From aff675634fabf9e01d5fc700d24e26522a8373a5 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Bahman Nikkhahan Date: Mon, 4 May 2020 22:57:48 +1000 Subject: [PATCH] Remove extra text Remove additional "Networking" text --- .../windows/intro-windows-in-kubernetes.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/content/en/docs/setup/production-environment/windows/intro-windows-in-kubernetes.md b/content/en/docs/setup/production-environment/windows/intro-windows-in-kubernetes.md index e8e23b8574..78e61d4588 100644 --- a/content/en/docs/setup/production-environment/windows/intro-windows-in-kubernetes.md +++ b/content/en/docs/setup/production-environment/windows/intro-windows-in-kubernetes.md @@ -263,7 +263,7 @@ As a result, the following storage functionality is not supported on Windows nod Windows Container Networking differs in some important ways from Linux networking. The [Microsoft documentation for Windows Container Networking](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/virtualization/windowscontainers/container-networking/architecture) contains additional details and background. -The Windows host networking networking service and virtual switch implement namespacing and can create virtual NICs as needed for a pod or container. However, many configurations such as DNS, routes, and metrics are stored in the Windows registry database rather than /etc/... files as they are on Linux. The Windows registry for the container is separate from that of the host, so concepts like mapping /etc/resolv.conf from the host into a container don't have the same effect they would on Linux. These must be configured using Windows APIs run in the context of that container. Therefore CNI implementations need to call the HNS instead of relying on file mappings to pass network details into the pod or container. +The Windows host networking service and virtual switch implement namespacing and can create virtual NICs as needed for a pod or container. However, many configurations such as DNS, routes, and metrics are stored in the Windows registry database rather than /etc/... files as they are on Linux. The Windows registry for the container is separate from that of the host, so concepts like mapping /etc/resolv.conf from the host into a container don't have the same effect they would on Linux. These must be configured using Windows APIs run in the context of that container. Therefore CNI implementations need to call the HNS instead of relying on file mappings to pass network details into the pod or container. The following networking functionality is not supported on Windows nodes