Search Options

Display Count
Sort
Preferred Language
Advanced Search

Results 381 - 390 of 454 for Needs (0.03 seconds)

  1. helm-releases/minio-4.0.11.tgz

    Kubernetes secret and providing it to Helm via the `trustedCertsSecret` value. If `.Values.tls.enabled` is `true` and you're installing certificates for third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret...
    Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Sun Aug 07 05:41:47 GMT 2022
    - 19.2K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  2. docs/changelogs/changelog_3x.md

        memory!
    
        The best practice in OkHttp 3 is to create a single OkHttpClient instance
        and share it throughout the application. Requests that needs a customized
        client should call `OkHttpClient.newBuilder()` on that shared instance.
        This allows customization without the drawbacks of separate connection
        pools.
    
    Created: Fri Apr 03 11:42:14 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Sun Feb 06 14:55:54 GMT 2022
    - 50.8K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  3. helm-releases/minio-3.6.0.tgz

    Kubernetes secret and providing it to Helm via the `trustedCertsSecret` value. If `.Values.tls.enabled` is `true` and you're installing certificates for third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret...
    Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Sun Mar 13 22:44:21 GMT 2022
    - 17.9K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  4. helm-releases/minio-5.2.0.tgz

    Kubernetes secret and providing it to Helm via the `trustedCertsSecret` value. If `.Values.tls.enabled` is `true` and you're installing certificates for third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret...
    Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Sun Apr 28 10:14:37 GMT 2024
    - 21.7K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  5. helm-releases/minio-3.5.4.tgz

    Kubernetes secret and providing it to Helm via the `trustedCertsSecret` value. If `.Values.tls.enabled` is `true` and you're installing certificates for third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret...
    Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Mon Feb 14 06:04:53 GMT 2022
    - 17.2K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  6. helm-releases/minio-3.5.5.tgz

    Kubernetes secret and providing it to Helm via the `trustedCertsSecret` value. If `.Values.tls.enabled` is `true` and you're installing certificates for third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret...
    Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Wed Feb 16 19:44:53 GMT 2022
    - 17.2K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  7. helm-releases/minio-3.6.6.tgz

    Kubernetes secret and providing it to Helm via the `trustedCertsSecret` value. If `.Values.tls.enabled` is `true` and you're installing certificates for third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret...
    Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Sun Apr 17 21:46:44 GMT 2022
    - 18.2K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  8. helm-releases/minio-4.0.0.tgz

    Kubernetes secret and providing it to Helm via the `trustedCertsSecret` value. If `.Values.tls.enabled` is `true` and you're installing certificates for third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret...
    Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Tue Apr 26 02:41:39 GMT 2022
    - 18K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  9. helm-releases/minio-4.0.6.tgz

    Kubernetes secret and providing it to Helm via the `trustedCertsSecret` value. If `.Values.tls.enabled` is `true` and you're installing certificates for third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret...
    Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Sun Jul 24 03:34:14 GMT 2022
    - 18.4K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  10. helm-releases/minio-5.0.1.tgz

    Kubernetes secret and providing it to Helm via the `trustedCertsSecret` value. If `.Values.tls.enabled` is `true` and you're installing certificates for third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret...
    Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Sun Nov 13 10:04:51 GMT 2022
    - 19.8K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
Back to Top