►
From YouTube: March 4, 2021 Ortelius Architecture Meeting
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B
All
right,
so
let
me
bring
up
a
document,
so
today
is
the
march
4th
architecture
meeting
I
do
have
to
share
my
screen,
which
does
help.
Let
me
know
if
I
lock
up
on
the
screen.
Sharing
I've
been
having
issues
lately
with
that.
So
let
me
grab
our
regular
attendee
list.
B
Give
me
one
second
here,
so
how
did
everybody
that
was
on
last
week
or
last
time
with
our
our
toc?
How
did
you
guys
think
that.
B
Yeah,
so
it's
a
good
good
group
of
people
and
it's
interesting
to
get
some
insights
from
you
know
some
of
these
really
large
companies
like
netflix
that
have
five
thousand
microservices
at
that
level.
So
let
me
bring
up
this
guy,
so
one
of
the
things
that.
B
B
So,
just
a
review
of
the
service
catalog.
This
is
what
we're
going
to
be
going
forward
with
initially.
B
So
that
will
be.
The
main
thing
is
to
get
the
issues
created.
What
we'll
do
is
the
anything
new,
we'll
kind
of
do.
A
mix
of
anything
new
will
go
into
a
microservice
and
we'll
stick
with
python.
B
For
now
I
know
there's
a
couple
people
that
wanted
to
do
golang,
but
we'll
stick
with
python
for
these
a
couple
until
we
get
our
feet
underneath
us
and
we
get
the
whole
process
in
place,
the
gui
side,
the
changes
that
we
have
to
the
ui
will
still
like
around
the
the
details
box
that
will
be
in
javascript
and
jquery.
B
So
what
I'll
do
is
I'll
break
it
out,
so
that
it's
easy
enough
for
people
to
work
isolated
in
their
microservice
to
be
able
to
get
the
data
that
we
need
to
bring
it
back
as
part
of
that
process,
we
are
going
to
need
to
do
some
investigation
on
what
is
go
back
to
this
guy.
On
the
cyclone
dx
tools
and
the
the
dependency
tracker,
so
one
of
the
things
I
want
to
do
is
add
in
scanning
for
licenses
and
cves
at
the
container
level.
B
This
happens
as
typically
as
a
step
in
the
the
build
process.
So
when
you're
doing
your
your
docker
build
that
you
insert
these
tools
in
there.
So
if
we
can
get
a
good
foundation
and
some
directions
of
how
people
can
implement
those
into
their
their
docker
builds,
and
we
can
collect
that
information
as
part
of
it.
We
know
that
not
everybody's
gonna
be
using
like
cyclone
and
dependency
tracker.
B
Commercial
tools
like
snick
will
be
used,
but
a
lot
of
that
will
be
already
in
the
per
in
the
company's
pipeline
and
we'll
just
need
to
pick
up
that
where
that
data
is
coming
from.
As
part
of
that.
D
So
steve,
can
you
can
you?
I
have
a
question.
So
do
we
is
cyclone
dx,
a
part
of
what
we
think
that
the
what
we're
calling
now
the
service
catalog
features
need.
B
It
is
one
of
the
the
service
features
needs,
so
the
high
level
that
we
have,
let
me
go
up
to
the
top-
is
most
of
these
fields.
B
We
already
have
like
build
url
build
id
docker
stuff,
the
commits
the
owner
owner
email
owner
phone
number
we
can
grab
from
the
owner
object,
new
ones
that
we
need
to
add
in
are
going
to
be
like
the
slack
channel
discord
channel
if
they're
using
hip
chat
any
page
or
duty
use
service
or
business
service
links,
and
then,
if
anybody's
familiar
with
any
of
the
runtime
logs
like
coming
out
of
prometheus,
how
we
can
link
to
those
logs
for
a
service
we'll
need
to
get
information
from
you
on
how
we
can
bring
that
that
that
log
url
in
and
then
transaction
logs
are
going
to
come,
like
from,
I
believe,
it's
grafana
or
kiali
mapping
out
the
transactions
and
there's
a
couple
other
open
source
transaction
log,
and
then
this
is
where
I'm
talking
about
the
container
image
dependencies.
B
B
We're
actually
looking
into
the
container
and
grabbing
package
information
about.
What's
in
the
container
now,
we'll
have
to
figure
out
the
the
terminology
around
this,
because
every
single
language
decides
to
use
something
different.
I
believe
node.js
is
a
package
python.
It's
a
module
goaling!
I
think
it's
a
module.
B
I
could
be
wrong
on
that.
So
there's
you
know
there's
these
different
dependencies,
so
we'll
have
to
come
up
with
a
some
sort
of
terminology
that
we
can
link
those
coding,
those
sub
dependencies
into
the
application.
B
So
some
of
the
the
new
boxes
that
we'll
have
on
the
screen
pertaining
to
this
lower
level
detail
it's
going
to
be
like
the
runtime
logs,
like
I
was
saying
at
the
toc
meeting
last
time.
We
end
up
with
this
end
to
end
to
end
kind
of
relationship,
so
you
can
have,
for
example,
a
runtime
log.
You
could
have
a
qa
environment
and
the
qa
environment
could
have
multiple
clusters
in
it
and
then
each
cluster
for
that
service
is
going
to
have
a
particular
log.
B
So
we
have
this
end-to-end
end
relationship
that
we
kind
of
need
to
map
out
and
then,
if
you
have
like
17
qa
environments
and
multiple
endpoints
in
every
qa
environment,
this
list
gets
pretty
long.
But
it's
going
to
be
very
useful
for
people
to
drive
right
in
to
find
out.
You
know,
find
the
location
where
they
need
to
look
if
something's
broken
and
then
on
the
the
component
image
dependency
section.
B
This
is
where
we
actually
start
looking
at
the
packages
that
are
inside
the
container,
what
version
they
are
and
then,
whether
they're,
what
their
license
and
their
and
their
severity
and
their
cve
and
the
goal
is
to
take
this
all
this
information,
especially
like
this
type
of
information
and
roll
it
up
to
the
application.
B
So
you
can
be
able
to
look
at
an
application
and
look
at
all
the
licenses
to
see
if
you're,
you
know,
if
you
brought
in
some
license,
that
is
like
a
new
license
that
you
don't
want
and
that's
going
to
be
driving
the
the
what
is
it
called,
not
provisioning,
I'll
think
of
it
later,
but
basically
to
see
if
we're
in
compliance
at
that
level.
B
So
that's
kind
of
where,
where
we're
we're
headed,
does
that
make
sense,
tracy.
D
Yeah,
I
think
this
is
a
really
good
first
kind
of
big
rocks
project.
B
Yeah
so,
like
I
said
I'll
lay
out
what
we
have
going
on
in
the
issues
I'll
I'll
tag
him.
I
believe
we
can
tag
him
as
a
project.
B
I
have
to
see
what
what
the
github
projects
is
all
about.
If
we
can
group
the
issues
based
on
a
project,
has
anybody
ever
used
github.
B
Okay,
it'll
be
new
new,
uncharted
territory
on
that
side
and
then,
if
not
we'll
use
milestones
to
hook
up
to
hook
together
the
issues,
let's
see
what
else
we
have?
B
The
website
is
up
and
going
I've
been
tweaking
a
few
little
changes
here
and
there
getting
some
of
the
base
readme
stuff
in
in
front
of
that,
we
do
need
to
look
at
the
probably
run
a
markdown
lint
on
the
pages
just
to
make
sure
that
we're
clean.
So
when
people
merge
and
stuff
it's
not
we're
not
having
major
issues
on
that
front.
B
I'll
fix
that
before
I
merge
it,
so
go
ahead.
If
you
see
anything
with
the
website
we're
up
and
running
so
you
can
create
a
pull
request
and
pull
things
in.
This
pull
request
is
to
update
the
the
readme.
That's
that's
the
original
one.
So
this
po,
this
pull
request,
will
fix
that
yeah.
Chris
can.
F
You
clarify
what
you're
looking
for
in
in
terms
of
css.
My
understanding
was
that
hugo
had
themes
and
if
we
wanted
it
a
different
sort
of
pretty,
we
should
just
click
on
a
different
theme.
Are
we
actually
trying
to
do
custom,
css
stuff
or
what's
the
story.
B
Yeah,
so
the
story
is,
there
are
themes.
The
themes
that
we're
using
is
doxy.
Doxy
is
the
theme,
that's
mainly
set
up
for
documentation
and
that
seemed
to
be
a
good
fit.
This
is
what
the
theme
that
kubernetes
is
using.
So
a
lot
of
what
we're
doing
here
is
copied
off
of
the
kubernetes.io
website
in
the
the
content
is
going
to
be
in
the
the
en
folder
and
sergio
is
going
to
start
working
on
the
spanish
version
as
well.
B
So
this
is
where
like,
if
you
want
to
create
a
blog
around
get
ops,
that's
where
that
markdown
is
going
to
go
now.
If
we
on
the
theme
side,
it
is
the
way
hugo
works
is
we
get
to
do
overrides
and
I
believe
it's
going
to
be
in
two
places.
The
assets
which
is
going
to
be
the
base
css
is
where
we
did
tweaking
on
some
of
the
layouts
like
the
logo.
Here
those
type
of
things
happen
as
overrides
at
this
level.
B
So
this
part
where
we
have
all
the
columns,
centering
columns
and
tables,
and
things
like
that,
is
what
we
did
for
css
overrides
in
the
assets,
I'm
trying
not
to
change
anything
in
the
themes,
because
if
we
need
to
get
an
update
on
the
theme,
we
don't
have
to
do
merges
at
that
level.
The
other
folder,
I
believe,
is
going
to
be
static,
and
this
is
where,
like
the
images
are,
so
all
the
images
are
for
the
page
are
out
here
in
the
static
directory.
B
Yeah
and
because
we
get
to
do
the
overrides,
we
can
and
there's
also
a
layout
section,
so
it
like,
if
you
want
to
change
like
the
way
something
looks
like
the
home
page,
is
off
of
the
hero.
So
this
is
where
you
can
do
additional
overrides.
B
The
other
thing
we
had
to
do
was
put
in
some
short
codes
to
deal
with
our
podcast,
which
is
buzz
sprout
to
bring
that
in
as
a
as
an
iframe
and
same
with
some
of
the
the
the
videos.
So
what
these
are
just
little
html
snippets
that
all
the
variables
get
substituted
and
it
actually
ends
up
generating
your
div
as
part
of
that,
so
it's
kind
of
handy
it
gets.
It
allows
you
to
be
reused,
so
this
one
is
actually
used
for
our
our
zoom
background
section.
B
Some
of
the
other
short
codes
that
we
have
are
around
us
like
dealing
with
features
which
are
multiple
boxes
on
the
same
row
tables
whether
we
want
the
table
to
be
centered
on
the
page
and
another
table
layout
that
we
have
to
deal
with.
I
believe
images
in
the
table.
B
So
because
we
can
do
these,
these
short
codes
and
the
partials,
we
can
basically
do
anything
what
we
want
with
the
the
layout
and
we
can
steal
if
we
find
another
theme
that
we
like
the
like,
the
like
the
blog
layout,
we
can
put
that
into
our
layout
and
override
the
doxy
one,
so
that's
kind
of
how
it
all
of
it
kind
of
fits
together.
B
And
we're
going
to
go
through
next
thursday,
we're
I'm
going
to
go
through
in
detail
how
this
is
all
laid
out.
So
next
thursday,
I
believe
at
8,
30.
kind
of
kind
of
work
walk
through
the
whole
layout.
How
things
are
are
fit
together
and
in
much
more
detail.
But
that's.
This
is
like
the
high
level
for
today.
B
B
The
javascript
part
is
a
little
bit
more
difficult
because
it's
served
up
by
the
tomcat
piece,
the
monolithic
piece
of
of
ortilius,
so
you
have
to
have
an
eclipse
environment
and
run
that
eclipse
environment.
You
know
java
in
in
your
eclipse
environment,
to
make
sure
you
can
load
up
tomcat
in
a
development
world
if
you're.
If
you
want
to
venture
down
that
road,
let
me
know.
A
B
A
E
B
Nice
and
what
what
what
languages
like
programming
languages
have?
Are
you
what's
your
favorite
one
put
it
that
way.
B
B
If
you
please
reach
out
to
the
the
discord
channel,
if
you
need
any
help
getting
anything
set
up
or
started
or
like
sasha,
that
takes
down
all
of
github
one
night.
E
D
D
And
then
ashish.
H
Hi,
so
I
am
like
a
potential
mentor
you
can
say
to
the
project
deploy
hub,
especially
in
the
aiml
part.
H
I
have
been
I
have
completed
like
I
have
started
my
open
source
journey
with
google
summer
of
code
program
at
cern
organization,
where
I
worked
on
a
project
called
generative
adversary
networks
for
particle
physics
applications.
That's
where
I
started,
then.
I
moved
on
to
like
tensorflow
organization
for
mentoring,
high
school
students
during
the
google
coding
program.
So
that's
some
of
my
open
source
journey
I
like
to
code
and
multiple
programming
languages,
especially
ranked
order,
is
python
javascript,
then
c,
plus
this.
H
I
also
am
proficient
in
website
development,
but
I'm
not
much
interested
in
that.
So
I
yeah
I
am
very
interested
in
working
on
the
project
deploy
hub.
Even
I
would
be
really
glad
to
contribute
to
other
projects
as
well
in
the
domain
of
my
expertise.
If
I
can
yeah.
D
So
I've
been
looking
for
someone
who's.
You
know
it
wants
to
be
a
specialist
in
data
science
to
start
looking
at
our
our
database
and
what
kind
of
predictive
analysis
we
can
start
doing,
what
kind
of
pattern
matching
and
she
came
through
the
cd
foundation,
and
I
grabbed
him
as
soon
as
I
could.
He
said
he
was
gonna.
He
was
happy
to
be
a
mentor
and
I
looked
at
his
what
his
current
background
was
and
what
he's
studying
and
then
aaron,
I'm
not
sure
which
erin
it
is
this
there.
D
I
I
So
I
can't
I
just
I'm,
I'm
more
of
a
going
person
or
even
just
flat
out
java.
D
G
B
I
may
be
bugging
you
later
because
there's
a
I
ran
into
a
situation
where
somebody
is
trying
to
run
ortelius
in
kubernetes
on
eks
and
they
didn't
do
a
a
volume
mount.
So
they
did
all
this
setup
and
we
updated
the
image
and
they
lost
all
their
work
that
they
did
because
they
persisted
the
database
in
in
the
container.
B
So
I
may
be:
okay,
I
may
be
yeah,
I
don't
know
how
why
they
went
there,
but
I
may
need
some,
maybe
bugging
around
some
volume
claim
stuff,
yeah
and
eks.
I
I
would
what's
funny
is:
I
was
literally,
I
have
raspberry
pi
cluster
and
I
work
on
eks
and
I
was
literally
doing
an
nfs
external
client
stuff
set
up
for
a
startup
I'm
trying
to
help
some
people
work
on.
That's
on
the
side
too,
and
it's
like
so
any
of
that
yeah
anything.
I
can
help
with
feel
free
to
reach
out
all
right,
cool.
B
So
that's,
thank
you.
Everybody
in
the
new
folks
and
everybody
else
has
been
coming.
Did
I
miss
anything
or
did
I
cover
everything
that
we
got
going
on.
D
No,
I
think
that
you
know,
I
think
we
there's
two
things
starting
april
1st.
We
really
want
to
get
this
first
big
project
in
the
works
and
we
have
a
time
change
coming
up.
So
I
don't
know
what
the
time
change
looks
like
in
pakistan
and
in
india.
Do
you
guys.
J
D
So
we're
gonna.
Next
we
change
times
we
go
if
we
move
forward
an
hour
on
the
14th,
so
the
next
call
we'll
have
this
just
be
aware
that
this
meeting
will
should
show
up
correctly
on
your
calendar,
but
it
will
be
an
hour
off.
B
Shouldn't
affect
you
guys,
but
you
know
we'll
be
like
I
said
the
the
countering
the
google
counter
invite
should
adjust
automatically,
but
just
a
heads
up
there's
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
the
other
open
source.
Sigs
that
don't
use.
Google
calendar
invites
for
some
reason,
so
they
sit
there
and
try
to
figure
out.
You
know
how
many
hours
they're
off
at
every
single
time
zone
for
every
single
member
and.
D
B
And,
like
I
said
next
thursday,
let
me
double
check
the
time.
I
I
believe
you
guys.
I
saw
a
bunch
of
you,
accept
the
invite
around
getting
to
know
the
the
website.
B
J
All
righty
or
tracy
for
g-shock
like
are
we
going
to
have
slots
or
not,
because
I
think
so
like
in
the
last
call.
We
had
talked
that
we
I
heard
that
we
are
only
that
cdf
city
foundation
is
going
to
have
only
four
slots
or
something
like
that.
B
J
B
I
was
on
the
the
and
you
guys
are
welcome
to
the
cdf
toc
meetings,
any
of
the
cdf
sigs
and
things
like
that
as
well.
They
were
talking
that
they
had,
they
were
submitting
20
mentors
to
gsoc
across
all
the
projects
and
they
were
hoping
because
we
had
so
many
mentors
that
we
will
be
able
to
get
a
decent
number
of
people
to
that
we
can
spread
out.
B
D
Yeah
yeah
I've
got
it
and
I
just
have
to
submit,
submit
us
as
a
project
they're
not
quite
as
picky
as
gsoc
they're,
not
asking
for
mentor
names
ahead
of
time,
but
we're
gonna,
but
I'll
get
that
taken
care
of.
I
have
a
meeting
with
the
woman
who
manages
it
on
friday.
F
B
Okay,
cool
well,
thank
you,
everybody
and
I
will
get
furiously
creating
issues
here
and
we'll
be
off
and
running
here
soon.