 In this video, we're going to use the Pixi data source plugin and Grafana's new graph beta panel to visualize all of the inbound connections to my cluster, made from endpoints outside of the cluster. So first, what is Pixi? Pixi is an open source observability tool for Kubernetes applications. Pixi uses EBPF to automatically collect a lot of data out of the box, such as infrastructure and network metrics, application profiles, and full body requests. So here's what the final graph looks like. Pixi has automatically traced all the connections made from remote endpoints outside the cluster to pods in my cluster. And for the pods here, you can see that we've displayed them as the namespace slash the pod name. So if you hover over an edge, it will show you the kilobyte sent and received for that connection pair. So yeah, you can get a good idea of who's talking to the pods in your cluster. So let's build this panel. So I already have Pixi installed in my cluster, and I have the Pixi plugin installed. And then I've also added the Pixi data source. And to learn how to configure this, feel free to look at the directions in the description or one of our other Grafana videos. So we're going to go to the dashboard and create a new panel. We'll call this the inbound connections. And this is going to be a no graph panel. So I'm going to copy in a script that you can find the link to in the directions. And we're going to change our data source to Grafana. And copy in that query. I'm just going to change this to the last five minutes, so be faster. Okay, sometimes you have to press refresh a few times, get this to show up. But here we go. Now we've got this node graph here. Unfortunately, you can't drag the nodes around yet. So you have to zoom in and out here to see the full picture. You can use grid view, but that doesn't show any of the connections between them. So if you want to see what this is returning, the node graph panel expects two data tables, edges and nodes. Nodes are just all the nodes that are in your graph and a title for them. We're using the same ID as title here. And then the edges are just the connections between the source and target. And we're using again kilobytes sent and received as our stats to display on the edges. So that's how you can use Pixi to see the inbound connections to your cluster. To see more of what you can do with this Pixi Grafana Diasource plugin, be sure to check out the other videos in our playlist.