Added update to two other links in 2.6

This commit is contained in:
Jennifer Travinski
2022-04-18 15:06:21 -04:00
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commit efaa378bae
2 changed files with 2 additions and 2 deletions
@@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ For details and prerequisites, refer to [this page.](./provisioning-new-storage)
Longhorn is free, open source software. Originally developed by Rancher Labs, it is now being developed as a sandbox project of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation. It can be installed on any Kubernetes cluster with Helm, with kubectl, or with the Rancher UI.
If you have a pool of block storage, Longhorn can help you provide persistent storage to your Kubernetes cluster without relying on cloud providers. For more information about Longhorn features, refer to the [documentation.](https://longhorn.io/docs/1.0.2/what-is-longhorn/)
If you have a pool of block storage, Longhorn can help you provide persistent storage to your Kubernetes cluster without relying on cloud providers. For more information about Longhorn features, refer to the [documentation.](https://longhorn.io/docs/latest/what-is-longhorn/)
Rancher v2.5 simplified the process of installing Longhorn on a Rancher-managed cluster. For more information, see [this page.]({{<baseurl>}}/rancher/v2.6/en/longhorn)
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[Longhorn](https://longhorn.io/) is a lightweight, reliable and easy-to-use distributed block storage system for Kubernetes.
Longhorn is free, open source software. Originally developed by Rancher Labs, it is now being developed as a sandbox project of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation. It can be installed on any Kubernetes cluster with Helm, with kubectl, or with the Rancher UI. You can learn more about its architecture [here.](https://longhorn.io/docs/1.0.2/concepts/)
Longhorn is free, open source software. Originally developed by Rancher Labs, it is now being developed as a sandbox project of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation. It can be installed on any Kubernetes cluster with Helm, with kubectl, or with the Rancher UI. You can learn more about its architecture [here.](https://longhorn.io/docs/latest/concepts/)
With Longhorn, you can: