 Now over to our last deep dive on IPFS operator, Corey. Hello, my name is Corey. I'm with the Filecoin Infrastructure team and this is about the IPFS operator. The IPFS operator is a Kubernetes operator that is designed to help people run an IPFS cluster or a set of IPFS nodes in the Kubernetes environment. The key feature of it is that it is a turnkey IPFS cluster you can see the GIF working over there on the right. That GIF is actually going through the entire process that is required to set up in a full-fledged IPFS cluster. You could see that it's quite simple, boils down to basically one command. The goal of this project is to spread the adoption of Web3 and enable it to be more easily run in high production environments, particularly those that are found users who might run Kubernetes. What we would like to do is we would like to, for Kubernetes operators, if they have a storage need, if they are searching for what storage projects or what storage product that they want to use, IPFS should be right there next to, you know, Ceph and the rest, when they go through their catalog and they wonder which product to make or which product to select, IPFS should be there right in their face and it should work for them and they should have a good time with it. This project is being developed in partnership with Red Hat, so I've included our GitHub link right there. We have moved recently, the code is now in the IPFS cluster or it is the same code and the same project. This is just a zoomed in version, just to really hammer home how easy it is to set up. You can see what we've got here. It's a very simple configuration file that you can set up. You can just use your standard Kubernetes utilities that operators of this type will be very comfortable with and apply it to your cluster. A brief overview of how this actually works. This is actually two Kubernetes controllers built into one binary. One of them is the IPFS cluster operator itself and the other one is a controller for LibP2P. This is an optional component that you can add in in case you would like to use whole punching services that are not simply the public whole punching services. But what I want to stress is that this offers a complete package for everything that you might need to run your IPFS cluster in Kubernetes, including all the things listed here, configuration, cluster following, all this comes straight out of the box. How do I get this thing? As I mentioned on the first slide, I want this to be right in front of your face when you go to select a storage platform. It will soon, although not yet, it will be featured on the operator hub, which is one of the things that you, particularly users of OpenShift will be familiar. This is a catalog of other Kubernetes clusters or excuse me, other Kubernetes operators. It will sit in this catalog right alongside other things like SAP or Rokr, something like that. Additionally, this is for internal use cases mostly at the moment. If you happen to be running on our weave clusters, IPFS is available as an option. You can get a cluster built by us to that will have the operator pre-installed. These are some features that we are soon to land. These are not entirely functioning if you were to run the code right now, but there are PRs available for it. What we would like to do is have better support for external facing services. Wouldn't it be great if you could take advantage of this one-click installation facility and then use this to operate your own IPFS gateway? I think so, and we can make that happen. We have some changes that are coming down the pike that will be landing before we get to the IPFS camp. Where can I learn more? I've put some screenshots here. Documentation can be seen in a number of places now. I've listed these in the comments of this slide if anybody is wondering, but you can always reach us at the IPFS operator GitHub page. Also, there are documents, documentations that can be seen on Read the Docs. We are featured on Red Hat Next project, which I have a screenshot there. There have been a couple of talks that have discussed this project. One of them was by myself at the IPFS thing that happened in Iceland. And also my colleague Oleg from Red Hat has done a talk at DevConf 2022. Adding to this list, Oleg and I will be at the IPFS camp in Lisbon. So we will be doing a talk there as well. So we will see you there.