 All right everyone, as you all know CNCF is a rapidly growing community and we will be sharing some exciting updates today from our projects, but we have something new and we're trying it out and I'm excited to share it with you all. That's right, this KubeCon and CloudNativeCon we wanted to give our graduated projects the opportunity to share their updates with you themselves. So sit back and watch some familiar and new faces from the community as they provide project updates on our graduated projects. Hello KubeCon, I'm Marek Sierkovich. Hi, this is Benjamin Yuan. Hello, I'm Sadu Zala. And this is quick updates from HCD Project. Since last KubeCon we released multiple patch releases with two important ones. Please check them out. We had two important announcements about critical bugs, so please also look into them. The project currently had three priorities, release qualification, test stabilization and automatic inconsistency detection. To learn more about the project, please see us at the maintainer's talk and at CDQOS. Thank you. My name is Deepti Sigredi. I'm a maintainer and project lead for WITES. We have just announced the general availability of WITES release 15. This is the most consequential release of the past two years. There are two things I want to highlight about this release. The first is VT-Orc, an automatic cluster management component. In the past, WITES users had to depend on a third party integration to detect and recover from failures. VT-Orc now does that natively. The second is VT-Admin, which is a new UI for WITES. This removes our dependence on an old outdated UI that was no longer maintainable. We have two talks here at KubeCon. I invite you to attend them to learn more about WITES. 2022 has been an exciting year for born infrastructure projects like Container D. Early this year, we released Container D 1.6, our first long-term stable release. We've also just released the first beta for Container D 1.7, which brings in exciting new ways to integrate with Container D, including a new way of managing sandboxes for VM-based runtimes, a new extension point for controlling image polls, and CRI updates supporting new features in Kubernetes like user namesases and vertical pod resizing. We're also planning our 2.0 release, our most boring release to date, mostly focused on feature deprecation, API stability, and long-term maintainability. If Container D interests you, watch our talks at this KubeCon and join our community meetings to hear the latest of what's going on in the project. Thank you. Hello, everyone. My name is Shruting Zhao, a staff engineer at Nomada and a core maintainer of Kverno. Kverno is a policy engine designed for communities. It addresses a wide range of security and automation use cases. With Kverno, you can prevent misconfigurations and enable multi-tendency, verify image signatures, and more. The Kverno community has around 200 sample policies to help you get started. In the past six months, Kverno published eight new releases, and the community has grown rapidly. There are 13 mentees who have participated in the LFX mentorship program. Join the Kverno sessions and visit us at Kverno.io. Hello, KubeCon. My name is William Vasilev, and I'm the community manager for Harbor. In the last six months, we have two new releases. In 2.5, we have integrated with Cosign, which gives you the possibility to sign your images and later on to verify them so you can have more secure environments. In 2.6, we have a new caching mechanism, which provides better performance when you have concurrent image pooling, a long-required CV exporter, which allows you to consume your CV data outside of Harbor, and we have implemented a new GDPR compliant process for deleting users. Those are just the highlights. If you like our project, scan the QR code. Our communities are waiting for you to help you out and help you out with your Harbor journey. I hope I can see you in our next community meeting. Thank you very much. Hi there. My name is William Morgan. I'm the CEO of Point and one of the creators of Linkerdee. Welcome to the KubeCon Detroit Linkerdee update. Most excitingly, in August, we shipped Linkerdee 2.12, which adds two major features to Linkerdee. The first is route-based policy, which allows you to authorize or deny requests based on HTTP verbs, methods, and other features. Number two, we add support for the Gateway API so you can configure this route-based policy based on Gateway API types. Coming up later this year, we've got 2.13, which will add client-side policy, including circuit-breaking, header-based routing, and a couple other exciting things. We have a great conference for you, a lot of Linkerdee talks, and a lot of Linkerdee maintainers and attendants, so please come find us at the booth. Have a great conference. Here are the highlights for Jaeger from 2022. We added service performance monitoring, which provides native integration with Prometheus for performance monitoring use cases. We moved closer to open telemetry by adding native OTLP support and replacing the Jaeger SDKs with the open telemetry SDKs. We added adaptive sampling into open telemetry and Jaeger, which allows for some very interesting use cases around sampling. We added flame graph visualizations instead of just the table view, and you can learn about these and much more with myself, Jonah Cowell and Joe Elliott, on the Jaeger maintainer session Wednesday, October 26th, 4.30 to 5. This is Alice, one of the maintainers of Emissary Ingress. Over the last six months, we've had seven new releases of Emissary, and in that time, we've updated the project's built-on from version 1.17 to version 1.19. We've also updated the version of Envoy that the project's built on, and they match outdated 1.17, the latest version. We've spent a lot of this time working to increase the stability, performance, and find new ways to improve the quality of life for our users. We've also released new version 3.0, which added support for HTTP3 to downstream clients. We look forward to finding new ways to make Emissary Ingress the number one choice for an open source E-Clay gateway. This is the open policy agent and gatekeeper project announcements. I'm Peter. I'm Rita. For the open policy agent, we have a number of new language features like contains and ifs, a number of new features in the project as well, like rich metadata annotations, and a number of performance updates and tools like disk storage and delta bundles. For gatekeeper, we have the new Gator CLI that helps you test your policies and test the Kubernetes objects against those policies in SLI. And for external data feature, now you can create policies that talks to external data providers outside the cluster. Now you can get early rejection of workload resources like deployments. Now there's a new website for gatekeeper policies, and we're on Artifact Hub. Performance improvements, major speed-up, as well as reduction in CPU memory. Go try it. And during the project today, you can find us on Slack, Twitter, LinkedIn, all of the files. Hope to see you there. Bye. Hi, Giocon. My name is Eduardo Silva. I'm the CEO of Calitya and the creator of FluentVid, which is a sub-project of the CNCF and an umbrella of FluentD. And today we are announcing FluentVid 2.0 that comes with full support with logs, metrics, and traces, plus full compatibility with open telemetry and Prometheus. It also comes with a high performance and a new way to query your data. Also, we added TLS support for input plugins, and now developers can extend FluentVid by using Golang or Wasm. Don't forget to stop by FluentVid booth and grab your new FluentVid 2.0 shirt. All right. Thank you so much. Can round of applause for all the updates. That was pretty awesome. It's happy to see more faces on stage. And I'm looking forward to what people will do next time as well for this kind of update. So let's see how creative people get. So as all of us are aware, Russia has continued to attack Ukraine since earlier this year. Many brave Ukrainians, as well as others from around the world, have been fighting daily to protect themselves, their families, and their countries. One of those is our very own Ihor Boretsky, who many of you know very well. We were honored this past May during Kupkan Cloud Native Con Europe that Ihor was able to join us via video, even though he was on active military duty. We continue to be moved by Ihor's bravery, as well as everyone else's, who are involved in this war, including the human rights organizations that are helping folks through this. We are very honored today that somebody from one of these organizations, Razum, can join us to talk about their efforts and how we can all continue to help Ukrainians. And we are ecstatic that they are joined today in person by Ihor. So please welcome Ihor and Dima. Hello, Kupkan. So it's been a while since I've been here, since I met here all 12 months ago at Los Angeles. And it's all the eight months when my home was invaded. Eight months when I had to step away from my beloved job and the community that I love. Eight months since I began serving in the Armed Forces of Ukraine. Well, that doesn't sound like a long time, right? So yeah, but in those eight months, we have needlessly lost more than 100,000 Ukrainians in the war. Millions of Ukrainians have been displaced and forced to flee their homes. And when they do return, they might not have a home to go because so many buildings have been destroyed. And this is why your ongoing support is so important to us, to everybody in Ukraine. So Priyanka spoke about finding the hope in the hard times. When I joined the Armed Forces, I tweeted that we need some help with supplies, with some other stuff. And within minutes, hundreds of messages of support and offers of help are from you, from the cloud native community. And by the fact that Operation Boretsky, the nonprofit that is being run by my friends, has been established just after one tweet. You started organizing the supply to us and all just because you saw the tweets asking for assistance. And now it's grown into all volunteer nonprofit organization. Last time at the most recent Kube Conclonative Con in Valencia, you have raised more than $20,000 for them and for the Razum for Ukraine Foundation. And all of your donations went directly to helping people of Ukraine who needed the most. Well, so the brutal invasion is not over. But guess what, we are not done either. And Ukraine is standing strong. We have the global community behind us. And your ongoing support means everything to us. Now I'd like to introduce you to Dima, who is a board member of the Razum for Ukraine Foundation. We'll tell more about the initiatives that the Razum for Ukraine is doing these days. Hi, I'm Dima. I'm a volunteer and a board member of a nonprofit organization, the Razum for Ukraine. But I'm also someone just like you. I'm a cybersecurity professional. I'm a father, I'm a husband. I'm just like Ihor. But the only difference is, as a Ukrainian-American, I'm privileged to live in this country. And to me, it symbolizes freedom. Today I'd like to talk to you about Ukraine, which is the new beacon of freedom. Recently, I went to Ukraine on a trip. And what struck me the most was how calm and how determined people there are, despite daily air sirens, despite shellings, any time, day, or night, they're determined to win. They're determined to have a better life, determined to build a strong democratic country. I want to tell you about the project called Veteranios. We started back in 2020 to support Ukrainian veterans. Because without veterans, there would be no Ukraine. Since then, we were able to train more than 500 people from 0 to 60 in IT. Many of those people found their first jobs in IT. But unfortunately, when the full-scale Russian management happened, everything stopped. And many of those people, if not all, went to the front lines. Sadly, many of them died. But I'm here to keep their memory alive and to encourage support of this critical project. Let me ask you, what do companies like Grammarly, GitLab, People.AI have in common? I'll give you a hint. They were all founded by Ukrainians. And we need more of that. Ukraine has a lot of untapped talent and incredibly skilled and motivated labor force. We can help bring it to the world. You all have a chance to change the world. So here's how you can help it, one of these simple ways. You can donate the money, check out the QR code. It'll take you to a website with a description of the project and a chance to donate. You can donate new, used hardware, software so students can use it. You can also donate your time and get engaged if you'd like to be a mentor. Thank you. Again, my name is Dima. Check out the QR code and come talk to us afterwards. All right. Hold on. One minute of our time here. It's announcement time. So I'm thrilled to announce that the Linux Foundation has partnered with the Rasmus for Ukraine Foundation on the Veteranus project, which helps to train retired veterans for career syntax. Later this year, a few Linux Foundation courses will be translated to Ukraine, including the Introduction to Linux, Introduction to Kubernetes, and other courses. And we want to offer these courses as not only to the veterans, but also to the close family members, to the families of the first responders and defenders, to the young adults, to children of those heroes, to the spouses, and as well as for the disabled veterans. Please keep us in your thoughts. Draw the head is far from easy, but together we are stronger. Thank you for all your support. Slavo Kain.