Aide-mémoire de kubectl
Cette page contient une liste des commandes et options fréquemment utilisées de kubectl
.
Note:
Ces instructions concernent Kubernetes v1.32. Pour vérifier la version, utilisez la commandekubectl version
.Autocomplétion de Kubectl
BASH
source <(kubectl completion bash) # set up autocomplete in bash into the current shell, bash-completion package should be installed first.
echo "source <(kubectl completion bash)" >> ~/.bashrc # add autocomplete permanently to your bash shell.
Vous pouvez également utiliser un alias pour kubectl qui fonctionne aussi avec l'autocomplétion.
alias k=kubectl
complete -o default -F __start_kubectl k
ZSH
source <(kubectl completion zsh) # set up autocomplete in zsh into the current shell
echo '[[ $commands[kubectl] ]] && source <(kubectl completion zsh)' >> ~/.zshrc # add autocomplete permanently to your zsh shell
FISH
Note:
Requires kubectl version 1.23 or above.echo 'kubectl completion fish | source' > ~/.config/fish/completions/kubectl.fish && source ~/.config/fish/completions/kubectl.fish
Remarque concernant --all-namespaces
L'utilisation de --all-namespaces
(tous les espaces de nommage) est assez fréquente, alors sachez qu'il existe un raccourci pour cela :
kubectl -A
Contexte et configuration de Kubectl
Définissez quel cluster Kubernetes doit être utilisé avec kubectl
, et modifiez les paramètres de configuration. Pour plus de détails sur le fichier de configuration, consultez la documentation Configurer l'accès à plusieurs clusters.
kubectl config view # Show Merged kubeconfig settings.
# use multiple kubeconfig files at the same time and view merged config
KUBECONFIG=~/.kube/config:~/.kube/kubconfig2
kubectl config view
# Show merged kubeconfig settings and raw certificate data and exposed secrets
kubectl config view --raw
# get the password for the e2e user
kubectl config view -o jsonpath='{.users[?(@.name == "e2e")].user.password}'
# get the certificate for the e2e user
kubectl config view --raw -o jsonpath='{.users[?(.name == "e2e")].user.client-certificate-data}' | base64 -d
kubectl config view -o jsonpath='{.users[].name}' # display the first user
kubectl config view -o jsonpath='{.users[*].name}' # get a list of users
kubectl config get-contexts # display list of contexts
kubectl config get-contexts -o name # get all context names
kubectl config current-context # display the current-context
kubectl config use-context my-cluster-name # set the default context to my-cluster-name
kubectl config set-cluster my-cluster-name # set a cluster entry in the kubeconfig
# configure the URL to a proxy server to use for requests made by this client in the kubeconfig
kubectl config set-cluster my-cluster-name --proxy-url=my-proxy-url
# add a new user to your kubeconf that supports basic auth
kubectl config set-credentials kubeuser/foo.kubernetes.com --username=kubeuser --password=kubepassword
# permanently save the namespace for all subsequent kubectl commands in that context.
kubectl config set-context --current --namespace=ggckad-s2
# set a context utilizing a specific username and namespace.
kubectl config set-context gce --user=cluster-admin --namespace=foo \
&& kubectl config use-context gce
kubectl config unset users.foo # delete user foo
# short alias to set/show context/namespace (only works for bash and bash-compatible shells, current context to be set before using kn to set namespace)
alias kx='f() { [ "$1" ] && kubectl config use-context $1 || kubectl config current-context ; } ; f'
alias kn='f() { [ "$1" ] && kubectl config set-context --current --namespace $1 || kubectl config view --minify | grep namespace | cut -d" " -f6 ; } ; f'
Kubectl apply
apply
gère les applications à travers des fichiers définissant les ressources Kubernetes. Il crée et met à jour les ressources dans un cluster en exécutant kubectl apply
. C'est la méthode recommandée pour gérer les applications Kubernetes en production. Consultez Kubectl Book.
Création d'objets
Les manifestes Kubernetes peuvent être définis en YAML ou en JSON. Les extensions de fichier .yaml
, .yml
, et .json
peuvent être utilisées.
kubectl apply -f ./my-manifest.yaml # create resource(s)
kubectl apply -f ./my1.yaml -f ./my2.yaml # create from multiple files
kubectl apply -f ./dir # create resource(s) in all manifest files in dir
kubectl apply -f https://example.com/manifest.yaml # create resource(s) from url (Note: this is an example domain and does not contain a valid manifest)
kubectl create deployment nginx --image=nginx # start a single instance of nginx
# créer un Job qui imprime « Hello World » (bonjour le monde)
kubectl create job hello --image=busybox:1.28 -- echo "Hello World"
# create a CronJob that prints "Hello World" every minute
kubectl create cronjob hello --image=busybox:1.28 --schedule="*/1 * * * *" -- echo "Hello World"
kubectl explain pods # get the documentation for pod manifests
# Create multiple YAML objects from stdin
kubectl apply -f - <<EOF
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: busybox-sleep
spec:
containers:
- name: busybox
image: busybox:1.28
args:
- sleep
- "1000000"
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: busybox-sleep-less
spec:
containers:
- name: busybox
image: busybox:1.28
args:
- sleep
- "1000"
EOF
# Create a secret with several keys
kubectl apply -f - <<EOF
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: mysecret
type: Opaque
data:
password: $(echo -n "s33msi4" | base64 -w0)
username: $(echo -n "jane" | base64 -w0)
EOF
Consultez et trouvez les ressources
# Get commands with basic output
kubectl get services # List all services in the namespace
kubectl get pods --all-namespaces # List all pods in all namespaces
kubectl get pods -o wide # List all pods in the current namespace, with more details
kubectl get deployment my-dep # List a particular deployment
kubectl get pods # List all pods in the namespace
kubectl get pod my-pod -o yaml # Get a pod's YAML
# Describe commands with verbose output
kubectl describe nodes my-node
kubectl describe pods my-pod
# List Services Sorted by Name
kubectl get services --sort-by=.metadata.name
# List pods Sorted by Restart Count
kubectl get pods --sort-by='.status.containerStatuses[0].restartCount'
# List PersistentVolumes sorted by capacity
kubectl get pv --sort-by=.spec.capacity.storage
# Get the version label of all pods with label app=cassandra
kubectl get pods --selector=app=cassandra -o \
jsonpath='{.items[*].metadata.labels.version}'
# Retrieve the value of a key with dots, e.g. 'ca.crt'
kubectl get configmap myconfig \
-o jsonpath='{.data.ca\.crt}'
# Retrieve a base64 encoded value with dashes instead of underscores.
kubectl get secret my-secret --template='{{index .data "key-name-with-dashes"}}'
# Get all worker nodes (use a selector to exclude results that have a label
# named 'node-role.kubernetes.io/control-plane')
kubectl get node --selector='!node-role.kubernetes.io/control-plane'
# Get all running pods in the namespace
kubectl get pods --field-selector=status.phase=Running
# Get ExternalIPs of all nodes
kubectl get nodes -o jsonpath='{.items[*].status.addresses[?(@.type=="ExternalIP")].address}'
# List Names of Pods that belong to Particular RC
# "jq" command useful for transformations that are too complex for jsonpath, it can be found at https://jqlang.github.io/jq/
sel=${$(kubectl get rc my-rc --output=json | jq -j '.spec.selector | to_entries | .[] | "\(.key)=\(.value),"')%?}
echo $(kubectl get pods --selector=$sel --output=jsonpath={.items..metadata.name})
# Show labels for all pods (or any other Kubernetes object that supports labelling)
kubectl get pods --show-labels
# Check which nodes are ready
JSONPATH='{range .items[*]}{@.metadata.name}:{range @.status.conditions[*]}{@.type}={@.status};{end}{end}' \
&& kubectl get nodes -o jsonpath="$JSONPATH" | grep "Ready=True"
# Check which nodes are ready with custom-columns
kubectl get node -o custom-columns='NODE_NAME:.metadata.name,STATUS:.status.conditions[?(@.type=="Ready")].status'
# Output decoded secrets without external tools
kubectl get secret my-secret -o go-template='{{range $k,$v := .data}}{{"### "}}{{$k}}{{"\n"}}{{$v|base64decode}}{{"\n\n"}}{{end}}'
# List all Secrets currently in use by a pod
kubectl get pods -o json | jq '.items[].spec.containers[].env[]?.valueFrom.secretKeyRef.name' | grep -v null | sort | uniq
# List all containerIDs of initContainer of all pods
# Helpful when cleaning up stopped containers, while avoiding removal of initContainers.
kubectl get pods --all-namespaces -o jsonpath='{range .items[*].status.initContainerStatuses[*]}{.containerID}{"\n"}{end}' | cut -d/ -f3
# List Events sorted by timestamp
kubectl get events --sort-by=.metadata.creationTimestamp
# List all warning events
kubectl events --types=Warning
# Compares the current state of the cluster against the state that the cluster would be in if the manifest was applied.
kubectl diff -f ./my-manifest.yaml
# Produce a period-delimited tree of all keys returned for nodes
# Helpful when locating a key within a complex nested JSON structure
kubectl get nodes -o json | jq -c 'paths|join(".")'
# Produce a period-delimited tree of all keys returned for pods, etc
kubectl get pods -o json | jq -c 'paths|join(".")'
# Produce ENV for all pods, assuming you have a default container for the pods, default namespace and the `env` command is supported.
# Helpful when running any supported command across all pods, not just `env`
for pod in $(kubectl get po --output=jsonpath={.items..metadata.name}); do echo $pod && kubectl exec -it $pod -- env; done
# Get a deployment's status subresource
kubectl get deployment nginx-deployment --subresource=status
Mise à jour des ressources
kubectl set image deployment/frontend www=image:v2 # Rolling update "www" containers of "frontend" deployment, updating the image
kubectl rollout history deployment/frontend # Check the history of deployments including the revision
kubectl rollout undo deployment/frontend # Rollback to the previous deployment
kubectl rollout undo deployment/frontend --to-revision=2 # Rollback to a specific revision
kubectl rollout status -w deployment/frontend # Watch rolling update status of "frontend" deployment until completion
kubectl rollout restart deployment/frontend # Rolling restart of the "frontend" deployment
cat pod.json | kubectl replace -f - # Replace a pod based on the JSON passed into stdin
# Force replace, delete and then re-create the resource. Will cause a service outage.
kubectl replace --force -f ./pod.json
# Create a service for a replicated nginx, which serves on port 80 and connects to the containers on port 8000
kubectl expose rc nginx --port=80 --target-port=8000
# Update a single-container pod's image version (tag) to v4
kubectl get pod mypod -o yaml | sed 's/\(image: myimage\):.*$/\1:v4/' | kubectl replace -f -
kubectl label pods my-pod new-label=awesome # Add a Label
kubectl label pods my-pod new-label- # Remove a label
kubectl label pods my-pod new-label=new-value --overwrite # Overwrite an existing value
kubectl annotate pods my-pod icon-url=http://goo.gl/XXBTWq # Add an annotation
kubectl annotate pods my-pod icon-url- # Remove annotation
kubectl autoscale deployment foo --min=2 --max=10 # Auto scale a deployment "foo"
Application des correctifs aux ressources
# Partially update a node
kubectl patch node k8s-node-1 -p '{"spec":{"unschedulable":true}}'
# Update a container's image; spec.containers[*].name is required because it's a merge key
kubectl patch pod valid-pod -p '{"spec":{"containers":[{"name":"kubernetes-serve-hostname","image":"new image"}]}}'
# Update a container's image using a json patch with positional arrays
kubectl patch pod valid-pod --type='json' -p='[{"op": "replace", "path": "/spec/containers/0/image", "value":"new image"}]'
# Disable a deployment livenessProbe using a json patch with positional arrays
kubectl patch deployment valid-deployment --type json -p='[{"op": "remove", "path": "/spec/template/spec/containers/0/livenessProbe"}]'
# Add a new element to a positional array
kubectl patch sa default --type='json' -p='[{"op": "add", "path": "/secrets/1", "value": {"name": "whatever" } }]'
# Update a deployment's replica count by patching its scale subresource
kubectl patch deployment nginx-deployment --subresource='scale' --type='merge' -p '{"spec":{"replicas":2}}'
Modification des ressources
Modifiez toutes ressources API de votre choix avec votre éditeur préféré
kubectl edit svc/docker-registry # Edit the service named docker-registry
KUBE_EDITOR="nano" kubectl edit svc/docker-registry # Use an alternative editor
Mise à l'échelle des ressources
kubectl scale --replicas=3 rs/foo # Scale a replicaset named 'foo' to 3
kubectl scale --replicas=3 -f foo.yaml # Scale a resource specified in "foo.yaml" to 3
kubectl scale --current-replicas=2 --replicas=3 deployment/mysql # If the deployment named mysql's current size is 2, scale mysql to 3
kubectl scale --replicas=5 rc/foo rc/bar rc/baz # Scale multiple replication controllers
Suppression des ressources
kubectl delete -f ./pod.json # Delete a pod using the type and name specified in pod.json
kubectl delete pod unwanted --now # Delete a pod with no grace period
kubectl delete pod,service baz foo # Delete pods and services with same names "baz" and "foo"
kubectl delete pods,services -l name=myLabel # Delete pods and services with label name=myLabel
kubectl -n my-ns delete pod,svc --all # Delete all pods and services in namespace my-ns,
# Delete all pods matching the awk pattern1 or pattern2
kubectl get pods -n mynamespace --no-headers=true | awk '/pattern1|pattern2/{print $1}' | xargs kubectl delete -n mynamespace pod
Interaction avec les Pods en cours d'exécution
kubectl logs my-pod # dump pod logs (stdout)
kubectl logs -l name=myLabel # dump pod logs, with label name=myLabel (stdout)
kubectl logs my-pod --previous # dump pod logs (stdout) for a previous instantiation of a container
kubectl logs my-pod -c my-container # dump pod container logs (stdout, multi-container case)
kubectl logs -l name=myLabel -c my-container # dump pod container logs, with label name=myLabel (stdout)
kubectl logs my-pod -c my-container --previous # dump pod container logs (stdout, multi-container case) for a previous instantiation of a container
kubectl logs -f my-pod # stream pod logs (stdout)
kubectl logs -f my-pod -c my-container # stream pod container logs (stdout, multi-container case)
kubectl logs -f -l name=myLabel --all-containers # stream all pods logs with label name=myLabel (stdout)
kubectl run -i --tty busybox --image=busybox:1.28 -- sh # Run pod as interactive shell
kubectl run nginx --image=nginx -n mynamespace # Start a single instance of nginx pod in the namespace of mynamespace
kubectl run nginx --image=nginx --dry-run=client -o yaml > pod.yaml
# Generate spec for running pod nginx and write it into a file called pod.yaml
kubectl attach my-pod -i # Attach to Running Container
kubectl port-forward my-pod 5000:6000 # Listen on port 5000 on the local machine and forward to port 6000 on my-pod
kubectl exec my-pod -- ls / # Run command in existing pod (1 container case)
kubectl exec --stdin --tty my-pod -- /bin/sh # Interactive shell access to a running pod (1 container case)
kubectl exec my-pod -c my-container -- ls / # Run command in existing pod (multi-container case)
kubectl debug my-pod -it --image=busybox:1.28 # Create an interactive debugging session within existing pod and immediately attach to it
kubectl debug node/my-node -it --image=busybox:1.28 # Create an interactive debugging session on a node and immediately attach to it
kubectl top pod # Show metrics for all pods in the default namespace
kubectl top pod POD_NAME --containers # Show metrics for a given pod and its containers
kubectl top pod POD_NAME --sort-by=cpu # Show metrics for a given pod and sort it by 'cpu' or 'memory'
Copie de fichiers et de répertoires vers et depuis des conteneurs
kubectl cp /tmp/foo_dir my-pod:/tmp/bar_dir # Copy /tmp/foo_dir local directory to /tmp/bar_dir in a remote pod in the current namespace
kubectl cp /tmp/foo my-pod:/tmp/bar -c my-container # Copy /tmp/foo local file to /tmp/bar in a remote pod in a specific container
kubectl cp /tmp/foo my-namespace/my-pod:/tmp/bar # Copy /tmp/foo local file to /tmp/bar in a remote pod in namespace my-namespace
kubectl cp my-namespace/my-pod:/tmp/foo /tmp/bar # Copy /tmp/foo from a remote pod to /tmp/bar locally
Note:
kubectl cp
nécessite que le binaire 'tar' soit présent dans l'image de votre conteneur. Si 'tar' n'est pas disponible, kubectl cp
échouera.
Pour les cas d'utilisation plus avancés, comme les liens symboliques, widlcard ou la préservation des modes d'accès aux fichiers, envisagez d'utiliser kubectl exec
tar cf - /tmp/foo | kubectl exec -i -n my-namespace my-pod -- tar xf - -C /tmp/bar # Copy /tmp/foo local file to /tmp/bar in a remote pod in namespace my-namespace
kubectl exec -n my-namespace my-pod -- tar cf - /tmp/foo | tar xf - -C /tmp/bar # Copy /tmp/foo from a remote pod to /tmp/bar locally
Interaction avec les Deployments et les Services
kubectl logs deploy/my-deployment # dump Pod logs for a Deployment (single-container case)
kubectl logs deploy/my-deployment -c my-container # dump Pod logs for a Deployment (multi-container case)
kubectl port-forward svc/my-service 5000 # listen on local port 5000 and forward to port 5000 on Service backend
kubectl port-forward svc/my-service 5000:my-service-port # listen on local port 5000 and forward to Service target port with name <my-service-port>
kubectl port-forward deploy/my-deployment 5000:6000 # listen on local port 5000 and forward to port 6000 on a Pod created by <my-deployment>
kubectl exec deploy/my-deployment -- ls # run command in first Pod and first container in Deployment (single- or multi-container cases)
Interaction avec les Nodes et le cluster
kubectl cordon my-node # Mark my-node as unschedulable
kubectl drain my-node # Drain my-node in preparation for maintenance
kubectl uncordon my-node # Mark my-node as schedulable
kubectl top node # Show metrics for all nodes
kubectl top node my-node # Show metrics for a given node
kubectl cluster-info # Display addresses of the master and services
kubectl cluster-info dump # Dump current cluster state to stdout
kubectl cluster-info dump --output-directory=/path/to/cluster-state # Dump current cluster state to /path/to/cluster-state
# View existing taints on which exist on current nodes.
kubectl get nodes -o='custom-columns=NodeName:.metadata.name,TaintKey:.spec.taints[*].key,TaintValue:.spec.taints[*].value,TaintEffect:.spec.taints[*].effect'
# If a taint with that key and effect already exists, its value is replaced as specified.
kubectl taint nodes foo dedicated=special-user:NoSchedule
Les types de ressources
Listez tous les types de ressources pris en charge, ainsi que leurs noms abrégés, leurs API group, s'ils sont namespaced, et leur kind:
kubectl api-resources
Autres opérations pour explorer les ressources API:
kubectl api-resources --namespaced=true # All namespaced resources
kubectl api-resources --namespaced=false # All non-namespaced resources
kubectl api-resources -o name # All resources with simple output (only the resource name)
kubectl api-resources -o wide # All resources with expanded (aka "wide") output
kubectl api-resources --verbs=list,get # All resources that support the "list" and "get" request verbs
kubectl api-resources --api-group=extensions # All resources in the "extensions" API group
Formatage de la sortie
Pour afficher les détails dans votre terminal avec un format spécifique, ajoutez l'option -o
(ou --output
) à une commande kubectl prise en charge.
Format de sortie | Description |
---|---|
-o=custom-columns=<spec> | Affiche une table en utilisant une liste de colonnes personnalisées séparées par des virgules |
-o=custom-columns-file=<filename> | Affiche une table en utilisant le modèle de colonnes personnalisées dans le fichier <filename> |
-o=go-template=<template> | Affiche les champs définis dans un golang template |
-o=go-template-file=<filename> | Affiche les champs définis par le golang template dans le fichier <filename> |
-o=json | Produit un objet API formaté en JSON |
-o=jsonpath=<template> | Affiche les champs définis dans une expression jsonpath |
-o=jsonpath-file=<filename> | Affiche les champs définis par l'expression jsonpathdans le fichier <filename> |
-o=name | Affiche uniquement le nom de la ressource et rien d'autre |
-o=wide | Produit une sortie en format texte avec des informations supplémentaires, et pour les pods, le nom du noeud est inclus |
-o=yaml | Produit un objet API formaté en YAML |
Exemples en utilisant -o=custom-columns
:
# All images running in a cluster
kubectl get pods -A -o=custom-columns='DATA:spec.containers[*].image'
# All images running in namespace: default, grouped by Pod
kubectl get pods --namespace default --output=custom-columns="NAME:.metadata.name,IMAGE:.spec.containers[*].image"
# All images excluding "registry.k8s.io/coredns:1.6.2"
kubectl get pods -A -o=custom-columns='DATA:spec.containers[?(@.image!="registry.k8s.io/coredns:1.6.2")].image'
# All fields under metadata regardless of name
kubectl get pods -A -o=custom-columns='DATA:metadata.*'
Pour plus d'exemples, consultez la documentation de référence de kubectl .
Verbositée et débogage des sorties de Kubectl
La verbosité de Kubectl est contrôlée avec les options -v ou --v suivies d'un entier représentant le niveau de log. Les conventions générales de journalisation de Kubernetes et les niveaux de log associés sont décrits ici.
Verbosity | Description |
---|---|
--v=0 | Généralement utile pour que cela soit toujours visible pour un opérateur de cluster. |
--v=1 | Un niveau de log par défaut raisonnable si vous ne souhaitez pas de verbosité. |
--v=2 | Informations utiles sur l'état stable du service et messages de log importants pouvant correspondre à des changements significatifs dans le système. C'est le niveau de log par défaut recommandé pour la plupart des systèmes. |
--v=3 | Informations supplémentaires sur les changements. |
--v=4 | Verbosité de niveau débogage. |
--v=5 | Verbosité de niveau trace. |
--v=6 | Affiche les ressources demandées. |
--v=7 | Affiche les en-têtes des requêtes HTTP. |
--v=8 | Affiche le contenu des requêtes HTTP. |
--v=9 | Affiche le contenu des requêtes HTTP sans troncature. |
Lire Aperçu de kubectl et apprendre à utiliser JsonPath.
Voir les options kubectl.
Et lire Conventions d'utilisation de kubectl pour apprendre à utiliser kubectl dans des scripts réutilisables.
Voir plus de kubectl cheatsheets de la communauté.