 Hello and welcome to this video. Today we want to showcase Camelon Quarkus and for that we bring to you a hands-on lab that you can execute in the developer sandbox. That's a free-to-use OpenShift environment where you can play with this technology. In the demo we include a very useful use case where we expose some REST API that we transform with some data transformation into a SOAP operation that we use to call a SOAP service back-end. All of that is provided with the example including a JUnit so that you can see how to create test cases in Camelon Quarkus. Those are very useful to validate the implementation of the developer or the code that the developer has produced. Let's jump to the environment so that you can see how you can get started. So click on the link provided or just simply go to developers.redhat.com slash developer sandbox. From there you will see a button that is available to you, a red button and the first time you'll have to sign up providing your email account or with some single sign-on but once you have done all of that then you just simply can click directly on start your sandbox for free and that should go straight into the OpenShift environment free for you to use. In this environment you can play with it, you can deploy your own applications and learn about OpenShift and Kubernetes but today we want to focus on Camelon Quarkus. So the first thing you have to do is go to the top bar and from there you can open Red Hat OpenShift Dev Spaces so click on that and that will open the dashboard. Dev Spaces will provide you a developer experience from where you can edit sources and open a terminal, execute commands and so on just like if you were working on your own laptop. So I have already provisioned the tutorial, it's right there on the screen but when you do it for the first time you have to click the option there or create workspace and you'll see an option to enter a Git repo URL and those are the sources where the samples live so just simply go there enter the URL that has been provided with the article or with the video and then click create and open. Once you have that then you'll have the workspace available and it should actually automatically launch the environment for you. So what we see on screen is Dev Spaces spinning and that will create that will present to you on screen VS Code like environment so if you are used to VS Code then you should feel at home and in this environment you'll have a welcome page and you'll have the sources on the left as you can see and then more importantly with this tutorial you'll find here on the end points option here one entry that says tutorial so click on it to open it in a new tab and just simply confirm that you want to perform that action and when you do that it will open the solution explorer where the example lives. You also will find that you have tutorials for Camel K, Camel Spring Boot and the one we want to look at right now. So click on that and your tutorial should start. What I'm going to do is just simply open that in a incognito window because I have cookies that will distort a little bit the user experience but the same screen should present right now there and so I click on Camel Quarkus and when I do that then the tutorial starts you'll see that the use case is presented in front of you and it will introduce a little bit what it is about and what you will learn today. Also see a little index about with all the chapters that involve these hands-on lab and then you can start the tutorial but just simply get started there you click on the button and you jump to the first chapter where you can explore the code you see that you have snapshots and it indicates to you where to find the source code it explains to you a little bit the main parts of the processing flow for Camel and all you have to do is read on and when you get to the end of the chapter say click next in this case there's no action to do so this is very simple but on your second chapter then you can start interacting in this example for instance we have to open a terminal and then launch a command to build compile and build the Camel Quarkus instance let's just do that very quickly in our environment so I switch there I copy as you can see on the keep copy to keyboard button and I jump to my environment I open a terminal as it was indicated as a new terminal and from there I just can paste the command and as you can see I'm already right there now I can click on this command to also copy the command here that I immediately execute and as you can see in the terminal Camel Quarkus is starting and it will start in a moment we can close on the meantime the welcome page and explore a little bit the sources you can find the camel sources in there and main resources roots and open the YAML file and you can see you know the source files there right so we can see here Camel Quarkus has started and well just simply keep interacting with your tutorial and by the end of this chapter you have a question mark a question just to validate that the expected outcome was what you also saw on screen click yes to jump to the next screen and so on until the end of the tutorial so once you have done all of that you should see your tutorial complete there with a hundred percent success in my case I just did the first chapter and that was all that I wanted to show to you today of course if you finish the first tutorial with Camel Quarkus feel free to also try try out the other ones thank you very much for listening and enjoy the demo thank you bye