diff --git a/tutorials/get-started-kubernetes-storage/index.mdx b/tutorials/get-started-kubernetes-storage/index.mdx index 4edb9323cd..c62e6588f2 100644 --- a/tutorials/get-started-kubernetes-storage/index.mdx +++ b/tutorials/get-started-kubernetes-storage/index.mdx @@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ What kind of applications need to use persistent volumes? To answer this, we mus **Stateless** applications do not need to load or save data: each request to the application is independent. There may be data in the payload of the request, but has not been retrieved from a previously saved state. A request to a search engine is a good example of this. -**Stateful** applications **do** need to save and load data. Most modern applications are stateless, such as online banking which needs to be able to store and retrieve all your transaction history, and online shopping which stores and remembers your previous orders. To run stateful applications in Kubernetes, we need to provision persistent storage volumes where they can store the data that gives them their state. +**Stateful** applications **do** need to save and load data. Most modern applications are stateful, such as online banking which needs to be able to store and retrieve all your transaction history, and online shopping which stores and remembers your previous orders. To run stateful applications in Kubernetes, we need to provision persistent storage volumes where they can store the data that gives them their state. | Stateless applications | Stateful applications | | ----------------------------------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------- | @@ -236,4 +236,4 @@ Try creating [snapshots](/storage/block/how-to/create-a-snapshot/) for your volu You can make snapshots by creating a manifest for a **VolumeSnapshot** object and applying it with kubectl. Refer to the [official Kubernetes documentation](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/volume-snapshots/) for help with this. You can then check the creation of the snapshot in the Storage > Block Storage > Snapshots section of the console. -It is also possible to create volumes from existing snapshots, again full details are available in the [official Kubernetes documentation](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/persistent-volumes/#volume-snapshot-and-restore-volume-from-snapshot-support). \ No newline at end of file +It is also possible to create volumes from existing snapshots, again full details are available in the [official Kubernetes documentation](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/persistent-volumes/#volume-snapshot-and-restore-volume-from-snapshot-support).