►
Description
OperatorHub.io Update
Maturity Model Updates
moderator: Rob Szumski
A
Everyone
welcome
to
the
may
operator.
Sig
call
apologies
for
not
having
this.
In
the
past
view,
we
got
caught
up
in
some
us
holidays
and
other
things
like
that,
so
glad
to
be
back
on
the
regular
track.
We've
got
a
pretty
short
agenda
today,
so,
if
folks
want
to
get
anything
added
to
it,
if
you
want
to
show
off
any
of
your
operators,
things
you've
been
working
on,
we
can
totally
do
that.
The
first
thing,
all
myself
folks,
are
new
I'm
Rob
Tomsky
I'm,
a
p.m.
at
Red
Hat.
A
That
looks
after
a
lot
of
the
operator
framework
components.
So
the
SDK
and
the
operator
lifecycle
manager
operator
hub
do
our
operator
certification
program
I'm
just
generally
moving
the
community
forward.
So
we're
really
happy
to
have
you
here
today.
I
wanted
to
highlight
some
new
additions
to
operator
hub
bio
I'm,
some
really
cool
stuff
happening
there
and
then
just
show
up
some
of
the
operator
related
events
that
are
gonna
be
happening
at
Q
Connie.
A
You
if
you
happen
to
be
going
to
that
or
if
you
want
to
catch
a
recording
afterwards
and
then
we've
got
kind
of
some
open
discussion
about
anything
that
folks
will
I
bring
up
on
the
call.
So
with
that
I'm
just
gonna
share.
My
screen
is
the
easiest
way
to
talk
through
operator
hub
dot,
IO.
So
right
now,
we've
got
37.
Operators
in
the
hub,
I
think
the
last
time
that
we
talked
about
it
on
this
call.
There
were
about
like
12
or
14.
A
It
was
kind
of
like
launch
day,
so
you
know,
we've
we've
more
than
doubled,
which
is
great,
so
we've
got
a
bunch
of
cool
ones.
I
think
I
mean
there's
a
ton
to
talk
about,
since
we
were
last
here.
I
think
aqua
securities
operator
has
just
been
added.
Since
then.
This
is
their
security
agent
that
helps
you
get
their
hook
up
to
their
infrastructure.
We're
doing
container
scanning
I
think
the
Amazon
service
operator
was
there
came.
A
Ok
is
a
new
one,
that's
a
part
of
the
K
native
framework,
and
so,
if
you're
familiar
with
Canada,
that's
kind
of
like
kubernetes
serverless
offering,
which
is
pretty
cool.
Cockroach
TB
is
noon,
and
this
one
is
cool.
I
believe
this
is
a
helm,
sharp
based
operators
using
our
helm,
SDK,
you
know,
I
think
a
lot
of
the
operators
we
have
right
now
are
the
pretty
sophisticated
go
one,
so
that's
pretty
cool
to
see
that
their
new
is
also
the
crunchy
Postgres
operator.
A
This
is
probably
one
of
the
oldest
operators
in
existence
and
they've
been
working
really
hard
on
it
and
modernizing
it
with
some
of
the
best
practices
from
the
SDK
and
lifecycle
manager.
Salute
really
glad
to
have
that
they're
also
joined
is
the
Cystic
Falco
operator.
So
this
is
designed
to
detect
you
know
kind
of
interesting
behavior.
They
can
get
take
a
look
at
and
hooked
up
into
the
Cystic
suite
of
kind
of
container
native
monitoring
and
DevOps
tools.
So
that's
very
cool
federated
a
I.
This
is
a
pretty
cool
one.
A
They
put
like
an
AI
spin
on
doing
cube
kind
of
like
configuration
management
and
like
workload
bin
packing.
So
if
you
want
to
look
at
their
description,
so
you
kind
of
can
do
things
for
auto
scaling
like
this
node
pool
or
that
node
pool
based
on
some
automation
that
they
have
in
there,
which
is
a
pretty
cool
one.
So
we're
starting
to
see
these
operators
get
smarter
and
smarter,
and
you
know
if
you're
familiar
with
our
maturity
model,
we
want
to
see
folks
get
as
far
over
into
this
phase
five
as
possible.
A
A
Some
of
the
things
that
are
new
hateful
cast
if
you're
familiar
with
their
product
they've
got
an
operator
that
installs
that
same
with,
in
finish
man
and
hence
Donna,
once
again
kind
of
on
the
DevOps
and
metrics
collection.
This
is
their
agent
that
connects
into
their
infrastructure
really
exciting
along
with
cam.
Okay
is
we've
got
some
other
ones
for
sto
and
key
ally.
These
are
service
mesh
components.
A
Got
Kong
Cubert
micro
rocks
take
a
look
at
these
are
all
I
think
fairly
new
as
well,
and
then
we've
got
some
of
the
other
stuff
from
tremendous
security
and
spinnaker.
If
you're
familiar
is
a
deployment
tool
which
is
pretty
cool,
honest
I
think
this
was
fly
out
of
at
least
like
Google
white
paper.
I,
don't
know
if
it
was
at
Google
originated
open
source
project.
A
I
think
we
had
a
lot
of
these
already
robbing
storage
is
new,
so
they've
got
a
storage
layer,
that's
kind
of
focused
on
big
data
and
powering
some
of
those
workloads,
there's
also
storage
OS,
which
is
a
more
kind
of
generic
storage
layer
and
then
rook
once
again
on
this
on
the
storage
side
is
once
it
got
a
very
old
operator,
very
mature
operator.
That
is
doing
really
awesome,
I
think
that's
mostly
it
I
think
another
Cystic
agent.
This
is
for
kind
of
their
overall
monitoring
and
yeah.
A
If
you
were
there,
one
so
check
it
out,
I'm
really
cool
stuff,
so
you
can
install
these
all
on
any
coop
cluster,
and
so
we've
got
some
instructions.
If
you
click
on
the
install
section
here,
if
you're
not
familiar
with
that,
so
it's
really
cool.
We
got
a
bunch
of
PRS
in
flight
as
well
to
add
all
kinds
of
other
operators.
A
So
it's
great
to
see
this
community
alive
and
thriving,
and
thank
you
all
for
all
the
work
that
you've
done
if
you've
listed
your
operator
or,
if
you're
planning
to
with
your
building
one
we're
looking
forward
to
seeing
that
all
right.
Moving
on
to
our
next
topic,
I
just
collected
a
really
quick
list
of
some
of
the
operator
sessions
at
cube.
Con
and
I'll
send
this
out
to
the
mailing
list.
As
a
response
to
my
message-
and
we
already
talked
about
the
Red
Hat
operator-
works
out,
the
only
reason
I
bring
this
up.
A
Is
it
sold
out,
but
it's
we're
doing
it
around
a
number
of
different
conferences.
So
you
know
Q
Khan
in
the
US
and
other
kind
of
major
open
source
conferences.
We
hope
to
run
this
workshop.
So
if
you've
got
the
folks
that
are
interested
in
that
stay
tuned
this
next
one
really
cool.
You
know:
databases
are
the
most
popular
form
of
operators.
A
I
would
say
in
this
kind
of
like
we're
at
the
beginning:
phases
of
this
movement
and
Sonia
4j
is
going
to
be
talking
through
what
their
operator
looks
like
and
how
it
does
you
know,
day
to
and
beyond
operations.
So
that
would
be
a
really
cool
one
to
check
out
this
one
is
pretty
cool
installing
this
automated
canary
testing,
and
doing
that
and
driving
that
via
and
operator.
So
that's
from
some
folks
at
Amadeus,
who
are
great
RedHat
partner
and
then
dated
also
a
great
Red
Hat
partner.
A
I
don't
know
much
about
can't
financial,
but
they've
got
two
different
sessions.
Actually
this
is
their
first
one
on
large-scale
distributed
learning
you
know
managed
by
operators.
I
think
we'll
see
AI
and
ml
being
one
of
the
the
next
major
phases
of
operator
adoptions
because
of
those
text,
actor
extremely
complex,
but
really
really
powerful
and
hits
your
business
the
bottom
line
once
you
have
it
up,
so
that'll
be
really
cool.
A
A
I'm
gonna
try
to
hit
a
bunch
of
these
so
hope
to
see
y'all
there
if
you're
going
to
keep
calm
so
that
that's
kind
of
the
the
main
part
of
the
agenda
I
think
we'll
have
the
rest
of
the
call
open
for
folks
to
just
talk
about
kind
of.
What's
going
on,
what
are
you
working
on
any
problems?
You
have
I'd
like
to
have
a
more
structured
conversation
about
the
operator
binding
and
some
of
that
type
of
stuff
at
a
later
date.
A
A
All
right,
this
might
be
a
short
call.
I
used
the
different
blue
jeans
since
Diane
was
out,
so
hopefully
there
are
folks
in
the
other
one
that
we
usually
use,
which
might
be
the
case.
Actually
this
is
a
great
topic
is,
would
it
help
you
all
to
have
a
calendar,
invite
that
I'll
manage
or
Diane
will
manage
and
we'll
just
add
and
remove
people
as
they
want
to
be
that
way,
you
get
all
the
alerts,
and
we
can,
you
know,
update
the
agenda
and
the
description
would
that
be
a
helpful
thing.
A
A
A
C
You
can
do
is
if
we
set
up
a
google
group
that
everybody
goes
and
subscribed
to.
You
can
send
a
calendar
invite
to
that
google
group
and
the
calendar
invite
will
actually
be
sent
to
anybody
who
actually
joins
after
that,
and
you
can
just
manage
the
calendar
invite
from
either
you
or
Diane
or
both
of
you,
yeah.
A
A
Fair
yeah,
okay,
I
think
we
should
just
go
ahead
and
do
that
I'll
do
that
at
when
I
send
the
recap
we'll
established
one
for
the
next
time,
yeah.
So
what's
going
on
in
operator,
land
Matt?
Why
are
you
working
with
a
lot
of
folks?
You
see
any
trends
and
the
kind
of
types
of
operators
if
folks
are
working
on
issues
that
they're
hitting
anything
like
that.
B
Haven't
seen
too
many
friends
lately,
although
we
just-
and
you
may
have
mentioned
it-
we
had
quite
a
few.
We
have
quite
a
few
storage
operators
now
and
there's
storage
operators,
obviously
because
they're
manipulating
the
the
the
actual
OS
itself.
They
need
host
level
access
and
so
we've
gotten
into
manipulation
of
security
context.
Here,
estranged,
the
SCC
is
an
open
ship,
so
those
being
added
to
the
OLM
template,
and
that
was
for
what
do
we
have?
We
have
Robin
in
there
rook
what
you
mentioned
work
we
recently
added
yeah.
B
A
Yeah
well,
actually,
this
is
one
thing:
I
want
to
bring
up.
I'll
share.
A
D
A
Would
be
if
your
application
cares
about
something
happening
on
the
cluster
like
if
there
was
an
event
emitted
for
every
new
namespace,
and
you
needed
to
do
something
related
that
that's
more
like
the
infrastructure
level,
but
also
it
could
be
all
kinds
of
other
stuff
like
just
like.
Basically,
all
the
lambda
type
use
cases
would
be.
You
know
this
wouldn't
be
bridging
it
into
the
operator
world.
If
that
makes
sense,.
A
A
The
folks
familiar
with,
can
a
tip.
It's
basically
there's
three
kind
of
different
components
of
it.
There
is
the
the
build
side
of
it
where
you
need
to
you
know,
given
like
a
JavaScript
function
or
whatever
code,
you
need
to
build
that
in
a
container
so
that
you
can
use
it
on
the
cluster.
There's
a
serving
component
to
it,
which
is
okay,
I
need
to
given
an
HTTP
request.
D
Yeah
to
me,
it
seems
more
like
this
as
dealing
with
it's
like
it's
more
on
the
level
of
talking
about
like
replacing
the
current
system
where
operators
have
like
are
watching
the
the
community's
cache
waiting
for
like
changes
to
commit,
and
then
triggering
actions
based
on
that.
It
feels
more
like
maturing
that
model
and
making
it
so
that,
rather
than
having
a
process
constantly
sitting
there
waiting
for
events
that
you
would
replace
those
with
with
functions
that
trigger
on,
like
events
that
you
you
map
to
like
it,.
A
Fair
and
I
guess
now
that
I'm
I'm
hearing
you
say
that
back
on
cue
trigger
doesn't
make
for
me,
which
is
like
we
I,
was
kind
of
speaking
about
it
as
a
consumption
side
of
it,
but
it
could
also
be
on
the
creation.
Side
of
these
events
is
when
the
operators,
you
know,
makes
a
new
database
table
or,
like
whatever
committing
events
for
that
for
other
functions.
To
then
do
something
with
there's.
Also
one
side
of
it.
D
A
A
All
right
so
next
time
we'll
meet
in
June
on
the
third
Friday
I'll,
hopefully
have
an
event
set
up
for
you
and
I'll
also
send
this
list
of
cute
concessions.
If
folks
are
going
to
that,
I'll
be
there
so
I'd
love
to
meet
up
with
you
kind
of
in
the
hallway
track,
so
come
say
hi
and
then
you
come
to
the
workshop
as
well.
It
sounds
like
Suresh
will
see
you
there.