►
From YouTube: Tanzu Community Edition Community Meeting - July 6, 2022
Description
Note: Acting on insights gained through community engagement over the past year, VMware has decided to offer a free download of VMware Tanzu Kubernetes Grid in place of VMware Tanzu Community Edition software and to retire the Tanzu Community Edition open source project. Users can download Tanzu Kubernetes Grid [here](https://www.vmware.com/go/get-tkg).
Tanzu Community Edition Community Meeting - July 6, 2022
This week we got a demo on the work being done on the kickstart UI, delivered announcements on the departure of three of our maintainers, and updates to our community meetings. See full agenda here: https://hackmd.io/CiuO4V0AT6WL_TgA47MXBA?both#July-6-2022-Agenda
A
A
Join
us
live,
be
on
a
lookout
for
for
on
our
website
and
on
twitter
and
whatnot,
for
when
these
meetings
resume
and
when
they
do,
you
know
we
we
sh,
we
should
be
meeting
again
every
first
and
third
wednesday
at
11
a.m,
pacific
time,
but
if
that
changes
we'll
make
sure
to
update
all
that
information
and
all
the
details
accordingly,
these
meetings
are
just
a
good
opportunity
to
come
and
hear
what
the
team's
working
on
provide
any
feedback
ask
questions
to
the
maintainers
meet
other
members
of
the
community
and
just
kind
of
hang
out
for
a
little
bit
and
listen
in
what
tc
is
all
about.
A
A
A
We
do
want
to
know
more
details
about
how
you
are
using
tonsil
community
edition,
so
we've
created
this
pinned
issue,
and
all
you
need
to
do
is
put
a
comment
on
this
issue
and
fill
out
these
details
that
we
request
of
you.
So
your
organization,
how
you
know
what
is
the
scenario
you're
using
tons
of
community
edition
and
anything
else
you
want
to
provide
it,
helps
us
to
learn.
A
You
know
how
to
like
learn
more
ways
about
how
others
are
using
it
to
to
better
our
development
process
for
for
tce,
and
it
helps
the
community
understand
how
others
are
using
it
and
then,
therefore
they
might
use
it
in
the
same
way.
So
please
fill
it
out.
It's
super
helpful
for
us
and
if
you
have
any
questions
about
that,
let
us
know
all
the
attendees
that
are
on
this
call.
A
So
we'd
appreciate
that
as
well,
so
some
announcements
to
share
it's
with
a
very
heavy
heart
that
I
let
the
community
know
that
we
have
some
departures
from
our
maintainers
and
it's
unfortunate
that
it
happened
all
at
the
same
time,
but
it's
not
all
related
by
any
means
and
when
we
have
more
information
to
share
regarding,
like
everything
else
regarding
this,
we
will.
But
as
far
as
like
the
health
and
state
of
tons
of
communication,
it
is
totally
not
relevant
to
that.
A
It's
just
totally
unfortunate
timing,
and
with
that
I'll,
let
you
know
who
it
is
that
is
leaving.
We
have
josh
rosso,
who
is
moving
on
john
mcbride
and
sean
mcginnis
and
their
last
day
at
vmware
will
be
july
15th.
So
with
that
josh,
do
you
want
to
say
anything.
B
Sure,
thanks
nancy,
hey
everybody,
yeah,
says
nancy
said
I'm
gonna
be
leaving
vmware
moving
on
july.
15Th
just
want
to
say
it's
obviously
been
a
huge
pleasure
working
on
tons
of
community
edition
with
you
all.
You
might
remember,
for
those
of
you,
who've
been
around
for
a
while
some
of
the
kind
of
gnarly
state
we
came
from.
B
We
were
first
trying
to
get
things
launched
and
we
couldn't
even
you
know,
ship
a
thing
and
how
much
we've
kind
of
built
up
from
there
how
many
cool
community
contributions
have
come
in,
like
you
know
all
scott's
cool
work
with
like
the
package
repos
and
and
all
the
awesome
things
we've
seen
from
our
user
base,
so
both
vmware
employees
and
folks
who
have
been
using
tce.
We
just
really
appreciate,
and
I
really
appreciate
all
the
involvement
you've
had.
B
It's
been
a
really
cool
project
to
work
on
and,
as
nancy
said
like,
I
don't
no
longer
believe
in
tce.
I
think
tons
of
community
edition
has
a
lot
of
opportunity
in
the
market
still
and
I'm
really
excited
to
root
from
the
sidelines.
B
For
me
personally,
I'm
just
really
passionate
about
working
in
the
realm
of
compute,
and
I
want
to
do
something
a
little
bit
outside
of
the
kubernetes
space
for
a
while,
so
really
psyched
to
do
that
and
really
psyched
again
to
have
had
this
opportunity
to
work
with
you
all
so
yeah
thanks
again
nancy.
A
Yeah
thanks
josh,
so
sad
but
excited
for
for
what
you
do
in
the
future
for
sure
we're
gonna
go
through
the
other
ones
that
are
that
are
leaving
and
then
at
the
end,
if
you
have
anything
you
want
to
say
from
the
community,
please
feel
free
to
do
so.
So
john,
do
you
want
to
say
anything.
C
I
feel
similarly
a
huge
shout
out
to
this
community
and
this
group
of
people
for
getting
tc8
to
the
point
it
is
making
it
successful
and
yeah
just
seeing
all
the
adoption
with
unmanaged
clusters
and
cool,
interesting
future
ideas
and
value
ads
has
been
awesome,
so
yeah
a
huge
shout
out
to
this
community.
I
think
the
community
is
what's
going
to
continue
to
make
this
successful
in
the
future
and
yeah.
I'm
just
excited
about
doing
something
a
little
different
and
getting
you
know
curious
about
some
things.
I
I
don't
know
a
lot
about
yeah.
C
A
Yeah
for
sure
I
have
no
doubt
that
you're
gonna
excel
at
whatever
thing
you
pick
up
next
super
excited
to
see
that
and
then
sean
have
anything.
You
want
to
say.
D
Yeah
well,
third,
in
line
now
so
not
much
to
add
you
know,
I
agree
with
everything
that
josh
and
john
had
said
same
for
me.
This
has
been
pretty
amazing
going
through
from
very
early
on
till
now
and,
and
it
is
bad
timing,
the
project's
still
going,
there's
a
lot
of
really
cool
stuff.
I'm
excited
for
the
demo
a
little
later
in
this
meeting,
so
there's
some
cool
stuff
that
can
still
be
done
with
tce
and
and
great
thing
about
it
being
an
open
source
project.
Is
you
know?
D
Maybe
you
can
still
drop
in
once
in
a
while
and
see
how
things
are
going,
but
yeah,
it's
been
great.
A
Yeah
thanks
sean
also
super
excited
to
see
you
whatever
you
land
next,
and
I
know
that
all
three
of
y'all
are
gonna,
continue
to
be
in
the
community
in
some
form
or
fashion,
and
if
you
just
like
get
an
itch
to
contribute
in
some
way,
you
know
that's
always
available
to
you,
so
we
we
look
forward
to
hopefully
continuing
that
relationship,
so
I'll
open.
That
up.
Does
anybody
else
like
want
to
share
anything.
E
Just
want
to
say
from
my
side
thank
you
to
all
three
of
you.
It
has
been
a
pleasure
coming
from
the
community
getting
such
great
responses
from
the
maintainer
team
and
it's
been
one
of
the
projects
that
it's
been
really
fun
to
use
because
of
the
maintainer
team,
not
just
the
technology.
So
good
luck
and
thank
you
all
for
all
of
the
help
and
everything
for
this
whole
period
and
good
luck.
F
I
just
say,
plus
one
that
it's
it's
fun
to
have
like
a
legit
open
project.
You
know
where
you're
working
out
on
github
and
actually
interacting
with
people
and
fostering
you
know
folks
to
create
their
own
content.
So
yeah
definitely
thank
you
and
also
exciting,
to
see
kind
of
the
bakes.
The
base
of
this
project
continue
to
grow.
A
Yeah
thanks
lee,
okay,
any
any
other
comments
things
to
share.
A
All
right
yeah,
I
I
know
that
it's,
it's
really
big
news
to
share
this,
and
I
I
imagine
all
of
y'all
have
questions
and-
and
you
want
to
know,
what's
going
on
in
the
future,
but
you
know,
obviously
we
have
some
things
we
need
to
work
on
and
therefore
that
means
these
community
meetings
we'll
pause
until
we
have
everything
ironed
out
and
what
it
means
for
for
these
folks
to
to
no
longer
be
maintainers
and
also
work
on
like
what
our
roadmap
is
going
to
look
like
now
and
everything,
but
it
by
no
means
means
anything
towards
the
state
of
tanzania
communition.
A
We're
really
excited
for
the
project
and
the
future
of
the
project.
So
you
know
if,
if
you
are
watching
this
or
if
anyone's
attending
this-
and
you
want
to
help
contribute
or
anything
like
that-
please
reach
out
to
us
we'd,
also
like
love
to
get
people
involved
that
are
excited
about
the
project,
just
as
much
as
we
are
so
with
that
we
will
move
on
to
updates.
A
As
far
as
engineering
updates
goes,
we
we
have
the
ui
proof
of
concept
update
demo,
so
we've
been
working
on
this
for
a
few
months
now,
we've
been
sharing
different
updates
to
to
this
concept
and
gathering
feedback
through
all
the
community
meetings.
So
we
will
share
what
that
looks
like,
as
the
state
of
it
is
now
so
shimon.
I
believe
you're
gonna
be
doing
this.
G
Yes,
thank
you
very
much.
Let
me
echo
everybody's
thanks
and
and
heartfelt
appreciation
to
the
three
amigos
who
will
be
leaving
us
soon
been
a
pleasure
working
with
you
guys,
you've
done
a
great
job
and
hope
to
move
forward.
You
know
on
with
the
work
that
you've
done
into
the
future.
I
also
before
I
roll
this
demo.
G
I
want
to
give
a
shout
out:
excuse
me
to
sean
for
his
help
working
through
some
technical
back
end
issues
and
to
gary
and
louie
for
their
their
help
with
the
ux
and,
of
course,
justin
who's,
not
on
the
call
right
now
and
panjijani
and
christian
are
also
my
teammates
who
have
been
doing
this
work.
I
recorded
a
demo
earlier
today,
it's
a
little
bit
rough
because
we
had
some
last
minute
changes
coming
in,
but
let
me
just
roll
that
clip
and
then
we
can
talk
about
it.
G
Hi,
my
name
is
shimon
walner
and
I'd
like
to
give
an
update
on
what
the
ui
team
has
been
doing.
We're
very
excited
about
this
ui
plugin.
That
will
allow
folks
to
have
a
pleasant,
ui
experience
when
they're
wanting
to
deploy
a
management
cluster
or
an
unmanaged
cluster
and
eventually
a
workload
cluster.
Now
our
target
audience
for
this,
as
you
probably
know,
are
people
who
are
not
as
familiar
with
the
kubernetes
ecosystem,
and
we
want
to
give
them
a
soft
landing.
G
So
I
want
to
show
different
aspects
of
what
we've
been
doing
as
a
team.
There's
a
lot
of
different
work,
the
different
team
members
have
been
doing,
but
I'm
the
one
demoing
it
for
the
sake
of
the
whole
team.
One
of
the
things
that
we're
really
excited
about
is
this
contextual
help.
So
in
the
upper
right
hand
corner
now
you're
going
to
see
this
help
colon
and
the
identifier
here
is
going
to
change
based
on
what
context
the
user's
in
so
right
now
we're
at
the
very
top
level
we're
at
the
welcome
stream.
G
This
is
just
time
to
community
edition.
If
I
click
on
it,
we'll
see
this
drawer
come
out
that
that
has
several
different
topics
that
are
related
to
this
context
of
classic
community
edition.
G
Now,
if
I
want
to,
I
can
search
in
here
for
other
contexts
and
I'll
get
some
results
based
on
what
my
search
term
is,
but
if
I'm
just
coming
in
here
by
itself,
I
can
see
that
these
are
the
things
that
we
expect
that,
if
you're
at
the
welcome
page,
you
might
want
some
help
with
and
now,
if
I
click
back
on
the
screen
that
goes
away.
G
If
I
want
it
to
stay
there,
because
maybe
I'm
looking
at
something-
and
I
want
to
keep
reading
it
while
I
navigate,
I
can
pin
this
and
now
I
can
click
over
here
in
the
app
and
actually
navigate,
and
my
help
will
stay
with
me.
So
we're
very
excited
about
this.
We
do
need
some
help,
getting
the
content
fleshed
out
throughout
the
entire
application,
but
we've
got
the
home
page
on
the
getting
started.
Page
are
working
very
nicely.
G
So
that's
the
contextual
help.
Now,
if
I
look
here
at
this
starting
getting
started
page,
you
may
notice,
from
the
previous
demos
we've
taken
out
the
workload
cluster.
That's
hiding
behind
a
feature
flag
right
now
that
I've
turned
off
the
reason
that
we
turned.
That
off
is
because
our
first
release
is
not
going
to
have
support
for
the
workload
cluster.
So
we
don't
want
that
cluttering
up
the
interface
and
confusing
people
with
links
that
won't
take
them
forward
through.
G
But
if
I
look
at
the
management
cluster
now
I'm
going
to
create
a
management
cluster
and
we
see
what
we've
seen
before
these
are
the
four
different
providers
that
we're
supporting.
Now
the
differences
are
this.
We
have
tested
the
docker
end
to
end
now,
so
that
provider
allows
us
to
actually
create
a
docker
cluster,
we're
not
just
using
a
mock
data.
G
There
we've
actually
been
able
to
do
that
same
for
aws,
so
using
the
aws
interface
that
we've
demoed
before
we've
actually
been
able
to
create
a
real
aws
cluster
on
an
aws
account,
microsoft,
azure,
I'm
going
to
walk
us
through.
We
have.
We
are
in
the
process
of
testing
this.
Now,
I'm
just
going
to
enter
some
garbage
data
here,
because
we're
using
a
mock
server,
but
raymond
is
in
the
process
of
testing
this
out,
and
we
see
that
you
know
the
interface
is
doing
what
we
expect.
G
You
do
the
connection
there,
and
then
you
name
your
cluster.
You
pick
an
instance
type
for
your
control
plane
and
when
you
click
create
management
question
you
come
here
and
we
walk
through
creating
the
cluster.
Now.
This
is
just
mock
data
here
and
you're,
seeing
an
error
message,
because
we've
knocked
that
out
to
demonstrate
that
the
error
messages
show
up
in
red
so
that
they
stand
out
and
on
this
page,
while
we're
waiting
for
our
cluster
to
complete,
we
can
scroll
down
and
look
at
some
of
the
next
steps
that
we
can
do.
G
Now,
if
we
come
back
here
to
our
providers,
the
vsphere
one
is
the
provider,
that's
lagging
the
most
behind,
that's
been
in
my
court
and
I've
had
a
lot
of
things
to
do,
but
we
can
see
that
there
are
some
nice
pieces
here
on
the
first
step
when
I
enter
in
a
server
name
and
then
move
to
the
next
field.
We
go
to
that
server
and
we
get
the
function
from
that
server.
G
And
now
the
user
can
look
at
that
thumb
print
and
compare
it
to
a
known
thumb
print
to
make
sure
that
we're
getting
the
right
server.
They
can
use
that
thumb
print
for
secure
login
if
they
want.
And
now,
when
I
type
in
my
password
here,
I
will
have
the
ability
to
connect,
as
you
would
expect.
We
also
have
the
ability
to
use
ipv6.
G
So
if
I
were
to
start
typing
in
an
ip
address
and
then
switch
over
to
ipv6
you'll
see
that
we
get
an
error
message
now
and
this
error
message
actually
recognizes
the
fact
that
we
typed
in
an
ipv4
and
asks
us
if
we
want
to
toggle
this
back
and
use
that
ipv4.
G
Once
I
connect,
I
get
the
data
centers
and
we'll
notice
that
now
this
is
just
mock
data,
but
the
data
center
that
I
select
here
doesn't
have
any
templates,
and
so
we
get
this
error
message
and
the
ability
to
refresh
that
check.
If
I
were
to
switch
over
to
setting
up
a
template
on
that
data
center
and
then
come
back
here.
G
I
just
want
to
be
able
to
click
this
free
question
and
we
can
demonstrate
that
with
this
particular
data
center
here
that
when
you
refresh
it,
we
do
that
check
again
and
we
see
that
there
are
templates
there
on
that
data
side
and
then,
when
we
go
next,
we
see
the
other
steps
that
have
not
been
good
yet
so,
let's
go
back
to
the
getting
started
page
and
see
the
unmanaged
cluster.
Now
this
is
also
working
development
that
we're
very
pleased
with
we're
going
to
unmanage
cluster.
G
If
we
don't
want
to,
we
can
use
calico
these
two
default
ciders
and
support
mapping,
which
opens
up
a
host
port
to
a
node
port,
and
we
see
that
this
is
defaulting
as
it
should,
but
we
can
change
the
protocol
if
we
want
to,
we
can
change
either
of
these
ports.
G
We
can
even
change
the
ip
address
if
we
wanted
to
change
it,
and
we
display
here
the
string
that
we're
going
to
use
on
the
command
line
equivalent
so
that
the
user
can
see
how
these
things
map
together
and
we
can
go
ahead
and
create
the
mns
cluster.
Obviously,
now
we
have
this
idea
of
an
advanced
configuration
now,
if
I
click
on
the
advanced
configuration,
I
have
the
same
two
steps,
but
now
I
could
specify
the
control
plane,
no
count
on
the
working
mode
count.
G
And
that
is
our
demo
for
today,
I'm
happy
to
take
any
questions
that
you
may
have
and
hope
to
have
another
update
for
you.
G
All
right
and
there
you
have,
it
also
wanted
to
acknowledge
that
landon
hot
is
with
us
on
the
call
today
and
we're
looking
forward
to
collaborating
with
you
on
the
health
content
and
getting
the
rest
of
the
contextual
help
for
all
the
different
pages
fleshed
out.
Any
questions
comments
I
see
it
looks
great.
Thank
you
looks
amazing.
B
E
This,
it
really
looks
amazing.
One
question
on
the
unmanaged
side
is
that
advanced
configuration
still
shows
only
about
like
10
or
20
of
what
is
actually
configurable
for
unmanaged
clusters.
E
Is
there
an
idea
of
exposing,
even
if
it's
just
like
a
blank
box,
almost
that
you
could
add
in
additional
configuration
or
something
so
someone
could
still
use
the
ui
for
a
lot
of
settings
but
add
in
like
provider
configuration
adding
in
that
kind,
config
or
adding
additional
repositories
or
adding
in
packages,
but
having
a
field
for
everything
is
obviously
complex,
but
the
advanced
doesn't
have
as
much
of
an
advanced
feeling,
because
it's
it's
still
only
like
the
20,
it's
in
a
great
ui,
but
that
was
just
the
one
question
I
had.
G
No
absolutely
and
it's
a
great
question.
What
I
failed
to
specify
is
that
this
is
the
advanced
settings
for
mvp.
It's
not
advanced
settings
like
our
goal
of
you
know
where
we're
going.
So
it's
just
the
sort
of
start
of
our
advancement
and
we
look
forward
to
feedback
on
what
we
should
add
to
it.
G
You
know,
as
you
suggest,
you
know,
having
a
actual
different
control
for
every
single
option
is
probably
not
workable,
but
do
we
want
to
have
more
controls
for
some
of
the
main
options
and
then
give
the
user
the
ability
to
just
you
know
add
in
in
a
text.
You
know
manner
some
of
the
particular
configurations
so
that
that
level
of
future
is
unclear,
but
we
welcome
feedback
on
it
and
we
just
want
to
be
able
to
get
out
our
mvp
with
just
a
sort
of
suggestion
and
then
get
that
feedback.
G
Yes,
we're
basically
just
sitting
on
top
of
the
unmanaged
cluster
work.
I
know
john
did
a
lot
of
that
and
we're
basically
just
falling
down
into
that
and
just
making
it
easier
for
the
user.
So,
yes,
we're
we're
doing
the
same
creation
of
the
configuration
file
and
we
wanna
make
make
that
available
to
the
user
as
well.
G
All
right:
well,
thanks
everyone
for
your
encouraging
feedback.
A
A
It's
been
such
a
pleasure
working
with
you
all,
so
I
really
hope
that
we
somehow
work
together
again
in
the
future,
but
who
knows-
and
if
anybody
is
watching
this
from
home-
and
you
want
to
share
some
thoughts
too,
be
sure
to
find
us
in
the
in
the
kubernetes
workspace
channel
and
if
you
have
any
feedback
on
the
demo
that
you
saw
today
as
well,
we
would
love
to
hear
that.
Okay
with
that,
we
hope
to
see
you
again
sometime
in
august,
stay
tuned
for
details
on
when
we
will
meet
again.