From 58c7197e583f2e48eeafa7193251408c4e3afb79 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Tu Nguyen Date: Tue, 21 Jun 2022 16:13:39 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] Apply suggestions from code review Co-authored-by: David Yu Co-authored-by: trujillo-adam <47586768+trujillo-adam@users.noreply.github.com> --- .../content/docs/connect/cluster-peering/k8s.mdx | 15 ++++++++++++--- 1 file changed, 12 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/website/content/docs/connect/cluster-peering/k8s.mdx b/website/content/docs/connect/cluster-peering/k8s.mdx index 7b32d17432..0c411933d0 100644 --- a/website/content/docs/connect/cluster-peering/k8s.mdx +++ b/website/content/docs/connect/cluster-peering/k8s.mdx @@ -27,8 +27,11 @@ To create and use cluster peering connections with Kubernetes, you need at least To establish cluster peering through Kubernetes, deploy clusters with the following Helm values. + + ```yaml global: + image: "hashicorp/consul:1.13.0-alpha2" peering: enabled: true connectInject: @@ -36,13 +39,19 @@ connectInject: meshGateway: enabled: true replicas: 1 -``` - + + + +Install Consul on Kubernetes using the values file `values.yaml` using the Helm CLI. + +```shell-session +$ export HELM_RELEASE_NAME=peer1 +$ helm install ${HELM_RELEASE_NAME} hashicorp/consul --version "0.45.0" --values server.yaml ## Create a peering connection To peer Kubernetes clusters running Consul, you need to create a peering token and share it with the other cluster. -1. In “cluster-01,” create the `PeeringAcceptor` custom resource. +1. In `cluster-01`, create the `PeeringAcceptor` custom resource.