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ZEBRA - Open Source API for Enhancing RMF Metrics

License Information

This program and the accompanying materials are made available under the terms of the Eclipse Public License v2.0 which accompanies this distribution, and is available at https://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-v20.html

SPDX-License-Identifier: EPL-2.0

Copyright Contributors to the Zowe Project.

About ZEBRA

ZEBRA (Zowe Embedded Browser for RMF and APIs) is an open source incubator project for the Open Mainframe Project©'s Zowe. The main goal of this project is to provide reusable and industry-compliant RMF data in JSON format. The benefit of using JSON is that it is a modern standard that is very attractive to developers. Because of this, there are many applications and use cases for third-party analysis and visualization tools to harvest ZEBRA's metrics.


System Requirements

Distributed Data Server (DDS)

Currently, ZEBRA requires an instance of RMF DDS (GPMSERVE) running on z/OS as the source of its data. You can find out more about setting up the DDS here.

Node.js Version 8

ZEBRA makes use of the Node.js runtime. IMPORTANT: It is imparitive that you are using an instance of Node.js version 8. Any version after 8 is currently not supported. If you are getting an error about parsing or getting the DDS data, this is a likely cause.

Docker (optional)

If you want to get ZEBRA set up as quick as possible, we recommend making use of containerization with Docker. More information below on how to run and build the containerized version of ZEBRA.


Built-in Third Party Support

ZEBRA comes prebuilt with some integrations and frameworks for other software and tools. The following is a list of what is currently supported. All software listed is completely optional and not required for ZEBRA to run, although we strongly recommend taking advantage of these integrations.

Software Integration with ZEBRA
MongoDB Historical Database for RMF III Records
Prometheus Realtime Data Scraping for RMF III Metrics
Grafana Visualization of RMF III Metrics

There is some configuration required in order for these to work with ZEBRA. NOTE: If running ZEBRA using docker-compose, all third party software will be installed with no manual configuration necessary.

Configuring MongoDB

No configuration needed beyond the standard installtion required in order to be compatible with ZEBRA.

Reminder: ZEBRA has to be configured to work with MongoDB.

Configuring Prometheus

After installing Prometheus, locate the prometheus.yml config file. You should clone and edit this file to look similar to

# my global config
global:
  scrape_interval: 15s # Set the scrape interval to every 15 seconds. Default is every 1 minute.
  evaluation_interval: 15s # Evaluate rules every 15 seconds. The default is every 1 minute.
  # scrape_timeout is set to the global default (10s).

# Alertmanager configuration
alerting:
  alertmanagers:
    - static_configs:
        - targets:
          # - alertmanager:9093

# Load rules once and periodically evaluate them according to the global 'evaluation_interval'.
rule_files:
  # - "first_rules.yml"
  # - "second_rules.yml"

# A scrape configuration containing exactly one endpoint to scrape:
# Here it's Prometheus itself.
scrape_configs:
  # The job name is added as a label `job=<job_name>` to any timeseries scraped from this config.
  - job_name: "zebra"
  
    metrics_path: "/prommetric"
    scrape_interval: 60s

    # metrics_path defaults to '/metrics'
    # scheme defaults to 'http'.

    static_configs:
      - targets: ["localhost:3090"]

where localhost:3090 is the host and port where ZEBRA is running.

Reminder: ZEBRA has to be configured to work with Prometheus.

Configuring Grafana

Grafana makes use of Prometheus to visualize ZEBRA metrics. Therefore, in order to use Grafana with ZEBRA you must have Prometheus installed and configured first.

After installing and running Grafana, follow this guide on how to add a Data Source. For the source, you want to use the Prometheus instance you sent up before this.

Note: ZEBRA has to be configured to work with Grafana.


Installing ZEBRA

There are currently two ways that you can install ZEBRA: Manual or Docker. We recommend using Docker for the simplest and fastest experience. See below for more details.

Manual Installation

  1. Make sure you have the required system specifications as described here.
  2. (Optional) Install any desired third party software you want to integrate with ZEBRA.
  3. Clone this repository with Git.
git clone git@github.com:zowe/zebra.git
  1. Navigate to the src directory.
cd src
  1. Install the Node.js dependencies needed for ZEBRA to run.
npm install
  1. (Optional) If developing, we recommend downloading the npm package nodemon.
npm install -g nodemon
  1. (Optional) Configure ZEBRA before running for the first time.

This step is not required since you can configure ZEBRA once it is running via the Settings page. However, if you already know how you want to configure everything you can make a copy Zconfig.template.json and name it Zconfig.json. Then, you can change your preferences and configuration following the format described here. Once the application runs, your configuration will already be applied.

  1. (Optional) Add SSL Certificate and Key to src/sslcert directory.

This step is only required running ZEBRA on https.

  1. Run ZEBRA.
node bin/www

For a development environment, you can use:

nodemon bin/www

If successful, you should see the following message:

http server listening at port [PORT]

where PORT is the port number that ZEBRA is configured to run on.

Docker Installation

  1. Make sure you have Docker installed.
  2. Clone this repository with Git.
git clone git@github.com:zowe/zebra.git
  1. (Optional) Configure ZEBRA before running for the first time.

This step is not required since you can configure ZEBRA once it is running via the Settings page. However, if you already know how you want to configure everything you can make a copy Zconfig.template.json and name it Zconfig.json. Then, you can change your preferences and configuration following the format described here. Once the application runs, your configuration will already be applied.

  1. (Optional) Add SSL Certificate and Key to src/sslcert directory.

This step is only required running ZEBRA on https.

  1. Navigate to the src directory.
cd src
  1. Use docker-compose to build the container network, and run ZEBRA.
docker-compose up --build

If successful, you should see the following message somewhere in the output:

http server listening at port [PORT]

NOTE: If you are getting an error regarding port conflicts, you can edit the docker-compose.yml to change the configuration to work with open ports on you machine. It should look like:

version: '3'

services:
  zebra:
    container_name: zebra
    build: .
    restart: always
    ports:
      - '[ZEBRA_PORT]:3090'
    depends_on:
      - mongo
      - prometheus
      - grafana
  mongo:
    container_name: zebra-mongo
    image: mongo:5.0.3
    ports:
      - '[MONGO_PORT]:27017'
    volumes:
      - mongo-data:/data/db
  prometheus:
    container_name: zebra-prometheus
    image: prom/prometheus:v2.30.3
    ports:
      - '[PROMETHEUS_PORT]:9090'
    volumes:
      - prometheus-data:/prometheus/data
      - ./config/prometheus:/etc/prometheus
  grafana:
    container_name: zebra-grafana
    image: grafana/grafana:8.2.2
    ports:
      - '[GRAFANA_PORT]:3000'
    depends_on:
      - prometheus
    volumes:
      - grafana-data:/var/lib/grafana
      - ./config/grafana:/etc/grafana/provisioning/datasources

volumes:
  mongo-data:
  prometheus-data:
  grafana-data:

where [ZEBRA_PORT], [MONGO_PORT], [PROMETHEUS_PORT], and [GRAFANA_PORT] are your desired ports for ZEBRA, MongoDB, Prometheus, and Grafana, respectively.


Configuring ZEBRA's Settings

You can configure ZEBRA in two ways: editing the Zconfig.json file directly, or making use of the Settings page interface once you get the application running.

Field Definitions

General Settings
Field Definition Required
appurl URL or hostname that ZEBRA is using Always
appport Port that ZEBRA is using Always
ppminutesInterval The interval (in minutes) that RMF Postprocessor (RMF Monitor I) records are recorded into the DDS Always
rmf3interval The interval (in seconds) that RMF Monitor III records are recorded into the DDS Always
zebra_httptype The http protocol that ZEBRA is using (http or https) Always
use_cert Specifies whether to use TLS for servicing ZEBRA API (true or false) Always
mongourl URL or hostname of your instance of MongoDB For MongoDB
mongoport Port of your instance of MongoDB For MongoDB
dbinterval The interval (in seconds) that data being recorded into MongoDB For MongoDB
dbname Name of the database to use in MongoDB For MongoDB
useDbAuth Specifies whether to use authentication for MongoDB (true or false) No
dbUser Username for MongoDB if using authentication No
dbPassword Password for MongoDB if using authentication No
authSource Source of MongoDB's authentication (default is admin) No
grafanaurl URL or hostname of your instance of grafana For Grafana
grafanaport Port of your instance of Grafana For Grafana
grafanahttptype The http protocol of your instance of Grafana For Grafana
dds Contains DDS configurations of one or more LPARs. See below to see how to configure this specific field. Always
DDS Settings

Each key in the dds field represents the name of the LPAR you are configuring. For example, if your LPAR is called SLSU, your DDS config may look like:

"SLSU": {
   "ddshhttptype":"https",
   "ddsbaseurl":"salisu.com",
   "ddsbaseport":"8803",
   "ddsauth":"true",
   "ddsuser":"user",
   "ddspwd":"pass",
   "rmf3filename":"rmfm3.xml",
   "rmfppfilename":"rmfpp.xml",
   "mvsResource":",SLSU,MVS_IMAGE",
   "PCI": 3340,
   "usePrometheus":"true",
   "useMongo": "false"
}
Field Definition Required
ddshhttptype The http protocal that this DDS service is using (http or https) Always
ddsbaseurl URL or host name of this DDS service Always
ddsbaseport Port of this DDS service Always
ddsauth Specifies whether this DDS service uses authentication (true or false) No
ddsuser Username to access this DDS (if ddsauth is true) No
ddspwd Password to access this DDS (if ddsauth is true) No
rmf3filename File name and extension used when DDS RMF service sends RMF Monitor III records to its Web API (default value is rmfm3.xml) Always
rmfppfilename File name and extension used when DDS RMF service sends RMF Monitor I (Postprocessor) records to its Web API (default value is rmfpp.xml) Always
mvsResource The default resource to query when making requests to this DDS Always
PCI The PCI value of the mainframe Always
usePrometheus Specifies whether this DDS service should make use of Prometheus data scraping (true or false) For Prometheus
useMongo Specifies whether this DDS service should store RMF III records in a MongoDB database (true or false) For MongoDB

Config File

The Zconfig.json file should be located in the src/config directory. In this directory, there is a Zconfig.template.json which is an example of what yours could look like:

{
    "mongourl":"localhost",
    "dbinterval":"100",
    "dbname":"zebraDB",
    "appurl":"localhost",
    "appport":"3090",
    "mongoport":"27017",
    "ppminutesInterval":"30",
    "rmf3interval":"100",
    "zebra_httptype":"https",
    "useDbAuth":"true",
    "dbUser":"user",
    "dbPassword":"pass",
    "authSource":"admin",
    "useMongo":"true",
    "use_cert": "false",
    "grafanaurl":"localhost",
    "grafanaport":"9000",
    "grafanahttptype": "http",
    "dds": {
        "SLSU": {
            "ddshhttptype":"https",
            "ddsbaseurl":"salisu.com",
            "ddsbaseport":"8803",
            "ddsauth":"true",
            "ddsuser":"user",
            "ddspwd":"pass",
            "rmf3filename":"rmfm3.xml",
            "rmfppfilename":"rmfpp.xml",
            "mvsResource":",SLSU,MVS_IMAGE",
            "PCI": 3340,
            "usePrometheus":"true",
            "useMongo": "false"
        },
        "JSTN": {
            "ddshhttptype":"http",
            "ddsbaseurl":"justin.com",
            "ddsbaseport":"8803",
            "ddsauth":"true",
            "ddsuser":"user",
            "ddspwd":"pass",
            "rmf3filename":"rmfm3.xml",
            "rmfppfilename":"rmfpp.xml",
            "mvsResource":",JSTN,MVS_IMAGE",
            "PCI": 3340,
            "usePrometheus":"false",
            "useMongo": "true"
        }
    }
}

You can edit this file directly with your specifications. NOTE: Once you save the changes, a restart of ZEBRA is required.

Settings Page

As an alternative to editing the Zconfig.json file directly, you could make use of the Settings page in a browser once the application is up and running. You can find the page using the Navbar in the browser:

Config > Settings

Alternatively, you can go to the page directly using the link http://localhost:3090/config/settings where you localhost is your ZEBRA hostname and 3090 is your ZEBRA port.

On this page, you can input and edit the same configuration fields as described previously for both General Settings and DDS Settings.

NOTE: If you make configuration changes through this method, a restart of ZEBRA is not required.


ZEBRA API

Here, you will find documentation on ZEBRA's API and how to make the most out of each query. A full interactive Swagger doc of the API can also be found in the /apis route of the application.

RMF Postprocessor (Monitor I) Reports

RMF Postprocessor reports offer historical records. These reports' intervals are longer than that of RMF Monitor III, and previous records are stored for a set amount of time (usually around 2 weeks).

List of Supported Postprocessor Reports

These report types are confirmed to be parsable by ZEBRA. There may be some report types not listed here that still work correctly, however. If you find a working report that is not listed, please reach out and we will add it below.

Each report links to its official IBM© documentation.

Report Description
CACHE Cache Subsystem Activity
CF Coupling Facility Activity
CHAN Channel Path Activity
CPU Channel Path Activity
CRYPTO Crypto Hardware Activity
DEVICE Device Activity
EADM Extended Asynchronous Data Mover Activity
HFS Hierarchical File System Statistics
IOQ I/O Queuing Activity
OMVS OMVS Kernal Activity
PAGESP Page Data Set Activity
PAGING Paging Activity
SDELAY Serialization Delay
VSTOR Virtual Storage Activity
WLMGL Workload Activity
XCF Cross-System Coupling Facility Activity

Additionally, when querying these reports with ZEBRA, you can append special parameters to the report as you would in the DDS. For example, instead of just using WLMGL, you could use WLMGL(SCPER, RCLASS) to breakdown the service classes by period and include report classes.

Request Format

To get a Postprocessor report in ZEBRA format, make a GET request to the route /v1/{lpar}/rmfpp/{report}.

The route has the following parameters:

Parameter Description
lpar Name of the reporting LPAR
report RMF Postprocessor report type (see list)

You can add additional query strings to the request for more options:

Option Description
start Specifies the start date for the report's interval (If missing, defaults to current date). NOTE: If start is defined, end must be as well.
end Specifies the end date for the report's interval (If missing, defaults to current date). NOTE: If end is defined, start must be as well.
Examples

The following examples use the ZEBRA demo found at https://zebra.talktothemainframe.com:3390/.

Request Description
https://zebra.talktothemainframe.com:3390/v1/RPRT/rmfpp/CPU Gets the list of CPU Activity reports for the current date so far.
https://zebra.talktothemainframe.com:3390/v1/RPRT/rmfpp/CHAN?start=2021-11-09&end=2021-11-11 Gets the list of Channel Path Activity reports from November 9, 2021 to November 11, 2021. NOTE: These dates are most likely outdated since Postprocessor reports only go back a limited amounted of time. Try changing the dates to those within the last week.
https://zebra.talktothemainframe.com:3390/v1/RPRT/rmfpp/WLMGL Gets the list of Workload Activity reports for the current date so far.
https://zebra.talktothemainframe.com:3390/v1/RPRT/rmfpp/WLMGL(SCPER,RCLASS) Adds additional parameters to the previously listed request. The SCPER parameter breaks down service classes to periods and the RCLASS adds report classes to the report.

RMF Monitor III Reports

RMF Monitor III reports offer near realtime records. These reports' intervals are much shorter than that of RMF Postprocessor. With Monitor III, you can only query the current Monitor III data, unlike Postprocessor records that are stored for some time after they are generated. To store Monitor III records, we recommend using the MongoDB integration.

List of Supported Monitor III reports

These report types are confirmed to be parsable by ZEBRA. There may be some report types not listed here that still work correctly, however. If you find a working report that is not listed, please reach out and we will add it below.

Each report links to its official IBM© documentation.

Report Description
CHANNEL Channel Path Activity
CPC CPC Capacity
DELAY Delay
DEV Device Delays
DEVR Device Resource Delays
DSND Data Set Delays
EADM Extended Asynchronous Data Mover Activity
ENCLAVE Enclave
ENQ Enqueue Delays
HSM Hierarchical Storage Manager Delays
JES Job Entry Subsystem Delays
OPD OMVS Process Data
PROC Processor Delays
PROCU Processor Usage
STOR Storage Delays
STORC Common Storage
STORCR Common Storage Remaining
SYSINFO System Information
SYSSUM Sysplex Summary
USAGE Monitor III Job Usage
Request Format

To get a Monitor III report in ZEBRA format, make a GET request to the route /v1/{lpar}/rmfm3/{report}.

The route has the following parameters:

Parameter Description
lpar Name of the reporting LPAR
report RMF Monitor III report type (see list)

You can add additional query strings to the request for more options:

Option Description
resource Specifies the resource to query for the reports (default is mvsResource defined in general settings)
Examples

The following examples use the ZEBRA demo found at https://zebra.talktothemainframe.com:3390/.

Request Description
https://zebra.talktothemainframe.com:3390/v1/RPRT/rmf3/CPC Gets the most recent CPC Capacity report.
https://zebra.talktothemainframe.com:3390/v1/RPRT/rmf3/SYSINFO Gets the most recent System Information report.
https://zebra.talktothemainframe.com:3390/v1/RPRT/rmf3/SYSSUM?resource=,VIPLEX,SYSPLEX Gets the most recent Sysplex Summary report from the ,VIPLEX,SYSPLEX resource.

Individual RMF Metrics

ZEBRA can also individually retrieve and parse certain RMF metrics defined by the DDS.

List of Supported RMF Metrics

To see a list of what metrics are available in your system, use the /v1/{lpar}/rmf?id=LIST API route (where lpar is the reporting LPAR). You can also include a resource query option to see the metrics for different resources (default is mvsResource defined in configuration).

Request Format

To get an individual RMF metric from ZEBRA, make a GET request to the route /v1/{lpar}/rmf?id={metricId}.

The route has the following parameters:

Parameter Description
lpar Name of the reporting LPAR
metricId ID of the RMF metric (the list of available metric IDs and descriptions can be found here)

You can add additional query strings to the request for more options:

Option Description
resource Specifies the resource to get the metric from
Examples

The following examples use the ZEBRA demo found at https://zebra.talktothemainframe.com:3390/.

Request Description
https://zebra.talktothemainframe.com:3390/v1/RPRT/rmf?id=LIST Lists the RMF metric IDs and their description in the default resource.
https://zebra.talktothemainframe.com:3390/v1/RPRT/rmf?id=LIST&resource=,VIPLEX,SYSPLEX Lists the RMF metric IDs and their description in the ,VIPLEX,SYSPLEX resource.
https://zebra.talktothemainframe.com:3390/v1/RPRT/rmf?id=8D0160 Gets most recent value for '% delay' (ID: 8D0160) from the default resource.
https://zebra.talktothemainframe.com:3390/v1/RPRT/rmf?id=8D0160&resource=,VIPLEX,SYSPLEX Gets most recent value for '% delay' (ID: 8D0160) from the ,VIPLEX,SYSPLEX resource.

Exposing RMF Data to Prometheus

ZEBRA comes built with an API and framework that allows for the creation of realtime Prometheus metrics, with RMF Monitor III. When the application is run for the first time, a metrics.json file is created in the src directory. This is where ZEBRA will store the custom Prometheus metrics that you define. While you can edit this file directly with your metric configuration, it is recommended to use the API. For complete documentation on the API, check out the Swagger page on the /apis route.

Custom Metric Format

Before getting into the API calls, it is important to understand how ZEBRA formats these custom metrics. In the src directory, there is a metrics.template.json that serves as an example of what the metrics should look like:

{
    "RPRT_QCK2_PTOU": {
        "lpar": "RPRT",
        "request": {
            "report": "CPC",
            "resource": ",RPRT,MVS_IMAGE"
        },
        "identifiers": [
            {
                "key": "CPCPPNAM",
                "value": "QCK2"
            }
        ],
        "field": "CPCPPTOU",
        "desc": "Physical total utilization for the QCK2 partition."
    },
    "RPRT_TRNG_PTOU": {
        "lpar": "RPRT",
        "request": {
            "report": "CPC",
            "resource": ",RPRT,MVS_IMAGE"
        },
        "identifiers": [
            {
                "key": "CPCPPNAM",
                "value": "TRNG"
            }
        ],
        "field": "CPCPPTOU",
        "desc": "Physical total utilization for the TRNG partition."
    },
    "RPRT_VIDVLP_PTOU": {
        "lpar": "RPRT",
        "request": {
            "report": "CPC",
            "resource": ",RPRT,MVS_IMAGE"
        },
        "identifiers": [
            {
                "key": "CPCPPNAM",
                "value": "VIDVLP"
            }
        ],
        "field": "CPCPPTOU",
        "desc": "Physical total utilization for the VIDVLP partition."
    },
    "RPRT_VIRPT_PTOU": {
        "lpar": "RPRT",
        "request": {
            "report": "CPC",
            "resource": ",RPRT,MVS_IMAGE"
        },
        "identifiers": [
            {
                "key": "CPCPPNAM",
                "value": "VIRPT"
            }
        ],
        "field": "CPCPPTOU",
        "desc": "Physical total utilization for the VIRPT partition."
    }
}

Each top-level key in the JSON is the name of the Prometheus metric. You can name the metrics how ever you like, there is no strict convention.

Field Definition
lpar The name of the reporting LPAR.
request Object that contains info about the request needed to get the data. The requests are RMF Monitor III, so you must specify a report type to call. Optionally, you can provide a resource target. If no resource is provided, then the default mvsResource specified in configuration will be used.
identifiers Array of key-value pairs that are used as conditions to get the data of the appropriate entity. For example, if you want the total physical utilization of only the partition with the name of QCK2, you can set key to be CPCPPNAM (partition name) and value to QCK2. Since identifiers is an array, you can add as many key-value pairs as needed for multiple conditions. Can be left empty [] if not needed.
field The field whose value is used as the Prometheus metric.
desc Optionally, you can provide a description for readability on what the metric is tracking.
Creating a Prometheus Metric

To initialize a new custom Prometheus metric, make a POST request to /v1/metrics/{metricName}, where metricName is the name of your new custom metric. This POST request should have a body with the format of metric. Here is an example:

Request:

POST https://zebra.talktothemainframe.com:3390/v1/metrics/RPRT_QCK2_PTOU

Request Body:

{
   "lpar": "RPRT",
   "request": {
       "report": "CPC",
       "resource": ",RPRT,MVS_IMAGE"
   },
   "identifiers": [
       {
           "key": "CPCPPNAM",
           "value": "QCK2"
       }
   ],
   "field": "CPCPPTOU",
   "desc": "Physical total utilization for the QCK2 partition."
}

Response:

{
    "msg": "Metrics were successfully created.",
    "err": false
}
Retrieving a Prometheus Metric

To retrieve a custom Prometheus metric, make a GET request to /v1/metrics/{metricName}, where metricName is the name of a custom metric that already exists. If you do not provide a metric name, it will list all current Prometheus metrics. Here is an example:

Request:

GET https://zebra.talktothemainframe.com:3390/v1/metrics/RPRT_QCK2_PTOU

Response:

{
    "data": {
        "lpar": "RPRT",
        "request": {
            "report": "CPC",
            "resource": ",RPRT,MVS_IMAGE"
        },
        "identifiers": [
            {
                "key": "CPCPPNAM",
                "value": "QCK2"
            }
        ],
        "field": "CPCPPTOU",
        "desc": "Physical total utilization for the QCK2 partition."
    },
    "msg": "Metric 'RPRT_QCK2_PTOU' successfully retrieved",
    "err": false
}
Updating a Prometheus Metric

To update a custom Prometheus metric, make a PUT request to /v1/metrics/{metricName}, where metricName is the name of a custom metric that already exists. Here is an example:

Request:

PUT https://zebra.talktothemainframe.com:3390/v1/metrics/RPRT_QCK2_PTOU

Request Body:

{
   "lpar": "RPRT",
   "request": {
       "report": "CPC",
       "resource": ",RPRT,MVS_IMAGE"
   },
   "identifiers": [
       {
           "key": "CPCPPNAM",
           "value": "QCK2"
       }
   ],
   "field": "CPCPLTOU",
   "desc": "Logical total utilization for the VIRPT partition."
}

Response:

{
    "msg": "Metric was successfully updated.",
    "err": false
}
Deleting a Prometheus Metric

To delete a custom Prometheus metric, make a DELETE request to /v1/metrics/{metricName}, where metricName is the name of a custom metric that already exists. Here is an example:

Request:

DELETE https://zebra.talktothemainframe.com:3390/v1/metrics/RPRT_QCK2_PTOU

Response:

{
    "msg": "Metric 'RPRT_QCK2_PTOU' was successfully deleted.",
    "err": false
}

Support

For any questions or help with any aspect of ZEBRA, you can contact the development team directly or open an issue on GitHub. For Slack users, there is a channel for ZEBRA in the Open Mainframe Project©'s workspace that you can use to get in touch with the team and community! We greatly appreciate any feedback or suggestions!

Name Role Contact
Alex Kim Project Lead alexkim@ibm.com
Salisu Ali Developer salis7897@gmail.com
Justin Santer Developer justin.santer@convergetp.com