From 1b03b19dc1709d53abd46c5f1b61a2cbe7aa7cf5 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: makocchi <makocchi@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 17 Jul 2018 21:55:38 +0900
Subject: [PATCH] apply content_template (#9136)

* apply task template

* change content_template to task from concept
---
 .../debug-pod-replication-controller.md       | 59 +++++++++++++------
 1 file changed, 41 insertions(+), 18 deletions(-)

diff --git a/content/en/docs/tasks/debug-application-cluster/debug-pod-replication-controller.md b/content/en/docs/tasks/debug-application-cluster/debug-pod-replication-controller.md
index 8aec219b4d..d59f3a918c 100644
--- a/content/en/docs/tasks/debug-application-cluster/debug-pod-replication-controller.md
+++ b/content/en/docs/tasks/debug-application-cluster/debug-pod-replication-controller.md
@@ -1,28 +1,41 @@
 ---
 reviewers:
 - bprashanth
-title: Debug Pods and Replication Controllers
-content_template: templates/concept
+title: Debug Pods and ReplicationControllers
+content_template: templates/task
 ---
 
 {{% capture overview %}}
 
+This page shows how to debug Pods and ReplicationControllers.
+
+{{% /capture %}}
+
+{{% capture prerequisites %}}
+
+{{< include "task-tutorial-prereqs.md" >}} {{< version-check >}}
+
+* You should be familiar with the basics of
+  [Pods](/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/pod/) and [Pod Lifecycle](/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/pod-lifecycle/).
+
+{{% /capture %}}
+
+{{% capture steps %}}
+
+## Debugging Pods
+
 The first step in debugging a pod is taking a look at it. Check the current
 state of the pod and recent events with the following command:
 
-    $ kubectl describe pods ${POD_NAME}
+```shell
+kubectl describe pods ${POD_NAME}
+```
 
 Look at the state of the containers in the pod. Are they all `Running`?  Have
 there been recent restarts?
 
 Continue debugging depending on the state of the pods.
 
-{{% /capture %}}
-
-{{< toc >}}
-
-{{% capture body %}}
-
 ### My pod stays pending
 
 If a pod is stuck in `Pending` it means that it can not be scheduled onto a
@@ -49,8 +62,10 @@ case you can try several things:
     command. Here are some example command lines that extract just the necessary
     information:
 
-      kubectl get nodes -o yaml | grep '\sname\|cpu\|memory'
-      kubectl get nodes -o json | jq '.items[] | {name: .metadata.name, cap: .status.capacity}'
+    ```shell
+    kubectl get nodes -o yaml | grep '\sname\|cpu\|memory'
+    kubectl get nodes -o json | jq '.items[] | {name: .metadata.name, cap: .status.capacity}'
+    ```
 
   The [resource quota](/docs/concepts/policy/resource-quotas/)
   feature can be configured to limit the total amount of
@@ -80,32 +95,40 @@ worker node, but it can't run on that machine. Again, the information from
 
 First, take a look at the logs of the current container:
 
-    $ kubectl logs ${POD_NAME} ${CONTAINER_NAME}
+```shell
+kubectl logs ${POD_NAME} ${CONTAINER_NAME}
+```
 
 If your container has previously crashed, you can access the previous
 container's crash log with:
 
-    $ kubectl logs --previous ${POD_NAME} ${CONTAINER_NAME}
+```shell
+kubectl logs --previous ${POD_NAME} ${CONTAINER_NAME}
+```
 
 Alternately, you can run commands inside that container with `exec`:
 
-    $ kubectl exec ${POD_NAME} -c ${CONTAINER_NAME} -- ${CMD} ${ARG1} ${ARG2} ... ${ARGN}
+```shell
+kubectl exec ${POD_NAME} -c ${CONTAINER_NAME} -- ${CMD} ${ARG1} ${ARG2} ... ${ARGN}
+```
 
 Note that `-c ${CONTAINER_NAME}` is optional and can be omitted for pods that
 only contain a single container.
 
 As an example, to look at the logs from a running Cassandra pod, you might run:
 
-    $ kubectl exec cassandra -- cat /var/log/cassandra/system.log
+```shell
+kubectl exec cassandra -- cat /var/log/cassandra/system.log
+```
 
 If none of these approaches work, you can find the host machine that the pod is
 running on and SSH into that host.
 
-## Debugging Replication Controllers
+## Debugging ReplicationControllers
 
-Replication controllers are fairly straightforward. They can either create pods
+ReplicationControllers are fairly straightforward. They can either create pods
 or they can't. If they can't create pods, then please refer to the
-[instructions above](#debugging_pods) to debug your pods.
+[instructions above](#debugging-pods) to debug your pods.
 
 You can also use `kubectl describe rc ${CONTROLLER_NAME}` to inspect events
 related to the replication controller.