 Hi, I'm Crisad from the OpenStack Foundation, and today I'm excited to share Newton, the 14th release of OpenStack. OpenStack is a cloud operating system that provides one-versusful platform from all your compute, networking, and storage resources across bare metal, virtual machines, and containers. It's a powerful and highly configurable integration engine with a set of core projects that are a foundation for a wealth of applications and services, all freely available and supported by a worldwide development team. In this video, we're going to give you a brief tour of OpenStack, including its integrated orchestration engine and bare metal services. We begin by logging into the OpenStack dashboard and uploading a Linux image. Once uploaded, we boot the image, selecting from a variety of configuration options for security, networking, and volume attachments. One of the exciting new features in Newton is a simplified interface between Neutron and Nova, letting you attach networks with a single API command. We now create a volume and attach it to our newly launched virtual instance. The network topology interface gives us a quick overview of the resources we just created. OpenStack has a powerful automation tool, Heat, built right into it. We demonstrate this by loading a heat template and launching a new stack. In this example, the stack includes a machine image, two networks with subnets and routers, a web server, a database server with attached storage, and two worker nodes. With template in hand, it takes only one command to launch the stack, and the heat convergence engine is fast and efficient. In less time than it took us to create our single instance, we were able to build out an entire application infrastructure. And when you don't need the resources anymore, a single command releases them back to the system. OpenStack Newton features enhanced ease of use for operators and app developers. It's easier to set up, operate, change, and fix, and includes better automation throughout. In addition to managing virtualized servers, OpenStack also offers Ironic, a bare metal service that can be used as a Nova driver or a standalone interface. In the second part of this video, we'll demonstrate Ironic as a standalone service for managing a small cluster. Our initial cluster is only managing one node. We create a second node with some basic information about its management address and Pixie boot information, then add some additional detail about the server properties and the operating system we want to deploy on it. The available network devices are also associated with the machine to aid with Pixie booting. And we validate the node to make sure Ironic has all the information it needs to manage it. With the second node under management, we automate the enrollment of the remainder of the eight node cluster. With broad support for a number of management drivers, Ironic can provision images in minutes. In the Newton release, Ironic also supports multi-tenant networking with Neutron and has tighter integration with Magnum, which provides on-demand container orchestration. OpenStack handles more workloads across more industries and offers greater range and choice. And with Newton, it has evolved to make it easier than ever to manage all of your infrastructure with a stable and consistent set of APIs. Thanks for watching and have a good time with OpenStack.