For Kubernetes 101, we will cover kubectl, pods, volumes, and multiple containers
In order for the kubectl usage examples to work, make sure you have an example directory locally, either from a release or the source.
The easiest way to interact with Kubernetes is via the kubectl command-line interface.
For more info about kubectl, including its usage, commands, and parameters, see the kubectl CLI reference.
If you haven’t installed and configured kubectl, finish installing kubectl before continuing.
In Kubernetes, a group of one or more containers is called a pod. Containers in a pod are deployed together, and are started, stopped, and replicated as a group.
See pods for more details.
The simplest pod definition describes the deployment of a single container. For example, an nginx web server pod might be defined as such:
pod-nginx.yaml
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A pod definition is a declaration of a desired state. Desired state is a very important concept in the Kubernetes model. Many things present a desired state to the system, and it is Kubernetes’ responsibility to make sure that the current state matches the desired state. For example, when you create a Pod, you declare that you want the containers in it to be running. If the containers happen to not be running (e.g. program failure, …), Kubernetes will continue to (re-)create them for you in order to drive them to the desired state. This process continues until the Pod is deleted.
See the design document for more details.
Create a pod containing an nginx server (pod-nginx.yaml):
$ kubectl create -f docs/user-guide/walkthrough/pod-nginx.yaml
List all pods:
$ kubectl get pods
On most providers, the pod IPs are not externally accessible. The easiest way to test that the pod is working is to create a busybox pod and exec commands on it remotely. See the command execution documentation for details.
Provided the pod IP is accessible, you should be able to access its http endpoint with wget on port 80:
$ kubectl run busybox --image=busybox --restart=Never --tty -i --generator=run-pod/v1 --env "POD_IP=$(kubectl get pod nginx -o go-template='{{.status.podIP}}')"
u@busybox$ wget -qO- http://$POD_IP # Run in the busybox container
u@busybox$ exit # Exit the busybox container
$ kubectl delete pod busybox # Clean up the pod we created with "kubectl run"
Delete the pod by name:
$ kubectl delete pod nginx
That’s great for a simple static web server, but what about persistent storage?
The container file system only lives as long as the container does. So if your app’s state needs to survive relocation, reboots, and crashes, you’ll need to configure some persistent storage.
For this example we’ll be creating a Redis pod with a named volume and volume mount that defines the path to mount the volume.
volumes:
- name: redis-persistent-storage
emptyDir: {}
volumeMounts:
# name must match the volume name below
- name: redis-persistent-storage
# mount path within the container
mountPath: /data/redis
Example Redis pod definition with a persistent storage volume (pod-redis.yaml):
pod-redis.yaml
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Notes:
volumeMounts
name
is a reference to a specific volumes
name
.volumeMounts
mountPath
is the path to mount the volume within the container./var/logs
).See volumes for more details.
Note: The examples below are syntactically correct, but some of the images (e.g. kubernetes/git-monitor) don’t exist yet. We’re working on turning these into working examples.
However, often you want to have two different containers that work together. An example of this would be a web server, and a helper job that polls a git repository for new updates:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: www
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /srv/www
name: www-data
readOnly: true
- name: git-monitor
image: kubernetes/git-monitor
env:
- name: GIT_REPO
value: http://github.com/some/repo.git
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /data
name: www-data
volumes:
- name: www-data
emptyDir: {}
Note that we have also added a volume here. In this case, the volume is mounted into both containers. It is marked readOnly
in the web server’s case, since it doesn’t need to write to the directory.
Finally, we have also introduced an environment variable to the git-monitor
container, which allows us to parameterize that container with the particular git repository that we want to track.
Continue on to Kubernetes 201 or for a complete application see the guestbook example
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