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From YouTube: Aug 31, 2023 - Ortelius Architecture Meeting
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A
B
C
A
B
Right
because
I
see
your
your
your
bot
jump
into
meetings
now
and
then.
C
B
So
a
couple
things
you've
probably
seen
yesterday
crazy,
PR's
and
stuff
flying
around
on
Discord.
What
I've
been
doing
is
we've
been
getting
a
lot
of
pull
requests
for
from
the
pentabot
to
deal
with.
You
know,
bumping
versions
and
stuff
like
that.
So
I
took
the
auto,
merge
action
that
Brad
McCoy
put
in
like
on
I,
think
on
the
backstage
repo
and
I've
been
rolling
that
out
to
the
MS
Dash
repos
to
enable
the
the
automation
to
work.
B
It
checks
to
see
if
dependabot
is
the
one,
that's
creating
the
pull
request,
and
if
it
is,
then
it
goes
there's
a
way
to
go
and
grab
a
bunch
of
data
from
dependabot,
and
some
of
the
things
it'll
it'll
grab
is
whether
it
was
a
patch
or
a
minor
release
versus
major
release
so
depend
upon
throws
that
into
its
Json
output,
which
is
kind
of
Handy
to
be
able
to
determine
what
it's
actually
doing
for
the
pentabot
and
I
I've
looked
I've
tried
to
look
at
the
depend
about
code,
but
it's
all
in
ruby
and
after
I
saw
it
was
all
written
in
Ruby
I'm
like
all
right,
I'm
not
going
to
bother
trying
to
see
what's
happening
there,
not
worth
the
headache.
B
So
what
it'll
do
is
it'll
figure
out
if
the
PR's
been
approved
or
not
because
sometimes
depending
on
your
GitHub
settings,
you
may
require
an
approval
or
review
and
stuff
like
that.
So
it'll
go
through
and
check
to
see.
If
we
have
to
do
that
and
then
once
it's
done
with
that,
it'll
go
ahead
and
do
the
auto
squash.
So
this
is
where
you'll
see
where
it's
doing
it
on
The
Miner
or
a
patch
version.
B
So
if
you
have
a
major
patch,
if
we
go,
if
you
go
from
like
version
1.2.0
to
2.0.0,
that's
a
major
jump
that
we
have
to
do
manually,
which
makes
sense
when
I
started.
Looking
at
this,
it
was
like
all
right
we're
we're
doing
a
lot
of
work
manually
on
our
our
repos,
and
we
really
just
need
to
start
looking
at
the
major
patches,
major
releases
manually
and
let
everything
else
happen.
B
The
one
thing
I'm
running
into
real
weird
is
this
step
is
failing
because
of
some
weird
token
issue,
so
I'm
trying
to
figure
that
out
to
get
that
sorted
out
so
you'll
see
a
bunch
of
me
trying
stuff
to
do
again
out
there
out.
I
may
create
another
repo
just
to
play
with
so
people
aren't
bothered
by
the
noise.
But
that's
what's
happening
on
this
front,
so
Arvin
once
I
get
this
figured
out.
B
I
will
go
ahead
and
I'll.
Let
you
know
the
file
where
it
is,
which
is
a
good
one
to
pull
from,
so
you
can
go
ahead
and
and
roll
it
out
to
all
the
other
repositories.
B
One
of
the
other
other
things
I
noticed
that
we
need
to
roll
out
as
well
was
on
dependabot.
We
are
typically
using
whether
it's
going
to
be
a
pip
for
python
or
golang
I.
Think
it's
gonna
be
go
as
the
ecosystem
for
the
golang
stuff,
our
Docker.
We
missed
having
the
GitHub
action,
so
our
GitHub
actions,
We're
Never,
Getting
Auto
the
defend
about
updates.
B
B
So
that
should
keep
us
up
to
date
and
moving
along
a
lot
smoother.
Once
we
get
all
that
sorted
out.
Any
questions
on
that.
B
B
C
Yeah
so
I
think
already
not
a
conflict
I've
been
using
it
exactly
what
oven
just
said.
It
scans
your
dependencies
and
then
it'll
raise
PR's
for
you,
especially
or
scans
all
your
dependencies
and
then
raises
the
ones
with
cves
or
security
issues
and
it'll
Auto
create
the
PRS,
and
you
can
tell
it
to
either
Auto
auto
merge
or
you
can
tell
it
obviously
not
to
do
that,
but
just
raise
the
pi
so
that
you
can
decide
right.
B
Okay
cool
so
I
wonder
if
that
that
may
be
a
better
way
better
GitHub
action
than
the
depend
about
one.
C
Yes,
what
you
do
is.
C
C
B
C
B
C
B
B
C
Then
there's
even
a
pre-commit
hook
that
you
can
get
to
even
validate
your
renovate
config.
C
B
C
C
Yeah
super
awesome
here
you
go
I'm,
just
sticking
that
there
you
go
it's
in
the
channel
there.
It's
like
that
simple!
That's
as
simple
as
my
config
is.
C
And
then
just
specify
your
repo
name
there
and
then
the
cool
thing
is
that
a
little
generator
PR
saying
hey?
Do
you
want
me
to
be
configured
to
work
on
this
repo
and
you
can
just
approve
the
when
you
approve
their
PR,
it
auto
configures
and
it
looks
for
this
file.
B
C
B
It
is
it
one,
is
it
one,
config
renovate
yaml
per
repo
or
yeah.
D
B
B
So
so
I
see
yeah.
So
it's
a
GitHub
app
because
it's
interesting
that
you
bring
this
up
because
GitHub
apps
have
different
permissions
than
GitHub
actions
and
one
of
the
things
I
was
running
into
it,
which
makes
sense.
Is
you
can't
have
an
action?
Auto
merge,
another
action
and
the
reason
being
is
somebody
can
go
in
and
and
mess
with
your
actions
on
a
PR
and
put
some
nefarious
code
into
the
action
and.
B
Merge
we
go
ahead
and
pick
that
up
and
merge
it
automatically
on
the
action
side,
but
because
things
are
happening
through
dependabot
it
it.
It
was
one
of
those
pain,
things
that
were
difficult,
but
I.
Think,
like
you
said,
because
it's
a
GitHub
apps
have
different
permissions
and
then
we
can.
We
can
kind
of
control
at
that
front.
So
let
me
look
at
that.
C
Yeah
just
put
my
pet
bucket
step
and
that's
not
GitHub,
but
it
kind
of
gives
you
an
idea
of
what
the
bitbucket
pipelines
uses.
Their
kind
of
actions
is
called
a
pipe
yeah.
So.
B
A
C
B
Pretty
cool
yeah
I've
seen
I've
seen
some
of
the
other
PR
merge
actions
create
stuff
on
the
Fly
Like
readme's,
and
things
like
that.
B
All
right
so
I
will
take
a
look
at
that
see
what
we
need
to
do
on
that
front.
It
sounds
like
it's
gonna,
be
a
lot
easier
to
manage
and
hopefully
they'll
fix
some
of
the
problems.
B
B
So
what
we're
able
to
do
is
we're
able
to
to
run
the
goaling
CLI
and
it'll,
create
the
the
Json
schema
on
all
the
data
and
pass
it
over
to
the
microservice
running
on
the
back
end,
the
back
end,
microservice
stores
in
an
orango
DB
and
then
we're
able
to
to
retrieve
it
back.
You
know
we
can
go
forward
and
backwards
through
that
microservice.
B
The
next
steps
on
that
front
are
going
to
be
hooking
in
the
ukarsh's
common
library
and
rolling
out
the
changes
I
had
to
make
to
the
microservices
as
well.
So
that's
coming
along
really
well,
so
keep
posted
on
that
front.
B
The
integrating
common
nftps
will
happen
in
our
common
code
piece.
So
it's
basically
we'll
be
able
to
plug
it
in
and
it'll
it'll
turn
on
for
everybody
automatically
I'm
gonna
jump
around
Urban
I'll.
Let
you
you
go
to
show
us
what
you
got
at
the
end.
We
still
need
to
do.
A
UI
design.
B
I
did
not
get
around
to
creating
this
shared
figma
dock
I
will
get
that
out
there
soon.
So
we'll
get
that
going
one
of
the
things
with
using
svelte
as
the
front
end
framework.
B
We
will
need
to
use
the
svelte
material
UI
components
as
well,
just
because
they're
I
looked
at
them
and
they
have
most
of
the
controls
that
we
need
as
components
for
asphalt.
So
we
don't
have
to
go
and
recreate
anything
from
scratch.
All
the
basics
are
there
even
more
than
the
basics.
So,
let's
see
yeah.
B
Give
me
one
second,
so
if
you
go
to
smelt
material
UI,
they
have
all
the
the
different
things
that
you
can
do
with
all
the
demos
out
here
and
like
the
ones
that
we'll
need
to
do
like
I
think
they
have
a
table
where's
table
table.
B
We
have
the
list
but
and
things
like
snack
bar,
which
I
never,
which
I
thought
was
pretty
pretty
slick.
We're
gonna
put
up
the
little
pop-up
at
the
bottom
for
things
like
that,
so
it
has
everything
that
we
needed.
B
There's
data
table
and
the
data
tables
have
pagination
headers,
sticky,
headers,
so
I
think
we're
going
to
be
good
on
that
front
being
able
to
do
use
everything
from
the
material
UI
for
what
we're
doing.
If
we
go.
If
we
go
beyond
that,
I
think
we're
we're
doing
something
wrong
and
making
things
too
complicated.
B
So
arvin's
been
working
on
the
getting
to
understand's
fault
as
well
and
he
did
some
work
on
the
mpm
as
well.
You
know
the
package
manager,
as
well
as
figuring
out
a
tutorial.
C
D
D
A
D
D
So
the
core
structure
is
pretty
simple:
a
public
folder
for
static
and
the
images
file,
the
source
code
and
index
was
HTML,
so
I'm
using
white
for
the
all
the
dependencies
are
very
low,
like
I
am
using
this
12
and
the
white
for
the
creating
a
new
ID
for
creating
a
random
like
number,
and
for
from
that
it
is
the
index.html
it's
in
the
front
page.
That
is
rendering
order
like
something
side,
and
then
we
go
to
the
source,
folder
and
short
further.
We
have
something:
it
is
the
mains
on
this.
D
B
D
B
Of
the
interesting
things
stay
on
app,
that's
felt
so
see
on
line
10,
11
and
12..
Those
are
those
are
tags
that
refer
to
the
com.
What
they
call
components
that
you
get
to
include
so
go
ahead
and
go
over
to
your.
D
So
here
like
it
is
the
JavaScript
it
is
the
HTML.
Then
we
can
below.
We
can
write
a
CSS
like
in
the
view,
so
like
yeah
in
the
feedback
form,
let's
go
to
the
components,
so
it's
in
the
feedback
from
components
here
is
in
the
script
like.
We
are.
Writing
all
the
JavaScript
here
below
that
it
is
the
component
which
is
like
the
HTML
path
and
we
load
it.
We
are
you
writing
the
CSS
for,
like
the
same
component,.
B
B
A
lot
did
you
use
typescript
for
this
or
JavaScript.
D
D
But
we
can
like
have
to
attracted
while
we
are
like
is
creating
this
projects
so
like
we
got
the
option
to
like
use
JavaScript
right,
so
we
don't
have
to
do
it
manually
and
like
the
buttons.
It
is
the
button
and
we
are
using
a
new
like.
Is
it
not
HTML,
which
is
calling
slot,
which
is
like
taking
data
which
is
which
is
passing
through
this
complement
so
like
the
button
component,
which
I
am
using
like
in
the
data.
D
So
we
can
search
is
the
disable
and
this
this
all
this
stuff
and
on
click
it
is.
It
is
the
custom
like
we
have
the
click
event.
We
have
the
mouse
over
event.
This
is
the
mouse.
In
the
event
the
ratings
like
it's
in
the
custom
event,
we
see
all
defining,
it
is
somewhere,
so
we
are
like
defining
it
in
another.
Folder
like
it
is
lectures
right,
so
we
have
for
creating
a
like
custom
event.
We
import
creative
and
dispatcher,
we
initializes
using
the
wrist
patch
and
then
this
flash.
D
D
A
D
D
A
B
Cool
I,
like
it
a
lot
and
and
one
of
the
things
one
of
the
things
I
I
understand
with
felt
is
it's
very
react
light.
So
if
you
update
any
variable
and
assign
it
a
new
value
that
the
front
end
page
will
re-render
with
the
new
value
automatically,
so
you
don't
have
to
do
anything
fancy
about
reloads
or
anything
like
that
or
you
know,
Ajax
on
a
Dom
object
or
anything
like
that.
B
You
can
just
go
ahead
and
update
variables
and
it
will
automatically
get
passed
along
and
updated
in
the
on
the
web
page
for
you.
D
D
B
Yeah
I
think
for
what
we're
doing
if
we
just
play
by
the
rules
of
the
of
the
toolkit
and
stick
within
those
bounds,
I
think
we
should
be
able
to
move
along
pretty
easily
on
that
front.
So
I
don't
think
that
we'll,
if,
if
we're
going
down
the
path
where
we
are
trying
to
do
something
weird,
we
should
rethink
it.
D
D
Yes,
I
will
like
I
like
editor
I,
follow
the
YouTube
tutorial
and
I.
Take
this
a
little
bit,
but
I
will
like
add
it
into
my
GitHub
and
share
the
recording.
B
Yeah
or
just
share
the
link
that
throw
the
link
out
on
Discord
of
where,
where
the
tutorial
was
that
you
followed.
B
D
B
B
C
B
B
Gonna
bundle
all
my
stuff
together
and
then
kind
of
we
can
divide
and
conquer
and
roll
all
the
changes
out
to
all
the
repos.
B
So
I'm
trying
to
get
tie
up
these
Loose
Ends,
so
we
don't
do
double
work,
but
hopefully,
by
the
end
of
the
week,
I'll
have
a
bunch
of
stuff
that
we
can
start
rolling
out
on
that
front.
C
B
B
I
think
we
should
be
able
to
do
something
similar
on
on
the
kubernetes
cluster.
Just
do
you
do
a
volume,
Mount
kind
of
like
what
we
did
with
the
postgres.
B
Config
and
you
expose
the
volume,
the
host
volume
to
the
the
the
kind
nodes
we'll
do
that
same
thing
that
we
did
with
postgres,
so
it
is
figured
out
but
give
me
a
day
or
two,
so
we
can
roll
everything
out,
get
it
all
right,
yeah
that
sounds.
C
B
Kind
of
on
that
front,
one
of
the
things
kind
of
the
last
thing
I
have
on
my
list
is:
we
need
to
take
down
our
Azure
cluster
over
that
we
have
to
play
I'm
running
on
and
a
bunch
of
other
stuff.
Basically,
it's
costing
too
much
that
cluster
over
there
is
costing
over
six
grand
a
year
yeah.
So
because
you've
built
up
the
artists
in
the
Box
we
can
do,
everybody
can
run
locally
and
do
development
locally.
So
that's
kind
of
where
we're
going
to
be
at
I'm.
B
A
C
B
It's
just
ridiculous
for
what
we're
doing
with
it.
So
so
we
will
need
to
do
version
10,
which
you
already
got
or
tell
this
in
the
Box.
The
version.
A
B
We
get
the
Helm
charts,
fixes
rolled
out
and
we'll
build
up
a
new
chart
to
run
all
that
in
kind.
But.
B
Because
we're
all
all
of
us
are
going
to
be,
all
of
us
could
be
using
the
same.
Nft
storage
account
that
we
could
actually
run
locally
but
have
a
central
database
of
all
the
the
nft
objects.
So
if
you
don't
have
it
locally,
we
go
out
to
the
nft
storage,
pull
it.
C
It's
brilliant:
it's
actually
a
cool,
it's
cool
for
a
demo
and
a
talk:
okay,
yeah,
to
show
how
we're
doing
that
eh
I'll
be
in
advance,
actually
amazing.
So
we
don't
need
the
cloud.
We
are
the
cloud
we
build
it
all
out.
C
B
B
What
was
the
other
thing?
I
was
going
to
ask?
Oh
so
I,
don't
know
if
you
guys
heard
this,
but
a
Hashi
Corpus
changed
their
licensing
around
terraform
I.
D
Yes,
yeah:
the
problem
is
going
in
business
plan
and
a
new
Foundation
create
like
a
rep
of
their
home.
B
Yeah,
it's
one
of
those
where
you
can't
ship
piriform
yourself,
I,
think
it's
one
of
those
situation.
So
we
may
need
to
look
at
a
different
solution
than
terraform.
B
C
B
I
think
cat
who's.
C
And
the
one
that
I've
been
looking
at
is
agnostic
to
any
language,
and
you
can
even
incorporate
all
your
Helms
they
can
use.
It
can
basically
run
any
it's
written
by
some
guys
in
Ukraine
called
cluster.dev
I'll
post,
the
the
I'll
post,
the
page
in
in
the
dev
channel.
For
you.
B
C
C
D
B
B
Similar
to
terraform
for
standing
up
clusters.
B
I
don't
know
I
know
I've
I've,
gotten
ortillas
to
run
on
k3s
instead
of
kind,
so
I
know
it
works,
but
I
have
not
looked
at
any
of
the
cluster
provisioning
pieces
of
it.
Just
I
just
took
it
from
the
helm
perspective,
so
I've
manually
stood
up
a
k3s
cluster
through
the
Rancher
UI
and
then
deployed
to
it
through
using
our
home
charts
and
got
it
to
work.
But
I
have
not
looked
at
any
cluster
provisioning
pieces.
A
B
Well,
it
it's,
it
seems
to
be
the
new
trend
so
like
one
of
the
things
that
I
ran
into
with
our
microservices,
because
we
use
the
chain
guard.
The
chain
Guard
base
image
for
a
lot
of
our
stuff.
So
we
have
a
secure
image
to
build
off
of
they
change
their
licensing.
B
So
you
couldn't
do
like
chain
guard.
You
know
python
317
as
the
image
name
for
you
to
go
and
grab
so
what
it
ends
up
being.
Is
you
have
to
you
always
use
latest
from
chain
guard,
so
you
could
use
the
at
latest
tag,
but
what
that
does
is
that
goes
against
all
of
the
software
supply
chain
security
saying
never
use
latest
so
they're
like.
B
C
It
always
tells
you
never
use
latest
yeah
it'll
block
you.
There.
C
C
B
C
A
good
discussion
because
it's
like
open
source
is
amazing
right,
it's
it's!
It
really
breathes
amazing
Innovation.
But
how
do
you
also,
then
pay
all
the
people
who
are
trying
to
work
on
this
thing
right?
How
do
you
make
it
like
so
I?
Guess
that's
the
that's
the
balance
right
so
hard.
How
do
you
do
you?
Do
it.
B
Exactly
but
you
know
you
know
it's
one
of
those
things
that.
B
If
you
the
way
I
look
at
it
is,
if
you
want
a
level
of
support
other
than
community
support.
If
you
want
things
faster,
then
you
go
in
and
pay
for
things.
Otherwise
you
know
it's
that
whole
model
string
me
along
for
with
the
free
stuff
and
then
oh
oops.
You
know
in
a
week
your
trial's
up
and
they
never
told
you
that
that
was
ever
going
to
happen.
C
D
A
B
D
B
We're
going
to
continue
this
discussion
on
Discord
on
everything
that
we
talked
about
today
and
so
keep
a
look
out
there
and,
what's
your,
can
you
drop
your
Discord
handle
and
your
GitHub
handle
in
the
chat.
B
Anything
else
that
we
have
that
we
need
to
talk
about
today.
Oh.
B
B
Yeah
share
that
link
and
to
your
figma
and
we'll
go
that
route
instead
of
what
you
may
need
to
do
is
we'll
send
us
drop
the
link
and
we'll
see
if
we
can
get
into
it.
If
we
can't
we'll
get
that
sorted
out
through
permissions.
A
C
I,
don't
have
anything
was
that
a
zero
cluster
part
of
the
cncf,
or
was
that
a
pro
was
that
something
you
were
playing
out
of
your
own
pocket
or.
B
C
Well,
that's
a
massive
difference.
You.
B
We're
going
on
that
we'll
need
to
figure
out
and
if
we
need
to
have
a
public
one,
we'll
we'll
figure
out
how
to
deal
with
that
down.
The
road.
C
You
can
buy
a,
we
can
buy
one
of
those
little
mini
clusters.
Put
it
put
it
in
a
data
center
yeah.
B
Yeah
and
I
have
been
in
talks
with
Oracle
about
their
the
Oracle
Cloud
kubernetes,
so
I'm
hopeful.
Then
this
is
for
deployal,
but
it'll
carry
over
to
ortelius
as
well.
I'm
they're
gonna,
give
me
a
a
quote:
I
have
pulled
some
numbers
from,
but
I'll
I'll.
Let
you
guys
know
what
Oracle
charges
and.
C
A
B
B
B
Yep
I
think
the.
B
B
B
Japan
versus
you
know,
South
Africa
versus
somewhere
in
the
states.
It's
a
different
pricing
model.
Yeah
oracle's
claims
that
they're
they're
equal
pricing
across
all
regions
really.
B
So
and
then
something
I
can't
remember
how
much
and
then
free,
basically
it's
free
in
in
region,
networking
costs.
So
if
you
have
a
database
in
the
network
and
we
have
our
kubernetes
cluster
all
in
the
same
region,
that
traffic
is
free,
you
don't
get
charged.
A
B
Yeah
we'll
see
but
anyways
anybody
else
have
anything
else.
D
I
haven't
I
will
like
make
up
a
building.
Let.
B
D
D
D
D
D
B
A
B
A
B
Yeah
good,
when.
A
B
Get
when
you
figure
it
out,
go
and
share
the
link
on
Discord
and
we'll
we'll.