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Christian Hernandez, Codefresh | CUBE Conversation


 

>>And welcome to this cube conversation here in Palo Alto, California. I'm John furrier, host of the cube. We have a great guest coming in remotely from LA Christian Hernandez developer experienced lead at code fresh code fresh IO. Recently they were on our feature at a startup showcase series, season two episode one cloud data innovations, open source innovations, all good stuff, Christian. Thanks for coming on this cube conversation. >>Thank you. Thank you, John. Thank you for having me on, >>You know, I'm I was really impressed with code fresh. My met with the founders on here on the cube because GI ops AI, everything's something ops devs dev sec ops. You've got AI ops. You've got now GI ops, essentially operationalizing the software future is here and software's eating the world is, was written many years ago, but it's open source is now all. So all things software's open source and that's kind of a done deal. It's only getting better and better. Mainstream companies are contributing. You guys are on this wave of, of this open source tsunami and you got cloud scale. Automation's right there, machine learning, all this stuff is now the next gen of, of, of code, right? So you, your code fresh and your title is developer experience lead. What does that mean right now? What does it mean to be a developer experience lead? Like you make sure people having a good experience. Are you developing you figuring out the product? What does that mean? >>Yeah. That's and it's also part of the, the whole Debre explosion that's happening right now. I believe it's, you know, everyone's always asking, well, what, you know, what is developer advocate? What does that mean developer experience? What does that mean? So, so you, you kind of hit the nail on the head a little bit up there in, in the beginning, is that the, the experience of the developer when using a particular platform, right? Especially the code flash platform. That is my responsibility there at code fresh to enable, to enable end users, to enable partners, to enable, you know, anyone that wants to use the code fresh platform for their C I C D and get ops square flows. So that's, that's really my, my corner of the world is to make sure their experience is great. So that's, it's really what, what I'm here to do >>At food fresh. You know, one of the things I can say of my career, you've been kind of become a historian over time. When I was a developer back in the old days, it was simply you compiled stuff, you did QA on it. You packaged it out. You wanted out the door and you know, that was a workflow right now with the cloud. I was talking with your founders, you got new abstraction layers. Cloud has changed again again, open source. So newer things are coming, right? Like, like, like Kubernetes for instance is a great example that came out of the open source kind of the innovations. But that, and Hadoop, we were mentioning before he came on camera from a storage standpoint, kind of didn't make it because it was just too hard. Right. And it made the developer's job harder. And then it made the developer's requirements to be specialized. >>So you had kind of two problems. You had hard to use a lot of friction and then it required certain expertise when the developers just want to code. Right. So, so you have now the motion of, with GI ops, you guys are in the middle of kinda this idea of frictionless based software delivery with the cloud. So what's different now, can you talk about that specific point because no one wants to be, do hard work and have to redo things. Yeah. Shift left and all that good stuff. What's hard now, what do you guys solve? What's the, what's the friction that you're taking out what's to become frictionless. >>Yeah. Yeah. And you, you, you mentioned a very interesting point about how, you know, things that are coming out almost makes it seem harder nowadays to develop an application. You used to have it to where, you know, kind of a, sort of a waterfall sort of workflow where, you know, you develop your code, you know, you compile it. Right. You know, I guess back in the day, Java was king. I think Java still is, has a, is a large footprint out there where you would just compile it, deploy it. If it works, it works. Alright cool. And you have it and you kind of just move it along in its process. Whereas I think the, the whole idea of, I think Netflix came out with like the, the fail often fail fast release often, you know, the whole Atlassian C I C D thing, agile thing came into play. >>Where now it's, it's a little bit more complex to get your code out there delivered to get your code from one environment to the other environment, especially with the, the Avan of Kubernetes and cloud native architecture, where you can deploy and have this imutable infrastructure where you can just deploy and automate so quickly. So often that there needs to be some sort of new process now into place where to have a new process, like GI ops to where it'll, it it's frictionless, meaning that it's, it, it makes it that process a little easier makes that little, that comp that complex process of deploying onto like a cloud native architecture easier. So that way, as you said before, returning the developers to back to what they care about, mot, the most is just code. I just want to code. >>Yeah. You know, the other thing, cool thing, Christian, I wanna bring up and we'll get into some of the specifics around Argo specifically CD is that the community is responding as a kind of, it takes a village kind of mindset. People are getting into this just saying, Hey, if we can get our act together around some de facto workflows and de facto capabilities, everyone wins. It's a rising tide, floats all boats, kind of concept. CNCF certainly has been a big part of that. Even seen some of the big hyper scales getting behind it. But you guys are part of the founding members of the open get ups working group, Amazon Azure, GitHub, red hat Weaveworks and then a ton of contributors. Okay. So this is kind of cool. This means that there's like people behind this thing. Look, we gotta get here faster. What happened at co con this year? You guys had some news around Argo and you had some news around the hosted solution. Can you take a minute to explain two things, one the open community vibe, and then two, what you guys announced at Coon in Spain. >>Yeah. Yeah. So as far as open get ups, that was, you know, as you said before, code fresh was part of that, that founding committee. Right. Of, of group of people trying to figure out, define what get ups is. Right. We're trying to bring it beyond the, you know, the, the hype word, right beyond just like a marketing term to where we actually define what it actually is, because it is actually something that's out there that people are doing. Right. A lot of people, you know, remember that the, the Chick-fil-A story where it's like, they, they are completely doing, you know, this get ops thing, we're just now wanting, putting definition around it. So that was just amazing to see out at there in, in Cuban. And, but like you said, in QAN, we, you know, we're, we're, we're taking some of that, that acceleration that we see in the community to, and we, we announce our, our hosted get ops offering. >>Right. So hosted get ops is something that our customers have been asking for for a while. Many times when, you know, someone wants to use something like Argo CD, the, in, they install it on their cluster, they get up and running. And, but with, with all that comes like the feed and care of that platform, and, you know, not only just keeping the lights on, but also management security, you know, general maintenance, you know, all the things that, that come along with managing a system. And on top of that comes like the scale aspect of it. Right. And so with scale, so a lot of people go with like a hub and spoke others, go with like a fleet design in, in either case, right. There's, there's a challenge for the feet and care of it. Right. And so with code fresh coast of get ups, we take that management headache away. >>Right? So we, we take the, the, the management of, of Argo CD, the management of, of all of that, and kind of just offer Argo CD as a surface, right. Which offers, you know, allows users to, you know, let us take care of all the, of the get offs, runtime. And so they can concentrate on, you know, their application deployments. Right. And you also get things like Dora metrics, right. Integrated with the platform, you have the ability to integrate multiple CI providers, you know, like get hub actions or whatever, existing Jenkins pipelines. And really that, that code fresh platform becomes like your get ops platform becomes like, you know, your, your central view of the world of, of your, you know, get ups processes. >>Yeah. I mean, that whole single source of truth concept is really kind of needed. I gotta ask you though, with the popularity of the Argo CD on get ups internally, right. That's been clear, right. Kubernetes, the way that's going, it's accelerating fast. People want simple it's scaling, you got automation built in all that good stuff. What was the driver behind the hosted get up solution? Was it customer needs? Was it efficiency all the above? What was specifically and, and why would someone want to have the hosted versus say internal? >>Yeah. So it's, it was really driven by, you know, customer need been something that the customers have been asking for. And it's also been something that, you know, you, you, you have a process of developing an application to, you know, you know, a fleet of clusters in a traditional, you know, I keep saying traditional, get outs practice as if get outs are so old. And, you know, in, you know, when, when, when people first start out, they'll start, you know, installing Argo city on all these clusters and trying to manage that at scale it's, it's, it, it seemed like there was, you know, it it'd be nice if we can just like, be able to consume this as a service. So we don't have to like, worry about, you know, you know, best practices. We don't have to worry about security. We don't just, all of that is taken care of and managed by us at code fresh. So this is like something that, you know, has been asked for and, and something that, you know, we believe will accelerate, you know, developers into actually developing their, their applications. They don't have to worry about managing >>The platform. So just getting this right. Hosted, managed service by you guys on this one, >>Correct? Yes. >>Okay. Got it. All right. So let me, let me get in the Argo real quick, just to kind of just level set for the folks that are, are leaning into this and then kicking the tires. Where are we with Argo? What, why was it so popular? What did it do specifically? Did it just make it easier for developers to manage and monitor Kubernetes, keep 'em updated? What was the specific value behind Argo? Where, where, where did it come from and why is it so popular? >>Yeah, so Argo the Argo project, which is made up of, of a few tools, usually when people say Argo, they meet, they they're talking about Argo CD, but there's also Argo workflows, Argo events, Argo notifications. And, and like I said before, CD with that, and that is something that was developed internally at Intuit. Right? So for those of who don't know, Intuit is the company behind turbo tax. So for those, those of us in the us, we, we know, you know, we know that season all too well, the tax season. And so that was a tool that was developed internally. >>And by the way, Intuit we've done many years. They're very huge cloud adopters. They've been on that train from the day one. They've been, they've been driving a lot of cloud scale too. Sorry >>To interrupt. Yeah. And, and, and yeah, no, and, and, and also, you know, they, they were always open source first, right. So they've always had, you know, they developed something internally. They always had the, the intention of opensourcing it. And so it was really a tool that was born internally, and it was a tool that helped them, you know, get stuff done with Kubernetes. And that's kind of like the tagline they use for, for the Argo project is you need to get stuff done. They wanted their developers to focus less on deploying the application and more right. More than on writing the application itself. And so the, and so the Argo project is a suite of tools essentially that helps deploy onto Kubernetes, you know, using get ups as that, you know, that cornerstone in design, right in the design philosophy, it's so popular because of the ease of use and developer friendliness aspect of it. It's, it's, it's, it's meant to be simple right. In and simple in a, in a good sense of getting up and running, which attracted, you know, developers from, you know, all around the world. You know, other companies like red hat got into it as well. BlackRock also is, is a, is a big contributor, thousands of other independent contributors as well to the Argo project. >>Yeah. Christian, if you bring up a good point and I'm gonna go on a little tangent here, but I wanna get your reaction to something that Dave ante and I, and our cube team has been kind of riffing on lately. You mentioned, you know, Netflix earlier, you mentioned Intuit. There's a kind of a story that's been developing and, and with traction and momentum and trajectory over the past, say 10 years, the companies that went on the cloud, like Netflix into it, snowflake, snowflake, not so much now, but in terms of open source, they're all contributing lift. They're all contributing back to open source, but they're not cloud providers. Right. So you're seeing that kind of first generation, I's a massive contribution to open source. So open source been around for a while, remember the early days, and we'd all participate on projects, but now you have real companies building IP going open source first because they're on a hyperscale cloud, but they're not the cloud themselves. They took advantage of that. So there's kind of this cycle of flywheel of cloud to open source, not from the vendors themselves like Amazon, which services or Azure, but the people who rode their CapEx and built on that scale, feeding into the open source. And then coming back, this is kind of an interesting dynamic. What's your reaction to that? Do you see that? Yeah. Super cloud kind of vibe there. >>Yeah. Yeah. Well, and, and also it, it, I think it's, it's a, it's indicative that, you know, open source is not only, you know, a way to develop, you know, applications, a way to engineer, you know, your project, but also kind of like a strategic advantage in, in, in such a way. Right. You know, you, you see, you see companies like, like, like even like Microsoft has been going into, you know, open source, right. They they've been going to open source first. They made a, a huge pivot to, you know, using open source as, you know, like, like a, like a strategic direction for, for the company. And I think that goes back to, you know, a little bit for my roots, you know, I, I, I always, I always talk about, you know, I always talk about red hat, right. I always talk about, you know, I was, I was, I was in red hat previously and, you know, you know, red hat being, you know, the first billion dollar open source company. >>Right. I, we always joke is like, well, you know, internally, like we know you were a billion dollar company that sold free software. How, you know, how, how does that happen? But it's, it's, it's really, you know, built into the, built into being able to tap into those expert resources. Yeah. You know, people love using software. People love the software they love using, and they wanna improve it. Companies are now just getting out of their way. Yeah. You know, companies now, essentially, it's just like, let's just get out of the way. Let's let people work on, you know, what they wanna work on. They love the software. They wanna improve it. Let's let them, >>It's interesting. A lot of people love the clouds have all this power. If you think about what we are just riffing on and what you just said, the economics and the organic self-governing has always been the open source way where commercial value is enabled. If you play ball, right. Like, oh, red hat, for instance. And now you're seeing the community kind of be that arbiter of the cloud. So, Hey, if everyone can create value on say AWS or Azure, bring it to open source, everyone benefits across all clouds hope eventually. So the choice aspect comes in. So this community angle is huge. And I think it's changing a lot for the better. And I think this is where we're seeing a lot of that growth. And you guys have been the middle level with the Argo project and get ups specifically in that, in that sector. How have you seen that growth? What some dynamics have you seen power dynamics, organic? Is it governed well, whats some of the, the successes, what are some of the challenges? Can you share your thoughts on the community's growth around get ops and Argo project? >>Yeah, yeah. Yeah. So I've been, you know, part of some of these communities, right? Like the, the open, get, get ops community, the Argos community pretty much from the beginning and, and seeing it developed from an idea to, you know, having all these contributors, having, you know, the, the, the buzzword come out of it, you know, the get ups and it be that being the, you know, having it, you know, all over the, you know, social media, all over LinkedIn, all over all, all these, all these different channels, you know, I I've seen things like get ops con, right. So, you know, being part of the, get ops open, get ops community, you know, one of the things we did was we did get ops con it started as a meetup, you know, couple years ago. And now, you know, it was a, you know, we had an actual event at Cuan in Los Angeles. >>You know, we had like, you know, about 50 people there, but then, you know, Cuan in Valencia this past Cuan we had over 200 people, it was a second largest co-located events in, at Cuan. So that just, just seeing that community and, you know, from a personal standpoint, you know, be being part of that, that the, the community being the, the event chair, right. Yeah. Being, being one of the co-chairs was a, was a moment of pride for me being able to stand up there and just seeing a sea of people was like, wow, we just started with a handful of people at a meetup. And now, you know, we're actually having conferences and, and, and speaking of conference, like the Argo community as well, we put in, you know, we put on a virtual only event on Argo con last year. We're gonna do it in person today. You know, this year. >>Do you have a date on that? Do you have a date on that Argo con 22? >>Two? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Argo con September 19th, 2022. So, you know, mark your calendars, it it's, you know, it's a multi-day event, you know, it's, it's part of something else that I've seen in the community where, you know, first we're talk talking about these meetups. Now we're doing multi-day events. We're, you know, in talks of the open, get ups, you know, get ups can also make that a multi-day event. There's just so many talks in so many people that want to be involved in network that, you know, we're saying, well, we're gonna need more days because there's just so many people coming to these events, you know, in, in, you know, seeing these communities grow, not just from like the engineering standpoint, but also from the end user standpoint, but also from the people that are actually doing these things. And, you know, seeing some of these use cases, seeing some of the success, seeing some of the failures, right? Like people love listening to those talks about postmortems, I think are part of my favorite talks as well. So seeing that community grow is, is, you know, on a personal level, it's, it's a point >>It's like CSI for software developers. You want to curious about >>Exactly >>What happened. You know, you know, it's interesting, you mentioned about the, the multiple events at Coon. You know, the vibe that's going on is a very festival vibe, right? You have organic groups coming together. I remember when they had just started doing the day zero programs. Now you have like, almost like multiple stages of content at these events. It feels like, like a Coachella vibe or some sort of like festival vibe, like a lot of things going on and you, and if you pick your kind of area, but you can move around, I find that the kind of the format de Azure I think is going well these days. What do you think about that? >>Yeah, yeah. No, for sure. It's and, and, and I love that that analogy of Coachella, it does feel like, you know, it's, there's something for everyone and you can find what you like, and you'll find a little, you know, a little group, right. A little click of, of, of people that's probably the wrong term to use, but you know, you, you find, you know, you, you know, like-minded people and, you know, passionate about the same thing, right? Like the security guys, they, you know, you see them all clump together, right? Like you see like the, the developer C I CD get ops guys, we all kind of clump together and start talking, you know, about everything that we're doing. And it's, that's, that's, I think that's really something special that coupon, you know, some, you know, it's gotten so big that it's almost impossible to fit everything in a, in a week, because unless there's just so much to do. And there's so much that that interests, you know, someone, but it's >>A code, a code party is what we call it. It's a code party. Yeah. >>It's, it's a code party for sure. For >>Sure. Nerd nerd Fest on, on steroids. Hey, I gotta get, I wanna wrap this up and give you the final word, Christian. Thanks for coming on. Great insight, great conversation. There's a huge, you guys are in the middle of a hot area, obviously large scale data growth. Kubernetes is scaling beautifully and making it easier at managed services. What people want machine learning's kicking in and, and you get automation building in all favoring, the developer and C I CD pipeline and all that good stuff. People want to learn more. Can you take a minute to put the plug in for code fresh on the certification? How do I get involved? Where are you? Is there levels if I want to jump in and get trained and get fluent on code fresh, can you share commentary and, and, and what the status is? >>Yeah, yeah, for sure. So code fresh is offering a free certification, right? For get ups or Argo CD and get ops. The first of it's kind for Argo CD, first of it's kind for get ops is you can actually go get certified with Argo CD and get ops. You know, we there level one is out right now. You can go take that code, fresh.io/certification. It's out there, sign up, you know, you, you don't, you don't need to pay anything, right. It's, it's something it's a, of a free course. You could take level two is coming soon. Right? So level two is coming soon in the next few months, I believe I don't wanna quote a specific day, but soon because I, but soon I, it it's soon, soon as in, as in months. Right? So, you know, we're, we're counting that down where you can not only level one cert level certification, but a level, two more advanced certification for those who have been using Argo for a while, they can still, you know, take that and be, you know, be able to get, you know, another level of certification for that. So also, you know, Argo con will be there. We're, we're part of the programming committee for Argo con, right? This is a community driven event, but, you know, code fresh is a proud diamond sponsor. So we'll be there. >>Where's it located up to us except for eptember 19th multiday or one day >>It's a, it's a multi-day event. So Argo con from 19, 19 20 and 21 in a mountain view. So it'll be in mountain view in the bay area. So for those of you who are local, you can just drive in. Great. >>I'm write that down. I'll plug it. I'll put in the show notes. >>Awesome. Awesome. Yeah. And you will be there so you can talk to me, you can talk to anyone else at code, fresh talking about Argo CD, you know, find, find out more about hosted, get ups code, fresh.io. You know, you can find us in the Argo project, open, get ups community, you know, we're, we're, we're deep in the community for both Argo and get ups. So, you know, you can find us there as well. >>Well, let's do a follow up in when you're in town, so's only a couple months away and getting through the summer, it's already, I can't believe events are back. So it's really great to see face to face in the community. And there was responding. I mean, co con in October, I think that was kind of on the, that was a tough call and then get to see your own in Spain. I couldn't make it. Unfortunately, I had got COVID came down with it, but our team was there. Open sources, booming continues to go. The next level, new power dynamics are developing in a great way. Christian. Thanks for coming on, sharing your insights as the developer experience lead at code fresh. Thanks so much. >>Thank you, John. I appreciate it. >>Okay. This is a cube conversation. I'm John feer, host of the cube. Thanks for watching.

Published Date : Jul 5 2022

SUMMARY :

I'm John furrier, host of the cube. Thank you. Are you developing you figuring out the product? I believe it's, you know, everyone's always asking, well, what, you know, You wanted out the door and you know, that was a workflow right now So, so you have now the motion of, with GI ops, you guys are in the middle of kinda this idea of frictionless workflow where, you know, you develop your code, you know, you compile it. So that way, as you said before, You guys had some news around Argo and you had some news around the hosted solution. A lot of people, you know, remember that the, the Chick-fil-A story where and, you know, not only just keeping the lights on, but also management security, you know, Which offers, you know, allows users to, you know, let us take care of all the, People want simple it's scaling, you got automation built in all that good stuff. you know, we believe will accelerate, you know, developers into actually developing their, Hosted, managed service by you guys on this one, So let me, let me get in the Argo real quick, just to kind of just level set for the folks that So for those, those of us in the us, we, we know, you know, we know that season all too well, the tax And by the way, Intuit we've done many years. and it was a tool that helped them, you know, You mentioned, you know, you know, applications, a way to engineer, you know, your project, but also kind of like I, we always joke is like, well, you know, internally, like we know you were a billion dollar company that And you guys have been the middle level with the Argo project and come out of it, you know, the get ups and it be that being the, you know, You know, we had like, you know, about 50 people there, but then, you know, Cuan in Valencia this you know, it's, it's part of something else that I've seen in the community where, you know, first we're talk talking about these meetups. You want to curious about You know, you know, it's interesting, you mentioned about the, the multiple events at Coon. Like the security guys, they, you know, you see them all clump together, Yeah. It's, it's a code party for sure. Hey, I gotta get, I wanna wrap this up and give you the final word, you know, be able to get, you know, another level of certification So for those of you who are local, I'll put in the show notes. So, you know, you can find us there as well. So it's really great to see face to face in the community. I'm John feer, host of the cube.

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