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kubectl Usage Conventions
Recommended usage conventions for kubectl
.
Using kubectl
in Reusable Scripts
For a stable output in a script:
- Request one of the machine-oriented output forms, such as
-o name
,-o json
,-o yaml
,-o go-template
, or-o jsonpath
. - Fully-qualify the version. For example,
jobs.v1.batch/myjob
. This will ensure that kubectl does not use its default version that can change over time. - Don't rely on context, preferences, or other implicit states.
Best Practices
kubectl run
For kubectl run
to satisfy infrastructure as code:
- Tag the image with a version-specific tag and don't move that tag to a new version. For example, use
:v1234
,v1.2.3
,r03062016-1-4
, rather than:latest
(For more information, see Best Practices for Configuration). - Check in the script for an image that is heavily parameterized.
- Switch to configuration files checked into source control for features that are needed, but not expressible via
kubectl run
flags.
You can use the --dry-run=client
flag to preview the object that would be sent to your cluster, without really submitting it.
Note: Allkubectl
generators are deprecated. See the Kubernetes v1.17 documentation for a list of generators and how they were used.
Generators
You can generate the following resources with a kubectl command, kubectl create --dry-run=client -o yaml
:
clusterrole Create a ClusterRole.
clusterrolebinding Create a ClusterRoleBinding for a particular ClusterRole.
configmap Create a configmap from a local file, directory or literal value.
cronjob Create a cronjob with the specified name.
deployment Create a deployment with the specified name.
job Create a job with the specified name.
namespace Create a namespace with the specified name.
poddisruptionbudget Create a pod disruption budget with the specified name.
priorityclass Create a priorityclass with the specified name.
quota Create a quota with the specified name.
role Create a role with single rule.
rolebinding Create a RoleBinding for a particular Role or ClusterRole.
secret Create a secret using specified subcommand.
service Create a service using specified subcommand.
serviceaccount Create a service account with the specified name.
kubectl apply
- You can use
kubectl apply
to create or update resources. For more information about using kubectl apply to update resources, see Kubectl Book.
Last modified September 29, 2020 at 7:25 AM PST: Update dry-run flag (f24bf6f60b)