Change deployment group (#7112)
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@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ This is a living document. If you think of something that is not on this list bu
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- To facilitate rolling updates, include version info in replication controller names, for example as a suffix to the name. It is useful to set a `version` label as well. The rolling update creates a new controller as opposed to modifying the existing controller. So, there will be issues with version-agnostic controller names. See the [documentation](/docs/tasks/run-application/rolling-update-replication-controller/) on the rolling-update command for more detail.
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- To facilitate rolling updates, include version info in replication controller names, for example as a suffix to the name. It is useful to set a `version` label as well. The rolling update creates a new controller as opposed to modifying the existing controller. So, there will be issues with version-agnostic controller names. See the [documentation](/docs/tasks/run-application/rolling-update-replication-controller/) on the rolling-update command for more detail.
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Note that the [Deployment](/docs/concepts/workloads/controllers/deployment/) object obviates the need to manage replication controller `version names`. A desired state of an object is described by a Deployment, and if changes to that spec are _applied_, the deployment controller changes the actual state to the desired state at a controlled rate. (Deployment objects are currently part of the [`extensions` API Group](/docs/concepts/overview/kubernetes-api/#api-groups).)
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Note that the [Deployment](/docs/concepts/workloads/controllers/deployment/) object obviates the need to manage replication controller `version names`. A desired state of an object is described by a Deployment, and if changes to that spec are _applied_, the deployment controller changes the actual state to the desired state at a controlled rate. (Deployment objects are currently part of the [`apps` API Group](/docs/concepts/overview/kubernetes-api/#api-groups).)
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- You can manipulate labels for debugging. Because Kubernetes replication controllers and services match to pods using labels, this allows you to remove a pod from being considered by a controller, or served traffic by a service, by removing the relevant selector labels. If you remove the labels of an existing pod, its controller will create a new pod to take its place. This is a useful way to debug a previously "live" pod in a quarantine environment. See the [`kubectl label`](/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/labels/) command.
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- You can manipulate labels for debugging. Because Kubernetes replication controllers and services match to pods using labels, this allows you to remove a pod from being considered by a controller, or served traffic by a service, by removing the relevant selector labels. If you remove the labels of an existing pod, its controller will create a new pod to take its place. This is a useful way to debug a previously "live" pod in a quarantine environment. See the [`kubectl label`](/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/labels/) command.
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