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authorDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2021-12-01 06:15:04 +0000
committerDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2021-12-01 06:15:04 +0000
commite970e0b37b8bd7f246feb3f70c4136418225e434 (patch)
tree0b67c0ca45f56f2f9d9c5c2e725279ecdf52d2eb /docs/guides/step-by-step
parentAdding upstream version 1.31.0. (diff)
downloadnetdata-e970e0b37b8bd7f246feb3f70c4136418225e434.tar.xz
netdata-e970e0b37b8bd7f246feb3f70c4136418225e434.zip
Adding upstream version 1.32.0.upstream/1.32.0
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/guides/step-by-step')
-rw-r--r--docs/guides/step-by-step/step-00.md1
-rw-r--r--docs/guides/step-by-step/step-03.md4
-rw-r--r--docs/guides/step-by-step/step-05.md7
3 files changed, 9 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/docs/guides/step-by-step/step-00.md b/docs/guides/step-by-step/step-00.md
index 794366645..106571915 100644
--- a/docs/guides/step-by-step/step-00.md
+++ b/docs/guides/step-by-step/step-00.md
@@ -32,7 +32,6 @@ Click on the **issues** tab to see all the conversations we're having with Netda
previously-written advice for your specific problem, and if you don't see any results, hit the **New issue** button to
send us a question.
-Or, if that's too complicated, feel free to send this guide's author [an email](mailto:joel@netdata.cloud).
## Before we get started
diff --git a/docs/guides/step-by-step/step-03.md b/docs/guides/step-by-step/step-03.md
index 2319adb44..a2f37beeb 100644
--- a/docs/guides/step-by-step/step-03.md
+++ b/docs/guides/step-by-step/step-03.md
@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ features, new collectors for more applications, and improved UI, so will Cloud.
## Get started with Netdata Cloud
-Signing in, onboarding, and claiming your first nodes only takes a few minutes, and we have a [Get started with
+Signing in, onboarding, and connecting your first nodes only takes a few minutes, and we have a [Get started with
Cloud](https://learn.netdata.cloud/docs/cloud/get-started) guide to help you walk through every step.
Or, if you're feeling confident, dive right in.
@@ -82,7 +82,7 @@ nodes](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1153921/80831018-e158ac80-8b9e-
## What's next?
-Now that you have a Netdata Cloud account with a claimed node (or a few!) and can navigate between your dashboards with
+Now that you have a Netdata Cloud account with a connected node (or a few!) and can navigate between your dashboards with
Visited nodes, it's time to learn more about how you can configure Netdata to your liking. From there, you'll be able to
customize your Netdata experience to your exact infrastructure and the information you need.
diff --git a/docs/guides/step-by-step/step-05.md b/docs/guides/step-by-step/step-05.md
index 30ab329cd..8a4d084e4 100644
--- a/docs/guides/step-by-step/step-05.md
+++ b/docs/guides/step-by-step/step-05.md
@@ -110,6 +110,13 @@ bother you with notifications.
The best way to understand how health entities work is building your own and experimenting with the options. To start,
let's build a health entity that triggers an alarm when system RAM usage goes above 80%.
+We will first create a new file inside of the `health.d/` directory. We'll name our file
+`example.conf` for now.
+
+```bash
+./edit-config health.d/example.conf
+```
+
The first line in a health entity will be `alarm:`. This is how you name your entity. You can give it any name you
choose, but the only symbols allowed are `.` and `_`. Let's call the alarm `ram_usage`.