diff --git a/guide/deployment_k8s.md b/guide/deployment_k8s.md index 7b7f00ee..41fd3607 100644 --- a/guide/deployment_k8s.md +++ b/guide/deployment_k8s.md @@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ > Note: The best place to start is the README file in the faas or faas-netes repo. -This guide is for deployment to a vanilla Kubernetes 1.8 cluster running on Linux hosts. It is not a hand-book, please see the set of guides available at [openfaas/guide](https://github.com/openfaas/faas/tree/master/guide). +This guide is for deployment to a vanilla Kubernetes 1.8 cluster running on Linux hosts. It is not a hand-book, please see the set of guides and blogs posts available at [openfaas/guide](https://github.com/openfaas/faas/tree/master/guide). ## Kubernetes @@ -24,7 +24,6 @@ A Helm chart is provided `faas-netes` repo. * [OpenFaaS Helm chart](https://github.com/openfaas/faas-netes/blob/master/HELM.md) - ### 2.0b Deploy OpenFaaS * Clone the code @@ -40,7 +39,7 @@ $ cd faas-netes $ kubectl apply -f ./faas.yml,monitoring.yml,rbac.yml ``` -### 3.0 +### 3.0 Use OpenFaaS That's it. You now have OpenFaaS deployed. @@ -156,7 +155,7 @@ $ echo -n "verbose" | faas-cli invoke --gateway http://kubernetes-ip:31112 nodei ## Asynchronous functions -Asynchronous invocation works by queuing requests with NATS Streaminig. +Asynchronous invocation works by queuing requests with NATS Streaming. An alternative implementation is available with Kafka in an [open PR](https://github.com/openfaas/faas/pull/311). Deploy the asynchronous stack like this (or use the helm chart with the async override)