Imagine the following deployment definition in kubernetes:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: nginx-deployment
labels:
env: staging
spec:
...
I have two questions in particular:
1). The label env: staging
won't be available in created pods. how can I access this data programmatically in client-go
?
2). When pod is created/updated, how can I found which deployment it belongs to?
CodePudding user response:
1). the label env: staging won't be available in created pods. how can I access this data programmatically in client-go?
You can get the Deployment
using client-go. See the example Create, Update & Delete Deployment for operations on a Deployment
.
2). when pod is created/updated, how can I found which deployment it belongs to?
When a Deployment
is created, a ReplicaSet is created that manage the Pods
.
See the ownerReferences
field of a Pod
to see what ReplicaSet
manages it. This is described in How a ReplicaSet works
CodePudding user response:
hope you are enjoying your kubernetes journey !
In fact the label won't be available in created pods but you can add it to the manifest, in the pod section:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: nginx-deploy
labels:
#Here you have the deployment labels
app: nginx
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
#Here you have the selector that indicates to the deployment
#(more exactly to the replicatsets of the deployment)
#which pod to track to check if the number of replicas is respected.
app: nginx
...
template:
metadata:
labels:
#Here you have the POD labels that needs to match in the selector.matchlabels section
app: nginx
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx-container
image: nginx:latest
...
you can check the pods' labels by typing:
❯ k get po --show-labels
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE LABELS
nginx-deploy-6bdc4445fd-5qlhg 1/1 Running 0 7m13s app=nginx,pod-template-hash=6bdc4445fd
nginx-deploy-6bdc4445fd-pgkhb 1/1 Running 0 7m13s app=nginx,pod-template-hash=6bdc4445fd
nginx-deploy-6bdc4445fd-xdz59 1/1 Running 0 7m13s app=nginx,pod-template-hash=6bdc4445fd
you can get the deployments' labels by typing:
❯ k get deploy --show-labels
NAME READY UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE LABELS
nginx-deploy 3/3 3 3 7m39s app=nginx
you can add a custom column in your "kubectl get po" command to display the value of each "app" labels when getting the pods:
❯ k get pod -L app
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE APP
nginx-deploy-6bdc4445fd-5qlhg 1/1 Running 0 8m30s nginx
nginx-deploy-6bdc4445fd-pgkhb 1/1 Running 0 8m30s nginx
nginx-deploy-6bdc4445fd-xdz59 1/1 Running 0 8m30s nginx
and you can use multiple -L :
❯ k get pod -L app -L test
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE APP TEST
nginx-deploy-6bdc4445fd-5qlhg 1/1 Running 0 9m46s nginx
nginx-deploy-6bdc4445fd-pgkhb 1/1 Running 0 9m46s nginx
nginx-deploy-6bdc4445fd-xdz59 1/1 Running 0 9m46s nginx
In general, the names of the pod begin by the name of their owner (deployment, replicaset, statefulset, job etc) When you use a deployment to create a pod, you can be sure that between the deployment and the pod there is a replicaset (The deployment only manages the differents version of the replicaset, while the replicaset only ENSURES that the current number of actual replicas is matching the demanded number of replicas in the manifes, with labels selector ! )
So you in fact, checks the ownerReference filed of a pod, by typing:
❯ kubectl get po -o custom-columns=NAME:'{.metadata.name}',OWNER:'{.metadata.ownerReferences[0].name}',OWNER_KIND:'{.metadata.ownerReferences[0].kind}'
NAME OWNER OWNER_KIND
nginx-deploy-6bdc4445fd-5qlhg nginx-deploy-6bdc4445fd ReplicaSet
nginx-deploy-6bdc4445fd-pgkhb nginx-deploy-6bdc4445fd ReplicaSet
nginx-deploy-6bdc4445fd-xdz59 nginx-deploy-6bdc4445fd ReplicaSet
can do the same with replicasets to get their deployments owner:
❯ kubectl get rs -o custom-columns=NAME:'{.metadata.name}',OWNER:'{.metadata.ownerReferences[0].name}',OWNER_KIND:'{.metadata.ownerReferences[0].kind}'
NAME OWNER OWNER_KIND
nginx-deploy-6bdc4445fd nginx-deploy Deployment
thats how you can quickly see withs kubectl who owns who
here is a little reading about owners and dependants: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/owners-dependents/
hope this has helped you. bguess