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Working with Kubernetes Objects
1 - Understanding Kubernetes Objects
This page explains how Kubernetes objects are represented in the Kubernetes API, and how you can express them in .yaml
format.
Understanding Kubernetes objects
Kubernetes objects are persistent entities in the Kubernetes system. Kubernetes uses these entities to represent the state of your cluster. Specifically, they can describe:
- What containerized applications are running (and on which nodes)
- The resources available to those applications
- The policies around how those applications behave, such as restart policies, upgrades, and fault-tolerance
A Kubernetes object is a "record of intent"--once you create the object, the Kubernetes system will constantly work to ensure that object exists. By creating an object, you're effectively telling the Kubernetes system what you want your cluster's workload to look like; this is your cluster's desired state.
To work with Kubernetes objects--whether to create, modify, or delete them--you'll need to use the Kubernetes API. When you use the kubectl
command-line interface, for example, the CLI makes the necessary Kubernetes API calls for you. You can also use the Kubernetes API directly in your own programs using one of the Client Libraries.
Object Spec and Status
Almost every Kubernetes object includes two nested object fields that govern
the object's configuration: the object spec
and the object status
.
For objects that have a spec
, you have to set this when you create the object,
providing a description of the characteristics you want the resource to have:
its desired state.
The status
describes the current state of the object, supplied and updated
by the Kubernetes system and its components. The Kubernetes
control plane continually
and actively manages every object's actual state to match the desired state you
supplied.
For example: in Kubernetes, a Deployment is an object that can represent an
application running on your cluster. When you create the Deployment, you
might set the Deployment spec
to specify that you want three replicas of
the application to be running. The Kubernetes system reads the Deployment
spec and starts three instances of your desired application--updating
the status to match your spec. If any of those instances should fail
(a status change), the Kubernetes system responds to the difference
between spec and status by making a correction--in this case, starting
a replacement instance.
For more information on the object spec, status, and metadata, see the Kubernetes API Conventions.
Describing a Kubernetes object
When you create an object in Kubernetes, you must provide the object spec that describes its desired state, as well as some basic information about the object (such as a name). When you use the Kubernetes API to create the object (either directly or via kubectl
), that API request must include that information as JSON in the request body. Most often, you provide the information to kubectl
in a .yaml file. kubectl
converts the information to JSON when making the API request.
Here's an example .yaml
file that shows the required fields and object spec for a Kubernetes Deployment:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: nginx-deployment
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
app: nginx
replicas: 2 # tells deployment to run 2 pods matching the template
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx:1.14.2
ports:
- containerPort: 80
One way to create a Deployment using a .yaml
file like the one above is to use the
kubectl apply
command
in the kubectl
command-line interface, passing the .yaml
file as an argument. Here's an example:
kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/application/deployment.yaml --record
The output is similar to this:
deployment.apps/nginx-deployment created
Required Fields
In the .yaml
file for the Kubernetes object you want to create, you'll need to set values for the following fields:
apiVersion
- Which version of the Kubernetes API you're using to create this objectkind
- What kind of object you want to createmetadata
- Data that helps uniquely identify the object, including aname
string,UID
, and optionalnamespace
spec
- What state you desire for the object
The precise format of the object spec
is different for every Kubernetes object, and contains nested fields specific to that object. The Kubernetes API Reference can help you find the spec format for all of the objects you can create using Kubernetes.
For example, the spec
format for a Pod can be found in
PodSpec v1 core,
and the spec
format for a Deployment can be found in
DeploymentSpec v1 apps.
What's next
- Learn about the most important basic Kubernetes objects, such as Pod.
- Learn about controllers in Kubernetes.
- Using the Kubernetes API explains some more API concepts.
2 - Kubernetes Object Management
The kubectl
command-line tool supports several different ways to create and manage
Kubernetes objects. This document provides an overview of the different
approaches. Read the Kubectl book for
details of managing objects by Kubectl.
Management techniques
Warning: A Kubernetes object should be managed using only one technique. Mixing and matching techniques for the same object results in undefined behavior.
Management technique | Operates on | Recommended environment | Supported writers | Learning curve |
---|---|---|---|---|
Imperative commands | Live objects | Development projects | 1+ | Lowest |
Imperative object configuration | Individual files | Production projects | 1 | Moderate |
Declarative object configuration | Directories of files | Production projects | 1+ | Highest |
Imperative commands
When using imperative commands, a user operates directly on live objects
in a cluster. The user provides operations to
the kubectl
command as arguments or flags.
This is the recommended way to get started or to run a one-off task in a cluster. Because this technique operates directly on live objects, it provides no history of previous configurations.
Examples
Run an instance of the nginx container by creating a Deployment object:
kubectl create deployment nginx --image nginx
Trade-offs
Advantages compared to object configuration:
- Commands are expressed as a single action word.
- Commands require only a single step to make changes to the cluster.
Disadvantages compared to object configuration:
- Commands do not integrate with change review processes.
- Commands do not provide an audit trail associated with changes.
- Commands do not provide a source of records except for what is live.
- Commands do not provide a template for creating new objects.
Imperative object configuration
In imperative object configuration, the kubectl command specifies the operation (create, replace, etc.), optional flags and at least one file name. The file specified must contain a full definition of the object in YAML or JSON format.
See the API reference for more details on object definitions.
Warning: The imperativereplace
command replaces the existing spec with the newly provided one, dropping all changes to the object missing from the configuration file. This approach should not be used with resource types whose specs are updated independently of the configuration file. Services of typeLoadBalancer
, for example, have theirexternalIPs
field updated independently from the configuration by the cluster.
Examples
Create the objects defined in a configuration file:
kubectl create -f nginx.yaml
Delete the objects defined in two configuration files:
kubectl delete -f nginx.yaml -f redis.yaml
Update the objects defined in a configuration file by overwriting the live configuration:
kubectl replace -f nginx.yaml
Trade-offs
Advantages compared to imperative commands:
- Object configuration can be stored in a source control system such as Git.
- Object configuration can integrate with processes such as reviewing changes before push and audit trails.
- Object configuration provides a template for creating new objects.
Disadvantages compared to imperative commands:
- Object configuration requires basic understanding of the object schema.
- Object configuration requires the additional step of writing a YAML file.
Advantages compared to declarative object configuration:
- Imperative object configuration behavior is simpler and easier to understand.
- As of Kubernetes version 1.5, imperative object configuration is more mature.
Disadvantages compared to declarative object configuration:
- Imperative object configuration works best on files, not directories.
- Updates to live objects must be reflected in configuration files, or they will be lost during the next replacement.
Declarative object configuration
When using declarative object configuration, a user operates on object
configuration files stored locally, however the user does not define the
operations to be taken on the files. Create, update, and delete operations
are automatically detected per-object by kubectl
. This enables working on
directories, where different operations might be needed for different objects.
Note: Declarative object configuration retains changes made by other writers, even if the changes are not merged back to the object configuration file. This is possible by using thepatch
API operation to write only observed differences, instead of using thereplace
API operation to replace the entire object configuration.
Examples
Process all object configuration files in the configs
directory, and create or
patch the live objects. You can first diff
to see what changes are going to be
made, and then apply:
kubectl diff -f configs/
kubectl apply -f configs/
Recursively process directories:
kubectl diff -R -f configs/
kubectl apply -R -f configs/
Trade-offs
Advantages compared to imperative object configuration:
- Changes made directly to live objects are retained, even if they are not merged back into the configuration files.
- Declarative object configuration has better support for operating on directories and automatically detecting operation types (create, patch, delete) per-object.
Disadvantages compared to imperative object configuration:
- Declarative object configuration is harder to debug and understand results when they are unexpected.
- Partial updates using diffs create complex merge and patch operations.
What's next
- Managing Kubernetes Objects Using Imperative Commands
- Managing Kubernetes Objects Using Object Configuration (Imperative)
- Managing Kubernetes Objects Using Object Configuration (Declarative)
- Managing Kubernetes Objects Using Kustomize (Declarative)
- Kubectl Command Reference
- Kubectl Book
- Kubernetes API Reference
3 - Object Names and IDs
Each object in your cluster has a Name that is unique for that type of resource. Every Kubernetes object also has a UID that is unique across your whole cluster.
For example, you can only have one Pod named myapp-1234
within the same namespace, but you can have one Pod and one Deployment that are each named myapp-1234
.
For non-unique user-provided attributes, Kubernetes provides labels and annotations.
Names
A client-provided string that refers to an object in a resource URL, such as /api/v1/pods/some-name
.
Only one object of a given kind can have a given name at a time. However, if you delete the object, you can make a new object with the same name.
Note: In cases when objects represent a physical entity, like a Node representing a physical host, when the host is re-created under the same name without deleting and re-creating the Node, Kubernetes treats the new host as the old one, which may lead to inconsistencies.
Below are three types of commonly used name constraints for resources.
DNS Subdomain Names
Most resource types require a name that can be used as a DNS subdomain name as defined in RFC 1123. This means the name must:
- contain no more than 253 characters
- contain only lowercase alphanumeric characters, '-' or '.'
- start with an alphanumeric character
- end with an alphanumeric character
DNS Label Names
Some resource types require their names to follow the DNS label standard as defined in RFC 1123. This means the name must:
- contain at most 63 characters
- contain only lowercase alphanumeric characters or '-'
- start with an alphanumeric character
- end with an alphanumeric character
Path Segment Names
Some resource types require their names to be able to be safely encoded as a path segment. In other words, the name may not be "." or ".." and the name may not contain "/" or "%".
Here's an example manifest for a Pod named nginx-demo
.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: nginx-demo
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx:1.14.2
ports:
- containerPort: 80
Note: Some resource types have additional restrictions on their names.
UIDs
A Kubernetes systems-generated string to uniquely identify objects.
Every object created over the whole lifetime of a Kubernetes cluster has a distinct UID. It is intended to distinguish between historical occurrences of similar entities.
Kubernetes UIDs are universally unique identifiers (also known as UUIDs). UUIDs are standardized as ISO/IEC 9834-8 and as ITU-T X.667.
What's next
- Read about labels in Kubernetes.
- See the Identifiers and Names in Kubernetes design document.
4 - Namespaces
Kubernetes supports multiple virtual clusters backed by the same physical cluster. These virtual clusters are called namespaces.
When to Use Multiple Namespaces
Namespaces are intended for use in environments with many users spread across multiple teams, or projects. For clusters with a few to tens of users, you should not need to create or think about namespaces at all. Start using namespaces when you need the features they provide.
Namespaces provide a scope for names. Names of resources need to be unique within a namespace, but not across namespaces. Namespaces cannot be nested inside one another and each Kubernetes resource can only be in one namespace.
Namespaces are a way to divide cluster resources between multiple users (via resource quota).
It is not necessary to use multiple namespaces to separate slightly different resources, such as different versions of the same software: use labels to distinguish resources within the same namespace.
Working with Namespaces
Creation and deletion of namespaces are described in the Admin Guide documentation for namespaces.
Note: Avoid creating namespace with prefixkube-
, since it is reserved for Kubernetes system namespaces.
Viewing namespaces
You can list the current namespaces in a cluster using:
kubectl get namespace
NAME STATUS AGE
default Active 1d
kube-node-lease Active 1d
kube-public Active 1d
kube-system Active 1d
Kubernetes starts with four initial namespaces:
default
The default namespace for objects with no other namespacekube-system
The namespace for objects created by the Kubernetes systemkube-public
This namespace is created automatically and is readable by all users (including those not authenticated). This namespace is mostly reserved for cluster usage, in case that some resources should be visible and readable publicly throughout the whole cluster. The public aspect of this namespace is only a convention, not a requirement.kube-node-lease
This namespace for the lease objects associated with each node which improves the performance of the node heartbeats as the cluster scales.
Setting the namespace for a request
To set the namespace for a current request, use the --namespace
flag.
For example:
kubectl run nginx --image=nginx --namespace=<insert-namespace-name-here>
kubectl get pods --namespace=<insert-namespace-name-here>
Setting the namespace preference
You can permanently save the namespace for all subsequent kubectl commands in that context.
kubectl config set-context --current --namespace=<insert-namespace-name-here>
# Validate it
kubectl config view --minify | grep namespace:
Namespaces and DNS
When you create a Service,
it creates a corresponding DNS entry.
This entry is of the form <service-name>.<namespace-name>.svc.cluster.local
, which means
that if a container only uses <service-name>
, it will resolve to the service which
is local to a namespace. This is useful for using the same configuration across
multiple namespaces such as Development, Staging and Production. If you want to reach
across namespaces, you need to use the fully qualified domain name (FQDN).
Not All Objects are in a Namespace
Most Kubernetes resources (e.g. pods, services, replication controllers, and others) are in some namespaces. However namespace resources are not themselves in a namespace. And low-level resources, such as nodes and persistentVolumes, are not in any namespace.
To see which Kubernetes resources are and aren't in a namespace:
# In a namespace
kubectl api-resources --namespaced=true
# Not in a namespace
kubectl api-resources --namespaced=false
What's next
- Learn more about creating a new namespace.
- Learn more about deleting a namespace.
5 - Labels and Selectors
Labels are key/value pairs that are attached to objects, such as pods. Labels are intended to be used to specify identifying attributes of objects that are meaningful and relevant to users, but do not directly imply semantics to the core system. Labels can be used to organize and to select subsets of objects. Labels can be attached to objects at creation time and subsequently added and modified at any time. Each object can have a set of key/value labels defined. Each Key must be unique for a given object.
"metadata": {
"labels": {
"key1" : "value1",
"key2" : "value2"
}
}
Labels allow for efficient queries and watches and are ideal for use in UIs and CLIs. Non-identifying information should be recorded using annotations.
Motivation
Labels enable users to map their own organizational structures onto system objects in a loosely coupled fashion, without requiring clients to store these mappings.
Service deployments and batch processing pipelines are often multi-dimensional entities (e.g., multiple partitions or deployments, multiple release tracks, multiple tiers, multiple micro-services per tier). Management often requires cross-cutting operations, which breaks encapsulation of strictly hierarchical representations, especially rigid hierarchies determined by the infrastructure rather than by users.
Example labels:
"release" : "stable"
,"release" : "canary"
"environment" : "dev"
,"environment" : "qa"
,"environment" : "production"
"tier" : "frontend"
,"tier" : "backend"
,"tier" : "cache"
"partition" : "customerA"
,"partition" : "customerB"
"track" : "daily"
,"track" : "weekly"
These are examples of commonly used labels; you are free to develop your own conventions. Keep in mind that label Key must be unique for a given object.
Syntax and character set
Labels are key/value pairs. Valid label keys have two segments: an optional prefix and name, separated by a slash (/
). The name segment is required and must be 63 characters or less, beginning and ending with an alphanumeric character ([a-z0-9A-Z]
) with dashes (-
), underscores (_
), dots (.
), and alphanumerics between. The prefix is optional. If specified, the prefix must be a DNS subdomain: a series of DNS labels separated by dots (.
), not longer than 253 characters in total, followed by a slash (/
).
If the prefix is omitted, the label Key is presumed to be private to the user. Automated system components (e.g. kube-scheduler
, kube-controller-manager
, kube-apiserver
, kubectl
, or other third-party automation) which add labels to end-user objects must specify a prefix.
The kubernetes.io/
and k8s.io/
prefixes are reserved for Kubernetes core components.
Valid label value:
- must be 63 characters or less (cannot be empty),
- must begin and end with an alphanumeric character (
[a-z0-9A-Z]
), - could contain dashes (
-
), underscores (_
), dots (.
), and alphanumerics between.
For example, here's the configuration file for a Pod that has two labels environment: production
and app: nginx
:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: label-demo
labels:
environment: production
app: nginx
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx:1.14.2
ports:
- containerPort: 80
Label selectors
Unlike names and UIDs, labels do not provide uniqueness. In general, we expect many objects to carry the same label(s).
Via a label selector, the client/user can identify a set of objects. The label selector is the core grouping primitive in Kubernetes.
The API currently supports two types of selectors: equality-based and set-based.
A label selector can be made of multiple requirements which are comma-separated. In the case of multiple requirements, all must be satisfied so the comma separator acts as a logical AND (&&
) operator.
The semantics of empty or non-specified selectors are dependent on the context, and API types that use selectors should document the validity and meaning of them.
Note: For some API types, such as ReplicaSets, the label selectors of two instances must not overlap within a namespace, or the controller can see that as conflicting instructions and fail to determine how many replicas should be present.
Caution: For both equality-based and set-based conditions there is no logical OR (||
) operator. Ensure your filter statements are structured accordingly.
Equality-based requirement
Equality- or inequality-based requirements allow filtering by label keys and values. Matching objects must satisfy all of the specified label constraints, though they may have additional labels as well.
Three kinds of operators are admitted =
,==
,!=
. The first two represent equality (and are synonyms), while the latter represents inequality. For example:
environment = production
tier != frontend
The former selects all resources with key equal to environment
and value equal to production
.
The latter selects all resources with key equal to tier
and value distinct from frontend
, and all resources with no labels with the tier
key.
One could filter for resources in production
excluding frontend
using the comma operator: environment=production,tier!=frontend
One usage scenario for equality-based label requirement is for Pods to specify
node selection criteria. For example, the sample Pod below selects nodes with
the label "accelerator=nvidia-tesla-p100
".
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: cuda-test
spec:
containers:
- name: cuda-test
image: "k8s.gcr.io/cuda-vector-add:v0.1"
resources:
limits:
nvidia.com/gpu: 1
nodeSelector:
accelerator: nvidia-tesla-p100
Set-based requirement
Set-based label requirements allow filtering keys according to a set of values. Three kinds of operators are supported: in
,notin
and exists
(only the key identifier). For example:
environment in (production, qa)
tier notin (frontend, backend)
partition
!partition
- The first example selects all resources with key equal to
environment
and value equal toproduction
orqa
. - The second example selects all resources with key equal to
tier
and values other thanfrontend
andbackend
, and all resources with no labels with thetier
key. - The third example selects all resources including a label with key
partition
; no values are checked. - The fourth example selects all resources without a label with key
partition
; no values are checked.
Similarly the comma separator acts as an AND operator. So filtering resources with a partition
key (no matter the value) and with environment
different than qa
can be achieved using partition,environment notin (qa)
.
The set-based label selector is a general form of equality since environment=production
is equivalent to environment in (production)
; similarly for !=
and notin
.
Set-based requirements can be mixed with equality-based requirements. For example: partition in (customerA, customerB),environment!=qa
.
API
LIST and WATCH filtering
LIST and WATCH operations may specify label selectors to filter the sets of objects returned using a query parameter. Both requirements are permitted (presented here as they would appear in a URL query string):
- equality-based requirements:
?labelSelector=environment%3Dproduction,tier%3Dfrontend
- set-based requirements:
?labelSelector=environment+in+%28production%2Cqa%29%2Ctier+in+%28frontend%29
Both label selector styles can be used to list or watch resources via a REST client. For example, targeting apiserver
with kubectl
and using equality-based one may write:
kubectl get pods -l environment=production,tier=frontend
or using set-based requirements:
kubectl get pods -l 'environment in (production),tier in (frontend)'
As already mentioned set-based requirements are more expressive. For instance, they can implement the OR operator on values:
kubectl get pods -l 'environment in (production, qa)'
or restricting negative matching via exists operator:
kubectl get pods -l 'environment,environment notin (frontend)'
Set references in API objects
Some Kubernetes objects, such as services
and replicationcontrollers
,
also use label selectors to specify sets of other resources, such as
pods.
Service and ReplicationController
The set of pods that a service
targets is defined with a label selector. Similarly, the population of pods that a replicationcontroller
should manage is also defined with a label selector.
Labels selectors for both objects are defined in json
or yaml
files using maps, and only equality-based requirement selectors are supported:
"selector": {
"component" : "redis",
}
or
selector:
component: redis
this selector (respectively in json
or yaml
format) is equivalent to component=redis
or component in (redis)
.
Resources that support set-based requirements
Newer resources, such as Job
,
Deployment
,
ReplicaSet
, and
DaemonSet
,
support set-based requirements as well.
selector:
matchLabels:
component: redis
matchExpressions:
- {key: tier, operator: In, values: [cache]}
- {key: environment, operator: NotIn, values: [dev]}
matchLabels
is a map of {key,value}
pairs. A single {key,value}
in the matchLabels
map is equivalent to an element of matchExpressions
, whose key
field is "key", the operator
is "In", and the values
array contains only "value". matchExpressions
is a list of pod selector requirements. Valid operators include In, NotIn, Exists, and DoesNotExist. The values set must be non-empty in the case of In and NotIn. All of the requirements, from both matchLabels
and matchExpressions
are ANDed together -- they must all be satisfied in order to match.
Selecting sets of nodes
One use case for selecting over labels is to constrain the set of nodes onto which a pod can schedule. See the documentation on node selection for more information.
6 - Annotations
You can use Kubernetes annotations to attach arbitrary non-identifying metadata to objects. Clients such as tools and libraries can retrieve this metadata.
Attaching metadata to objects
You can use either labels or annotations to attach metadata to Kubernetes objects. Labels can be used to select objects and to find collections of objects that satisfy certain conditions. In contrast, annotations are not used to identify and select objects. The metadata in an annotation can be small or large, structured or unstructured, and can include characters not permitted by labels.
Annotations, like labels, are key/value maps:
"metadata": {
"annotations": {
"key1" : "value1",
"key2" : "value2"
}
}
Here are some examples of information that could be recorded in annotations:
Fields managed by a declarative configuration layer. Attaching these fields as annotations distinguishes them from default values set by clients or servers, and from auto-generated fields and fields set by auto-sizing or auto-scaling systems.
Build, release, or image information like timestamps, release IDs, git branch, PR numbers, image hashes, and registry address.
Pointers to logging, monitoring, analytics, or audit repositories.
Client library or tool information that can be used for debugging purposes: for example, name, version, and build information.
User or tool/system provenance information, such as URLs of related objects from other ecosystem components.
Lightweight rollout tool metadata: for example, config or checkpoints.
Phone or pager numbers of persons responsible, or directory entries that specify where that information can be found, such as a team web site.
Directives from the end-user to the implementations to modify behavior or engage non-standard features.
Instead of using annotations, you could store this type of information in an external database or directory, but that would make it much harder to produce shared client libraries and tools for deployment, management, introspection, and the like.
Syntax and character set
Annotations are key/value pairs. Valid annotation keys have two segments: an optional prefix and name, separated by a slash (/
). The name segment is required and must be 63 characters or less, beginning and ending with an alphanumeric character ([a-z0-9A-Z]
) with dashes (-
), underscores (_
), dots (.
), and alphanumerics between. The prefix is optional. If specified, the prefix must be a DNS subdomain: a series of DNS labels separated by dots (.
), not longer than 253 characters in total, followed by a slash (/
).
If the prefix is omitted, the annotation Key is presumed to be private to the user. Automated system components (e.g. kube-scheduler
, kube-controller-manager
, kube-apiserver
, kubectl
, or other third-party automation) which add annotations to end-user objects must specify a prefix.
The kubernetes.io/
and k8s.io/
prefixes are reserved for Kubernetes core components.
For example, here's the configuration file for a Pod that has the annotation imageregistry: https://hub.docker.com/
:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: annotations-demo
annotations:
imageregistry: "https://hub.docker.com/"
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx:1.14.2
ports:
- containerPort: 80
What's next
Learn more about Labels and Selectors.
7 - Field Selectors
Field selectors let you select Kubernetes resources based on the value of one or more resource fields. Here are some examples of field selector queries:
metadata.name=my-service
metadata.namespace!=default
status.phase=Pending
This kubectl
command selects all Pods for which the value of the status.phase
field is Running
:
kubectl get pods --field-selector status.phase=Running
Note: Field selectors are essentially resource filters. By default, no selectors/filters are applied, meaning that all resources of the specified type are selected. This makes thekubectl
querieskubectl get pods
andkubectl get pods --field-selector ""
equivalent.
Supported fields
Supported field selectors vary by Kubernetes resource type. All resource types support the metadata.name
and metadata.namespace
fields. Using unsupported field selectors produces an error. For example:
kubectl get ingress --field-selector foo.bar=baz
Error from server (BadRequest): Unable to find "ingresses" that match label selector "", field selector "foo.bar=baz": "foo.bar" is not a known field selector: only "metadata.name", "metadata.namespace"
Supported operators
You can use the =
, ==
, and !=
operators with field selectors (=
and ==
mean the same thing). This kubectl
command, for example, selects all Kubernetes Services that aren't in the default
namespace:
kubectl get services --all-namespaces --field-selector metadata.namespace!=default
Chained selectors
As with label and other selectors, field selectors can be chained together as a comma-separated list. This kubectl
command selects all Pods for which the status.phase
does not equal Running
and the spec.restartPolicy
field equals Always
:
kubectl get pods --field-selector=status.phase!=Running,spec.restartPolicy=Always
Multiple resource types
You use field selectors across multiple resource types. This kubectl
command selects all Statefulsets and Services that are not in the default
namespace:
kubectl get statefulsets,services --all-namespaces --field-selector metadata.namespace!=default
8 - Recommended Labels
You can visualize and manage Kubernetes objects with more tools than kubectl and the dashboard. A common set of labels allows tools to work interoperably, describing objects in a common manner that all tools can understand.
In addition to supporting tooling, the recommended labels describe applications in a way that can be queried.
The metadata is organized around the concept of an application. Kubernetes is not a platform as a service (PaaS) and doesn't have or enforce a formal notion of an application. Instead, applications are informal and described with metadata. The definition of what an application contains is loose.
Note: These are recommended labels. They make it easier to manage applications but aren't required for any core tooling.
Shared labels and annotations share a common prefix: app.kubernetes.io
. Labels
without a prefix are private to users. The shared prefix ensures that shared labels
do not interfere with custom user labels.
Labels
In order to take full advantage of using these labels, they should be applied on every resource object.
Key | Description | Example | Type |
---|---|---|---|
app.kubernetes.io/name | The name of the application | mysql | string |
app.kubernetes.io/instance | A unique name identifying the instance of an application | mysql-abcxzy | string |
app.kubernetes.io/version | The current version of the application (e.g., a semantic version, revision hash, etc.) | 5.7.21 | string |
app.kubernetes.io/component | The component within the architecture | database | string |
app.kubernetes.io/part-of | The name of a higher level application this one is part of | wordpress | string |
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by | The tool being used to manage the operation of an application | helm | string |
To illustrate these labels in action, consider the following StatefulSet object:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: StatefulSet
metadata:
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: mysql
app.kubernetes.io/instance: mysql-abcxzy
app.kubernetes.io/version: "5.7.21"
app.kubernetes.io/component: database
app.kubernetes.io/part-of: wordpress
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: helm
Applications And Instances Of Applications
An application can be installed one or more times into a Kubernetes cluster and, in some cases, the same namespace. For example, WordPress can be installed more than once where different websites are different installations of WordPress.
The name of an application and the instance name are recorded separately. For
example, WordPress has a app.kubernetes.io/name
of wordpress
while it has
an instance name, represented as app.kubernetes.io/instance
with a value of
wordpress-abcxzy
. This enables the application and instance of the application
to be identifiable. Every instance of an application must have a unique name.
Examples
To illustrate different ways to use these labels the following examples have varying complexity.
A Simple Stateless Service
Consider the case for a simple stateless service deployed using Deployment
and Service
objects. The following two snippets represent how the labels could be used in their simplest form.
The Deployment
is used to oversee the pods running the application itself.
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: myservice
app.kubernetes.io/instance: myservice-abcxzy
...
The Service
is used to expose the application.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: myservice
app.kubernetes.io/instance: myservice-abcxzy
...
Web Application With A Database
Consider a slightly more complicated application: a web application (WordPress) using a database (MySQL), installed using Helm. The following snippets illustrate the start of objects used to deploy this application.
The start to the following Deployment
is used for WordPress:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: wordpress
app.kubernetes.io/instance: wordpress-abcxzy
app.kubernetes.io/version: "4.9.4"
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: helm
app.kubernetes.io/component: server
app.kubernetes.io/part-of: wordpress
...
The Service
is used to expose WordPress:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: wordpress
app.kubernetes.io/instance: wordpress-abcxzy
app.kubernetes.io/version: "4.9.4"
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: helm
app.kubernetes.io/component: server
app.kubernetes.io/part-of: wordpress
...
MySQL is exposed as a StatefulSet
with metadata for both it and the larger application it belongs to:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: StatefulSet
metadata:
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: mysql
app.kubernetes.io/instance: mysql-abcxzy
app.kubernetes.io/version: "5.7.21"
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: helm
app.kubernetes.io/component: database
app.kubernetes.io/part-of: wordpress
...
The Service
is used to expose MySQL as part of WordPress:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: mysql
app.kubernetes.io/instance: mysql-abcxzy
app.kubernetes.io/version: "5.7.21"
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: helm
app.kubernetes.io/component: database
app.kubernetes.io/part-of: wordpress
...
With the MySQL StatefulSet
and Service
you'll notice information about both MySQL and WordPress, the broader application, are included.