 Now, we have some more exciting updates to give you from our project maintainers, this time from Kubernetes. So, sit back, relax, and let's see what's new in the world of Kubernetes. Hi, everyone. I'm Navaran from the Kubernetes Stating Committee, and today I'm going to bring you some major governance updates. Stating Committee's goal is to plan for the long-term sustainability of the Kubernetes project, protecting contributors, fostering contributed growth and engaging commercial contributors into committing resources. First, we have added a new role called sub-project lead, expanding on our existing sub-project owners. This is largely to formally recognize the people who have already been doing the work. This will pave the way for new people to get into leadership and clarify responsibilities. Second, our annual report process is completed. The annual report process helps community groups in painting a complete project health picture. You can scan this QR code and go to the repository and look at the reports for each of the community groups in their respective directories. You can also find past annual reports there. You can go to our GitHub repo to know more about what we do. Hello, everybody. Welcome to KubeCon. My name is Federico Buoniovanni. I'm co-chair of CAPI Machinery for Kubernetes Open Source, and I work for Google. CAPI Machinery is responsible for all the Kubernetes control plane, which includes things like QVAPA server, the persistent framework, the controller manager framework, and extension mechanisms as custom resource definition and workbooks. If you know that, we own about 25% of the Kubernetes code base. That is a large piece of the pie. Some exciting updates are the things that we have merged in 128, a special mention to sell and encouraging you to test our features. If you want to know more about us, this is where you find us. Subscribe to our main list, join our Slack channel. This is who we are, the leads, and then some useful links for you. Thank you so much. Hope to see you around. Hi, I'm Marley Puckett, joined by Eddie Zoneschi on behalf of Kubernetes 6CLI. 6CLI is the special interest group responsible for all things command line for the Kubernetes project, including KubeKettle and Customize. Kubernetes 1.27 brought enhancements to apply Perng, discovery caching, open API v3, and KubeKettle debug profiles. Kubernetes 1.28 graduated KubeKettle events to stable and added an alpha feature for interactively deleting resources. We're currently working on transitioning from speedy to WebSockets. This will significantly improve things like KubeKettle port forward. We're also working on separating out cluster configurations from user preferences. New areas that we're exploring are a new version of KubeKettle apply that is server side by default, as well as JSON path improvements or alternatives. We're looking for lots of new contributors, so please join our meetings at Wednesday at 9 a.m. Pacific time. Find us on the Kubernetes Slack. We have a maintainer track session this week, and we'll also be hanging out at Meet the SIGs, so please come by. Contributors to the special interest group for contributor experience or SIG Contribux work to promote community health and reduce project friction. We thank Bob, Josh, Nikita, and Pristof for their work as they move to emanate status from their current leadership tools in SIG Contribux. Myself and Navarune are the new co-chairs and myself and Madhav are the new technical leads. We are passionate about helping new folks join the community. As such, we've created a new contributor onboarding course at kates.dev slash course, where you can learn how to contribute with guided instruction and GitHub code spaces. Using our new project, Veribullos, open source projects can keep their old settings, themes, and memberships up-to-date declaratively. Recently, we've implemented new automation to streamline the process of uploading our contributor meetings from Zoom to YouTube. Also, to encourage an active and engaged community, we are working on a project to audit our old members' contribution statistics to keep their ownership status up-to-date. You can learn more about SIG Contribux in our GitHub repo and join us on Slack. Hi, I'm Ray Lahano, and I'm with Kubernetes SIGDocs. SIGDocs publishes and maintains the Kubernetes documentation on kubernetes.io. We're also responsible for the website infrastructure and tooling, like tooling to generate the reference docs for the Kubernetes API and CLI. Kubernetes SIGDocs is comprised of four sub-projects, website, blog, reference docs, and our latest one, localization. Today, the Kubernetes documentation is available in 15 languages. Some of our new exciting updates is that we have a new name role called the Issue Wrangler role. This person, the Issue Wrangler, will be a dedicated person to wrangle issues every single week, and we will have a rotation of Issue Wranglers as well. We're also currently updating the localization contributor guide. Come join us at SIGDocs. We could find us at the Kubernetes Slack and hashtag SIGDocs, or you could also join us in our biweekly Zoom meetings as well. We meet every other Tuesday at 1700 UTC, and there's a QR code there for more information. Thank you very much. Hey friends, welcome to the SIG Release Project Update for this KubeCon. Are you aware of all those awesome Kubernetes releases we did in the past years? I would like to give a huge shout out to everyone who was part of them. You are the community, this project needs to create sustainable release process, and therefore should software with such a huge impact to the ecosystem. Let's check out what's new. Release Kubernetes 128 back in August, and we are now looking forward to a successful 129 release by the end of the year. The release engineering team added support for shipping data and RBM packages powered by the OpenSUSE build service. This means another big thank you to the OpenSUSE community for all your support in the past. SIG Release now also participates in the Linux Foundation mentorship program to get new folks on board and make contributions to the project more sustainable. Beside of that, we also keep getting latest code versions into the supported release branches, and we work on making the artifact signatures a first class citizen in Kubernetes. Do you want to hear more about it? Check out our main header track session at this KubeCon. Hello everyone, this is Shebra SIG Storage. SIG Storage is responsible for ensuring that different types of storage are available wherever a container is scheduled in a Kubernetes cluster. We have some exciting updates for you. We have two GA features in Kubernetes 1.28 release. The first feature makes it easier for you to change the default storage class retroactively for an existing unbound persistent loading clip. The second feature is a non-grease window shutdown. It allows your stable workloads to failover to another running node if the original node shuts down unexpectedly or gets into a non-recoverable state. At SIG Storage, we always welcome new contributors. Come to our intro and a deep dive session at KubeCon to learn more. Thank you. Hi folks, I'm Michelle Shepherdson presenting the SIG testing update. SIG testing is responsible for the effective testing of Kubernetes and automating away project toil. We work on frameworks, tools, and infrastructure that make it easy to test and develop Kubernetes at scale. In the last year, we've made improvements to testing across the project. Some of our larger updates are that our CI platform, Prow, runs jobs against AWS and GCP build clusters, and we improve support code and guidelines for EDA tests. More on that at kubernetes.dev.blog. Come find us at our maintainer trap talk later this con on the Kubernetes Slack at SIG testing or on GitHub at kubernetes.blog.com. We're always looking for new contributors and we hope to see you around. So thank you to our Kubernetes speakers. Round of applause.