diff --git a/content/en/docs/setup/best-practices/cluster-large.md b/content/en/docs/setup/best-practices/cluster-large.md index 80169b9868..808a1c4751 100644 --- a/content/en/docs/setup/best-practices/cluster-large.md +++ b/content/en/docs/setup/best-practices/cluster-large.md @@ -9,13 +9,13 @@ weight: 10 A cluster is a set of {{< glossary_tooltip text="nodes" term_id="node" >}} (physical or virtual machines) running Kubernetes agents, managed by the {{< glossary_tooltip text="control plane" term_id="control-plane" >}}. -Kubernetes {{< param "version" >}} supports clusters with up to 5000 nodes. More specifically, +Kubernetes {{< param "version" >}} supports clusters with up to 5,000 nodes. More specifically, Kubernetes is designed to accommodate configurations that meet *all* of the following criteria: * No more than 110 pods per node -* No more than 5000 nodes -* No more than 150000 total pods -* No more than 300000 total containers +* No more than 5,000 nodes +* No more than 150,000 total pods +* No more than 300,000 total containers You can scale your cluster by adding or removing nodes. The way you do this depends on how your cluster is deployed.