diff --git a/content/en/blog/_posts/2022-04-28-Increasing-the-security-bar-in-Ingress-NGINX/index.md b/content/en/blog/_posts/2022-04-28-Increasing-the-security-bar-in-Ingress-NGINX/index.md index dff7428219..25161b8c96 100644 --- a/content/en/blog/_posts/2022-04-28-Increasing-the-security-bar-in-Ingress-NGINX/index.md +++ b/content/en/blog/_posts/2022-04-28-Increasing-the-security-bar-in-Ingress-NGINX/index.md @@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ Linux containers (and underlying mechanisms such as kernel namespaces) work. You can read about cgroups in the Kubernetes glossary: [`cgroup`](https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/glossary/?fundamental=true#term-cgroup) and learn more about cgroups interact with namespaces in the NGINX project article [What Are Namespaces and cgroups, and How Do They Work?](https://www.nginx.com/blog/what-are-namespaces-cgroups-how-do-they-work/). (As you read that, bear in mind that Linux kernel namespaces are a different thing from -[Kubernetes namespaces](/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/namespaces/). +[Kubernetes namespaces](/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/namespaces/)). ## Skip the talk, what do I need to use this new approach?