►
From YouTube: Jan 20, 2022 - Ortelius Architecture
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
All
right
welcome
everybody
to
the
january
20th,
artelias
architecture
meeting.
I
let
me
drop
in
the
link
again
into
the
chat,
so
please
sign
in.
A
So
I'm
just
going
to
go
through
a
kind
of
like
a
a
quick
recap
of
what
we
got
going
on
and
then
I'm
gonna
make
sergio
do
some
work.
A
So
I
still
have
to
open
an
issue,
but
we
do
need
to
add
the
s-bomb
generators
to
our
microservices.
A
A
A
We
can
use
that
number
to
help
figure
out
where
you
know
if
people
are
staying
current
with
their
packages
and
we
kind
of
ran
into
this
chrome
ran
into
this,
with
our
our
microservices
and
kind
of
get
into
what
he's
up
to
on
that
front.
Sasha
the
helm
chart
the
the
main
sub
album
chart.
Any
luck
on
getting
to
that.
C
C
A
If,
if
you
could
drop
droppers
name
in
this,
one.
C
C
Yeah,
I
added
him
to
the
issue
and
I
added
him
to
the
tops
google,
but
just
read
only.
A
C
Yeah
sorry,
but
otherwise
booked
a
meeting
with
you
for
this
evening.
My
time,
okay,.
A
A
Cool
and
I
have
a
meeting
so
there's
a
another
meeting
today,
it's
going
to
be
4
30
p.m.
My
time
it
puts
it
at
8,
30,
australian
time.
A
Going
to
be
the
the
get
ops
so
there's
another
group
that
we
work
with
another
working
group
for
get
ops
and
I
know
they're
doing
some
stuff
around
the
helm
as
well.
A
E
A
Ben
ben
and
brad
are
have
been
working
on
the
the
helm
stuff
on
that
side
as
well.
C
C
A
Yeah,
so
we
visualization
of
our
data.
That
is
something
that
we
need
to
continue
kind
of
poking
around.
So
if
anybody
finds
any
cool
graphs
out
there,
even
if
we
don't
know
what
the
library
is,
but
just
what
the
graphs
look
like
we're
trying
to
look
at
one
of
the
ideas
is,
you
know,
changes
over
time,
service,
service
level,
mappings,
there's
another
one
that
I
that
came
up
this
week
was.
A
Other
metrics,
like
how
long
has
it
taken
for
a
commit
you
know
so
in
in
our
process?
You
do
your
git
commit
you,
you
build
it.
Then
you
deploy
it
well,
but
the
time
between
the
the
build
of
a
like
a
docker
image
and
the
deployment
to
production
is
going
to
be
x
number
of
days
or
hours.
So
we
can
actually
calculate
you
know
how
long
it's
taking
for
a
developer's
commit
to
get
to
production
or
the
uat
or
whatever
or
qa.
A
So
that
type
of
thing
we
there's
some
more
data
that
we
need
to
that.
We
have.
We
just
need
to
look
at
visualizing
on
that
front.
Another
one
is
looking
at
cookie
cutter.
So
when
you
register
microservice,
we
kind
of
go
and
do
the
back
end
thing
set
up.
The
jenkins
templates
check
that
one
out
and
testing
looks
like
there's
something
wrong
with
the
the
test,
the
dev
site
on
azure.
I
got
to
take
a
look
at
that
for
some
reason
we
can't
log
in.
A
I
don't
know
if
something
got
messed
up
in
the
data
or
if
it's
just
something
in
azure,
that's
causing
us
problems.
I
go.
Take
a
look
at
that,
so
this
is
where
I
was
kind
of
telling
sergio
he
has
to.
It
has
a
little
work
to
do
so.
What
we're
thinking
is!
A
Oh
before
we
get
to
the
issue
clean
up
karen,
why
don't
you
just
give
a
quick
kind
of
recap
of
what
one
of
the
issues
I
assigned
you
and
what
you're
you're
seeing
out
there.
F
So
we
are
working
on
the
cleaning
up
our
docker
images
with
vulnerabilities.
So
currently
we
are
using
a
python
3.8
with
alpine
3.10
as
our
base
image.
So
there
were
some
vulnerabilities
which
you
can
see
on
artifada
as
well
as
on
on
query
repository
related
to
our
docker
images.
So
I
was
assigned
the
task
to
finish
that
up.
F
F
So
we
are
on
the
latest
version
of
the
state
as
well
as
coming
towards
the
also.
It's
also
invented
that,
instead
of
using
alpine
for
docker
for
python
based
programs,
it's
better
to
use
slim
based
images,
so
slim
basically
is
a
similar
to
ubuntu
operating
system,
but
a
slimmer
version
of
the
of
the
os
and
on
file
trying
to
creating
a
docker
image.
From
that
it
was
like.
F
It
was
easier
to
create
a
locker
image
like
not
no
need
to
store
a
lot
of
other
dependencies
like
we
have
to
do
in
case
of
alpine
for
a
postgres
driver,
but
but
what
I've
noticed
that,
in
case
of
this,
the
slim
part
that
there's
a
lot
of
vulnerabilities
coming
because
of
the,
and
there
is
no,
they
are
not
yet
fixed.
F
A
Yeah
so
yeah,
that's
what
I
noticed
with
the
alpine
versus
slim
alpine.
You
have
to
do
more
work
on
installing
the
extra
packages
that
you
need,
because
it
is
kind
of
like
a
scaled
back
version
of
the
os,
but
so
you
end
up
doing
more
work
on
your
on
on
your
side
to
get
all
the
packages
the
dependencies
there
for
your
stuff
to
run
versus
slim,
which
has
a
bunch
of
packages
pre-installed
for
you,
so
it
makes
it
really
easy
to
get
up
and
going,
but
the
trade-off
that
we're.
A
Having
is
the
vulnerabilities,
and
it
sounds
like
chrome.
That
alpine
is
correcting
the
issues
faster
than
slim.
Is
that
a
good
assumption.
F
Oh
yeah,
because
I
think
so
in
in
case
of
slim,
they
are
using
the
latest
versions
of
everything.
So
the
latest
so
like
when
you
when
I
saw
the
what
you
say
the
vulnerabilities
they
didn't
have
any
picture
like
when
this
vulnerability
will
be
fixed
because
you're
on
the
latest
version
itself,
yeah.
So.
A
Yeah,
so
this
is,
this
is
going
to
be
one
of
our
and
and
we
will
still
run
into
blockers
and
like
this.
Bin
utils
is
a
blocker,
because
if
you
try
to
go
to
2.33,
it
goes
and
breaks
a
bunch
of
other
stuff
right.
G
A
F
Actually,
I
fixed
that
because
what
I
found
that,
because,
as
you
remember,
I
was
not
using
a
multi-stage
build
so
when
I
went
to
a
multi-stage
build
this
went
away
because
ecc
was
not
getting
pulled
away
into
the
new.
B
A
Yeah,
so
that
kind
of
brings
me
back
to
while
that's
opening
the
ability
to
have
a
you
know,
build
up
this
dashboard
and
being
able
to
visualize,
and
you
know
understand
where
vulnerabilities
are,
when
they're
being
fixed
the
lib
year
type
of
thing.
So
if
we
get
a
a
new
release
of
ben
utils
that
we
can
actually,
you
know
really
have
a
a
way
to
notify
everybody
that
that
the
new
release
is
out
there
and
that
they
can
start
using
it
so
which
one
you
want
me
to
look
at
chrome.
F
F
So
in
this
case
I
have
fixed
the
like
when
I'm
logging
into
the
container.
I
can
see
that
xpath
is
the
latest
version
2.4.3,
but
I'm
not
sure
like
why
sco
is
showing
with
a
2.4.1.
A
It's
probably
coming
in
some
weird
layer
and
then
it
doesn't.
Then
it's
getting
replaced.
F
A
Okay,
I'll,
if
I
have
some
time
this
week,
I'll
take
a
look
at
it
and
and
see.
A
Yeah
one
of
the
interesting
things
I
don't
know
if
you
folks
know,
but
alpine
does
not
use
g
lib
c
slim
does
and
when
you
bring
in
glib
c,
you
get
a
lot
of
these
weird
high
vulnerabilities
that
have
been
around,
for
you
know,
10
years
that
they
just
haven't
bothered
to
fix
yeah.
This.
F
One
this
one's
much
more
challenging
because
there's
a
bunch
of
different
libraries-
and
I
think
so
guys
they're
on
the
latest
version,
because
I
could
not
see
any
fixed
version
as
well
like
when
which
person
to
fix
right,
yeah,
yeah
and
comparing
the
packages
like
it
has
around
54.
If
I
think
so
like
60
packages
and
still
like
the
alpine
has
bought
30
or
40
packages
and
the
email
size
is
almost
half
for
alpine.
A
A
Yeah
and
if
we
can
get
that
one
fixed
we'd
be
really
nice
to
be,
have
a
35
megabyte,
microservice
out
there
right,
you
know
it's
like
like
our
monolith
is
like
three
gig
and
and
part
of
the
reason
is
we
have
to
bring
in
a
bunch
of
tools,
it's
the
red
hat
tools
that
give
us
the
most
bloat,
but.
A
A
So
I
reached
out
to
him
to
ask
him
to
help
figure
out
our
vulnerability
reports
that
we're
showing
up
on
on
artifact
hub,
because
if
you
go
back
and
we
look
at
you-
know
our
rating
for
our
market
services,
a
bunch
of
apps
is
not
going
to
be
well
well
received
by
anybody
who
wants
to
go
and
use
our
our
microservices
and
and
ortelius.
So
because
I
knew
chrome
was
initially
created,
the
microservices
and
the
images
it
was
a
good
fit.
A
So
that
kind
of
leads
me
into
sergio's
role,
which
is
going
to
be
helping,
assign
and
kind
of
groom
the
community
and
look
for
folks
to
help
work
on
certain
issues.
A
I
know
last
time
I
kind
of
asked
where
people
don't
mind
being
being
assigned
an
issue
and
given
kind
of
like
a
due
date.
Is
that
still
the
am?
I
understanding
that
correctly
that
everybody
kind
of
is
in
that
mindset.
F
It's
better
because
planning
our
releases
is
important
yeah.
If
you
could
have
some
relief
cycle
like
every
six
months
or
like
every.
I
think
six
months
would
be
a
good
place
to
start,
as
we
are
a
small
community
but
open
source
as
well
right.
So
once
we
have
some,
we
are
moving
some
stuff
out
every
six
months.
Every
caution,
at
least.
H
Yeah,
I
think
is
at
the
beginning
is
useful
because
we
need
to
maybe
it's
more
to
get
related,
for
example,
to
know
who
is
more
used
to
it
to
do
what
some
kind
of
stuff,
so
it's
good
to
have
a
to
start
more
with
more
speed
to
have
a
few
days
and
when
we
came
together
and
talk
a
little
bit
and
do
a
little
tactical
distribution
about
the
task,
but
it
is
good
to
know
each
other
because
in
the
beginning
I
think
it's
going
to
be
a
little
slow.
H
If
we
try
to
reach
out,
I
don't
know,
assign
some
something
to
someone,
and
maybe
the
the
iteration
between
I
don't
know,
maybe
find
another
play
on
other
people
or
stuff
like
that.
So
yeah
I
think
for
for
like
doing
a
little
team
building.
It's
it
will,
it
could
be.
It
will
be
great
yeah,
okay,
everyone
we
are
not
trying
to
like
you
must
do.
This
is
more
like
hey.
We
think.
Maybe
you
can
take
this.
H
We
are
if,
if
you're,
if
it's
not
like
the
the
the
most
surprising
for
you,
let
me
know-
and
we
are
going
to
start
to
begin
that
feedback
and
have
released
little
knowledge
base
about
who
can
help
in
what
space
the
dedication
time
stuff
like
that.
So
it's
going
to
be
a
little
experiment
to
be
patient
and
be
super
open
to
say
yes
or
no.
This
everything
is
able.
We
are
community,
but
at
the
beginning,
probably
we
are
going
to
have
a
lot
of.
H
I
don't
know
assignment
and
reassignment
just
to
at
least
until
we
we
have
like
a
a
performance
established
as
a
team.
Okay,.
I
Yeah-
and
I
think
on
that,
just
from
knowing
what
needs
to
be
done
is
helpful
for
especially
people
who
are
new
to
get
started
to
be
given,
given
a
suggestion
on
what
kind
of
a
pull
request
they
can
work
on
and
know
that
everybody
knows
they're
working
on
it.
If
they
need
help,
they
can
reach
out
for
it
as
opposed
to
them.
Just
trying
to
figure
it
out.
I
think
trying
to
figure
it
out
is
actually
much
harder.
A
You
know
another
idea
would
be
kind
of
like
code
co-coding,
so
people
are
coding
at
the
same
time
on
the
on
the
same
same
issue
or
same
piece
of
code,
so
I
don't
know
exactly
how
it
would
work,
but
maybe
like
where
one
person
is
doing
the
coding
another
person's
watching
along
asking
questions.
Why
they're
doing
this
and
why
they're
doing
that
type.
A
E
J
H
K
Yes
or
maybe
we
can
suggest
something
like
that,
for
example,
I'm
a
newcomer
to
this
group.
So
maybe
so,
if
you,
if
we
provide
some
kind
of
onboarding
like
for
example,
I
don't
know
where
to
I
mean
start
with,
you
know
some
kind
of
this
kind
of
thing,
so
I'm
completely
new.
I
don't
know
what
exactly
is
going
on
on
this
project,
so
I'm
in
the
jumping
in
the
middle
of
this
war.
So
maybe,
if
there's
some
kind
of
onboarding
for
this
newcomer,
so
it
will
be
kind
of
helpful
right.
I
Well,
we
have
some
stuff
like
we
have
in
the
documentation.
We
have
a.
We
have
that
contributor
guide
and
we
have
a
video
that
cars
did
back
actually
last
month
and
that's
posted
out
there,
but
I
think
that
there's
a
human
element
to
that
too.
I
I
I
feel
like
if
there
is
a
somebody
new-
and
I
know
when
new
people
show
up
because
they
add
themselves
to
the
google
groups.
Maybe
I
should
be
sending
an
email
out
to
steve
and
to
sergio
so
that
you
guys
so
so
that
you
can
reach
out
to
them
and
you
know
invite
them
to
a
meeting
or
have
a
discussion,
because
I
I
recruit
people
and
then
they
go
to
the
next
level,
which
is
how
do
I
get
involved?
And
that's
when
I
need
I
like
sergio
and
steve
to
pick
up
the
process.
A
Yeah,
because
I
I
know
the
the
the
documentation
can
get
you
only
so
far
like
sasha,
you
have
some
competition,
puja
varana.
It
has
broken,
get
pretty
good
too.
So.
A
A
Getting
that
locomotive
back
on
the
tracks
can
be
a
pretty
heavy
lift.
That's.
A
A
Tracy
has
authority
to
work
directly
with
the
the
repos,
just
as
I
am
working
off
a
fork
and
she
can
break
it.
A
All
right,
so
I
think
it
sounds
like
we
have
some
good
ideas
which
one
do
you
think
we
should
try.
First,
the
mini
hackathon
or
the
code
pairing.
H
Yeah,
I
think
it's
more
broader,
like
more
massive,
so
it
can
be
more
good
for
a
start.
Okay,.
A
A
Well,
we
will,
let
me
think,
about
what
we
can
and
I'll
work
with
you
sergio
throw
some
ideas
out
on
a
couple
topics
and
I
kind
of
think
when
we
do
the
hackathon,
it
will
kind
of
do
it
kind
of
as
a
you
know
like
we're
doing
today,
we'll
just
set
an
hour
or
two
aside
and
kind
of
do,
go
through
a
group
hack
of
what
we
got
going
on
and
we
may
do
that
just
to
wrap
up
the
last
sprint
here
to
get
everything
out
the
door.
I
And
there
might
be
a
way
we
could
just
start
doing
a
hack
hour
too,
where
everybody
gets
on
a
call
like
we're
doing
now
and
everybody's
working
on
their
stuff,
and
you
hang
out
in
and
code
or
you
know,
the
other
thing
we
could
do
would
be
to
start
adding
time
to
the
calendar
for
different
slots
of
the
calendar,
where
people
can
say
yeah
I'll,
be
hanging
out
I'll,
be
coding,
then.
So,
let's
get
on
a
call
together.
H
I
A
Over
discord,
remember:
if
it
does
anybody
know
if
it
will
allow
you
to
do
group
video.
H
Yes,
you
can
do
a
do.
Any
channel
can
be
a
video
channel,
so
you
can
like
pick
a
topic
and
do
a
video
channel
where
everything
is
maybe
watching
someone
sold
themselves
or
something.
So
it's
really
easy
to
to
do
that
on
this
car.
A
Okay,
we'll
figure
that
out
we'll
probably
start
with
zoom
since
it's
well
well-known
territory.
H
Yeah,
it's
more
organic
in
the
way
that
is
more
easy
to
create
it's
like
channels.
So
you
pick
a
channel
and
you're
going
to
have
either
a
chat
and
video
over
there
and
you
don't
need
to
in
advance
to
create
a
meeting
and
simulations
right.
I
D
I
A
And
go
to
bl
scroll
down.
A
H
Well,
you
need
to
open
open
voice
channel
because
it's
like
a
collapser
yeah,
then
in
general,
then
clock
open
general.
There
there
ready
I
already
booked
the
video.
I
G
E
G
E
Channel
has
a
limit
of
five
people,
so
we
have
to
extend.
This
looks
like
25.
H
We
just
we
can
create
like
a
main
channel
of
hackathon
and
do
sub
channels
and
you
can
in
every
channel
you
can
do
like
a
shared
screen
and
video
screen.
So
it's
easy
to
organize.
A
Well,
let's
give
it
a
shot,
yeah
and
we'll
just
kind
of.
H
I
H
In
work,
we
usually
do
what
tracy
said
like
between
some
hours
of
the
day,
there's
always
like
a
channel
where
it's
people
like
sharing
and
helping,
and
at
least
hearing
if
someone
needs
something.
So
if
someone
needs
something,
it's
really
easy
because
you
start
your
video,
your
shares,
created
and
try
to
help.
So
we
do
a
lot
of
that
and
on
this
currency,
breeze
all
right.
I
H
We
can
use
it
to
if
someone
already
is
like
working
on
an
issue
today,
like
start
doing
giving
super
on
that
channel,
we
don't
need
to
wait
much.
A
Yeah
yeah
so
like
when,
when
chrome
and
I
were
working
on
the
the
cves,
I
just
dropped
in
a
link
to
zoom,
but
instead
we'll
just
be
able
to
jump
on
a
a
channel.
So
anybody
can
join
in
then.
I
Exactly
yeah
anapalm:
do
you
think
this
should
be
helpful.
K
I
C
I
Our
first
artillious
in-person
event
in
roswell.
C
I
A
I
I
I
A
A
I
also
anybody
else
have
anything
before
we
wrap
up
here.
A
Okay,
keep
an
eye
on
discord
and
we'll
start
setting.
I
Well
so
go
ahead
and
you
know
I
gave
some
suggestions
if
you
want
to
pick
a
topic
and
you're
not
sure
about
it
or
you
want
me
to.
D
I
The
the
synopsis
or
the
abstract
just
shoot
me
an
email
or
you
know
and
I'll
be
happy
to
do
that
and
go
for
it.
I
D
I
They
first
said
that
speakers
had
to
be
in
person,
but
then
at
one
of
our
at
the
cd
events
meeting
some
of
the
people
said
we're
not
going
to
be
able
to
do
this
because
we
can't
travel.
So
I
know
that
they're
thinking
about
how
to
fix
that.
I'm
assuming
they're
gonna
allow
us
to
record
the
meetings
record
our
sessions,
even
if
we
don't
attend
in
person.
I
Yeah,
absolutely
and
anything
you
do
around
dortelius
will
get
priority
since
we're
a
focused
area.
A
Yeah,
there's
a
on
discord.
There's
a
call
for
papers,
topics
channel.
E
A
Yeah,
so
I
think
I
know
what's
happening
so
karama.
I
was
gonna
talk
to
you
about
this
later,
but
so
what's
happening
is
when
you
sign
into
discord,
you
get
added
to
the
welcome
channel
and
then
underneath
the
welcome
channel.
There's
a
code
of
conduct
channel.
A
A
D
Yeah
like
when
I
looked
at
the
code
of
conduct,
I
did
not
understand
that
you
can
click
on
the
check
for
a
check,
guys.
A
The
wording
a
little
bit
there,
but
the
reason
why
we
do
that
is
just
because
the
whole
linux
foundation
is
into
this
whole
code
of
conduct
where
everybody's
nice
and
polite
and
stuff
like
that,
and
what
what
to
do,
if
somebody
somebody
is
and
that's
why
we
have
that
out
there.
A
All
right
everybody
I'm
going
to
take
off.
Thank
you,
everybody
for
coming
today.