Tasks

Tasks
Example Task Template
Extend kubectl with plugins
Manage HugePages
Schedule GPUs
Manage Memory, CPU, and API Resources
Access Clusters Using the Kubernetes API
Access Services Running on Clusters
Advertise Extended Resources for a Node
Autoscale the DNS Service in a Cluster
Change the Reclaim Policy of a PersistentVolume
Change the default StorageClass
Cluster Management
Configure Default CPU Requests and Limits for a Namespace
Configure Default Memory Requests and Limits for a Namespace
Configure Memory and CPU Quotas for a Namespace
Configure Minimum and Maximum CPU Constraints for a Namespace
Configure Minimum and Maximum Memory Constraints for a Namespace
Configure Multiple Schedulers
Configure Out Of Resource Handling
Configure Quotas for API Objects
Configure a Pod Quota for a Namespace
Control CPU Management Policies on the Node
Customizing DNS Service
Debugging DNS Resolution
Declare Network Policy
Developing Cloud Controller Manager
Encrypting Secret Data at Rest
Guaranteed Scheduling For Critical Add-On Pods
IP Masquerade Agent User Guide
Kubernetes Cloud Controller Manager
Limit Storage Consumption
Namespaces Walkthrough
Operating etcd clusters for Kubernetes
Persistent Volume Claim Protection
Reconfigure a Node's Kubelet in a Live Cluster
Reserve Compute Resources for System Daemons
Romana for NetworkPolicy
Safely Drain a Node while Respecting Application SLOs
Securing a Cluster
Set Kubelet parameters via a config file
Set up High-Availability Kubernetes Masters
Set up a High-Availablity Etcd Cluster With Kubeadm
Share a Cluster with Namespaces
Static Pods
Storage Object in Use Protection
Use Calico for NetworkPolicy
Use Cilium for NetworkPolicy
Use Kube-router for NetworkPolicy
Using CoreDNS for Service Discovery
Using Sysctls in a Kubernetes Cluster
Using a KMS provider for data encryption
Weave Net for NetworkPolicy

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Install and Set Up kubectl

Use the Kubernetes command-line tool, kubectl, to deploy and manage applications on Kubernetes. Using kubectl, you can inspect cluster resources; create, delete, and update components; and look at your new cluster and bring up example apps.

Before you begin

Use a version of kubectl that is the same version as your server or later. Using an older kubectl with a newer server might produce validation errors.

Install kubectl binary via native package management


apt-get update && apt-get install -y apt-transport-https
curl -s https://packages.cloud.google.com/apt/doc/apt-key.gpg | apt-key add -
cat <<EOF >/etc/apt/sources.list.d/kubernetes.list
deb http://apt.kubernetes.io/ kubernetes-xenial main
EOF
apt-get update
apt-get install -y kubectl

Install with snap on Ubuntu

kubectl is available as a snap application.

  1. If you are on Ubuntu or one of other Linux distributions that support snap package manager, you can install with:

    sudo snap install kubectl --classic
    
  2. Run kubectl version to verify that the version you’ve installed is sufficiently up-to-date.

Install with Homebrew on macOS

  1. If you are on macOS and using Homebrew package manager, you can install with:

    brew install kubectl
    
  2. Run kubectl version to verify that the version you’ve installed is sufficiently up-to-date.

Install with Powershell from PSGallery

  1. If you are on Windows and using Powershell Gallery package manager, you can install and update with:

    Install-Script -Name install-kubectl -Scope CurrentUser -Force
    install-kubectl.ps1 [-DownloadLocation <path>]
    

If no Downloadlocation is specified, kubectl will be installed in users temp Directory 2. The installer creates $HOME/.kube and instructs it to create a config file 3. Updating re-run Install-Script to update the installer re-run install-kubectl.ps1 to install latest binaries

Install with Chocolatey on Windows

  1. If you are on Windows and using Chocolatey package manager, you can install with:

    choco install kubernetes-cli
    
  2. Run kubectl version to verify that the version you’ve installed is sufficiently up-to-date.

  3. Configure kubectl to use a remote Kubernetes cluster:

    cd C:\users\yourusername (Or wherever your %HOME% directory is)
    mkdir .kube
    cd .kube
    New-Item config -type file
    

Edit the config file with a text editor of your choice, such as Notepad for example.

Download as part of the Google Cloud SDK

kubectl can be installed as part of the Google Cloud SDK.

  1. Install the Google Cloud SDK.
  2. Run the following command to install kubectl:

    gcloud components install kubectl
    
  3. Run kubectl version to verify that the version you’ve installed is sufficiently up-to-date.

Install kubectl binary via curl

  1. Download the latest release with the command:

    curl -LO https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/$(curl -s https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/stable.txt)/bin/darwin/amd64/kubectl
    

    To download a specific version, replace the $(curl -s https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/stable.txt) portion of the command with the specific version.

    For example, to download version v1.10.0 on MacOS, type:

    curl -LO https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/v1.10.0/bin/darwin/amd64/kubectl
    
  2. Make the kubectl binary executable.

    chmod +x ./kubectl
    
  3. Move the binary in to your PATH.

    sudo mv ./kubectl /usr/local/bin/kubectl
    

Configure kubectl

In order for kubectl to find and access a Kubernetes cluster, it needs a kubeconfig file, which is created automatically when you create a cluster using kube-up.sh or successfully deploy a Minikube cluster. See the getting started guides for more about creating clusters. If you need access to a cluster you didn’t create, see the Sharing Cluster Access document. By default, kubectl configuration is located at ~/.kube/config.

Check the kubectl configuration

Check that kubectl is properly configured by getting the cluster state:

kubectl cluster-info

If you see a URL response, kubectl is correctly configured to access your cluster.

If you see a message similar to the following, kubectl is not correctly configured or not able to connect to a Kubernetes cluster.

The connection to the server <server-name:port> was refused - did you specify the right host or port?

For example, if you are intending to run a Kubernetes cluster on your laptop (locally), you will need a tool like minikube to be installed first and then re-run the commands stated above.

If kubectl cluster-info returns the url response but you can’t access your cluster, to check whether it is configured properly, use:

kubectl cluster-info dump

Enabling shell autocompletion

kubectl includes autocompletion support, which can save a lot of typing!

The completion script itself is generated by kubectl, so you typically just need to invoke it from your profile.

Common examples are provided here. For more details, consult kubectl completion -h.

On Linux, using bash

To add kubectl autocompletion to your current shell, run source <(kubectl completion bash).

To add kubectl autocompletion to your profile, so it is automatically loaded in future shells run:

echo "source <(kubectl completion bash)" >> ~/.bashrc

On macOS, using bash

On macOS, you will need to install bash-completion support via Homebrew first:

## If running Bash 3.2 included with macOS
brew install bash-completion
## or, if running Bash 4.1+
brew install bash-completion@2

Follow the “caveats” section of brew’s output to add the appropriate bash completion path to your local .bashrc.

If you’ve installed kubectl using the Homebrew instructions then kubectl completion should start working immediately.

If you have installed kubectl manually, you need to add kubectl autocompletion to the bash-completion:

kubectl completion bash > $(brew --prefix)/etc/bash_completion.d/kubectl

The Homebrew project is independent from Kubernetes, so the bash-completion packages are not guaranteed to work.

Using Zsh

If you are using zsh edit the ~/.zshrc file and add the following code to enable kubectl autocompletion:

if [ $commands[kubectl] ]; then
  source <(kubectl completion zsh)
fi

Or when using Oh-My-Zsh, edit the ~/.zshrc file and update the plugins= line to include the kubectl plugin.

source <(kubectl completion zsh)

Install kubectl

Here are a few methods to install kubectl.

What's next

Learn how to launch and expose your application.

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