 Hey, we're arriving at the end of the lightning talks. However, we got one request for doing a plug, which might be of interest of us as the next Cloud community. May I ask Jeroen Bater to come on stage and to talk a little bit about a specific project which might be of interest to us. So, hi. I only have five minutes. Normally, I do whole, no, not whole conferences, but longer talks. My name is Jeroen Bater. I've been in open source for 20 years. I've written more than 10 books about open source. Okay, that's my credentials. Okay? Yesterday, I published Code and GitHub. That's the result of four months of work of configuring popular open source applications for single sign-on. And clearly, one of those is next Cloud because, you know, why not? Let's see if I can make that move it a little bit. Hmm, no. Okay, anyway, so four months of work. Those are simple, straight, Ansible playbooks. Okay, who does not know what Ansible is? Okay, who doesn't know what Ansible is and doesn't work in marketing? Okay, so Ansible is a syntax, is a file, a syntax. It's sort of a recipe to configure computers. So you say, I want, by the way, I want users. And this is the list of user accounts I want. And I want this package and this package installed. And I want the application Hello World installed. So that's a sort of a recipe and you send it to a bunch of servers, if you like. All one. And so the people who know Ansible, a simple playbook based on key cloak as a central authentication mechanism, what you do. So the playbook is install next Cloud, single sign-on.yaml. You fire it, it will install standard next Cloud, not the snap, Justin, some directory, I don't know. And then configure single sign-on by creating, with a REST call to key cloak, creating a client there, getting a secret key if you're using OpenID Connect. Put it in your configuration and you're good to go. So don't try this at home. Read the playbook and adjust it to your own network, okay? But you don't have a bunch of roles that you all have to go to with this. One simple straight file. And I've done this for the last four months for, let's see, XWiki, Odoo, Next Cloud, Key Cloak, of course not, GitLab and Jenkins. And today I found out that I also have to do the same work for Open Project, clearly, yay. Um, it's, well, I think that's about all the time I can use. Roughly, yes. Yeah, roughly, okay. Any questions? Well, that's it. Thank you very much. Jeroen, thank you so much for doing this. Next time, please do submit the talk. I think it deserves more time than you had right now.