 In this video, we're going to go ahead and configure the inventory failover service. Again, this is going to be a service that's just going to be responding back with a positive response for the inventory service. And that's if the inventory service is not available. There's really no Kubernetes configuration to do for this. It's more application logic to utilize one service over another if the preferred service is not available. That's all application logic. But for our deployment to Kubernetes, we do need to define that service. So let's toggle over to the command line and do that right now. That's going to be a cube control. And in this case, we are going to be able to do everything right from the command line. So create deployment. And in this case, it's going to be inventory failover. Same framework guru, and this is going to be KBE. And failover this time, not specifying a tag, dry-run equals client, minus O equals YAML. And we'll call it inventory failover YMO. That creates the failover, and we do cube control and apply that. So here's our failover deployment.yaml. That creates the pod for us, clear. And now let's go ahead and create the service, create service, cluster IP, inventory-failover. And this is going to be running on 8083, dry-run client, minus O for YAML output. And in this case, we want to say service. That creates the service. And in this case, we can say inventory, service, keep control, apply inventory, failover, service like so. And that creates that. Clear the screen, and let's go ahead and take a look at what's running now. And now we can see that we have a little big for the font here, but we have the pod inventory, failover, the services of inventory, inventory failover, JMS, Kubernetes, MySQL. All that is looking good for us.