Reorg kube docs

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@ -3,18 +3,20 @@ layout: "docs"
page_title: "Install Consul"
sidebar_current: "docs-install-install"
description: |-
Installing Consul is simple. You can download a precompiled binary or compile
from source. This page details both methods.
Installing Consul is simple. You can download a precompiled binary, compile
from source or run on Kubernetes. This page details these methods.
---
# Install Consul
Installing Consul is simple. There are two approaches to installing Consul:
Installing Consul is simple. There are three approaches to installing Consul:
1. Using a [precompiled binary](#precompiled-binaries)
1. Installing [from source](#compiling-from-source)
1. Installing [on Kubernetes](/docs/platform/k8s/run.html)
Downloading a precompiled binary is easiest, and we provide downloads over TLS
along with SHA256 sums to verify the binary. We also distribute a PGP signature
with the SHA256 sums that can be verified.

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@ -1,15 +1,14 @@
---
layout: "docs"
page_title: "Out-of-Cluster Nodes - Kubernetes"
sidebar_current: "docs-platform-k8s-ooc-nodes"
page_title: "Consul Clients Outside of Kubernetes - Kubernetes"
sidebar_current: "docs-platform-k8s-run-clients-outside"
description: |-
Non-Kubernetes nodes can join a Consul cluster running within Kubernetes. These are considered "out-of-cluster" nodes.
Consul clients running on non-Kubernetes nodes can join a Consul cluster running within Kubernetes.
---
# Out-of-Cluster Nodes
# Consul Clients Outside Kubernetes
Non-Kubernetes nodes can join a Consul cluster running within Kubernetes.
These are considered "out-of-cluster" nodes.
Consul clients running on non-Kubernetes nodes can join a Consul cluster running within Kubernetes.
## Auto-join
@ -37,8 +36,8 @@ different pods to have different exposed ports.
## Networking
Consul typically requires a fully connected network. Therefore, out-of-cluster
nodes joining a cluster running within Kubernetes must be able to communicate
Consul typically requires a fully connected network. Therefore,
nodes outside of Kubernetes joining a cluster running within Kubernetes must be able to communicate
to pod IPs or Kubernetes node IPs via the network.
-> **Consul Enterprise customers** may use

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@ -0,0 +1,115 @@
---
layout: "docs"
page_title: "Consul Enterprise"
sidebar_current: "docs-platform-k8s-run-consul-ent"
description: |-
Configuration for running Consul Enterprise
---
# Consul Enterprise
You can use this Helm chart to deploy Consul Enterprise by following a few extra steps.
Find the license file that you received in your welcome email. It should have a `.hclic` extension. You will use the contents of this file to create a Kubernetes secret before installing the Helm chart.
You can use the following commands to create the secret with name `consul-ent-license` and key `key`:
```bash
secret=$(cat 1931d1f4-bdfd-6881-f3f5-19349374841f.hclic)
kubectl create secret generic consul-ent-license --from-literal="key=${secret}"
```
-> **Note:** If you cannot find your `.hclic` file, please contact your sales team or Technical Account Manager.
In your `config.yaml`, change the value of `global.image` to one of the enterprise [release tags](https://hub.docker.com/r/hashicorp/consul-enterprise/tags).
```yaml
# config.yaml
global:
image: "hashicorp/consul-enterprise:1.4.3-ent"
```
Add the name and key of the secret you just created to `server.enterpriseLicense`.
```yaml
# config.yaml
global:
image: "hashicorp/consul-enterprise:1.4.3-ent"
server:
enterpriseLicense:
secretName: "consul-ent-license"
secretKey: "key"
```
Now run `helm install`:
```bash
$ helm install --wait hashicorp ./consul-helm -f config.yaml
```
Once the cluster is up, you can verify the nodes are running Consul Enterprise by
using the `consul license get` command.
First, forward your local port 8500 to the Consul servers so you can run `consul`
commands locally against the Consul servers in Kubernetes:
```bash
$ kubectl port-forward service/hashicorp-consul-server 8500:8500
```
In a separate tab, run the `consul license get` command (if using ACLs see below):
```bash
$ consul license get
License is valid
License ID: 1931d1f4-bdfd-6881-f3f5-19349374841f
Customer ID: b2025a4a-8fdd-f268-95ce-1704723b9996
Expires At: 2020-03-09 03:59:59.999 +0000 UTC
Datacenter: *
Package: premium
Licensed Features:
Automated Backups
Automated Upgrades
Enhanced Read Scalability
Network Segments
Redundancy Zone
Advanced Network Federation
$ consul members
Node Address Status Type Build Protocol DC Segment
hashicorp-consul-server-0 10.60.0.187:8301 alive server 1.4.3+ent 2 dc1 <all>
hashicorp-consul-server-1 10.60.1.229:8301 alive server 1.4.3+ent 2 dc1 <all>
hashicorp-consul-server-2 10.60.2.197:8301 alive server 1.4.3+ent 2 dc1 <all>
```
If you get an error:
```bash
Error getting license: invalid character 'r' looking for beginning of value
```
Then you have likely enabled ACLs. You need to specify your ACL token when
running the `license get` command. First, assign the ACL token to the `CONSUL_HTTP_TOKEN` environment variable:
```bash
$ export CONSUL_HTTP_TOKEN=$(kubectl get secrets/hashicorp-consul-bootstrap-acl-token --template={{.data.token}} | base64 -D)
```
Now the token will be used when running Consul commands:
```bash
$ consul license get
License is valid
License ID: 1931d1f4-bdfd-6881-f3f5-19349374841f
Customer ID: b2025a4a-8fdd-f268-95ce-1704723b9996
Expires At: 2020-03-09 03:59:59.999 +0000 UTC
Datacenter: *
Package: premium
Licensed Features:
Automated Backups
Automated Upgrades
Enhanced Read Scalability
Network Segments
Redundancy Zone
Advanced Network Federation
```

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@ -353,113 +353,6 @@ to run the sync program.
}
```
## Using the Helm Chart to deploy Consul Enterprise
You can also use this Helm chart to deploy Consul Enterprise by following a few extra steps.
Find the license file that you received in your welcome email. It should have the extension `.hclic`. You will use the contents of this file to create a Kubernetes secret before installing the Helm chart.
You can use the following commands to create the secret:
```bash
secret=$(cat 1931d1f4-bdfd-6881-f3f5-19349374841f.hclic)
kubectl create secret generic consul-ent-license --from-literal="key=${secret}"
```
-> **Note:** If you cannot find your `.hclic` file, please contact your sales team or Technical Account Manager.
In your `config.yaml`, change the value of `global.image` to one of the enterprise [release tags](https://hub.docker.com/r/hashicorp/consul-enterprise/tags).
```yaml
# config.yaml
global:
image: "hashicorp/consul-enterprise:1.4.3-ent"
```
Add the name of the secret you just created to `server.enterpriseLicense`.
```yaml
# config.yaml
global:
image: "hashicorp/consul-enterprise:1.4.3-ent"
server:
enterpriseLicense:
secretName: "consul-ent-license"
secretKey: "key"
```
Now run `helm install`:
```bash
$ helm install --wait hashicorp ./consul-helm -f config.yaml
```
Once the cluster is up, you can verify the nodes are running Consul Enterprise by
using the `consul license get` command.
First, forward your local port 8500 to the Consul servers so you can run `consul`
commands locally against the Consul servers in Kubernetes:
```bash
$ kubectl port-forward service/hashicorp-consul-server 8500:8500
```
In a separate tab, run the `consul license get` command (if using ACLs see below):
```bash
$ consul license get
License is valid
License ID: 1931d1f4-bdfd-6881-f3f5-19349374841f
Customer ID: b2025a4a-8fdd-f268-95ce-1704723b9996
Expires At: 2020-03-09 03:59:59.999 +0000 UTC
Datacenter: *
Package: premium
Licensed Features:
Automated Backups
Automated Upgrades
Enhanced Read Scalability
Network Segments
Redundancy Zone
Advanced Network Federation
$ consul members
Node Address Status Type Build Protocol DC Segment
hashicorp-consul-server-0 10.60.0.187:8301 alive server 1.4.3+ent 2 dc1 <all>
hashicorp-consul-server-1 10.60.1.229:8301 alive server 1.4.3+ent 2 dc1 <all>
hashicorp-consul-server-2 10.60.2.197:8301 alive server 1.4.3+ent 2 dc1 <all>
```
If you get an error:
```bash
Error getting license: invalid character 'r' looking for beginning of value
```
Then you have likely enabled ACLs. You need to specify your ACL token when
running the `license get` command. First, get the ACL token:
```bash
$ kubectl get secrets/hashicorp-consul-bootstrap-acl-token --template={{.data.token}} | base64 -D
4dae8373-b4d7-8009-9880-a796850caef9%
```
Now use the token when running the `license get` command:
```bash
$ consul license get -token=4dae8373-b4d7-8009-9880-a796850caef9
License is valid
License ID: 1931d1f4-bdfd-6881-f3f5-19349374841f
Customer ID: b2025a4a-8fdd-f268-95ce-1704723b9996
Expires At: 2020-03-09 03:59:59.999 +0000 UTC
Datacenter: *
Package: premium
Licensed Features:
Automated Backups
Automated Upgrades
Enhanced Read Scalability
Network Segments
Redundancy Zone
Advanced Network Federation
```
## Helm Chart Examples

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@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
---
layout: "docs"
page_title: "Operations"
sidebar_current: "docs-platform-k8s-ops"
description: |-
Operating Consul on Kubernetes
---
# Operations
This section holds documentation on various operational tasks you may need to perform.
* [Upgrading](/docs/platform/k8s/upgrading.html) - Upgrading your Consul servers or clients and the Helm chart.
* [Uninstalling](/docs/platform/k8s/uninstalling.html) - Uninstaling the Helm chart.

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@ -0,0 +1,32 @@
---
layout: "docs"
page_title: "Predefined PVCs"
sidebar_current: "docs-platform-k8s-run-pvcs"
description: |-
Using predefined Persistent Volume Claims
---
# Predefined Persistent Volume Claims (PVCs)
The only way to use a pre-created PVC is to name them in the format Kubernetes expects:
```
data-<kubernetes namespace>-<helm release name>-consul-server-<ordinal>
```
The Kubernetes namespace you are installing into, Helm release name, and ordinal
must match between your Consul servers and your pre-created PVCs. You only
need as many PVCs as you have Consul servers. For example, given a Kubernetes
namespace of "vault," a release name of "consul," and 5 servers, you would need
to create PVCs with the following names:
```
data-vault-consul-consul-server-0
data-vault-consul-consul-server-1
data-vault-consul-consul-server-2
data-vault-consul-consul-server-3
data-vault-consul-consul-server-4
```
If you are using your own storage, you'll need to configure a storage class. See the
documentation for configuring storage classes [here](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/storage-classes/).

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@ -117,33 +117,6 @@ If you've already installed Consul and want to make changes, you'll need to run
`helm upgrade`. See the [Upgrading Consul on Kubernetes](/docs/platform/k8s/run.html#upgrading-consul-on-kubernetes)
section for more details.
## Uninstalling Consul
Consul can be uninstalled via the `helm delete` command:
```bash
$ helm delete hashicorp
release "hashicorp" uninstalled
```
-> If using Helm 2, run `helm delete --purge hashicorp`
After deleting the Helm release, you need to delete the `PersistentVolumeClaim`'s
for the persistent volumes that store Consul's data. These are not deleted by Helm due to a [bug](https://github.com/helm/helm/issues/5156).
To delete, run:
```bash
$ kubectl get pvc -l chart=consul-helm
NAME STATUS VOLUME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES STORAGECLASS AGE
data-default-hashicorp-consul-server-0 Bound pvc-32cb296b-1213-11ea-b6f0-42010a8001db 10Gi RWO standard 17m
data-default-hashicorp-consul-server-1 Bound pvc-32d79919-1213-11ea-b6f0-42010a8001db 10Gi RWO standard 17m
data-default-hashicorp-consul-server-2 Bound pvc-331581ea-1213-11ea-b6f0-42010a8001db 10Gi RWO standard 17m
$ kubectl delete pvc -l chart=consul-helm
persistentvolumeclaim "data-default-hashicorp-consul-server-0" deleted
persistentvolumeclaim "data-default-hashicorp-consul-server-1" deleted
persistentvolumeclaim "data-default-hashicorp-consul-server-2" deleted
```
## Viewing the Consul UI
The Consul UI is enabled by default when using the Helm chart.
@ -162,44 +135,6 @@ the [`ui.service` chart values](/docs/platform/k8s/helm.html#v-ui-service).
This service will allow requests to the Consul servers so it should
not be open to the world.
## Joining an Existing Consul Cluster
If you have a Consul cluster already running, you can configure your
Kubernetes nodes to join this existing cluster.
```yaml
# config.yaml
global:
enabled: false
client:
enabled: true
join:
- "provider=my-cloud config=val ..."
```
The `config.yaml` file to configure the Helm chart sets the proper
configuration to join an existing cluster.
The `global.enabled` value first disables all chart components by default
so that each component is opt-in. This allows us to _only_ setup the client
agents. We then opt-in to the client agents by setting `client.enabled` to
`true`.
Next, `client.join` is set to an array of valid
[`-retry-join` values](/docs/agent/options.html#retry-join). In the
example above, a fake [cloud auto-join](/docs/agent/cloud-auto-join.html)
value is specified. This should be set to resolve to the proper addresses of
your existing Consul cluster.
-> **Networking:** Note that for the Kubernetes nodes to join an existing
cluster, the nodes (and specifically the agent pods) must be able to connect
to all other server and client agents inside and _outside_ of Kubernetes.
If this isn't possible, consider running the Kubernetes agents as a separate
DC or adopting Enterprise for
[network segments](/docs/enterprise/network-segments/index.html).
## Accessing the Consul HTTP API
The Consul HTTP API should be accessed by communicating to the local agent
@ -274,86 +209,6 @@ spec:
consul kv put hello world
```
## Upgrading Consul on Kubernetes
To upgrade Consul on Kubernetes, we follow the same pattern as
[generally upgrading Consul](/docs/upgrading.html), except we can use
the Helm chart to step through a rolling deploy. It is important to understand
how to [generally upgrade Consul](/docs/upgrading.html) before reading this
section.
Upgrading Consul on Kubernetes will follow the same pattern: each server
will be updated one-by-one. After that is successful, the clients will
be updated in batches.
### Upgrading Consul Servers
To initiate the upgrade, change the `server.image` value to the
desired Consul version. For illustrative purposes, the example below will
use `consul:123.456`. Also set the `server.updatePartition` value
_equal to the number of server replicas_:
```yaml
server:
image: "consul:123.456"
replicas: 3
updatePartition: 3
```
The `updatePartition` value controls how many instances of the server
cluster are updated. Only instances with an index _greater than_ the
`updatePartition` value are updated (zero-indexed). Therefore, by setting
it equal to replicas, none should update yet.
Next, run the upgrade. You should run this with `--dry-run` first to verify
the changes that will be sent to the Kubernetes cluster.
```
$ helm upgrade consul ./
...
```
This should cause no changes (although the resource will be updated). If
everything is stable, begin by decreasing the `updatePartition` value by one,
and running `helm upgrade` again. This should cause the first Consul server
to be stopped and restarted with the new image.
Wait until the Consul server cluster is healthy again (30s to a few minutes)
then decrease `updatePartition` and upgrade again. Continue until
`updatePartition` is `0`. At this point, you may remove the
`updatePartition` configuration. Your server upgrade is complete.
### Upgrading Consul Clients
With the servers upgraded, it is time to upgrade the clients. To upgrade
the clients, set the `client.image` value to the desired Consul version.
Then, run `helm upgrade`. This will upgrade the clients in batches, waiting
until the clients come up healthy before continuing.
### Using Existing Persistent Volume Claims (PVCs)
The only way to use a pre-created PVC is to name them in the format Kubernetes expects:
```
data-<kubernetes namespace>-<helm release name>-consul-server-<ordinal>
```
The Kubernetes namespace you are installing into, helm release name, and ordinal
must match between your Consul servers and your pre-created PVCs. You only
need as many PVCs as you have Consul servers. For example, given a Kubernetes
namespace of "vault" and a release name of "consul" and 5 servers, you would need
to create PVCs with the following names:
```
data-vault-consul-consul-server-0
data-vault-consul-consul-server-1
data-vault-consul-consul-server-2
data-vault-consul-consul-server-3
data-vault-consul-consul-server-4
```
If you are using your own storage, you'll need to configure a storage class. See the
documentation for configuring storage classes [here](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/storage-classes/).
## Architecture

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@ -0,0 +1,54 @@
---
layout: "docs"
page_title: "Consul Servers Outside of Kubernetes - Kubernetes"
sidebar_current: "docs-platform-k8s-run-servers-outside"
description: |-
Running Consul servers outside of Kubernetes
---
# Consul Servers Outside of Kubernetes
If you have a Consul cluster already running, you can configure your
Consul clients inside Kubernetes to join this existing cluster.
The below `config.yaml` file shows how to configure the Helm chart to install
Consul clients that will join an existing cluster.
The `global.enabled` value first disables all chart components by default
so that each component is opt-in. This allows us to _only_ setup the client
agents. We then opt-in to the client agents by setting `client.enabled` to
`true`.
Next, `client.exposeGossipPorts` can be set to true or false depending on if
you want the clients to be exposed on the Kubernetes node IPs (`true`) or
their pod IPs (`false`).
Finally, `client.join` is set to an array of valid
[`-retry-join` values](/docs/agent/options.html#retry-join). In the
example above, a fake [cloud auto-join](/docs/agent/cloud-auto-join.html)
value is specified. This should be set to resolve to the proper addresses of
your existing Consul cluster.
```yaml
# config.yaml
global:
enabled: false
client:
enabled: true
# Set this to true to expose the Consul clients using the Kubernetes node
# IPs. If false, the pod IPs must be routable from the external servers.
exposeGossipPorts: true
join:
- "provider=my-cloud config=val ..."
```
-> **Networking:** Note that for the Kubernetes nodes to join an existing
cluster, the nodes (and specifically the agent pods) must be able to connect
to all other server and client agents inside and _outside_ of Kubernetes.
If this isn't possible, consider running a separate Consul cluster inside Kubernetes
and federating it with your cluster outside Kubernetes.
You may also consider adopting Consul Enterprise for
[network segments](/docs/enterprise/network-segments/index.html).

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@ -0,0 +1,34 @@
---
layout: "docs"
page_title: "Uninstalling"
sidebar_current: "docs-platform-k8s-ops-uninstalling"
description: |-
Uninstalling Consul on Kubernetes
---
# Uninstalling Consul
Consul can be uninstalled via the `helm delete` command:
```bash
$ helm delete hashicorp
release "hashicorp" uninstalled
```
-> If using Helm 2, run `helm delete --purge hashicorp`
After deleting the Helm release, you need to delete the `PersistentVolumeClaim`'s
for the persistent volumes that store Consul's data. These are not deleted by Helm due to a [bug](https://github.com/helm/helm/issues/5156).
To delete, run:
```bash
$ kubectl get pvc -l chart=consul-helm
NAME STATUS VOLUME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES STORAGECLASS AGE
data-default-hashicorp-consul-server-0 Bound pvc-32cb296b-1213-11ea-b6f0-42010a8001db 10Gi RWO standard 17m
data-default-hashicorp-consul-server-1 Bound pvc-32d79919-1213-11ea-b6f0-42010a8001db 10Gi RWO standard 17m
data-default-hashicorp-consul-server-2 Bound pvc-331581ea-1213-11ea-b6f0-42010a8001db 10Gi RWO standard 17m
$ kubectl delete pvc -l chart=consul-helm
persistentvolumeclaim "data-default-hashicorp-consul-server-0" deleted
persistentvolumeclaim "data-default-hashicorp-consul-server-1" deleted
persistentvolumeclaim "data-default-hashicorp-consul-server-2" deleted
```

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@ -0,0 +1,63 @@
---
layout: "docs"
page_title: "Upgrading"
sidebar_current: "docs-platform-k8s-ops-upgrading"
description: |-
Upgrading Consul on Kubernetes
---
# Upgrading Consul on Kubernetes
To upgrade Consul on Kubernetes, we follow the same pattern as
[generally upgrading Consul](/docs/upgrading.html), except we can use
the Helm chart to step through a rolling deploy. It is important to understand
how to [generally upgrade Consul](/docs/upgrading.html) before reading this
section.
Upgrading Consul on Kubernetes will follow the same pattern: each server
will be updated one-by-one. After that is successful, the clients will
be updated in batches.
## Upgrading Consul Servers
To initiate the upgrade, change the `server.image` value to the
desired Consul version. For illustrative purposes, the example below will
use `consul:123.456`. Also set the `server.updatePartition` value
_equal to the number of server replicas_:
```yaml
server:
image: "consul:123.456"
replicas: 3
updatePartition: 3
```
The `updatePartition` value controls how many instances of the server
cluster are updated. Only instances with an index _greater than_ the
`updatePartition` value are updated (zero-indexed). Therefore, by setting
it equal to replicas, none should update yet.
Next, run the upgrade. You should run this with `--dry-run` first to verify
the changes that will be sent to the Kubernetes cluster.
```
$ helm upgrade consul ./
...
```
This should cause no changes (although the resource will be updated). If
everything is stable, begin by decreasing the `updatePartition` value by one,
and running `helm upgrade` again. This should cause the first Consul server
to be stopped and restarted with the new image.
Wait until the Consul server cluster is healthy again (30s to a few minutes)
then decrease `updatePartition` and upgrade again. Continue until
`updatePartition` is `0`. At this point, you may remove the
`updatePartition` configuration. Your server upgrade is complete.
## Upgrading Consul Clients
With the servers upgraded, it is time to upgrade the clients. To upgrade
the clients, set the `client.image` value to the desired Consul version.
Then, run `helm upgrade`. This will upgrade the clients in batches, waiting
until the clients come up healthy before continuing.

View File

@ -108,3 +108,7 @@ on `consul -v`.
of Consul, especially newer features, may not be available. If this is the
case, Consul will typically warn you. In general, you should always upgrade
your cluster so that you can run the latest protocol version.
## Upgrading on Kubernetes
See the dedicated [Upgrading Consul on Kubernetes](/docs/platform/k8s/upgrading.html) page.

View File

@ -593,25 +593,41 @@
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/index.html">Kubernetes</a>
<ul class="nav">
<li<%= sidebar_current("docs-platform-k8s-run") %>>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/run.html">Installing Consul</a>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/run.html">Installation</a>
<ul class="nav">
<li<%= sidebar_current("docs-platform-k8s-run-aks") %>>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/aks.html">Consul on Azure Cloud</a>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/aks.html">Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS)</a>
</li>
<li<%= sidebar_current("docs-platform-k8s-run-gke") %>>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/gke.html">Consul on Google Cloud</a>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/gke.html">Google Kubernetes Service (GKE)</a>
</li>
<li<%= sidebar_current("docs-platform-k8s-run-mini") %>>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/minikube.html">Consul on Minikube</a>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/minikube.html">Minikube</a>
</li>
<li<%= sidebar_current("docs-platform-k8s-run-consul-ent") %>>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/consul-enterprise.html">Consul Enterprise</a>
</li>
<li<%= sidebar_current("docs-platform-k8s-run-clients-outside") %>>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/clients-outside-kubernetes.html">Consul Clients Outside Kubernetes</a>
</li>
<li<%= sidebar_current("docs-platform-k8s-run-servers-outside") %>>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/servers-outside-kubernetes.html">Consul Servers Outside Kubernetes</a>
</li>
<li<%= sidebar_current("docs-platform-k8s-run-pvcs") %>>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/predefined-pvcs.html">Predefined Persistent Volume Claims</a>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li<%= sidebar_current("docs-platform-k8s-helm") %>>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/helm.html">Helm Chart Reference</a>
<li<%= sidebar_current("docs-platform-k8s-ops") %>>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/operations.html">Operations</a>
<ul class="nav">
<li<%= sidebar_current("docs-platform-k8s-ops-upgrading") %>>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/upgrading.html">Upgrading</a>
</li>
<li<%= sidebar_current("docs-platform-k8s-ooc-nodes") %>>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/out-of-cluster-nodes.html">Out-of-Cluster Nodes</a>
<li<%= sidebar_current("docs-platform-k8s-ops-uninstalling") %>>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/uninstalling.html">Uninstalling</a>
</li>
</ul>
<li<%= sidebar_current("docs-platform-k8s-dns") %>>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/dns.html">Consul DNS</a>
</li>
@ -624,6 +640,9 @@
<li<%= sidebar_current("docs-platform-k8s-ambassador") %>>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/ambassador.html">Ambassador Integration</a>
</li>
<li<%= sidebar_current("docs-platform-k8s-helm") %>>
<a href="/docs/platform/k8s/helm.html">Helm Chart Reference</a>
</li>
</ul>
</li>