 Okay, previously we talked about setting up port forwarding to access services from our local host and that's one method. I want to show you a second method inside this video here that could be a little bit more convenient and dealing with a Kubernetes running on a single load instance of Kubernetes running on local host. There's a couple nuances that we are dealing with here. I'm going to show you a second technique that doesn't require us to use a tunnel and this is something that we can bring up but make a little bit more permanent. And I am showing you one technique of several. We are going to be using what's called a node port. So what we want to do is come in and edit our services YAML definition. You can see down here on the type cluster IP we want to get rid of that and do node port just like so. So this is a different type of definition for the service. We are saying node port and this is going to expose a port on the local host that we will be able to get to from the local host network into the Kubernetes cluster. And again, this is one way. There's a couple of different techniques that we could actually approach. There's several actually. This is just another way that I want to show you how to do this. So in this case, we are going to hit escape and WQ to save this. And what I want to do now is say, and remember we shut everything down. So I am going to say apply. I am going to reapply the deployment. That is going to start the KBE Rust container. We should be able to see that starting with Docker PS. And we can see that that container is up and running. Let me clear this. And now let's go ahead and do cube control. Apply minus minus F in the service. And we can see that was created. I clear the screen here and we will do cube CTL. Get all. And here the important part about using node port. So we can see here that we have the service KBE Rust node port. This is important because now we have a node port. We don't have an external IP but it is going to get mapped to local host. And we can see ports 8080 and then this 31569. So this is a TCP port and I am going to copy that. And let's toggle over to postman. You can see I am in postman now. I am going to local host and that port gets generated at random when we create the node port mapping. And here you can see that I am doing local host port. And this is for the Rust API that is running in our container. You can see that now I am getting data back from that. So that is data coming back from the spring boot application. So let's just recap this real quick. Toggle back over to the terminal. Now I clear that. And what I changed here was this type of node port. So I just edited the service back, changed it over to node port. And I quit out of that. And when we do cube control, get all. When I see the service, this is the service that we created with the type of node port. This here port is what is getting mapped. So that will get mapped and be available on local host, on the local host network for us to access into our Kubernetes local cluster.