> sudo mv ./kubectl /usr/local/bin/kubectl
> mkdir ~/.kube
-Paste kubectl config from Rancher (see the :ref:`cloud-setup-guide-label` for alternative Kubenetes environment setups) into the `~/.kube/config` file.
+Paste kubectl config from Rancher (see the :ref:`cloud-setup-guide-label` for alternative Kubernetes environment setups) into the `~/.kube/config` file.
Verify that the Kubernetes config is correct::
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Helm is used by OOM for package and configuration management. To install Helm, enter the following::
- > wget http://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-helm/helm-v2.8.2-linux-amd64.tar.gz
- > tar -zxvf helm-v2.8.2-linux-amd64.tar.gz
+ > wget http://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-helm/helm-v2.9.1-linux-amd64.tar.gz
+ > tar -zxvf helm-v2.9.1-linux-amd64.tar.gz
> sudo mv linux-amd64/helm /usr/local/bin/helm
Verify the Helm version with::
All highly available systems include at least one facility to monitor the
health of components within the system. Such health monitors are often used as
inputs to distributed coordination systems (such as etcd, zookeeper, or consul)
-and monitoring systems (such as nagios or zabbix). OOM provides two mechanims
+and monitoring systems (such as nagios or zabbix). OOM provides two mechanisms
to monitor the real-time health of an ONAP deployment:
- a Consul GUI for a human operator or downstream monitoring systems and