--- --- To validate that your node(s) have been added, run: ```shell kubectl get nodes ``` That should show something like: ```shell NAME LABELS STATUS 10.240.99.26 kubernetes.io/hostname=10.240.99.26 Ready 127.0.0.1 kubernetes.io/hostname=127.0.0.1 Ready ``` If the status of any node is `Unknown` or `NotReady` your cluster is broken, double check that all containers are running properly, and if all else fails, contact us on [Slack](/docs/troubleshooting/#slack). ### Run an application ```shell kubectl -s http://localhost:8080 run nginx --image=nginx --port=80 ``` now run `docker ps` you should see nginx running. You may need to wait a few minutes for the image to get pulled. ### Expose it as a service ```shell kubectl expose rc nginx --port=80 ``` Run the following command to obtain the IP of this service we just created. There are two IPs, the first one is internal (CLUSTER_IP), and the second one is the external load-balanced IP. ```shell kubectl get svc nginx ``` Alternatively, you can obtain only the first IP (CLUSTER_IP) by running: ```shell {% raw %}kubectl get svc nginx --template={{.spec.clusterIP}}{% endraw %} ``` Hit the webserver with the first IP (CLUSTER_IP): ```shell curl ``` Note that you will need run this curl command on your boot2docker VM if you are running on OS X. ### Scaling Now try to scale up the nginx you created before: ```shell kubectl scale rc nginx --replicas=3 ``` And list the pods ```shell kubectl get pods ``` You should see pods landing on the newly added machine.