From a4b97e427c19ef44e0609efba996540e69c76987 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Aryansharma9917 Date: Mon, 2 Oct 2023 23:09:07 +0530 Subject: [PATCH] Fixed CSI Driver Operator --- modules/persistent-storage-csi-vsphere-install-issues.adoc | 4 ++-- modules/persistent-storage-csi-vsphere-stor-policy.adoc | 2 +- 2 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/modules/persistent-storage-csi-vsphere-install-issues.adoc b/modules/persistent-storage-csi-vsphere-install-issues.adoc index b18690a413..02735d618f 100644 --- a/modules/persistent-storage-csi-vsphere-install-issues.adoc +++ b/modules/persistent-storage-csi-vsphere-install-issues.adoc @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ // [id="persistent-storage-csi-vsphere-install-issues_{context}"] -= Removing a third-party vSphere CSI Operator Driver += Removing a third-party vSphere CSI Driver Operator {product-title} 4.10, and later, includes a built-in version of the vSphere Container Storage Interface (CSI) Operator Driver that is supported by Red Hat. If you have installed a vSphere CSI driver provided by the community or another vendor, updates to the next major version of {product-title}, such as 4.13, or later, might be disabled for your cluster. @@ -31,4 +31,4 @@ To uninstall the third-party vSphere CSI Driver: csidriver.storage.k8s.io "csi.vsphere.vmware.com" deleted ---- -After you have removed the third-party vSphere CSI Driver from the {product-title} cluster, installation of Red Hat's vSphere CSI Operator Driver automatically resumes, and any conditions that could block upgrades to {product-title} 4.11, or later, are automatically removed. If you had existing vSphere CSI PV objects, their lifecycle is now managed by Red Hat's vSphere CSI Operator Driver. +After you have removed the third-party vSphere CSI Driver from the {product-title} cluster, installation of Red Hat's vSphere CSI Driver Operator automatically resumes, and any conditions that could block upgrades to {product-title} 4.11, or later, are automatically removed. If you had existing vSphere CSI PV objects, their lifecycle is now managed by Red Hat's vSphere CSI Driver Operator. diff --git a/modules/persistent-storage-csi-vsphere-stor-policy.adoc b/modules/persistent-storage-csi-vsphere-stor-policy.adoc index 50f5e41d9e..1d1741a47c 100644 --- a/modules/persistent-storage-csi-vsphere-stor-policy.adoc +++ b/modules/persistent-storage-csi-vsphere-stor-policy.adoc @@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ [id="persistent-storage-csi-vsphere-stor-policy_{context}"] = vSphere storage policy -The vSphere CSI Operator Driver storage class uses vSphere's storage policy. {product-title} automatically creates a storage policy that targets datastore configured in cloud configuration: +The vSphere CSI Driver Operator storage class uses vSphere's storage policy. {product-title} automatically creates a storage policy that targets datastore configured in cloud configuration: [source,yaml] ---- kind: StorageClass