From aacfbba8d335e2ebb227c322daed12e87cf3e142 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Amy Unruh Date: Mon, 20 Jul 2015 13:11:58 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] fixed 2 links, bit of text polishing --- docs/getting-started-guides/README.md | 22 +++++++++++----------- 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-) diff --git a/docs/getting-started-guides/README.md b/docs/getting-started-guides/README.md index fc24eacde97..9feb139b4e4 100644 --- a/docs/getting-started-guides/README.md +++ b/docs/getting-started-guides/README.md @@ -34,17 +34,17 @@ Documentation for other releases can be found at # Creating a Kubernetes Cluster Kubernetes can run on a range of platforms, from your laptop, to VMs on a cloud provider, to rack of -bare metal servers. The effort required to setup a cluster varies from running a single command to +bare metal servers. The effort required to set up a cluster varies from running a single command to crafting your own customized cluster. We'll guide you in picking a solution that fits for your needs. ## Picking the Right Solution If you just want to "kick the tires" on Kubernetes, we recommend the [local Docker-based](docker.md) solution. -The local Docker-based solution is one of several [Local cluster](#local-solutions) solutions -that are quick to setup, but are limited to running on one machine. +The local Docker-based solution is one of several [Local cluster](#local-machine-solutions) solutions +that are quick to set up, but are limited to running on one machine. -When you are ready to scale-up to more machines and higher availability, a [Hosted](#hosted-solutions) +When you are ready to scale up to more machines and higher availability, a [Hosted](#hosted-solutions) solution is the easiest to create and maintain. [Turn-key cloud solutions](#turn-key-cloud-solutions) require only a few commands to create @@ -52,16 +52,16 @@ and cover a wider range of cloud providers. [Custom solutions](#custom-solutions) require more effort to setup but cover and even they vary from step-by-step instructions to general advice for setting up -a kubernetes cluster from scratch. +a Kubernetes cluster from scratch. ### Local-machine Solutions -Local-machine solutions create a single cluster with one or more kubernetes nodes on a single +Local-machine solutions create a single cluster with one or more Kubernetes nodes on a single physical machine. Setup is completely automated and doesn't require a cloud provider account. But their size and availability is limited to that of a single machine. The local-machine solutions are: - - [Local Docker-based](#local-solutions) (recommended starting point) + - [Local Docker-based](docker.md) (recommended starting point) - [Vagrant](vagrant.md) (works on any platform with Vagrant: Linux, MacOS, or Windows.) - [No-VM local cluster](locally.md) (Linux only) @@ -171,7 +171,7 @@ any | any | any | any | [docs](scratch.md) Definition of columns: - **IaaS Provider** is who/what provides the virtual or physical machines (nodes) that Kubernetes runs on. - **OS** is the base operating system of the nodes. - - **Config. Mgmt** is the configuration management system that helps install and maintain kubernetes software on the + - **Config. Mgmt** is the configuration management system that helps install and maintain Kubernetes software on the nodes. - **Networking** is what implements the [networking model](../../docs/admin/networking.md). Those with networking type _none_ may not support more than one node, or may support multiple VM nodes only in the same physical node. @@ -181,9 +181,9 @@ Definition of columns: - **Project**: Kubernetes Committers regularly use this configuration, so it usually works with the latest release of Kubernetes. - **Commercial**: A commercial offering with its own support arrangements. - - **Community**: Actively supported by community contributions. May not work with more recent releases of kubernetes. - - **Inactive**: No active maintainer. Not recommended for first-time K8s users, and may be deleted soon. - - **Notes** is relevant information such as version k8s used. + - **Community**: Actively supported by community contributions. May not work with more recent releases of Kubernetes. + - **Inactive**: No active maintainer. Not recommended for first-time Kubernetes users, and may be deleted soon. + - **Notes** is relevant information such as the version of Kubernetes used.