docs: fix ior to or

pull/6/head
Brandon Philips 2015-03-03 14:17:42 -08:00
parent 084c08e452
commit 5bddd99a76
1 changed files with 1 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -57,7 +57,7 @@ resourceRequirementSpec: [
]
```
Where:
* _request_ [optional]: the amount of resources being requested, or that were requested and have been allocated. Scheduler algorithms will use these quantities to test feasibility (whether a pod will fit onto a node). If a container (or pod) tries to use more resources than its _request_, any associated SLOs are voided - e.g., the program it is running may be throttled (compressible resource types), or the attempt may be denied. If _request_ is omitted for a container, it defaults to _limit_ if that is explicitly specified, otherwise to an implementation-defined value; this will always be 0 for a user-defined resource type. If _request_ is omitted for a pod, it defaults to the sum of the (explicit ior implicit) _request_ values for the containers it encloses.
* _request_ [optional]: the amount of resources being requested, or that were requested and have been allocated. Scheduler algorithms will use these quantities to test feasibility (whether a pod will fit onto a node). If a container (or pod) tries to use more resources than its _request_, any associated SLOs are voided - e.g., the program it is running may be throttled (compressible resource types), or the attempt may be denied. If _request_ is omitted for a container, it defaults to _limit_ if that is explicitly specified, otherwise to an implementation-defined value; this will always be 0 for a user-defined resource type. If _request_ is omitted for a pod, it defaults to the sum of the (explicit or implicit) _request_ values for the containers it encloses.
* _limit_ [optional]: an upper bound or cap on the maximum amount of resources that will be made available to a container or pod; if a container or pod uses more resources than its _limit_, it may be terminated. The _limit_ defaults to "unbounded"; in practice, this probably means the capacity of an enclosing container, pod, or node, but may result in non-deterministic behavior, especially for memory.