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k8sh

k8sh Screenshot

A shell wrapper for bash including aliases for kubectl that makes it easy to navigate between and execute commands on different kubernetes clusters and namespaces.

First time

Clone the repo and then make sure k8sh has execute permissions:

chmod +x k8sh

Now you can execute k8sh!

./k8sh

Add to a PATH directory to execute anywhere.

k8sh will automatically look at your current kubectl configuration to determine your current kubernetes context and namespace.

Switching contexts and namespaces

k8sh automatically keeps track of the current context and namespace you are operating in. These are displayed when starting up k8sh and on the k8sh prompt.

To switch contexts just enter:

ct <context_to_switch_to>

To switch namespaces just enter:

ns <namespace_to_switch_to>

NOTE: When changing the context, the change is made globally to kubectl as if you did a kubectl config use-context yourself. The namespace, however, is kept track of by k8sh. The standard kubectl command is aliased to always include the namespace that is currently selected within k8sh.

Aliases

As stated above, when inside of k8sh the standard kubectl command is aliased to always include the namespace that is currently selected. k8sh also includes many other aliases to make accessing commonly used kubectl commands a snap.

k

k is an easy shorthand for kubectl

Common Actions

Shorthands for common actions

  • describe -> k describe
  • get -> k get
  • create -> k create
  • apply -> k apply
  • delete -> k delete
  • scale -> k scale
  • rollout -> k rollout
  • logs -> k logs

Query for common resources (kubectl get)

Instead of typing out kubectl get pods/services/replicationcontrollers/etc you can simply type the following aliases to get a list of those resources:

  • pods
  • services
  • deployments / dep
  • replicasets
  • replicationcontrollers / rc
  • nodes
  • limitranges
  • limits
  • events
  • persistentvolumes / pv
  • persistentvolumeclaims / pvc
  • namespaces
  • ingresses / ing
  • configmaps
  • secrets

.k8sh_extensions

On startup k8sh looks for a .k8sh_extensions file in your home directory. If it is there, it loads it as an inline bash script so you can supply your own aliases and functions to execute within k8sh.

To force the extensions file to be reloaded while in a k8sh session you can run:

reloadExtensions

See examples/k8sh_extensions for some examples of what extensions can do.

Todo

  • Get the standard kubectl tab completion to work with aliases.