From fab9b4bca212e1312bc6224c7fb01413e708fa00 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Brian Tomlinson <btomlins@redhat.com>
Date: Wed, 08 Aug 2018 13:57:31 +0200
Subject: [PATCH] Remove 'blue balls' reference, fixes #254

---
 1-the-manual-menace/README.md |    1 -
 1 files changed, 0 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-)

diff --git a/1-the-manual-menace/README.md b/1-the-manual-menace/README.md
index 897839f..ef9ffef 100644
--- a/1-the-manual-menace/README.md
+++ b/1-the-manual-menace/README.md
@@ -416,7 +416,6 @@
 greenballs:1.15
 ```
 ![green-balls.png](../images/exercise1/green-balls.png)
-Why does Jenkins have Blue Balls? More can be found [on reddit](https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/4lu6q8/why_does_jenkins_have_blue_balls/) or the [jenkins blog](https://jenkins.io/blog/2012/03/13/why-does-jenkins-have-blue-balls/)
 
 5. Before building and deploying the Jenkins s2i; add git credentials to it. These will be used by Jenkins to access the Git Repositories where our apps will be stored. We want Jenkins to be able to push tags to it so write access is required. There are a few ways we can do this; either adding them to the `template/jenkins.yml` as environment Variables and then including them in the `params/jenkins` file.  We could also create a token in GitLab and use it as the source secret in the Jenkins template.
 But for simplicity just replace the `<USERNAME>` && `<PASSWORD>` in the `jenkins-s2i/configuration/init.groovy` with your LDAP credentials as seen below. This init file gets run when Jenkins launches and will setup the credentials for use in our Jobs in the next exercises

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