Commit 742a9c83 authored by Jason Colyer's avatar Jason Colyer

Added Evan's suggestions

parent 54330656
...@@ -113,18 +113,13 @@ To add an existing Kubernetes cluster to your project: ...@@ -113,18 +113,13 @@ To add an existing Kubernetes cluster to your project:
After a couple of minutes, your cluster will be ready to go. You can now proceed After a couple of minutes, your cluster will be ready to go. You can now proceed
to install some [pre-defined applications](#installing-applications). to install some [pre-defined applications](#installing-applications).
If you need to determine some of the above values, the following should prove helpful: To determine the:
- The API URL: - API URL, run `kubectl cluster-info | grep 'Kubernetes master' | awk '/http/ {print $NF}'`
- You can get this via the command: `kubectl cluster-info | grep 'Kubernetes master' | awk '/http/ {print $NF}'` - Token:
- The Token: 1. List the secrets by running `kubectl get secrets`. Note the name of the secret you need the token for.
- You will first need to determine which secret you need the token for. 2. Get the token for the noted secret by running `kubectl get secret <SECRET_NAME> -o jsonpath="{['data']['token']}" | base64 -D`
- To list the secrets, run the command: `kubectl get secrets` - CA Certificate, run `kubectl get secret <secret name> -o jsonpath="{['data']['ca\.crt']}" | base64 -D`
- Determine which secret you want the token for
- Run this command to get the token: `kubectl get secret <SECRET_NAME> -o jsonpath="{['data']['token']}" | base64 -D`
- Replace `<SECRET_NAME>` with the secret you want the token for
- The CA Certificate:
- You can determine the certificate via this command: `kubectl get secret <secret name> -o jsonpath="{['data']['ca\.crt']}" | base64 -D`
## Security implications ## Security implications
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