Kubernetes is a portable, extensible, open source platform for managing containerized workloads and services, that facilitates both declarative configuration and automation. It has a large, rapidly growing ecosystem. Kubernetes services, support, and tools are widely available.
Kubernetes is a portable, extensible, open source platform for managing containerized
workloads and services, that facilitates both declarative configuration and automation.
It has a large, rapidly growing ecosystem. Kubernetes services, support, and tools are widely available.
The name Kubernetes originates from Greek, meaning helmsman or pilot. K8s as an abbreviation
results from counting the eight letters between the "K" and the "s". Google open-sourced the
Kubernetes project in 2014. Kubernetes combines
over 15 years of Google's experience running
production workloads at scale with best-of-breed ideas and practices from the community.
Going back in time
Let's take a look at why Kubernetes is so useful by going back in time.
Traditional deployment era:
Early on, organizations ran applications on physical servers. There was no way to define
resource boundaries for applications in a physical server, and this caused resource
allocation issues. For example, if multiple applications run on a physical server, there
can be instances where one application would take up most of the resources, and as a result,
the other applications would underperform. A solution for this would be to run each application
on a different physical server. But this did not scale as resources were underutilized, and it
was expensive for organizations to maintain many physical servers.
Virtualized deployment era: As a solution, virtualization was introduced. It allows you
to run multiple Virtual Machines (VMs) on a single physical server's CPU. Virtualization
allows applications to be isolated between VMs and provides a level of security as the
information of one application cannot be freely accessed by another application.
Virtualization allows better utilization of resources in a physical server and allows
better scalability because an application can be added or updated easily, reduces
hardware costs, and much more. With virtualization you can present a set of physical
resources as a cluster of disposable virtual machines.
Each VM is a full machine running all the components, including its own operating
system, on top of the virtualized hardware.
Container deployment era: Containers are similar to VMs, but they have relaxed
isolation properties to share the Operating System (OS) among the applications.
Therefore, containers are considered lightweight. Similar to a VM, a container
has its own filesystem, share of CPU, memory, process space, and more. As they
are decoupled from the underlying infrastructure, they are portable across clouds
and OS distributions.
Containers have become popular because they provide extra benefits, such as:
Agile application creation and deployment: increased ease and efficiency of
container image creation compared to VM image use.
Continuous development, integration, and deployment: provides for reliable
and frequent container image build and deployment with quick and efficient
rollbacks (due to image immutability).
Dev and Ops separation of concerns: create application container images at
build/release time rather than deployment time, thereby decoupling
applications from infrastructure.
Observability: not only surfaces OS-level information and metrics, but also
application health and other signals.
Environmental consistency across development, testing, and production: runs
the same on a laptop as it does in the cloud.
Cloud and OS distribution portability: runs on Ubuntu, RHEL, CoreOS, on-premises,
on major public clouds, and anywhere else.
Application-centric management: raises the level of abstraction from running an
OS on virtual hardware to running an application on an OS using logical resources.
Loosely coupled, distributed, elastic, liberated micro-services: applications are
broken into smaller, independent pieces and can be deployed and managed dynamically –
not a monolithic stack running on one big single-purpose machine.
Resource utilization: high efficiency and density.
Why you need Kubernetes and what it can do
Containers are a good way to bundle and run your applications. In a production
environment, you need to manage the containers that run the applications and
ensure that there is no downtime. For example, if a container goes down, another
container needs to start. Wouldn't it be easier if this behavior was handled by a system?
That's how Kubernetes comes to the rescue! Kubernetes provides you with a framework
to run distributed systems resiliently. It takes care of scaling and failover for
your application, provides deployment patterns, and more. For example: Kubernetes
can easily manage a canary deployment for your system.
Kubernetes provides you with:
Service discovery and load balancing
Kubernetes can expose a container using the DNS name or using their own IP address.
If traffic to a container is high, Kubernetes is able to load balance and distribute
the network traffic so that the deployment is stable.
Storage orchestration
Kubernetes allows you to automatically mount a storage system of your choice, such as
local storages, public cloud providers, and more.
Automated rollouts and rollbacks
You can describe the desired state for your deployed containers using Kubernetes,
and it can change the actual state to the desired state at a controlled rate.
For example, you can automate Kubernetes to create new containers for your
deployment, remove existing containers and adopt all their resources to the new container.
Automatic bin packing
You provide Kubernetes with a cluster of nodes that it can use to run containerized tasks.
You tell Kubernetes how much CPU and memory (RAM) each container needs. Kubernetes can fit
containers onto your nodes to make the best use of your resources.
Self-healing
Kubernetes restarts containers that fail, replaces containers, kills containers that don't
respond to your user-defined health check, and doesn't advertise them to clients until they
are ready to serve.
Secret and configuration management
Kubernetes lets you store and manage sensitive information, such as passwords, OAuth tokens,
and SSH keys. You can deploy and update secrets and application configuration without
rebuilding your container images, and without exposing secrets in your stack configuration.
Batch execution
In addition to services, Kubernetes can manage your batch and CI workloads, replacing containers that fail, if desired.
Horizontal scaling
Scale your application up and down with a simple command, with a UI, or automatically based on CPU usage.
IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack
Allocation of IPv4 and IPv6 addresses to Pods and Services
Designed for extensibility
Add features to your Kubernetes cluster without changing upstream source code.
What Kubernetes is not
Kubernetes is not a traditional, all-inclusive PaaS (Platform as a Service) system.
Since Kubernetes operates at the container level rather than at the hardware level,
it provides some generally applicable features common to PaaS offerings, such as
deployment, scaling, load balancing, and lets users integrate their logging, monitoring,
and alerting solutions. However, Kubernetes is not monolithic, and these default solutions
are optional and pluggable. Kubernetes provides the building blocks for building developer
platforms, but preserves user choice and flexibility where it is important.
Kubernetes:
Does not limit the types of applications supported. Kubernetes aims to support an
extremely diverse variety of workloads, including stateless, stateful, and data-processing
workloads. If an application can run in a container, it should run great on Kubernetes.
Does not deploy source code and does not build your application. Continuous Integration,
Delivery, and Deployment (CI/CD) workflows are determined by organization cultures and
preferences as well as technical requirements.
Does not provide application-level services, such as middleware (for example, message buses),
data-processing frameworks (for example, Spark), databases (for example, MySQL), caches, nor
cluster storage systems (for example, Ceph) as built-in services. Such components can run on
Kubernetes, and/or can be accessed by applications running on Kubernetes through portable
mechanisms, such as the Open Service Broker.
Does not dictate logging, monitoring, or alerting solutions. It provides some integrations
as proof of concept, and mechanisms to collect and export metrics.
Does not provide nor mandate a configuration language/system (for example, Jsonnet). It provides
a declarative API that may be targeted by arbitrary forms of declarative specifications.
Does not provide nor adopt any comprehensive machine configuration, maintenance, management,
or self-healing systems.
Additionally, Kubernetes is not a mere orchestration system. In fact, it eliminates the need
for orchestration. The technical definition of orchestration is execution of a defined workflow:
first do A, then B, then C. In contrast, Kubernetes comprises a set of independent, composable
control processes that continuously drive the current state towards the provided desired state.
It shouldn't matter how you get from A to C. Centralized control is also not required. This
results in a system that is easier to use and more powerful, robust, resilient, and extensible.
Kubernetes objects are persistent entities in the Kubernetes system. Kubernetes uses these entities to represent the state of your cluster. Learn about the Kubernetes object model and how to work with these 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.
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 file known as a manifest.
By convention, manifests are YAML (you could also use JSON format).
Tools such as kubectl convert the information from a manifest into JSON or another supported
serialization format when making the API request over HTTP.
Here's an example manifest that shows the required fields and object spec for a Kubernetes
Deployment:
apiVersion:apps/v1kind:Deploymentmetadata:name:nginx-deploymentspec:selector:matchLabels:app:nginxreplicas:2# tells deployment to run 2 pods matching the templatetemplate:metadata:labels:app:nginxspec:containers:- name:nginximage:nginx:1.14.2ports:- containerPort:80
One way to create a Deployment using a manifest 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:
In the manifest (YAML or JSON 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 object
kind - What kind of object you want to create
metadata - Data that helps uniquely identify the object, including a name string, UID, and optional namespace
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, see the spec field
for the Pod API reference.
For each Pod, the .spec field specifies the pod and its desired state (such as the container image name for
each container within that pod).
Another example of an object specification is the
spec field
for the StatefulSet API. For StatefulSet, the .spec field specifies the StatefulSet and
its desired state.
Within the .spec of a StatefulSet is a template
for Pod objects. That template describes Pods that the StatefulSet controller will create in order to
satisfy the StatefulSet specification.
Different kinds of object can also have different .status; again, the API reference pages
detail the structure of that .status field, and its content for each different type of object.
Starting with Kubernetes v1.25, the API server offers server side
field validation
that detects unrecognized or duplicate fields in an object. It provides all the functionality
of kubectl --validate on the server side.
The kubectl tool uses the --validate flag to set the level of field validation. It accepts the
values ignore, warn, and strict while also accepting the values true (equivalent to strict)
and false (equivalent to ignore). The default validation setting for kubectl is --validate=true.
Strict
Strict field validation, errors on validation failure
Warn
Field validation is performed, but errors are exposed as warnings rather than failing the request
Ignore
No server side field validation is performed
When kubectl cannot connect to an API server that supports field validation it will fall back
to using client-side validation. Kubernetes 1.27 and later versions always offer field validation;
older Kubernetes releases might not. If your cluster is older than v1.27, check the documentation
for your version of Kubernetes.
What's next
If you're new to Kubernetes, read more about the following:
Pods which are the most important basic Kubernetes objects.
To learn about objects in Kubernetes in more depth, read other pages in this section:
1.1 - 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 imperative replace 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 type LoadBalancer, for example, have their externalIPs 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 the patch API operation to write only
observed differences, instead of using the replace
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:
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.
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.
Names must be unique across all API versions
of the same resource. API resources are distinguished by their API group, resource type, namespace
(for namespaced resources), and name. In other words, API version is irrelevant in this context.
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 four 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
RFC 1123 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
RFC 1035 Label Names
Some resource types require their names to follow the DNS
label standard as defined in RFC 1035.
This means the name must:
contain at most 63 characters
contain only lowercase alphanumeric characters or '-'
start with an alphabetic character
end with an alphanumeric character
Note: The only difference between the RFC 1035 and RFC 1123
label standards is that RFC 1123 labels are allowed to
start with a digit, whereas RFC 1035 labels can start
with a lowercase alphabetic character only.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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 (can be empty),
unless 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 a manifest for a Pod that has two labels
environment: production and app: nginx:
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".
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 to production or qa.
The second example selects all resources with key equal to tier and values other
than frontend and backend, and all resources with no labels with the tier 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):
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 notin 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.
Label 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).
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.
Using labels effectively
You can apply a single label to any resources, but this is not always the
best practice. There are many scenarios where multiple labels should be used to
distinguish resource sets from one another.
For instance, different applications would use different values for the app label, but a
multi-tier application, such as the guestbook example,
would additionally need to distinguish each tier. The frontend could carry the following labels:
labels:app:guestbooktier:frontend
while the Redis master and replica would have different tier labels, and perhaps even an
additional role label:
labels:app:guestbooktier:backendrole:master
and
labels:app:guestbooktier:backendrole:replica
The labels allow for slicing and dicing the resources along any dimension specified by a label:
kubectl apply -f examples/guestbook/all-in-one/guestbook-all-in-one.yaml
kubectl get pods -Lapp -Ltier -Lrole
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
guestbook-redis-replica-2q2yf 1/1 Running 0 3m
guestbook-redis-replica-qgazl 1/1 Running 0 3m
Updating labels
Sometimes you may want to relabel existing pods and other resources before creating
new resources. This can be done with kubectl label.
For example, if you want to label all your NGINX Pods as frontend tier, run:
This first filters all pods with the label "app=nginx", and then labels them with the "tier=fe".
To see the pods you labeled, run:
kubectl get pods -l app=nginx -L tier
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE TIER
my-nginx-2035384211-j5fhi 1/1 Running 0 23m fe
my-nginx-2035384211-u2c7e 1/1 Running 0 23m fe
my-nginx-2035384211-u3t6x 1/1 Running 0 23m fe
This outputs all "app=nginx" pods, with an additional label column of pods' tier
(specified with -L or --label-columns).
In Kubernetes, namespaces provides a mechanism for isolating groups of resources within a single cluster. Names of resources need to be unique within a namespace, but not across namespaces. Namespace-based scoping is applicable only for namespaced objects(e.g. Deployments, Services, etc) and not for cluster-wide objects (e.g. StorageClass, Nodes, PersistentVolumes, etc).
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.
Note: For a production cluster, consider not using the default namespace. Instead, make other namespaces and use those.
Initial namespaces
Kubernetes starts with four initial namespaces:
default
Kubernetes includes this namespace so that you can start using your new cluster without first creating a namespace.
kube-node-lease
This namespace holds Lease objects associated with each node. Node leases allow the kubelet to send heartbeats so that the control plane can detect node failure.
kube-public
This namespace is readable by all clients (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-system
The namespace for objects created by the Kubernetes system.
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).
By creating namespaces with the same name as public top-level
domains, Services in these
namespaces can have short DNS names that overlap with public DNS records.
Workloads from any namespace performing a DNS lookup without a trailing dot will
be redirected to those services, taking precedence over public DNS.
To mitigate this, limit privileges for creating namespaces to trusted users. If
required, you could additionally configure third-party security controls, such
as admission
webhooks,
to block creating any namespace with the name of public
TLDs.
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 namespacekubectl api-resources --namespaced=true# Not in a namespacekubectl api-resources --namespaced=false
Automatic labelling
FEATURE STATE:Kubernetes 1.22 [stable]
The Kubernetes control plane sets an immutable labelkubernetes.io/metadata.name on all namespaces.
The value of the label is the namespace name.
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. It is possible to use labels as
well as annotations in the metadata of the same object.
Note: The keys and the values in the map must be strings. In other words, you cannot use
numeric, boolean, list or other types for either the keys or the values.
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 a manifest for a Pod that has the annotation imageregistry: https://hub.docker.com/ :
Field selectors let you select Kubernetes objects 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 the kubectl queries kubectl get pods and kubectl 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
Note:Set-based operators
(in, notin, exists) are not supported for field selectors.
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 can 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
1.7 - Finalizers
Finalizers are namespaced keys that tell Kubernetes to wait until specific
conditions are met before it fully deletes resources marked for deletion.
Finalizers alert controllers
to clean up resources the deleted object owned.
When you tell Kubernetes to delete an object that has finalizers specified for
it, the Kubernetes API marks the object for deletion by populating .metadata.deletionTimestamp,
and returns a 202 status code (HTTP "Accepted"). The target object remains in a terminating state while the
control plane, or other components, take the actions defined by the finalizers.
After these actions are complete, the controller removes the relevant finalizers
from the target object. When the metadata.finalizers field is empty,
Kubernetes considers the deletion complete and deletes the object.
You can use finalizers to control garbage collection
of resources. For example, you can define a finalizer to clean up related resources or
infrastructure before the controller deletes the target resource.
You can use finalizers to control garbage collection
of objects by alerting controllers
to perform specific cleanup tasks before deleting the target resource.
Finalizers don't usually specify the code to execute. Instead, they are
typically lists of keys on a specific resource similar to annotations.
Kubernetes specifies some finalizers automatically, but you can also specify
your own.
How finalizers work
When you create a resource using a manifest file, you can specify finalizers in
the metadata.finalizers field. When you attempt to delete the resource, the
API server handling the delete request notices the values in the finalizers field
and does the following:
Modifies the object to add a metadata.deletionTimestamp field with the
time you started the deletion.
Prevents the object from being removed until all items are removed from its metadata.finalizers field
Returns a 202 status code (HTTP "Accepted")
The controller managing that finalizer notices the update to the object setting the
metadata.deletionTimestamp, indicating deletion of the object has been requested.
The controller then attempts to satisfy the requirements of the finalizers
specified for that resource. Each time a finalizer condition is satisfied, the
controller removes that key from the resource's finalizers field. When the
finalizers field is emptied, an object with a deletionTimestamp field set
is automatically deleted. You can also use finalizers to prevent deletion of unmanaged resources.
A common example of a finalizer is kubernetes.io/pv-protection, which prevents
accidental deletion of PersistentVolume objects. When a PersistentVolume
object is in use by a Pod, Kubernetes adds the pv-protection finalizer. If you
try to delete the PersistentVolume, it enters a Terminating status, but the
controller can't delete it because the finalizer exists. When the Pod stops
using the PersistentVolume, Kubernetes clears the pv-protection finalizer,
and the controller deletes the volume.
Note:
When you DELETE an object, Kubernetes adds the deletion timestamp for that object and then
immediately starts to restrict changes to the .metadata.finalizers field for the object that is
now pending deletion. You can remove existing finalizers (deleting an entry from the finalizers
list) but you cannot add a new finalizer. You also cannot modify the deletionTimestamp for an
object once it is set.
After the deletion is requested, you can not resurrect this object. The only way is to delete it and make a new similar object.
Owner references, labels, and finalizers
Like labels,
owner references
describe the relationships between objects in Kubernetes, but are used for a
different purpose. When a
controller manages objects
like Pods, it uses labels to track changes to groups of related objects. For
example, when a Job creates one or
more Pods, the Job controller applies labels to those pods and tracks changes to
any Pods in the cluster with the same label.
The Job controller also adds owner references to those Pods, pointing at the
Job that created the Pods. If you delete the Job while these Pods are running,
Kubernetes uses the owner references (not labels) to determine which Pods in the
cluster need cleanup.
Kubernetes also processes finalizers when it identifies owner references on a
resource targeted for deletion.
In some situations, finalizers can block the deletion of dependent objects,
which can cause the targeted owner object to remain for
longer than expected without being fully deleted. In these situations, you
should check finalizers and owner references on the target owner and dependent
objects to troubleshoot the cause.
Note: In cases where objects are stuck in a deleting state, avoid manually
removing finalizers to allow deletion to continue. Finalizers are usually added
to resources for a reason, so forcefully removing them can lead to issues in
your cluster. This should only be done when the purpose of the finalizer is
understood and is accomplished in another way (for example, manually cleaning
up some dependent object).
In Kubernetes, some objects are
owners of other objects. For example, a
ReplicaSet is the owner
of a set of Pods. These owned objects are dependents of their owner.
Ownership is different from the labels and selectors
mechanism that some resources also use. For example, consider a Service that
creates EndpointSlice objects. The Service uses labels to allow the control plane to
determine which EndpointSlice objects are used for that Service. In addition
to the labels, each EndpointSlice that is managed on behalf of a Service has
an owner reference. Owner references help different parts of Kubernetes avoid
interfering with objects they don’t control.
Owner references in object specifications
Dependent objects have a metadata.ownerReferences field that references their
owner object. A valid owner reference consists of the object name and a UID
within the same namespace as the dependent object. Kubernetes sets the value of
this field automatically for objects that are dependents of other objects like
ReplicaSets, DaemonSets, Deployments, Jobs and CronJobs, and ReplicationControllers.
You can also configure these relationships manually by changing the value of
this field. However, you usually don't need to and can allow Kubernetes to
automatically manage the relationships.
Dependent objects also have an ownerReferences.blockOwnerDeletion field that
takes a boolean value and controls whether specific dependents can block garbage
collection from deleting their owner object. Kubernetes automatically sets this
field to true if a controller
(for example, the Deployment controller) sets the value of the
metadata.ownerReferences field. You can also set the value of the
blockOwnerDeletion field manually to control which dependents block garbage
collection.
A Kubernetes admission controller controls user access to change this field for
dependent resources, based on the delete permissions of the owner. This control
prevents unauthorized users from delaying owner object deletion.
Note:
Cross-namespace owner references are disallowed by design.
Namespaced dependents can specify cluster-scoped or namespaced owners.
A namespaced owner must exist in the same namespace as the dependent.
If it does not, the owner reference is treated as absent, and the dependent
is subject to deletion once all owners are verified absent.
Cluster-scoped dependents can only specify cluster-scoped owners.
In v1.20+, if a cluster-scoped dependent specifies a namespaced kind as an owner,
it is treated as having an unresolvable owner reference, and is not able to be garbage collected.
In v1.20+, if the garbage collector detects an invalid cross-namespace ownerReference,
or a cluster-scoped dependent with an ownerReference referencing a namespaced kind, a warning Event
with a reason of OwnerRefInvalidNamespace and an involvedObject of the invalid dependent is reported.
You can check for that kind of Event by running
kubectl get events -A --field-selector=reason=OwnerRefInvalidNamespace.
Ownership and finalizers
When you tell Kubernetes to delete a resource, the API server allows the
managing controller to process any finalizer rules
for the resource. Finalizers
prevent accidental deletion of resources your cluster may still need to function
correctly. For example, if you try to delete a PersistentVolume that is still
in use by a Pod, the deletion does not happen immediately because the
PersistentVolume has the kubernetes.io/pv-protection finalizer on it.
Instead, the volume remains in the Terminating status until Kubernetes clears
the finalizer, which only happens after the PersistentVolume is no longer
bound to a Pod.
Kubernetes also adds finalizers to an owner resource when you use either
foreground or orphan cascading deletion.
In foreground deletion, it adds the foreground finalizer so that the
controller must delete dependent resources that also have
ownerReferences.blockOwnerDeletion=true before it deletes the owner. If you
specify an orphan deletion policy, Kubernetes adds the orphan finalizer so
that the controller ignores dependent resources after it deletes the owner
object.
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 SemVer 1.0, 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:
# This is an excerptapiVersion:apps/v1kind:StatefulSetmetadata:labels:app.kubernetes.io/name:mysqlapp.kubernetes.io/instance:mysql-abcxzyapp.kubernetes.io/version:"5.7.21"app.kubernetes.io/component:databaseapp.kubernetes.io/part-of:wordpressapp.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.
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:
With the MySQL StatefulSet and Service you'll notice information about both MySQL and WordPress, the broader application, are included.
2 - Kubernetes Components
A Kubernetes cluster consists of the components that are a part of the control plane and a set of machines called nodes.
When you deploy Kubernetes, you get a cluster.
A Kubernetes cluster consists of a set of worker machines, called nodes,
that run containerized applications. Every cluster has at least one worker node.
The worker node(s) host the Pods that are
the components of the application workload. The
control plane manages the worker
nodes and the Pods in the cluster. In production environments, the control plane usually
runs across multiple computers and a cluster usually runs multiple nodes, providing
fault-tolerance and high availability.
This document outlines the various components you need to have for
a complete and working Kubernetes cluster.
Control Plane Components
The control plane's components make global decisions about the cluster (for example, scheduling),
as well as detecting and responding to cluster events (for example, starting up a new
pod when a Deployment's
replicas field is unsatisfied).
Control plane components can be run on any machine in the cluster. However,
for simplicity, setup scripts typically start all control plane components on
the same machine, and do not run user containers on this machine. See
Creating Highly Available clusters with kubeadm
for an example control plane setup that runs across multiple machines.
kube-apiserver
The API server is a component of the Kubernetes
control plane that exposes the Kubernetes API.
The API server is the front end for the Kubernetes control plane.
The main implementation of a Kubernetes API server is kube-apiserver.
kube-apiserver is designed to scale horizontally—that is, it scales by deploying more instances.
You can run several instances of kube-apiserver and balance traffic between those instances.
etcd
Consistent and highly-available key value store used as Kubernetes' backing store for all cluster data.
If your Kubernetes cluster uses etcd as its backing store, make sure you have a
back up plan
for the data.
You can find in-depth information about etcd in the official documentation.
kube-scheduler
Control plane component that watches for newly created
Pods with no assigned
node, and selects a node for them
to run on.
Factors taken into account for scheduling decisions include:
individual and collective resource requirements, hardware/software/policy
constraints, affinity and anti-affinity specifications, data locality,
inter-workload interference, and deadlines.
kube-controller-manager
Control plane component that runs controller processes.
Logically, each controller is a separate process, but to reduce complexity, they are all compiled into a single binary and run in a single process.
There are many different types of controllers. Some examples of them are:
Node controller: Responsible for noticing and responding when nodes go down.
Job controller: Watches for Job objects that represent one-off tasks, then creates
Pods to run those tasks to completion.
EndpointSlice controller: Populates EndpointSlice objects (to provide a link between Services and Pods).
ServiceAccount controller: Create default ServiceAccounts for new namespaces.
The above is not an exhaustive list.
cloud-controller-manager
A Kubernetes control plane component
that embeds cloud-specific control logic. The cloud controller manager lets you link your
cluster into your cloud provider's API, and separates out the components that interact
with that cloud platform from components that only interact with your cluster.
The cloud-controller-manager only runs controllers that are specific to your cloud provider.
If you are running Kubernetes on your own premises, or in a learning environment inside your
own PC, the cluster does not have a cloud controller manager.
As with the kube-controller-manager, the cloud-controller-manager combines several logically
independent control loops into a single binary that you run as a single process. You can
scale horizontally (run more than one copy) to improve performance or to help tolerate failures.
The following controllers can have cloud provider dependencies:
Node controller: For checking the cloud provider to determine if a node has been deleted in the cloud after it stops responding
Route controller: For setting up routes in the underlying cloud infrastructure
Service controller: For creating, updating and deleting cloud provider load balancers
Node Components
Node components run on every node, maintaining running pods and providing the Kubernetes runtime environment.
kubelet
An agent that runs on each node in the cluster. It makes sure that containers are running in a Pod.
The kubelet takes a set of PodSpecs that
are provided through various mechanisms and ensures that the containers described in those
PodSpecs are running and healthy. The kubelet doesn't manage containers which were not created by
Kubernetes.
kube-proxy
kube-proxy is a network proxy that runs on each
node in your cluster,
implementing part of the Kubernetes
Service concept.
kube-proxy
maintains network rules on nodes. These network rules allow network
communication to your Pods from network sessions inside or outside of
your cluster.
kube-proxy uses the operating system packet filtering layer if there is one
and it's available. Otherwise, kube-proxy forwards the traffic itself.
Container runtime
A fundamental component that empowers Kubernetes to run containers effectively.
It is responsible for managing the execution and lifecycle of containers within the Kubernetes environment.
Addons use Kubernetes resources (DaemonSet,
Deployment, etc)
to implement cluster features. Because these are providing cluster-level features, namespaced resources
for addons belong within the kube-system namespace.
Selected addons are described below; for an extended list of available addons, please
see Addons.
DNS
While the other addons are not strictly required, all Kubernetes clusters should have
cluster DNS, as many examples rely on it.
Cluster DNS is a DNS server, in addition to the other DNS server(s) in your environment,
which serves DNS records for Kubernetes services.
Containers started by Kubernetes automatically include this DNS server in their DNS searches.
Web UI (Dashboard)
Dashboard is a general purpose,
web-based UI for Kubernetes clusters. It allows users to manage and troubleshoot applications
running in the cluster, as well as the cluster itself.
Container Resource Monitoring
Container Resource Monitoring
records generic time-series metrics
about containers in a central database, and provides a UI for browsing that data.
Cluster-level Logging
A cluster-level logging mechanism is responsible for
saving container logs to a central log store with search/browsing interface.
Network Plugins
Network plugins are software
components that implement the container network interface (CNI) specification. They are responsible for
allocating IP addresses to pods and enabling them to communicate with each other within the cluster.
The Kubernetes API lets you query and manipulate the state of objects in Kubernetes. The core of Kubernetes' control plane is the API server and the HTTP API that it exposes. Users, the different parts of your cluster, and external components all communicate with one another through the API server.
The core of Kubernetes' control plane
is the API server. The API server
exposes an HTTP API that lets end users, different parts of your cluster, and
external components communicate with one another.
The Kubernetes API lets you query and manipulate the state of API objects in Kubernetes
(for example: Pods, Namespaces, ConfigMaps, and Events).
Most operations can be performed through the
kubectl command-line interface or other
command-line tools, such as
kubeadm, which in turn use the
API. However, you can also access the API directly using REST calls.
Consider using one of the client libraries
if you are writing an application using the Kubernetes API.
OpenAPI specification
Complete API details are documented using OpenAPI.
OpenAPI V2
The Kubernetes API server serves an aggregated OpenAPI v2 spec via the
/openapi/v2 endpoint. You can request the response format using
request headers as follows:
Valid request header values for OpenAPI v2 queries
Kubernetes implements an alternative Protobuf based serialization format that
is primarily intended for intra-cluster communication. For more information
about this format, see the Kubernetes Protobuf serialization design proposal and the
Interface Definition Language (IDL) files for each schema located in the Go
packages that define the API objects.
OpenAPI V3
FEATURE STATE:Kubernetes v1.27 [stable]
Kubernetes supports publishing a description of its APIs as OpenAPI v3.
A discovery endpoint /openapi/v3 is provided to see a list of all
group/versions available. This endpoint only returns JSON. These
group/versions are provided in the following format:
The relative URLs are pointing to immutable OpenAPI descriptions, in
order to improve client-side caching. The proper HTTP caching headers
are also set by the API server for that purpose (Expires to 1 year in
the future, and Cache-Control to immutable). When an obsolete URL is
used, the API server returns a redirect to the newest URL.
The Kubernetes API server publishes an OpenAPI v3 spec per Kubernetes
group version at the /openapi/v3/apis/<group>/<version>?hash=<hash>
endpoint.
Refer to the table below for accepted request headers.
Valid request header values for OpenAPI v3 queries
A Golang implementation to fetch the OpenAPI V3 is provided in the package k8s.io/client-go/openapi3.
Persistence
Kubernetes stores the serialized state of objects by writing them into
etcd.
API Discovery
A list of all group versions supported by a cluster is published at
the /api and /apis endpoints. Each group version also advertises
the list of resources supported via /apis/<group>/<version> (for
example: /apis/rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1alpha1). These endpoints
are used by kubectl to fetch the list of resources supported by a
cluster.
Aggregated Discovery
FEATURE STATE:Kubernetes v1.27 [beta]
Kubernetes offers beta support for aggregated discovery, publishing
all resources supported by a cluster through two endpoints (/api and
/apis) compared to one for every group version. Requesting this
endpoint drastically reduces the number of requests sent to fetch the
discovery for the average Kubernetes cluster. This may be accessed by
requesting the respective endpoints with an Accept header indicating
the aggregated discovery resource:
Accept: application/json;v=v2beta1;g=apidiscovery.k8s.io;as=APIGroupDiscoveryList.
The endpoint also supports ETag and protobuf encoding.
API groups and versioning
To make it easier to eliminate fields or restructure resource representations,
Kubernetes supports multiple API versions, each at a different API path, such
as /api/v1 or /apis/rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1alpha1.
Versioning is done at the API level rather than at the resource or field level
to ensure that the API presents a clear, consistent view of system resources
and behavior, and to enable controlling access to end-of-life and/or
experimental APIs.
To make it easier to evolve and to extend its API, Kubernetes implements
API groups that can be
enabled or disabled.
API resources are distinguished by their API group, resource type, namespace
(for namespaced resources), and name. The API server handles the conversion between
API versions transparently: all the different versions are actually representations
of the same persisted data. The API server may serve the same underlying data
through multiple API versions.
For example, suppose there are two API versions, v1 and v1beta1, for the same
resource. If you originally created an object using the v1beta1 version of its
API, you can later read, update, or delete that object using either the v1beta1
or the v1 API version, until the v1beta1 version is deprecated and removed.
At that point you can continue accessing and modifying the object using the v1 API.
API changes
Any system that is successful needs to grow and change as new use cases emerge or existing ones change.
Therefore, Kubernetes has designed the Kubernetes API to continuously change and grow.
The Kubernetes project aims to not break compatibility with existing clients, and to maintain that
compatibility for a length of time so that other projects have an opportunity to adapt.
In general, new API resources and new resource fields can be added often and frequently.
Elimination of resources or fields requires following the
API deprecation policy.
Kubernetes makes a strong commitment to maintain compatibility for official Kubernetes APIs
once they reach general availability (GA), typically at API version v1. Additionally,
Kubernetes maintains compatibility with data persisted via beta API versions of official Kubernetes APIs,
and ensures that data can be converted and accessed via GA API versions when the feature goes stable.
If you adopt a beta API version, you will need to transition to a subsequent beta or stable API version
once the API graduates. The best time to do this is while the beta API is in its deprecation period,
since objects are simultaneously accessible via both API versions. Once the beta API completes its
deprecation period and is no longer served, the replacement API version must be used.
Note: Although Kubernetes also aims to maintain compatibility for alpha APIs versions, in some
circumstances this is not possible. If you use any alpha API versions, check the release notes
for Kubernetes when upgrading your cluster, in case the API did change in incompatible
ways that require deleting all existing alpha objects prior to upgrade.