The list of supported annotations for Consul service mesh were moved
from /docs/k8s/connect to /docs/k8s/annotations-and-labels in PR
#12323.
This commit updates various across the site to point to the new
URL for these annotations.
Introduces the capability to configure TLS differently for Consul's
listeners/ports (i.e. HTTPS, gRPC, and the internal multiplexed RPC
port) which is useful in scenarios where you may want the HTTPS or
gRPC interfaces to present a certificate signed by a well-known/public
CA, rather than the certificate used for internal communication which
must have a SAN in the form `server.<dc>.consul`.
Use long form of CLI flags in all example commands.
Co-authored-by: mrspanishviking <kcardenas@hashicorp.com>
Co-authored-by: David Yu <dyu@hashicorp.com>
Use kubectl's base64decode template function (added in K8s 1.11) to
decode values in Secrets. Removes external call to `base64` utility on
the host system.
* Use CodeTabs for examples in multiple formats.
* Ensure correct language on code fences.
* Use CodeBlockConfig for examples with filenames, or which need
highlighted content.
The base64 CLI utility has two different short flag arguments for decode
depending on the platform: -D and -d.
Previously, the docs used the -D flag exclusively with the base64 utility.
Luckily, the long form of the flag is the same across platforms: --decode.
All uses of the base64 -D flag have been replaced with --decode.
Per Consul PM, kubeconfig is not required for manual join. I believe this should be clarified in the docs as the current wording refers to the auto join steps above which state kubeconfig is required.
* website: migrate to new nav-data format
* website: clean up unused intro content
* website: remove deprecated sidebar_title from frontmatter
* website: add react-content to fix global style import issue