Merge pull request #18188 from wenchma/doc_update

Correct some typos for docs
This commit is contained in:
Sebastiaan van Stijn 2015-11-24 12:01:17 +01:00
commit 56305adf4a
3 changed files with 4 additions and 4 deletions

View File

@ -375,7 +375,7 @@ networks.
Within a user-defined bridge network, linking is not supported. You can
expose and publish container ports on containers in this network. This is useful
if you want make a portion of the `bridge` network available to an outside
if you want to make a portion of the `bridge` network available to an outside
network.
![Bridge network](images/network_access.png)

View File

@ -112,7 +112,7 @@ $ docker run -itd --name=container2 busybox
498eaaaf328e1018042c04b2de04036fc04719a6e39a097a4f4866043a2c2152
```
Then create a isolated, `bridge` network to test with.
Then create an isolated, `bridge` network to test with.
```bash
$ docker network create -d bridge isolated_nw

View File

@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ You can also use `docker inspect` with the container's name.
Container names must be unique. That means you can only call one container
`web`. If you want to re-use a container name you must delete the old container
(with `docker rm`) before you can reuse the name with a new container. Go ahead and stop and them remove your `web` container.
(with `docker rm`) before you can reuse the name with a new container. Go ahead and stop and remove your old `web` container.
$ docker stop web
web
@ -73,7 +73,7 @@ Container names must be unique. That means you can only call one container
Docker includes support for networking containers through the use of **network
drivers**. By default, Docker provides two network drivers for you, the
`bridge` and the `overlay` driver. You can also write a network driver plugin so
`bridge` and the `overlay` drivers. You can also write a network driver plugin so
that you can create your own drivers but that is an advanced task.
Every installation of the Docker Engine automatically includes three default networks. You can list them: