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From YouTube: Tanzu Community Edition Community Meeting - June 1, 2022
Description
Tanzu Community Edition Community Meeting - June 1, 2022
We meet every Wednesday at 11am PT. We'd love for you to join us live!
This week was a light week as the team is still away on post-KubeCon travels. We discussed Tanzu Community Edition workshops that were offered at the VMware booth at KubeCon in Valencia and how to access them now, Arm64 support with Tanzu Community Edition, and what to expect in the next few weeks. Full details here: https://hackmd.io/CiuO4V0AT6WL_TgA47MXBA#June-1-2022-Agenda
A
A
For
those
that
are
watching
this
from
home
as
a
recording,
we
encourage
you
to
come
join
us
live.
This
is
an
opportunity
for
you
to
come
meet
folks
on
the
team,
other
members
of
the
community.
You
can
bring
up
any
questions
you
have
about
using
tanzu
community
edition.
You
can
bring
up
any
feature,
requests
or
just
anything
you
want
to
discuss
regarding
this
or
you
can
kind
of
just
sit
and
listen
to
what
the
team
is
is
working
on
for
this
week.
A
We
do
meet
every
wednesday
at
11
a.m,
pacific
time
and
for
for
our
weekly
community
meetings,
and
we
also
have
an
opportunity
to
meet
monthly
for
those
in
which
time
zones
don't
work
out
for
the
previous
option.
You
can
come
meet
us
every
second
thursday
of
the
month
at
9
a.m.
India's
standard
time
and
if
those
meeting
times
don't
work
out
for
you
and
you
still
want
to
get
a
hold
of
us,
you
can
still
find
us
in
the
kubernetes
select
workspace
and
the
tonzo
community
edition
channel.
You
can
find
us
in
github
discussions.
A
A
If
you
do
attend
these
meetings-
and
you
have
something
you
wish
to
discuss
with
the
team,
you
just
need
to
simply
add
that
down
to
the
discussion
topic
section
down
here
below
so
for
anyone.
That's
in
this
meeting,
if
you
have
something
that
you
want
to
bring
up
with
a
team
today,
be
sure
to
add
that
down
there
and
we'll
get
to
it
towards
the
end
of
the
meeting.
A
If,
at
any
point,
you
are
interacting
with
us
or
any
members
of
the
community,
whether
that's
through
the
meeting
slack
or
any
of
those
those
outlets
up
above,
we
ask
that
you
please.
A
We
didn't
abide
by
our
code
of
conduct
which
is
linked
here,
and
it's
also
within
our
repo
for
those
that
are
using
tons
of
community
edition.
We
want
to
know
more
details
about
how
you're
using
it
it
helps
us
know
so
that
we
can
better
develop
tons
of
community
edition
as
well.
It
also
helps
the
community
understand
how
others
are
using
it,
and
so
that,
in
turn,
helps
them
learn
more
ways
that
they
can
utilize
tons
of
community
additions.
So
we've
created
this
pinned
issue
and
you
can
just
provide
those
details
in
a
comment.
A
A
Moving
on
to
announcements
and
any
items
to
share
for
those
that
that
aren't
aware,
we
were
at
kubecon
a
lot
of
us
from
the
tce
team.
We
had
some
talks
at
kubecon,
not
necessarily
about
tanzania
community
edition,
but
we
were
there.
We
we
had
some
talks,
we'll
post
the
recordings
as
they
come
become
available
right
now
we
have
the
cloud
native
rejects,
talk
from
david
von
thienen
and
learnings
from
creating
cic
cicd
pipelines
for
open
source
kubernetes
projects,
and
that
that
recording
in
particular
is
an
entire
day's
worth
of
talks.
A
So
I've
put
in
the
timestamp
of
of
where
that
talk
lives
in
that
recording,
then
the
next
one
we
have
is
k-native
con.
Why
vmware
supports
k-native
and
other
cloud-native
oss
projects
and
that's
by
v
chords,
so
go
and
check
those
out?
Let
us
know
what
you
think
and
as
we
come,
we
have
more
available
we'll
be
sure
to
post
these
here.
A
A
Moving
on
to
item
from
lee
lee,
you
want
to
go
over.
The
the
workshops
are
held
at
kubecon
eu.
B
B
I
had
a
bunch
of
people,
take
the
workshops,
lots
of
great
feedback
and
chances
to
just
actually
connect
with
some
software
maintainers
as
well
in
the
ecosystem.
Some
people
took
the
tce
packaging
workshop
and
were
inspired
to
go
start
writing
a
package
of
their
own.
B
We
connected
with
the
cloud
native
pg
folks
from
the
edbt
and
40
of
the
people
who
took
workshops,
did
a
session
with
the
tce
packaging,
so
that
was
actually
like
using
you
know
the
pac,
the
package
metadata
and
package
resources
and
package
install
and
using
the
tons
of
cli.
So
that
was
really
cool.
We
we
ran
a
bunch
of
those
workshops,
they're
available
online.
Some
of
the
stats
are
in
the
notes
and
we
will
be
running
these
at
future
spring.
B
One
tour
events
as
well
as
getting
them
onto
the
tonsil
developer
center,
so
links
in
the
meeting
notes.
B
Yeah
go
check
them
out.
There
is
like
a
raffle
entry
box
at
the
end
of
these
things,
we're
not
running
the
raffle
anymore,
but
you
know,
but
you
can
still
go
and
take
the
lab
and
learn.
A
Oh
yeah,
thankfully
so
yeah
if
anyone's
interested
and
wants
to
to
start
these
workshops
they're
still
available
here
and
they
will
be
eventually
moved
on
over
to
the
tonsi
developer
center,
so
be
sure
to
check
those
out.
Let
us
know
what
you
think
any
questions
on
any
of
that
before
we
move
on.
C
Yeah,
how
long
are
the
workshops
going
to
stay
there
like?
Are
they
going
to
be
there
permanently
or
just
like
a
few
days?
What's
the
what's
the
plan
we're.
B
Going
to
keep
these
workshops
available
there
until
we
get
at
least
them
moved
over
to
the
tonto
dev
center
and
then
for
like
running
future
events
and
that
kind
of
stuff
we'll
continue
to
stand
up,
dedicated
infrastructure
and
landing
pages.
B
But
we
will
get
these
published
to
the
tanza
developer
center
and
you
know
just,
however
long
it
takes
the
team
to
fully
get
things
polished.
We
we
did
a
bunch
of
special
things
to
the
you
know,
the
ci
pipelines
that
make
the
clusters
and
set
up
all
the
infrastructure,
and
so
we're
getting
all
of
that
kind
of
like
upstreamed
in
a
way
so
that
we
can
use
it
on
dev
center.
C
Okay,
that
that's
cool
thanks
and
yeah
for
for
anybody
there
who
hasn't
checked
out
the
workshops
yet
they're
super
cool,
like
I
work
at
this
stuff,
I'm
familiar
with
all
of
it
and
I
learned
a
bunch
of
new
things,
so
definitely
recommend
anyone
who's
interested
to
check
them
out.
A
Yeah
awesome
yeah.
I'm
super
excited
that
they're
still
available
there
thanks
lee,
okay
moving
on
to
releases,
so
we
did
have
just
a
a
little
release.
After
0.12
we
released
0.12.1
on
may
18th,
so
david.
Did
you
want
to
give
a
little
bit
more
insight
into
what
this
this
fixed.
B
Yeah
sure
so
yeah
we,
while
we
were
at
kubecon
in
europe,
we
me
and
john,
had
to
cut
a
release.
It's
really
to
fix
logging
related
to
the
docker
for
desktop
plug-in,
functional
functionality-wise
like
if
you're
not
using
that
it's
identical.
Basically,
what
we
needed
to
do
was
surface
certain
error
messages
like
failure,
conditions
to
the
user
when
they're
using
for
the
docker
desktop
plug-in
thing
so
yeah.
A
A
Okay,
so
moving
on
to
updates
it's
very,
very,
very
light
this
week,
since
the
team
has
been
traveling
and
continues
to
to
be
off
for
on
pto
this
week
as
well.
So
we
are
running
a
really
light
ship
this
week
in
the
last
few
weeks,
but
for
now
for
product
management
and
roadmap
stuff.
I
know
you
know.
A
Yep
absolutely
yeah
any
questions
on
that.
A
Okay-
and
I
don't
believe
we
have
any
in
any
engineering
updates
for
now-
is
there
anything
that
folks
want
to
bring
up
that
isn't
listed
here
in
the
updates.
C
I
have
a
question:
do
we
have
the
eyes
here,
people
who
are
more
familiar
with
the
vsphere
side
of
things?
Yes,
yeah?
Let's.
C
E
B
Refresh
me,
I
think
your
audio
and
video
is
set.
C
Oh
right
yeah,
I
I
asked
for
the
people
who
are
familiar
with
the
vsphere
side
of
things
and
also
the
tonsil
side
of
things
and
then
robert
said
hi.
Someone
else
said
hi,
but
I
didn't
get
their
name
myself,
scotch
right,
okay
and
then
what
I
had
said
afterwards
is,
I
will
say,
hello
to
y'all
in
a
few
days
to
start
some
conversation
there.
So
thanks
a
bunch.
D
Awesome
yeah
yeah
v.
If
you
can
go
back
and
look
at
recordings
at
the
last
vmworld,
there
were
workshops
conducted
specifically
for
running
tce
on
vsphere.
I
don't
know
if
the
workshops
actually
got
recorded,
but
if
they
did,
you
should
be
able
to
mine
attendees
on
those
things
they
were
pretty
well
subscribed.
E
I
just
want
to
shout
out
carlos's
blog
post
he's
linked
it
in
the
in
the
hackmd,
which
a
special
shout
out
to
a
few
of
you
that
we
met
at
cubecon,
and
I
just
wanna
say
it
was
awesome
meeting
many
of
you
guys
and
awesome
hanging
around
with
with
some
of
you.
So
thanks
for
that.
F
Yes,
I
can
say
the
same
and
thank
you,
robert
yeah
as
well.
It
was
a
great
meeting,
yeah
a
bunch
of
you
in
there
and
yeah.
I
hope
to
see
you
again
sometime
soon.
Hopefully,.
F
I
mean
well
as
to
say
something
a
little
bit
about
the
blog
post.
Really,
it's
just
something
a
little
bit
general
from
my
experience,
yeah
first,
first
cubecon
we
also
went
to
githubscon
and
then
I
just
yeah
chat
a
little
bit
about
the
events.
Now
we
went
in
in
the
evening
and
stuff,
you
can
go
check
it
out.
F
Yeah,
it
was
awesome
plus
well,
I
am
from
valencia
myself,
so
first
cubecon
and
you
know
pretty
much
yeah
playing
home.
A
F
Yeah,
absolutely
we
have
well
some
time
as
well
with
steven
we're
showing
him
a
little
bit
the
central
station
a
little
bit
yeah.
That
area
in
valencia.
D
Yeah,
I
want
to
acknowledge
it
was
great
meeting
you
too,
and
you
know
what
now
that
these
conferences
are
going
back
to
physical.
Let's
hope
that
we
can
continue
these
face-to-face
meetings
when
we
get
opportunities.
G
A
Yeah,
it
was
super
awesome
to
meet
you
scott.
It
almost
felt,
like
you
were
just
part
of
the
team
hanging
out
with
us
and
yeah,
really
really
nice
to
meet.
You.
A
Okay,
anybody
have
anything
else
to
share.
They
want
to
share
on
kubecon
or.
C
H
C
H
I'm
sorry
hi
everybody
just
to
clarify.
First,
I'm
very
happy
to
join
the
team.
The
maintainer
thank
you
nick
I'm
more
of
a
helm
maintainer.
So
I'm
just
starting
to
learn
about
tanzu
and
tce,
and
that's
up
and
very
excited
to
join
the
team.
B
When
you
say
hell
maintainer,
do
you
mean
of
the
sdk
or
of
the
charts.
H
No,
the
the
core
maintenance-
well,
okay,
so
I'm
I'm
very
niche
in
in
my
knowledge.
So
if
you
bombard
me
with
detailed
questions,
you'll
be
disappointed
but
yeah.
It's
a
core
maintenance
of
the
home
project.
Figure.
You've
worked
with
scott
rigby
before.
A
Yeah
welcome
mark-
and
it's
really
interesting-
that
you're
part
of
a
helm
team
I'd
love
to
to
talk
more
about
that
as
well
and
jay
said
they're
part
of
the
og
home
folks
from
dais.
So
even
cooler.
H
B
B
I
guess
I
just
had
a
question
I
could
bring
up,
which
is
do
we?
How
does
does
anyone
on
this
call
know
how
the
arm
64
images
work
and
like
if
we
have
a
plan
to
build
for
linux
arm64
at
some
point.
C
C
The
problem
is
that
a
lot
of
the
stuff
that
ships
with
tc
is
not
built
for
arm,
so
basically
t
tc
e
itself
can
be
arm
and
that's
fine,
but
a
lot
of
the
actual
applications
you're
gonna
use
it
with
are
not
so,
and
we
can't
fix
that
as
the
cc
car
team.
So
that's
gonna.
C
That
would
depend
on
other
internal
processes
which
I
have
no
control
over
and
it
would
depend
on
the
individual,
the
people,
packaging
individually,
the
individual
packages
and
that's
a
bit
a
bit
of
a
steeper
climb
to
to
climb
but
david.
What
am
I?
What
did
I
miss
here?
Yeah.
B
No,
that's
exactly
right.
I
just
would
like
to
throw
in
that.
You
know
if
you
do
want
to
like
do
and
try-
and
you
know,
go
through
the
like
the
bleeding
edge
stuff.
So,
although
we
don't
ship
the
arm,
64
binaries
for
that
exact,
for
those
exact
reasons
in
the
make
file
process,
you
can
actually
build
them
yourself.
B
B
Is
the
linux
machine
running
arm64
images
for
the
api,
server
and
stuff,
because
I
don't
see
a
manifest
list
for,
for
you
know,
are
the
actual
kubernetes
components
or
are
we
using
yeah?
That's
that's!
Actually,
google.
I
myself
have
not
run
it
personally,
so
yeah.
B
I
can't
really
speak
to
the
d,
like
you
know,
specific
details
about,
like
which
things
john
or
someone
who
built
yeah
I'll,
probably
message
john
on
the
public
slack
and
ask
that
question,
because
I've
done
some
digging
over
a
few
days
and
just
when
I
had
time
and
it's
the
answers
are
not
very
clear
and
I'm
trying
to
package
up
a
distribution
with
some
tce
components.
B
Then
I
would
give
it
a
try,
but
yeah
I
mean
sure
I
guess
I
could
possibly
spin
it
up
in
the
amazon
or
something
but
yeah
ryan
asks
in
the
chat
about
arm
support,
impacting
the
support
of
tons
of
cli
for
apple
silicon
max.
I
think
we
have
an
arm64
darwin
build
I'm
not
mistaken.
C
Yeah
so
I
I
have
tested
on
I'm
on
and
once
running
a
bunch
of
stuff
at
tc
and
a
bunch
of
stuff
just
works
because
rosetta
does
the
translation,
so
you
just
get
the
intel
build
and
it
just
runs
on
m1
just
fine
again.
The
problem
is
that's
a
lot
of
packages
that
you
try
to
install
are
just
gonna
blank
on
you
and
then
I
guess,
like
david
said,
you'd
have
to
build
those
yourself
and
then
that's
a
bit
tricky.
B
I
think
the
daily
build
might
have
that
posted
and,
if
not,
I
probably
should
add
that
so
that
they're
they
are
available
so
but
in
either
case
yeah,
it's
you
can
build
it
yourself.
Just
you
just
do
like
a
make.
Release
it'll
actually
build
all
of
the
it'll
build
all
of
the
platforms,
including
the
arm
64
one
for
darwin.
B
I
guess
that
auto
detects
on
the
host
architecture,
or
do
I
just
have
to
pass
the
flag,
probably
no
it
we
by
default
for
like
when
you
do
like
make
release.
That's
basically
saying
hey
actually
build
like
what
all
of
the
release
artifacts
are,
so
that
also
includes
our
arm
64
darwin,
even
though
we're
not
really
really
seeing
that
it
still
builds
it
yeah.
B
I'm
talking,
I
I'm
missing
a
binary
for
arm64
linux,
because
I
have
a
linux
virtual
machine
for
arm,
but
but
I
suppose
I
can
modify
the
build
or
look
at
how
to
pass
the
proper
flex.
A
Okay,
well
thanks
everyone
for
joining
us
at
this
week's
edition
of
the
tonvo
community
edition
community
meeting.
We
look
forward
to
seeing
you
next
week.
So,
if
you're
watching
this
from
home
come
join
us
we
meet
every
wednesday
at
11
a.m.
Pacific
time
and
again
just
come.
Listen
in
bring
up
any
questions
you
have
for
the
team.
We
would
love
to
meet
you
not
thanks.
Everyone
have
a
good
rest
of
your
day.