 Hello, everyone. I'm Luke, and today I'm going to show you how quick and easy it is to get started with deploying a Node.js application on the OpenShift developer sandbox. You can provision your own instance of the sandbox by going to developers.redhat.com. But for the sake of time, I've already provisioned my own, so let's hop over to that one. So once we're in the console, in this base typology view, there's nothing here, so let's click the Add button here, and then we're going to click on Import from Get. I'm going to paste in a URL from the Node.Shift starters organization on GitHub. It's a very basic REST application using Express. You'll notice that OpenShift is detected that it's a Node.js application, so it's going to use this Node image. We can keep all our defaults here. You scroll down, and we click Create. You'll notice that it has created our application. This will be our deployment, but right now it's light blue, which means it's pending. And if we cover over this little thing right here, it said our build is running, so if we click that, we can actually see our build running. It might take a few minutes, because what it is doing is importing our Git repository, and it is also building a container image. Once this container image is created, it actually will upload that to the internal registry that OpenShift has for use for their application. If you are familiar with Docker, this should look very familiar. You'll notice here that it's installing all of our dependencies, which is the MPM install. While this is building, we'll hop just quick over to the Node Shift Application Starters organization on GitHub, where I got the REST application from. This organization also has other various cloud-native Node applications to start as examples and to start with. Click back here. Our build is almost done, so we'll click back over to the topology view and wait for it to finish there. Let's hope we're over this. Our build is still running, and now we see that it's complete. And now that we have, now we can see that our Node application is running. So if we click on the circle, it'll give us some information about what this pod is. We see that we have, we'll click on Details, so we see that our pod is running. Click on Resources. We can actually view the logs of that pod, which as we should expect, it's calling the Node process to run our application. Now to view the application that we just deployed, we can click on this section right here at the top right. We can open our URL. And here we have our very basic REST application where if we click this button, it'll bring back a greeting, Hello World. Or I can type my name in and press the button again, and it'll say Hello Luke. So as you can see, it only took a few minutes to deploy Node.js application using the OpenShift developer sandbox. Check it out at developers.redhat.com, and see you in the next video.