
provisioning
or
governance
and
service
mesh
can
be
the
tool
that
really
keep
the
application
in
sync
and
make
some
layer
to
control
the
traffic
between
those
applications.
I
put
a
link
in
the
chat
if
you
are
interested
on
service
mesh
and
understanding
more
what
this
step
is
mesh
and
how
can
solve
address
your
let's
say
cloud
native
challenges
or
or
your
application,
development
and
yeah.
A
Those
were
one
of
the
hottest
things
that
we
announced
at
kubecon.
I
I
have
another
news
to
say
that
developer
sandbox,
which
is
our
cloud
free
cloud,
kubernetes
experience
that
we
offer
that
that
we
offer
it's
now
supporting
also
serverless
workloads.
So
let
me
share
in
the
chat,
sandbox
url.
If
you
go
here,
you
get
an
account
for
frame
for
developer.com
and
you
join
an
openshift
cluster
for
free.
A
You
can
start
deploying
and
try
out
your
kubernetes
workloads
and
also
you
can
try
out
k
native,
which
is
the
serverless
implementation
in
kubernetes.
So
if
you
like
to
explore
more
the
topic
about
serverless,
you
can
now
try
it
out
directly
on
developer
sandbox.
So
please
register
on
sandbox
and
let
us
know
all
the
any
feedback
that
you
that
you
have.
B
And
and
natalie
thank
you
for
bringing
that
up
because
this
afternoon,
actually
I
will
be
co-hosting
a
session
about
openshift
serverless,
oh
yeah,
so
yeah
on
openshift
tv,
so
it's
gonna
be
on
the
level
up
hour.
So
yes,
guys,
if
you
want
to
know
more
about
serverless,
please
come
this
afternoon.
B
It's
at
3
00
pm
our
time
in
mia
time
zone.
So
yeah.
If
you
go
on
the
openshift
tv
channel,
you
will
be
able
to
see
the
the
schedule
there.
But
yes,
please.
B
Come
to
the
serverless
session,
we're
gonna
have
the
pms
we're
gonna
have
a
demo
we're
gonna.
Have
you
know
just
a
conversation
about
basically
what
serverless
how
it
works,
how
we
implement
it
so
yeah.
I
think
it's
going
to
be
an
interesting
session.
I.
A
Think
it's
great,
I
won't
miss
it,
so
3
p.m,
and
this
thanks
jafar
for
reminding
this.
Please
look
at
the
agenda
that
we
have
an
openshift
tv
today.
This
is
the
our
emea
time
zone,
show,
let's
say
our
pack,
so
it's
covering
this
part
of
the
world.
Let's
say
for
the
time
zone,
then
in
the
in
our
afternoon
we
go
in
the
global,
let's
say
schedule
so
3
p.m.
A
There's
jafar
on
the
level
up
hour
talking
about
serverless
with
the
pms,
then
there's
the
ask
and
openshift
admin
at
5
p.m,
and
then
there's
a
and
there's
another
show
about
about
rel
at
8,
as
as
I
see
so,
please
check
the
calendar.
We
are
in
the
final
moments
of
our
show,
thanks
for
to
everyone
for
attending.
Thank
jafar
for
being
here
today.
A
A
great
conversation
I
just
want
to
remind
that.
Obviously
corporate
break
will
come
back
november,
the
3rd
with
the
open
shift,
the
single,
not
open,
shift
session
that
we
mentioned
today.
So
please
join
us
november,
the
3rd
same
time
same
channel
here
at
openshifttv.
Thank
you
very
much.