Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Are we allowed to add bookmarks in our chrome to direct yaml in the Tasks section of kubernetes.io? #47

Open
nicoclau opened this issue Dec 4, 2020 · 3 comments

Comments

@nicoclau
Copy link

nicoclau commented Dec 4, 2020

In Tasks we have lot of yamls direct links for example : https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/website/master/content/en/examples/pods/resource/memory-request-limit.yaml

are we allowed to bookmark this for the exam?

Thanks

@guomaoqiu
Copy link

guomaoqiu commented Dec 4, 2020 via email

@nicoclau
Copy link
Author

nicoclau commented Dec 8, 2020

Any help?

@unacceptable
Copy link

unacceptable commented Dec 8, 2020

@nicoclau when I took the CKA (1.18) I only needed what's on kubernetes.io/docs. They did say I could look at GitHub repos which I thought would prove useful for instances like troubleshooting kublet, but honestly, I had no need to look through any code. The exam is a lot easier than you probably think it is.

For the specific example that you provided here are some corresponding docs from a corresponding search:
https://kubernetes.io/search/?q=memory%20request%20limit
second link: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/assign-memory-resource/ (I didn't bother looking at the first for this search because the search results seemed iffy, but the first result was actually better)

...or if I was going to search for this:
https://kubernetes.io/search/?q=resource%20limit%20pod
https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/manage-resources-containers/ (first link here is the first link from before)

I get where the question is coming from, but if you start to do a bunch of stuff that's hard for the proctors to follow, they might think you're being academically dishonest. IMHO - best not to chance it. I reckon it's best to not be too much of an individual during this and just pass the exam the way they want you to.

You could always ask your proctor at the start of the exam. This is one of the few things that might be different on a per proctor basis.

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
None yet
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests

3 participants