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Managing Kubernetes Objects Using Imperative Commands
Kubernetes objects can quickly be created, updated, and deleted directly using
imperative commands built into the kubectl
command-line tool. This document
explains how those commands are organized and how to use them to manage live objects.
Before you begin
Install kubectl
.
You need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster. It is recommended to run this tutorial on a cluster with at least two nodes that are not acting as control plane hosts. If you do not already have a cluster, you can create one by using minikube or you can use one of these Kubernetes playgrounds:
To check the version, enterkubectl version
.Trade-offs
The kubectl
tool supports three kinds of object management:
- Imperative commands
- Imperative object configuration
- Declarative object configuration
See Kubernetes Object Management for a discussion of the advantages and disadvantage of each kind of object management.
How to create objects
The kubectl
tool supports verb-driven commands for creating some of the most common
object types. The commands are named to be recognizable to users unfamiliar with
the Kubernetes object types.
run
: Create a new Pod to run a Container.expose
: Create a new Service object to load balance traffic across Pods.autoscale
: Create a new Autoscaler object to automatically horizontally scale a controller, such as a Deployment.
The kubectl
tool also supports creation commands driven by object type.
These commands support more object types and are more explicit about
their intent, but require users to know the type of objects they intend
to create.
create <objecttype> [<subtype>] <instancename>
Some objects types have subtypes that you can specify in the create
command.
For example, the Service object has several subtypes including ClusterIP,
LoadBalancer, and NodePort. Here's an example that creates a Service with
subtype NodePort:
kubectl create service nodeport <myservicename>
In the preceding example, the create service nodeport
command is called
a subcommand of the create service
command.
You can use the -h
flag to find the arguments and flags supported by
a subcommand:
kubectl create service nodeport -h
How to update objects
The kubectl
command supports verb-driven commands for some common update operations.
These commands are named to enable users unfamiliar with Kubernetes
objects to perform updates without knowing the specific fields
that must be set:
scale
: Horizontally scale a controller to add or remove Pods by updating the replica count of the controller.annotate
: Add or remove an annotation from an object.label
: Add or remove a label from an object.
The kubectl
command also supports update commands driven by an aspect of the object.
Setting this aspect may set different fields for different object types:
set
<field>
: Set an aspect of an object.
The kubectl
tool supports these additional ways to update a live object directly,
however they require a better understanding of the Kubernetes object schema.
edit
: Directly edit the raw configuration of a live object by opening its configuration in an editor.patch
: Directly modify specific fields of a live object by using a patch string. For more details on patch strings, see the patch section in API Conventions.
How to delete objects
You can use the delete
command to delete an object from a cluster:
delete <type>/<name>
kubectl delete
for both imperative commands and imperative object
configuration. The difference is in the arguments passed to the command. To use
kubectl delete
as an imperative command, pass the object to be deleted as
an argument. Here's an example that passes a Deployment object named nginx:kubectl delete deployment/nginx
How to view an object
There are several commands for printing information about an object:
get
: Prints basic information about matching objects. Useget -h
to see a list of options.describe
: Prints aggregated detailed information about matching objects.logs
: Prints the stdout and stderr for a container running in a Pod.
Using set
commands to modify objects before creation
There are some object fields that don't have a flag you can use
in a create
command. In some of those cases, you can use a combination of
set
and create
to specify a value for the field before object
creation. This is done by piping the output of the create
command to the
set
command, and then back to the create
command. Here's an example:
kubectl create service clusterip my-svc --clusterip="None" -o yaml --dry-run=client | kubectl set selector --local -f - 'environment=qa' -o yaml | kubectl create -f -
- The
kubectl create service -o yaml --dry-run=client
command creates the configuration for the Service, but prints it to stdout as YAML instead of sending it to the Kubernetes API server. - The
kubectl set selector --local -f - -o yaml
command reads the configuration from stdin, and writes the updated configuration to stdout as YAML. - The
kubectl create -f -
command creates the object using the configuration provided via stdin.
Using --edit
to modify objects before creation
You can use kubectl create --edit
to make arbitrary changes to an object
before it is created. Here's an example:
kubectl create service clusterip my-svc --clusterip="None" -o yaml --dry-run=client > /tmp/srv.yaml
kubectl create --edit -f /tmp/srv.yaml
- The
kubectl create service
command creates the configuration for the Service and saves it to/tmp/srv.yaml
. - The
kubectl create --edit
command opens the configuration file for editing before it creates the object.