[DOCS] Updates terminology for alerting features (#43945)

This commit is contained in:
Lisa Cawley 2019-07-15 13:48:04 -07:00 committed by lcawl
parent c00b082701
commit 753da8feac
3 changed files with 10 additions and 9 deletions

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@ -37,10 +37,10 @@ All of these use-cases share a few key properties:
3rd party system is notified, or the query results are stored.
[float]
=== How Watches Work
=== How watches work
{xpack} provides an API for creating, managing and testing _watches_. A watch
describes a single alert and can contain multiple notification actions.
The {alert-features} provide an API for creating, managing and testing _watches_.
A watch describes a single alert and can contain multiple notification actions.
A watch is constructed from four simple building blocks:

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@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
[partintro]
--
{xpack} alerting is a set of administrative features that enable you to watch
The {alert-features} enable you to watch
for changes or anomalies in your data and perform the necessary actions in
response. For example, you might want to:
@ -38,10 +38,10 @@ All of these use-cases share a few key properties:
3rd party system is notified, or the query results are stored.
[float]
=== How Watches Work
=== How watches work
{xpack} provides an API for creating, managing and testing _watches_. A watch
describes a single alert and can contain multiple notification actions.
The {alert-features} provide an API for creating, managing and testing _watches_.
A watch describes a single alert and can contain multiple notification actions.
A watch is constructed from four simple building blocks:

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
[[schedule-cron]]
==== `cron` Schedule
==== `cron` schedule
A <<trigger-schedule, `schedule`>> trigger that enables you to use a
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cron[cron] style expression to specify when you
@ -213,7 +213,8 @@ minute during the weekend:
[[croneval]]
===== Verifying Cron Expressions
{xpack} ships with a `elasticsearch-croneval` command line tool that you can use to verify that
The {es} {alert-features} provide a `elasticsearch-croneval` command line tool
that you can use to verify that
your cron expressions are valid and produce the expected results. This tool is
provided in the `$ES_HOME/bin` directory.