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authorMarcin Owsiany <porridge@google.com>2017-10-16 16:23:58 +0200
committerMarcin Owsiany <porridge@google.com>2017-10-16 16:23:58 +0200
commit9c6f8d429c4c64d3631ea7d2a5e70b29e6c8f123 (patch)
treeb4af10a7a61b58c69539e5ef3d0ca7b4b11ad3ec /sig-scalability
parent07e214b0d24b9f0f09819778ccbf2559c33d3ff5 (diff)
Split paragraphs.
Diffstat (limited to 'sig-scalability')
-rw-r--r--sig-scalability/extending_slo.md1
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diff --git a/sig-scalability/extending_slo.md b/sig-scalability/extending_slo.md
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+++ b/sig-scalability/extending_slo.md
@@ -9,6 +9,7 @@ which are enough to guarantee that cluster doesn't feel completely dead, but not
We're going to define more SLOs based on most important indicators, and standardize the format in which we speak about our objectives. Our SLOs need to have two properties:
- They need to be testable, i.e. we need to have a benchmark to measure if it's met,
- They need to be expressed in a way that's possible to understand by a user not intimately familiar with the system internals, i.e. formulation can't depend on some arcane knowledge.
+
On the other hand we do not require that:
- SLOs are possible to monitor in a running cluster, i.e. not all SLOs need to be easily translatable to SLAs. Being able to benchmark is enough for us.