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12
README.md
12
README.md
@@ -78,11 +78,11 @@ $ minikube start --addons=ingress --cpus=4 --cni=flannel --install-addons=true \
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Once Minikube is deployed, check if the node(s) and `kube-apiserver` communication is working as expected.
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```bash
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$ kubectl get nodes
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$ minikube kubectl -- get nodes
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NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION
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minikube Ready control-plane,master 6m28s v1.20.2
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$ kubectl get pods -A
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$ minikube kubectl -- get pods -A
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NAMESPACE NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
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ingress-nginx ingress-nginx-admission-create-tjk94 0/1 Completed 0 6m4s
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ingress-nginx ingress-nginx-admission-patch-r4pl6 0/1 Completed 0 6m4s
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@@ -97,6 +97,14 @@ kube-system kube-scheduler-minikube 1/1 Running
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kube-system storage-provisioner 1/1 Running 1 6m17s
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```
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It is not required for `kubectl` to be separately installed since it comes already wrapped inside minikube. As demonstrated above, simply prefix `minikube kubectl --` before kubectl command, i.e. `kubectl get nodes` would become `minikube kubectl -- get nodes`
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Let's create an alias for easier usage:
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```bash
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$ alias kubectl="minikube kubectl --"
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```
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Now you need to deploy AWX Operator into your cluster. Start by going to https://github.com/ansible/awx-operator/releases and making note of the latest release. Replace `<TAG>` in the URL `https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ansible/awx-operator/<TAG>/deploy/awx-operator.yaml` with the version you are deploying.
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```bash
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