This PR fixes links where the target is a redirection. The special case
is about minikube, which has been deleted recently. The dangling link
now points to `/docs/tasks/tools/` which makes no sense. This PR change
the target for `minikube` to `https://minikube.sigs.k8s.io/docs/`.
As per conversations in issue https://github.com/kubernetes/website/issues/23354,
* Removing content/en/docs/tasks/tools/install-minikube.md page
* Adding a 302 temporary redirect for /docs/tasks/tools/install-minikube/
* Updating content/en/docs/tasks/tools/_index.md with the suggestion to add buttons to make these links more visual/see-able, including aria-labels
Additionally:
* Updating minikube capitalization throughout page
* Updating text throughout page for line length
* Correcting back ticks use throughout page
Signed-off-by: Nate W <nwaddington@cncf.io>
* Update install-kubectl.md
Wrong formatting on the first curl command
* Update content/en/docs/tasks/tools/install-kubectl.md
Correct syntax
Co-authored-by: Tim Bannister <tim@scalefactory.com>
Co-authored-by: Tim Bannister <tim@scalefactory.com>
Add description metadata for each task section (English localization).
For sections that only have one page, make sure that that sole page has
description metadata set.
This change helps prepare for the migration to the Docsy theme.
* Add newlines to `none` VM driver docs
* Add note on `none` driver in minikube installation docs
Link to documentation describing possible security and data loss issues
* minikube: Add caution block to `none` vm driver
* Edit Debian-related minikube instructions
Update section on the `none` driver.
when copying/pasting the command to install the Kubernetes on Mac OS using zsh, the command results in the following error,
`The specified key does not exist.`. This is usually because of the `\` that zsh automatically inserts into the command. The best practice is to use double-quotes and this is also the standard method according to https://google.github.io/styleguide/shell.xml?showone=Quoting#Quoting
- tested on macOS with BSD's grep and GNU's. same flags, same output.
- there are some 55 CPU flags on mac, so highlighting VMX makes it
easier to grasp
- using `egrep` on linux and `grep` on mac, not necessary
- precision: the VT-x feature is NOT an OS feature...