 Thanks for joining us. We just want to do a quick demo here of Red Hat Universal Base Image to show you how it works. So on the left, you'll see we have a Fedora test system where we are going to build a new container image from the Red Hat UBI base image. And then on the right, we have a rel8 test system that we're actually going to run it. We are going to share it using Quade.io, which is a publicly available registry server that you can push your own images to and share them with other people. And so we're going to show you these three things all working together. So let's take a quick look at a Docker file I created. In this Docker file, you'll see we are pulling this Red Hat Universal Base Image. Again, this is publicly available on Red Hat's registry. And you see we just embedded maintainer. Then we install a package. You'll see that UBI comes preconfigured with a set of yum repositories. So it actually has extra packages you can pull and install. One of them being a web server. And then we are going to just echo hello world, expose it, and then fire up the web server. So let's go ahead and build this. Let's fire this off. Wants this build happen. You'll see it's pulling packages from the publicly available yum repositories. And now it's installing software. And you'll see these packages are all rel8 packages, but they are released under a end user license agreement that allows for redistribution. So these are essentially publicly available. You'll see we've built the image now. We have the image locally. You'll see we have the Quay.io, Father Linux, UBI demo. Let's run it real quick just to test it before we push it. We are going to fire it up, expose port to 8080. Let's fire it up. There we go. OK, let's do a curl. OK, there's hello world. So we have a running web server. Let's push this image up to Quay.io here. You'll see it's pushing the image layers nice and quickly. It's right in the manifest. OK, image is pushed. Let's go over to our rel8 test box where UBI 8 was really designed to run in production. And then let's do apartment images. Let's do a pull. Pull this thing down. See it's pulling all the image layers. OK, we have our image now. See UBI demo. Again, let's run it like we did on the other system. Man run. OK, so we fired it up. Now let's curl up. There's a hello world. So what I've shown you here is that you can freely distribute UBI-based container images that you build yourself. So applications, you can build your own application, share them on UBI. And it really gives you an on-ramp to a supported environment if you want one, but at the same time provides a great base image no matter where you want to use it. So thanks for joining.