diff --git a/docs/getting-started-guides/fedora/fedora_manual_config.md b/docs/getting-started-guides/fedora/fedora_manual_config.md index f043b29f07..be37d3b2ea 100644 --- a/docs/getting-started-guides/fedora/fedora_manual_config.md +++ b/docs/getting-started-guides/fedora/fedora_manual_config.md @@ -128,6 +128,8 @@ done ``` kubectl get minions +NAME LABELS +fed-minion ``` **The cluster should be running! Launch a test pod.** diff --git a/examples/walkthrough/README.md b/examples/walkthrough/README.md index cb15116183..b2157367ca 100644 --- a/examples/walkthrough/README.md +++ b/examples/walkthrough/README.md @@ -11,6 +11,7 @@ Trivially, a single container might be a pod. For example, you can express a si ```yaml apiVersion: v1beta1 +kind: Pod id: www desiredState: manifest: @@ -31,6 +32,7 @@ Now that's great for a static web server, but what about persistent storage? We ```yaml apiVersion: v1beta1 +kind: Pod id: storage desiredState: manifest: @@ -88,6 +90,7 @@ However, often you want to have two different containers that work together. An ```yaml apiVersion: v1beta1 +kind: Pod id: www desiredState: manifest: