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authorMatt Bruzek <mbruzek@gmail.com>2018-01-10 16:09:52 -0600
committerMatt Bruzek <mbruzek@gmail.com>2018-01-10 16:09:52 -0600
commit2012b16de11f044e7014d4aadf5a38ad91e92a2e (patch)
tree3ddc5a5e6e8f51601fab825bd571c883304a32b7
parentfa8b17c95de8445849ff8412f1c5affd63892c11 (diff)
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Spelling and grammar changes to the advanced-configuration.md file.
-rw-r--r--playbooks/openstack/advanced-configuration.md14
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/playbooks/openstack/advanced-configuration.md b/playbooks/openstack/advanced-configuration.md
index 2c9b70b5f..0eb51e4b5 100644
--- a/playbooks/openstack/advanced-configuration.md
+++ b/playbooks/openstack/advanced-configuration.md
@@ -133,7 +133,7 @@ You can also access the OpenShift cluster with a web browser by going to:
https://master-0.openshift.example.com:8443
Note that for this to work, the OpenShift nodes must be accessible
-from your computer and it's DNS configuration must use the cruster's
+from your computer and its DNS configuration must use the cluster's
DNS.
@@ -153,7 +153,7 @@ openstack stack delete --wait --yes openshift.example.com
Pay special attention to the values in the first paragraph -- these
will depend on your OpenStack environment.
-Note that the provsisioning playbooks update the original Neutron subnet
+Note that the provisioning playbooks update the original Neutron subnet
created with the Heat stack to point to the configured DNS servers.
So the provisioned cluster nodes will start using those natively as
default nameservers. Technically, this allows to deploy OpenShift clusters
@@ -162,7 +162,7 @@ without dnsmasq proxies.
The `openshift_openstack_clusterid` and `openshift_openstack_public_dns_domain`
will form the cluster's public DNS domain all your servers will be under. With
the default values, this will be `openshift.example.com`. For workloads, the
-default subdomain is 'apps'. That sudomain can be set as well by the
+default subdomain is 'apps'. That subdomain can be set as well by the
`openshift_openstack_app_subdomain` variable in the inventory.
If you want to use a two sets of hostnames for public and private/prefixed DNS
@@ -334,7 +334,7 @@ or your trusted network. The most important is the `openshift_openstack_node_ing
that restricts public access to the deployed DNS server and cluster
nodes' ephemeral ports range.
-Note, the command ``curl https://api.ipify.org`` helps fiding an external
+Note, the command ``curl https://api.ipify.org`` helps finding an external
IP address of your box (the ansible admin node).
There is also the `manage_packages` variable (defaults to True) you
@@ -415,7 +415,7 @@ OpenStack)[openstack] for more information.
[openstack]: https://docs.openshift.org/latest/install_config/configuring_openstack.html
-Next, we need to instruct OpenShift to use the Cinder volume for it's
+Next, we need to instruct OpenShift to use the Cinder volume for its
registry. Again in `OSEv3.yml`:
#openshift_hosted_registry_storage_kind: openstack
@@ -470,12 +470,12 @@ The **Cinder volume ID**, **filesystem** and **volume size** variables
must correspond to the values in your volume. The volume ID must be
the **UUID** of the Cinder volume, *not its name*.
-We can do formate the volume for you if you ask for it in
+The volume can also be formatted if you configure it in
`inventory/group_vars/all.yml`:
openshift_openstack_prepare_and_format_registry_volume: true
-**NOTE:** doing so **will destroy any data that's currently on the volume**!
+**NOTE:** Formatting **will destroy any data that's currently on the volume**!
You can also run the registry setup playbook directly: