Fix typos and text in manage-resources-containers.md
Fix typos and text in manage-resources-containers.mdpull/48596/head
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@ -199,7 +199,7 @@ On Linux, the container runtime typically configures
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kernel {{< glossary_tooltip text="cgroups" term_id="cgroup" >}} that apply and enforce the
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limits you defined.
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- The CPU limit defines a hard ceiling on how much CPU time that the container can use.
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- The CPU limit defines a hard ceiling on how much CPU time the container can use.
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During each scheduling interval (time slice), the Linux kernel checks to see if this
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limit is exceeded; if so, the kernel waits before allowing that cgroup to resume execution.
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- The CPU request typically defines a weighting. If several different containers (cgroups)
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@ -255,8 +255,8 @@ more likely.
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From the perspective of memory management, there are some similarities between
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when a process uses memory as a work area and when using memory-backed
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`emptyDir`. But when using memory as a volume like memory-backed `emptyDir`,
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there are additional points below that you should be careful of.
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`emptyDir`. But when using memory as a volume, like memory-backed `emptyDir`,
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there are additional points below that you should be careful of:
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* Files stored on a memory-backed volume are almost entirely managed by the
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user application. Unlike when used as a work area for a process, you can not
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