►
From YouTube: OpenShift Commons Gathering Santa Clara 2019 OpenShift Community Update - Diane Mueller Red Hat
Description
OpenShift Commons Gathering
Santa Clara 2019
OpenSource Collaboration in Action
Community Update Diane Mueller (Red Hat)
A
So
today,
I'm
gonna
try
and
stay
on
track
and
on
time,
I'm
pretty
good,
usually
about
it.
We're
gonna
be
kind
of
front-loaded
the
whole
morning
with
a
lot
of
talk
about
operators,
because
in
the
afternoon
some
of
you
are
registered
for
the
operator
framework
training
course,
which
you
should
all
take.
If
you
can
at
some
point
and
if
you
haven't
gotten
into
the
class,
go
to
learn,
openshift
comm
and
the
operator
framework
is
there's
a
whole
category
course
on
it.
A
So
there's
great
stuff,
so
don't
feel
bad
if
you
got
left
out,
I'll
have
a
coffee
break
around
10:50
we're
gonna
hear
from
some
people
who
have
built
operators,
some
people
who
are
building
operators
and
we're
going
to
talk
a
lot
about
container
security
because
that's
top
of
everybody's
mind
I,
know
and
then
we're
gonna.
After
the
morning
such
training
is
done.
A
I'm
gonna
make
the
trainers
and
the
folks
who
are
building
the
rook
operator
come
in
and
give
a
little
talk
to
so
really
the
morning
is
very
operator
focused
and
that's
a
good
thing
in
my
point.
From
my
point
of
view,
the
afternoon
we're
gonna
dive
into
some
other
technologies,
we're
going
to
talk
about
some
deep
learning
inference
on
NVIDIA.
Some
of
the
GP
work.
Gpu
work,
that's
being
going
on
is
Peter
McKinnon
in
the
room.
A
So
we're
really
happy
to
have
a
good
group
of
folks
to
come
and
have
that
conversation
and
talk
about
why
that's
really
important,
then
later
Brian,
Redbeard
and
you'll
know
him,
because
it
does
have
that
red
beard
is
going
to
give
us
a
talk
on
K
native
key
ally,
sto
and
all
that
good
service
mesh
stuff.
Then
because
I
can't
do
a
gathering
without
having
a
real
case
study
from
someone
to
keep
us
grounded,
as
we
have
production
case
study
from
First,
Republic
and
I.
A
Don't
know
if
the
first
republic'
person
is
here
yet
but
he'll
be
coming.
Keresh
promises
me
and
then
we'll
just
do
a
little
bit
of
a
wrap,
but
what
I
like
to
do
at
the
very
end?
It
would
there'll
be
time
a
little
bit
of
time
in
between
talks
for
QA,
but
I'd
like
to
bring
all
of
the
speakers
back
onstage
at
the
end
of
the
day
before
the
reception.
So
you
get
one
more
chance
to
like
input
in
print
on
their
faces.
So
during
the
reception
you
can
bug
them
too.
A
A
I,
don't
know
how
many
of
you
realize,
but
this
is
a
community
of
that
not
a
corporate
event,
which
is
why
we,
we
really
are
dependent
on
our
wonderful
supporters
and
not
only
are
these
people,
port
works
and
crunchy
data
at
kouvaris
and
IAS
are
out
there
in
the
reception
area,
but
they're
also
some
of
the
people
who
are
building
some
of
the
operators
and
our
partners,
technology
partners,
helping
other
people
deploy
and
build
out
their
cloud
infrastructure.
So
we're
really
pleased
to
have
them
here
and
we
really
are
beholden
to
them.
A
So
you'll
hear
me
thank
them
quite
a
bit.
So
I
want
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
what
this
community
is
about,
because
you
all
here,
because
it
said
open
shift
Commons,
you
might
be
all
here
because
there's
free
training,
but
really
what
we're
trying
to
do
is
create
around
the
ecosystem.
That
is
OpenShift
and
kubernetes
a
network
and
a
peer-to-peer
network
of
people
who
can
collaborate
together
effectively,
and
that's
really
my
goal
here.
A
What
had
in
the
tiniest
font,
ever
every
open
source
project
that
anyone
at
Red
Hat
had
contributed
to,
and
it
was
you
needed
a
microscope
to
see
it,
there's
just
so
much
open
source
out
there
that
is
powering
all
of
these
projects,
not
just
every
one
of
the
projects,
including
OpenShift
and
kubernetes,
is
beholden
to
a
whole
slew
of
libraries,
languages
and
ancillary
projects
that
help
feed
into
it.
So
it's
just
part
of
our
DNA
and
that's
really
important
to
keep
in
mind
and
okd
is
just
one
piece
of
that
puzzle.
A
So
this
is
really
about.
How
do
we
work
effectively
together
to
drive
that
continuous
innovation
into
your
projects?
How
do
you
get
your
feedback
into
those
projects?
How
do
you
get
updates
and
releases
and
information?
And
how
do
you
manage
all
of
that
fire
hose
of
information,
so
first
I'm
going
to
do
a
quick
update,
so
how
many
of
you
heard
that
we
changed
the
name
of
the
open
source
project,
formerly
known
as
origin,
to
okd
show
of
hands?
Yes,
okay,
some
of
you
didn't.
A
So
we
brought
back
the
Panda
if
you
guys
were
around
in
the
very
early
days
of
gears
and
cartridges
with
open
shift.
We
had
a
cute
little
animal
icon
and
when
build
'got,
there's
I
wanted
mine
back.
So
I
got
this
one
back
in
the
update
and
so
about
three
years
ago,
maybe
probably
two
and
a
half
years
ago.
If
you
don't
know
about
it,
we
did
a
little
pivot
and
we
refactored
all
of
open
shift
on
top
of
kubernetes
and
became
basically
a
kubernetes
distribution.
So
the
rebranding
is
really
about
reflecting
that.
A
A
Okay,
D
is
the
is
still
called
origin
in
the
repo.
So
if
you
wrote
scripts
or
anything
else
that
is
building
your
own
version
of
okay
D,
it's
still
all
in
the
same
place.
We
didn't
change
that
bit.
So
I
really
wanted
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
how
and
how
we're
building
and
delivering
OpenShift
it's
really
about
integrating.
A
All
of
the
other
tools
that
you
use,
whether
it's
ansible,
whether
it's
helm,
whether
it's
operator
framework
because
we're
going
to
talk
a
lot
about
operators
today
or
any
of
the
other,
the
core
OS
pieces,
the
docker
pieces,
any
of
the
SEF
cluster.
We
are
really
beholdin
to
all
of
these
other
projects
that
we
pull
in
along
with
kubernetes
and
create
our
community
distribution.
A
And
there
are
these
dates,
or
these
things
are
that
they're
over
now,
I
think
I
have
68
community
operators
and
we're
going
to
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
operators
and
things
like
that.
So
I'm
not
going
to
steal
thunder
from
other
people,
but
there's
hundreds
of
opera
folks
that
have
integrated
software
that
works
with
OpenShift
and
under
openshift.
So
it's
really
that
that's
driving
it
into
the
container
platform
to
open,
dedicated,
openshift,
online
and
OpenShift
on
Azure.
A
But
these
people,
who
are
part
of
our
community,
like
the
crunch
EDP
folks
and
the
port
works
folks
and
kouvaris,
and
the
others
and
black
duck
and
NVIDIA
people
you'll
hear
from
today,
and
people
who
aren't
here
today
and
big
customers
who
are
using
stuff
like
Amadeus,
who
are
also
contributing
to
other
projects.
All
of
those
people
make
up
the
openshift
community
and
the
ecosystem,
so
openshift
Commons
is,
is
our
community
central?
Is
our
community
place
for
all
of
these
people?
A
We
have
about
475
now,
depending
on
the
day
of
the
week,
and
whether
I've
answered
all
my
email
as
it
goes
up
pretty
much
ten
or
twelve
new
members
a
month
which
is
pretty
awesome
and
it's
all
very
organic.
It's
just
people
who
want
to
get
into
the
community
get
on
the
mailing
list
and
the
slack
channels,
so
I
want
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
this
and
so
open
ship
Commons
is,
is
really
kind
of
a
new
new
community
model,
new
old
sort
of
community
model.
A
A
We
have
probably
about
500
videos
in
the
YouTube
channel
now
of
briefings
and
talks
and
things
that
I've
coerced
you
and
you've
asked
me
to
be
able
to
give
I
love,
giving
away
the
podium,
though
it
doesn't
seem
like
that
right
now,
but
I
will
and
we're
really
trying
just
to
keep
the
cadence
up
every
time
a
new
release
comes
out
every
time.
Kafka
comes
with
something
or
spark
or
something
that
people
are
using
in
their
tool.
Kits.
A
We
really
like
to
hear
from
the
people
who
are
using
it,
who
are
building
it
and
get
that
information
out
there.
So,
if
you're
interested
in
doing
that,
we
have
lots
of
gatherings.
This
will
have
a
I
have
a
whole
page
about
that.
You
can
find
it
all
and
openshift
Commons.
So
if
you
go
to
Commons
at
OpenShift
or
you
can
find
the
whole
calendar,
so
this
whole
community
model,
rather
than
me
going
out
trying
to
coerce
you
into
pushing
contribution
into
our
project,
has
really
driven
a
lot
of
contribution
into
our
offering
into
okd.
A
So
we
have
over
70
companies
that
are
now,
and
it's
probably
a
little
higher
since
I.
First
made
this
who
have
actually
made
code
contributions
back
into
okd
and
back
into
that
origin
repo.
So
the
side
effect
of
having
really
good
relationships
that
sounds
like
a
therapy
thing
is,
is
that
you
are
actually
contributing
to
the
relationship.
A
So
we
do
a
lot
of
communication
and
collaboration
on
kubernetes,
and
the
interesting
thing
about
today
is
today
is
not
really
going
to
be
a
lot
about
you're,
not
going
to
hear
about
the
latest
release
of
kubernetes,
or
anything
like
that,
because
there
are
so
many
new
projects
on
the
side
that
we're
going
to
be
talking
about
instead,
which
I
think
is
actually
a
good
thing.
We
do
a
lot
of
work
in
all
the
different
SIG's.
There's
lots
of
leadership,
probably
on
a
monthly
basis.
A
I
probably
should
update
this
slide,
but
there's
a
lot
of
Red
Hatters
who
are
out
there
contributing
to
other
bits
and
pieces
of
kubernetes
the
folks
from
matters
you
are
here.
We've
been
doing.
Some
really
interesting
analysis
work
on
where
the
work
is
being
done
on
kubernetes,
together
using
some
software
that
we
have
access
to
about
where
Red
Hatters
are
contributing
to
open
shift
and
where
they're
contributing
to
kubernetes
and
each
of
those
dots
represent
person
and
a
bit
of
code.
A
That's
in
each
of
the
projects,
and
you
can
kind
of
see
how
the
there's
a
collaboration
across
projects
here
and
we've
been
doing
some
great
work
with
them,
seeing
where
people
are
working
on
both
projects-
and
it's
been
quite
quite
interesting,
but
that's
all
that
those
previous
ones
were
all
about
where
the
Red
Hatters
are.
These
ones
are
where
the
different
organizations,
those
70
folks,
are
or
different
organizations,
are
working
on
both
projects
too,
and
we
really
are
trying
to
encourage
this.
A
The
more
stuff
that's
put
in
the
upstream
kubernetes,
the
better,
in
my
humble
opinion,
because
more
eyeballs,
more
Sun
lights
on
that
and
that
just
gets
sucked
in
when
we
do
our
releases
and
put
into
the
up
from
the
upstream.
So
it's
really
a
very
great
thing.
The
next
iteration
of
this
analysis
is
going
to
take
in
all
of
the
other
CN
CF
projects,
and
so
we
can
start
to
see
where
the
projects
are
going,
which
ones
are
the
popular
kids,
which
ones
are
the
new
kids
and
at
being
from
Canada.
A
One
of
the
things
that's
really
interesting
for
me
is
to
see
where
the
hockey
puck
is
going.
So
what
is
the
next
hotness
and
one
of
the
interesting
things
about
when
you
start
to
really
look
at
the
coop?
The
relationships
in
this
and
this
group
of
people
on
this
network
and
this
community
is
that
you
can
start
to
see
where
the
mavens?
If
you
guys,
if
anyone
has
ever
read
malcolm
gladwell
and
the
tipping
point,
he
has
a
person,
personality
or
persona
called
the
maven
and
that's
those
are
the
people
in
my
mind.
A
In
these
charts,
the
larger
people
that
have
the
most
relationships
to
them,
they
may
be
contributing
code
and
stuff,
but
they're
also
the
people
to
watch
where
they
move
to
when
they
move
from
OpenStack
to
kubernetes
or
back
or
we
were
looking
at
diving
I.
Don't
think
I
have
a
slide
here.
Wait
we're
diving
into
the
Amadeus
as
contributions
and
you
could
see
when
they
started
using
Kafka.
A
I
added
the
little
operator
box
here
on
the
top,
not
because
it's
in
CNC
F,
but
just
because
it's
having
such
a
huge
network
effect
on
the
number
of
people
collaborating
with
kubernetes
in
the
OpenShift
community,
and
it
really
is
not
just
about
the
projects.
It's
about
all
of
the
folks
here
who
are
using
kubernetes,
who
are
using
OpenShift,
who
are
using
core
OS
stuff
who
are
using
those
operators
who
are
building
them.
It's
really
about
the
peers
that
are
here
today
and
that's
if
you
take
one
thing,
do
meet
somebody
new
today.
A
If
you
take
another
thing,
I'll
ask
you
to
do
is
if
you
go
to
Commons
dot,
open,
shipped
org
and
if
you're,
not
a
member
of
open
chef
Commons,
and
you
want
to
be
on
those
slack
channels-
and
you
want
to
get
the
announcements
about
these
events
and
other
ones
and
briefings
that
we
do.
Last
week
we
did
a
briefing
on
the
operator
framework
for
ansible
people
this
week
we're
doing
one
on
the
operator
lifecycle,
management
for
helm
people
every
week
we
do
at
least
one
or
two
we
have
SIG's.
It's
really
a
great
thing.
A
Please
do
join
if
you
can't
figure
out
how
to
do
it.
I'll
be
around
and
I
can
show
you
how
again
I'm
gonna
thank
the
folks
who
are
doing
our
sponsorship
on
the
breaks.
Please
do
take
a
minute
and
visit
with
them.
Ask
them
about
their
operators.
Welcome
if
you
haven't
been
to
an
open
ship
things
before
welcome
to
our
universe,
we're
really
pleased
to
have
you
here
and
thank
you
and
we're
gonna.
Oh
I'm,
going
to
one
more
pitch.
A
If
you
are
coming
to
Boston
for
Red
Hat
summit,
let
me
know,
and
if
you
want
to
speak,
let
me
know
too,
if
you're
going
to
Barcelona
and
you're
gonna
be
or
you
if
you
found
out
you've
got
your
paper
accepted
for
coop
con.
Let
me
know
because
that
probably
means
somebody's
for
your
trip,
so
I
can
get
you
a
to
speak
or
give
you
the
podium
there.
We're
gonna
do
another
gathering
in
Milan
in
the
summer.
A
That
sounds
terrible
trip
right
and
then
we'll
be
back
here
in
the
valley
for
San
Diego
and
in
North
doing
the
kook
on
North
America
event.
So
there's
lots
of
opportunities
for
you
to
get
the
podium
or
for
you
to
ask
for
a
topic
to
be
talked
about.
So
please,
let
me
know
if
there's
anything
you'd
like
to
talk
about.