►
From YouTube: wasmCloud Community Meeting - 15 Feb 2023
Description
Welcome to the wasmCloud community! Tune in live where we discuss the latest developments in the wasmCloud ecosystem, WebAssembly standards, and break out sweet demos.
Agendas for wasmCloud community meetings can be found at: https://wasmcloud.com/community
A
Wednesday
or
February
15th,
we
are
actually
a
lot
of
us
core.
Maintainers
are
actually
in
a
room
here.
Hence
the
you
can
maybe
able
to
see
the
webcam
down
there
and
in
a
different
input.
But
you
know
we
have
a
Bailey
Aishwarya,
Connor
Patrick,
Dan,
Liam,
Taylor,
Roman,
myself
and
and
Lachlan
a
bunch
of
the
cosmotic
team
here
in
a
room,
so
we
are
going
to
be.
You
know
we're
going
to
be
kind
of
having
a
fun
time
popcorning
around
the
room
for
for
any
audio
things,
but
without
further
Ado.
A
We
can
go
ahead
and
get
started
with
the
agenda,
which
is
pretty.
We
have
a
pretty
short
agenda,
but
I
have
a
feeling
that
we'll
have
some
fun
discussion.
I
have
a
little
demo
for
wasmcloud
Dev
containers,
so
I
hadn't
heard
about
Dev
containers
before
I
did
a
little
bit
of
research
after
GitHub
coach
basis
came
out
because
that
seemed
like
a
pretty
sweet
way
to
do
like
a
online
developer
environment
that
you
know
is.
A
Reproducible
has
the
command
line,
tools
and
and
language
tool
chains
all
all
installed
for
you,
and
this
seems
like
a
pretty
sweet
thing
to
be
able
to
do,
especially
when
you're
evaluating
a
new
project
for
the
first
time,
and
you
want
to
try
and
work
on
something
without
installing
a
bunch
of
tools
locally
on
your
machine,
so
I'm
going
to
go
ahead
and
share
I
put
in
two
PRS
one
for
the
wash
repository
and
one
for
Watson,
Cloud
OTP,
just
a
very
simple
damp
container.
A
This
is
actually
the
first
time
that
I
read
the
documentation
and
set
these
up
so
I'm
totally
happy
to
take
some
constructive
feedback
on
ways
that
we
could
do
this
better
or
or
ways
to
improve
this
experience.
But
if
you
haven't
heard
of
the
concept
of
a
Dev
container
before
the
way
I
essentially
understand
it,
is
you
set
up
a
single
container
that
you
can
run
and
develop
inside
of
the
container
instead
of
developing
on
your
local
machine?
A
So
when
you
look
at
this,
let
me
change
this
really
quick.
A
When
you
look
at
what
a
Dev
container
actually
looks
like
it's,
it's
really
just
this
one,
this
one
Json
file
that
specifies
a
base
image
for
your
container
and
then
you
know
a
couple
of
options
that
are
very
similar
to
Docker
options
like
the
the
dev
container
for
wash
just
mounts
the
local
folder
into
the
Container
under
slash
wash
so
that
if
you're
developing
locally
on
your
machine
or
you
develop
in
a
container,
you
still
have
access
to
all
of
your
changes
on
your
local
machine.
A
You
don't
lose
that
when
you
close
the
container,
for
example,
but
the
big
piece
of
Dev
containers
is
this
set
of
features
and
I.
Think
Stephen,
who,
who
is
on
the
call,
actually
introduced
this
concept
to
to
me
and
it
might
have
been
in
the
guise
of
death
containers.
But
essentially,
these
are
layers
or
features
that
you
add
into
your
container,
so
for
the
wash
the
wash
Dev
container,
for
example,
we
have
one
feature
and
that's
just
a
rust
tool
chain.
A
So
when
you
build
this
Dev
container,
it
installs
rust
into
this
tool
chain
on
or
into
this
container,
on
top
of
a
Debian
Bullseye
image,
and
then
we
Mount
the
source
code
into
the
container,
and
then
you
can
develop
as
normal
and
you
already
have
a
rust
tool
chain
installed.
So
what
this?
What
this
actually
looks
like
you
do
have
to
have
the
dev
container,
CLI
or
and
and
I,
haven't
experimented
too
too
much
with
this.
You
can
just
do
it
straight
from
GitHub
code
spaces,
we'd
love.
A
If
anybody
else
has
tried
that
to
talk
more
about
that
process,
but
with
the
dev
container
CLI,
you
can
run
Dev
container,
build
to
actually
create
this
image,
or
you
know
kind
of
the
thing
that
that
does
all
of
the
steps
for
you
and
makes
it
really
easy.
Is
this
Dev
container
open
step
right
at
the
root
of
the
watch
repository?
What
this
does
is
opens
up
a
vs
code
environment.
A
That's
essentially
like
a
remote
code
environment
that
starts
the
container,
builds
it
if
necessary
and
drops
you
right
into
the
right
into
the
the
file
system
onto
that
container.
So
the
terminal
here
is
actually
running
in
a
Docker
container
and
if
I
run
cargo
build,
you
know.
This
is
the
first
thing
that
anybody
would
do
right
when
they
get
into
the
project.
There's
already
a
rust
Target
installed
and
I've
already
kind
of
tested
this
before
since
you're
just
mounting
the
file
system
in
the
cargo,
build
finishes
right
away.
A
A
Now
this
is
a
pretty
simple
example:
there's
not
too
too
much
going
on
with
this.
It's
just
a
rust
tool
chain
and
that's
not
too
much
to
set
up
locally,
but
another
one
that
we
have
is.
The
now
is
the
wasm
cloud.
Otp
Dev
container
there's
another
PR
that
I
put
in
pretty
recently
and
if
we
look
at
this
Dev
container,
there's
a
little
bit
more
going
on
so
there's
actually
a
you
know:
I'm
using
just
a
Debian
base.
This
is
pretty
standard.
It
installs
the
latest
version
of
rust.
A
It
installs
a
specific
version
of
Elixir
and
erlang,
just
something.
This
is
just
what
I
had
on
my
local
machine.
So
I
knew
that
it
was
going
to
be
like
compatible
versions
and
then
it
also
installs
a
custom
feature
which
I
created
in
this.
This
pull
request
as
well.
Now
this
custom
feature
will
download
Nats
for
you
and
then
make
sure
that
everything
is
set
up
properly
in
your
path
for
Elixir
and
erlang,
and
then
install
one
or
two
Elixir
tools
that
you'd
have
to
to
set
up
manually.
A
So
creating
your
own
feature,
I
found
really
accessible.
Since
it's
essentially
just
running
a
bash
script,
you
can
really
easily
script
this
when
you
build
the
container.
This
feature
essentially
run
after
installing
rust
and
elixir.
So
when
you
go
to
the
wasm
cloud,
OTP
live
repository
and
use
this
Dev
container.
A
A
So
you
know,
even
if
I
didn't
have
anything
installed
on
my
local
machine,
you
know
I
could
come
right
in
go
into
the
host
core
project
and
run
mix,
compile
to
to
compile
the
the
entire
awesome
Cloud
project.
So
this
is
pretty
sweet,
I'm,
I'm
really
interested.
You
know
this
was
something
that
I
wanted
to
learn
more
about
just
with
the
the
new
edition
of
GitHub
code
spaces,
but
I.
A
Think
the
the
downsides
of
trying
to
adopt
like
developing
in
a
container
are
pretty
quickly
overrun
by
the
benefits
that
you
can
get
for
not
installing
some
tooling
on
your
local
machine
and
the
ability
for
somebody
to
just
to
drop
right
into
a
setup.
Developer,
environment
and
I
could
actually
see
this
being
really
useful
for
our
wasn't
Cloud
examples
as
well
so
like
getting
into
and
starting
like
the
echo
actor,
you
could
drop
right
into
a
Dev
container
that
has
all
these
assets
downloaded
locally.
A
A
Stephen
actually
dropped
a
good
comment
in
the
chat
that
Bailey
has
pretty
pretty
sweet
experience
with
that
containers
as
well.
She's
she's
written
a
couple
of
things
for
the
what
general
web
assembly
and
Bird
was
in
Cloud.
Actually
Bailey.
Do
you
want
to
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
that.
C
B
Hello,
everyone
I'm
having
slow,
Wi-Fi
evidence
easier
for
me
to
the
same
video
This,
Way,
I
I
am
trying
to
fold
some
of
the
my
experiments
that
you
can
find
over
on
Ricochet
I'll
post
a
link
in
there,
but
my
other
based
off
of
Steven,
so
I'm,
not
even
gonna,
like
Stephen,
did
awesome
work
there.
What
I
wanted
to
do
was
break
it
down
into
individual
features
for
all
the
different
pieces
that
you
need
for
wasm
and
in
the
butt
coat
Alliance
GitHub
organization.
B
Different
projects
that
you
you
just
you
get
a
container,
it's
got
the
right
Shaws
and
it
just
works.
So
that's
some
of
the
work
that
I'm
driving
right
now,
I,
don't
have
anything
to
show
like
Brooks.
He
was
very
productive
on
the
airplane,
I
I,
doodled
and.
B
We'll
expect
to
hear
more
about
that
soon.
A
So
Stephen
you're
kind
of
the
ubiquitous
inspiration
here
for
some
of
us
to
play
with
Dev
containers.
The
only
thing
that
you'd
like
to
not
to
totally
put
you
on
the
spot,
but
I
will
is
there
anything
that
you
want
to
say
about
your
experience
playing
with
them.
Do
you
have
your
own
kind
of
custom
Dev
containers
that
you
use
on
a
regular
basis.
E
I
have
one
that
I
built.
That
was
meant
for
like
a
rust
and
was
some
web
app
development
environment.
E
I
I
opened
it
today
and
realized
that
I
had
added
a
clean
step
and
didn't
take
ownership
of
some
cargo
files.
So
I
guess
the
the
big
caveat
for
anyone
working
with
Dev
containers
and
rust
would
be
if
you're
running
any
cargo
commands
make
sure
that
you
take
ownership
of
anything
related
to
Cargo
in
any
CI
steps,
because
if
you
don't
you're,
gonna
get
these
weird
errors
called
spurious
network
errors
and
it
sounds
like
a
network
error.
But
it's
a
permission.
E
Error
in
cargo
just
can't
access
its
own
directories,
so
I
put
a
link
for
that
CI
in
the
in
the
chat.
E
If
your
image
takes
like
30
minutes
to
build,
what
you
can
do
is
just
create
a
GitHub
workflow
and
anytime
you're
pushing
some
changes,
it'll
build
in
GitHub
actions,
and
you
can
just
pull
the
built
image
into
your
Dev
container
so
rather
than
referencing
like
base
of
DPN
Buster
or
whatever
it
is,
you
can
reference
the
image
you
built
and
rather
than
the
30
minutes
of
build
time.
For
someone
it
might
be
two
to
three
minutes
just
to
download
it
and
you're
up
and
running
so
that
one
was
pretty
cool.
A
B
B
B
So
bad
for
for
the
library
that
you
were
showing,
but
for
a
lot
of
applications
that
can
be
25
minutes
yeah
if
you
do
a
free,
build
and,
and
you
supply.
C
That
it's
already
built,
like
all
that's
already
there
It's
a
larger.
B
Image
right
so
there's
a
downside
for
that,
but
if
those
certain
parts
aren't
changing
where
you
just
set
it
up
to
do
it
like
say
nightly,
saves
you
a
ton
of
time.
E
A
A
Sense
I
mean
the
the
reproducible
dev
environment
I
feel
like
loses
a
little
bit
of
its
value.
If
we
spent
you
know
if
you
spend
the
whole
time
building
the
dev
environment
anyways.
So
you
know
for
for
this
to
be
really
accessible
and
get
the
full
benefit.
I
think
we
would
want
to
publish
this
image
ooh
I'm,
going
to
share
this
on
on
screen
Bailey.
If
you
don't
mind
and
Bailey
just
sent
her
wasmcloud
Dev
container
feed.
What
what
kind
of
features
do
you
have
in
here.
B
Drilling
going
into
the
source,
so
I
I
kind
of
did
similar
to
you
on
one
pronounce
one-on-one
harassed.
I
wanted
the.
F
B
Sdk
was
the
most
important
thing
to
me
like
trying
to
get
the
bike
to
the
line,
the
CPS
of
fine
grained
out,
because
I'm
expecting
some
breaking
cages,
basically
coming
with
all
kinds
of
good
stuff,
but
I
wanted
those
to
be
able
to
have
their
own
shop
that
I'd
pull
in
and
not
just
one
big
monolithic
thing
with
with,
and
that's
why
that
I'm
able
to
use
the
fine
green
feature,
features
of
Dev
containers.
A
Okay,
that's
really
cool
and
sorry.
I
tried
to
pin
Bailey's
actual
video
to
the
screen,
but
I
think
you
were
just
looking
at
me
talking
his
favorite.
So
I'll
take
the
credit
you
know
whatever
all
right.
Well,
let's
see.
Oh
Oren
had
a
had
a
question.
What
the
what's
the
Shah
associated
with.
B
Yeah
so
with
containers,
one
of
the
big
downsides
with
them
is
that.
B
And
each
one
of
those
layers
includes
different
tools.
You
know,
starting
from
the
operating
systems,
all
the
way
to
like,
say
your
rust
crates
and
those
crates
each
one.
You
would
prefer
to
have
the
reproducible
bill
there.
E
B
Instead,
what
I
did
is
I
pinned
to
the
get
shot
of
of
whatever
tool
I
was
using,
and
so
there's
a
lot
of
those
I.
E
The
one
that
I
set
up
was
just
my
PR,
where
I
was
stacking.
Around
I
was
having
some.
B
Trouble
I
only
had
like
less
than
three
days
right
before
the
holiday
break,
where
I
was
to
look
around
but
anyways
I
hope
that
helps
yeah.
B
F
C
A
Okay,
well
we're
getting
into
nerds
night
territory,
where
we're
probably
transitioning
to
the
next
topic.
We
usually
like
to
do
new
community
like
introductions
at
the
beginning,
but
I
missed
it.
Would
you
like
to
do
an
intro
picture.
G
Yeah
sure,
hey
everyone,
my
name
is
Victor
I,
guess
all
on
my
video
on,
oh,
hey,
hey
everybody,
yeah
I,
recently
joined
Cosmic
to
try
and
help
and
work
on
stuff
all
around
still
getting
up
to
speed
on
everything,
pretty
excited
about
wasm
in
general
I,
like
infrastructure
I
like
rust,
I
like
Haskell
I
like
typescript.
Those
are
my
those
are
my
favorites
and
yeah
I
work
on
lots
of
things
and
lots
of
little
projects,
but
really
excited
to
try
and
make
wasm
sort
of
go.
D
F
D
F
What
grade,
what
am
I
say?
Is
package
manager,
but
I
would
say:
there's
not
a
package
manager.
What
I
would
say
it
is
a
generic
build
tool.
It's
cross-platform,
it
works
in
Linux
versus
MAC,
have
actually
different
architectures
and
it's
just
a
tool.
You
can
use
well
to
reproducibly,
build
declaratively
it'll,
build
implications
packages,
OCA
images
Amis
a
whole
like
mix
OS
is
an
example
output
of
a
next
bill.
So
you
can
build
actual
declarative
OS
using
next,
but
it's
really
just
a
way
to
build
things.
So.
F
F
The
things
yeah
so
next
you
guys
actually
source
code
references,
not
binary
references.
You
know
like
I,
actually
sometimes
when
I
introduce
people
people
to
next
I.
If
you
know
Docker,
for
example,
I
make
analogies
it's
kind
of
like
Docker
right,
but
you
can.
If
Docker
you
can
build
an
animation.
You
can
run
that
image.
You
can
do
something
similar
mix
like
you
have
this
store,
which
is
totally
a
miracle.
F
You
know
Mercury
kind
of
store
and
then
yeah
like
recently
in
this
we
had
this
video
flakes
where
basically,
you
get
a
flake
block
where
anything
that
any
input
to
to
your
build
is
including
that
lock
right.
So
you
have
this
whole
Merkle
tree
state
in
that
one
lock,
and
you
can
order
this
thing
right.
You
can
audit,
but
you
leave
C,
which
was
used
to
you
know,
build
rust
tool
shed,
for
example,
the
source
code.
You
know
everything
is
there,
so
that's,
essentially
an
s-bone
kind
of
thing
got
it.
Okay,
all
right!
A
F
Does
yeah
I'm
not
sure
hi,
everyone
yeah,
so
I
actually
just
joined
this
morning?
In
fact,
I
think
I'm,
officially
starting
the
week
or
next
week,
I.
F
Yeah
so
I
recently
worked
at
profin
and
before
Docker
and
before
I
was
in
iot
I
I'm
a
fan
of
next,
as
you
probably
already
understood,
so
actually
something
I
used
for
seven
years
now.
So
it's
there's
nothing
but
excited
about.
But
webassembly
is
another
technology.
I'm
also
swimming
excited
about
so
yeah
very
happy
to
be
here.
Hopefully
you
know
the
good
stuff
together.
So
yeah.
A
Yeah
kind
of
fun
note
we
do
have
a
Nick's,
Blake
I,
think
it's
like
four
wash,
so
you
can
install
wash
using
NYX.
It
was
a
Community
member
of
this
one
through
maybe
about
a
year
ago
and
said
hey.
This
would
be
cool
if
you
had
a
Nick's
Blake
and
we're
like
I,
don't
know
what
that
means,
and
then
they
opened
a
VR
and
added
one
for
us,
which
is,
which
is
pretty
that's
pretty
neat,
it's
something
that
is
on
like
that.
A
A
D
Always
we've
got
three
great
conferences
coming
up
the
next
few
weeks.
I
don't
know
if
you
can
pull
up
web
pages.
Brooks
we've
got
lost
my
out
I'm
in
Barcelona,
where
you
can
see
our
own
Bailey
Hayes
speaking
about
Wazi
Cloud,
the
agendas
post
that
is
going
to
be
awesome.
We've.
D
With
the
team
behind
wasmayo
for
a
few
months
now
and
I'm,
really
helping
them
plan,
cosmonic
actually
sponsored
the
conference.
D
Workshop
while
we're
there
in
Barcelona
and
if
you're
a
european-based
team
feel
free
to
reach
out
via
the
watch,
Cloud
slack
slack.wasenclub.com
or
on
Twitter,
and
we're
more
than
happy
to
discuss
doing
an
event
in
your
city,
while
we've
got
folks
over
there.
D
Secondly,
cfp
just
closed
for
wasnt
filed
with
Cloud
native
Blossom
Day
in
association
with
kubecon
EU,
which
is
in
Amsterdam
that
we
had
an
awesome
amount
of
talks.
I,
don't
know
how
we're
going
to
pick
a
schedule
from
this
a
bubble
we're
going
to
try
to
get
that
done
in
the
next
two
weeks.
We've
got
a
somewhere
around
50
submissions,
so
I'm
super
excited
to
dive
in
and
dig.
D
Of
even
more
power
to
a
whole
bunch
of
names,
I
don't
want
to
be
nice,
so
that'll
be
phenomenal
and
planning
is
well
underway
for
the
Watson
Summit
in
London
in
I.
Think
it's
going
to
be
in
July
and
that's
going
to
be
co-located
with
the
Bailey
which
CG
is
going
to
be
co-located.
There.
D
The
web
assembly
Community
here
yeah
through
the
w3c,
is
going
to
host
their
meeting
live
in
London.
For
that
event,
so
be
another
great
opportunity
to
meet
with
not
only
wasmathon,
cosmonic
bolts
but
fortunate
by
code,
Alliance
and
I'm
sure
other
companies
as
well
was
an
enthusiasts
from
around
the
world
and
then
just
another
quick
shout
out.
If
you
are
a
waslam
cloud
user
and
enthusiastic
about
awesome
club,
the.
D
Has
this
amazing
new
TSC
member,
Bailey,
Hayes
and
she's
kicked
off
a
whole
round
of
Community
meetings?
D
The
first
community
meeting
was
just
hosted
as
well
as
interviews
and
talks
to
help
raise
the
profile
for
webassembly
and
to
help
get
us
all
on
the
same
page.
So
Bailey
I
know
we're
all
incredibly
grateful
of
the
both
ends
of
the
candle
that
you're
burning
right
now,
and
we
really
appreciate
it.
I
mean
you
can
find
that
linked
right
off
of
the
by
code,
Alliance
YouTube
page.
Maybe
somebody
can
get
that
into
our
chat
here
and
on
our
slot
as
well.
D
D
Great
and
then
a
few
miscellaneous
things
coming
up
we'll
have
those
up
on
Twitter,
but
somebody
from
waslam
cloud
and
Cosmic
will
be
at
scale.
20X
tell
you
Taylor
yeah
me
and
Brooks.
D
20X
and
what
else
do
we
have
coming
up.
A
You
got
wozmio,
you
got
guacamayo
you
got,
it
will
be,
will
be
a
coupon,
of
course,
for
sure
I'll.
A
Bailey
will
be
International
in
Nashville
for
devops
days,
Nashville
I,
don't
have
that
link
handy,
but
I
could
find
it
in
a
second
that'll,
be
fun.
We've.
D
C
A
A
You
know
on
our
awesome,
Cloud
blog,
we'll
make
sure
to
publicize
those
kind
of
things.
Aha,.
A
Yeah
I
would
love
to
love
to
keep
that
on
my
radar.
A
All
right,
well,
I,
think
that
that's
all
that
we
had
on
our
agenda
today
a
little
bit
of
a
of
a
short
meeting
since
we're
all
kind
of
in
kind
of
planning
mode.
Is
there
anything
else
that
anyone
London
wanted
to
share?
This
can
be
wasn't
Cloud
related,
like
wasn't
without
questions
or
just
general
General
webassembly
ecosystem
related.
C
I
was
trying
to
unmute.
No,
we
were
just
posting
in
the
chat,
a
list
of
various
talks
and
so
on
so
I
figured
I'd
share
the
one
from
kubecon
EU.
A
Oops
I
got
muted
there
for
a
second
yeah.
Kevin
was
actually
the
old,
the
the
prestigious
one
of
the
bunch
who
got
a
talk
accepted
to
the
main
conference
about
distributed
event.
Sourcing
with
with
wasmcloud
I
think
this
is
going
to
be
a
really
exciting
one
I
mean
when
Taylor
and
I
did
our
talk
about
building
the
cosmotic
platform
on
wasmcloud
that
one
got
a
lot
of
attendees
who
were
interested
in
how
the
technology
could
be
used
in
a
real
real
world
way,
and
our
resident
of
insourcing
expert
is
gonna.
A
To
my
General
ask
anybody
anything
else.
They
want
to
talk
about.
Wasn't
cloud
or
general
wasn't
related.