This page shows how to use kubectl exec
to get a shell to a
running Container.
You need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster. If you do not already have a cluster, you can create one by using Minikube, or you can use one of these Kubernetes playgrounds:
To check the version, enter kubectl version
.
In this exercise, you create a Pod that has one Container. The Container runs the nginx image. Here is the configuration file for the Pod:
application/shell-demo.yaml
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Create the Pod:
kubectl create -f https://k8s.io/examples/application/shell-demo.yaml
Verify that the Container is running:
kubectl get pod shell-demo
Get a shell to the running Container:
kubectl exec -it shell-demo -- /bin/bash
Note: The double dash symbol “–” is used to separate the arguments you want to pass to the command from the kubectl arguments.
In your shell, list the root directory:
root@shell-demo:/# ls /
In your shell, experiment with other commands. Here are some examples:
root@shell-demo:/# ls /
root@shell-demo:/# cat /proc/mounts
root@shell-demo:/# cat /proc/1/maps
root@shell-demo:/# apt-get update
root@shell-demo:/# apt-get install -y tcpdump
root@shell-demo:/# tcpdump
root@shell-demo:/# apt-get install -y lsof
root@shell-demo:/# lsof
root@shell-demo:/# apt-get install -y procps
root@shell-demo:/# ps aux
root@shell-demo:/# ps aux | grep nginx
Look again at the configuration file for your Pod. The Pod
has an emptyDir
volume, and the Container mounts the volume
at /usr/share/nginx/html
.
In your shell, create an index.html
file in the /usr/share/nginx/html
directory:
root@shell-demo:/# echo Hello shell demo > /usr/share/nginx/html/index.html
In your shell, send a GET request to the nginx server:
root@shell-demo:/# apt-get update
root@shell-demo:/# apt-get install curl
root@shell-demo:/# curl localhost
The output shows the text that you wrote to the index.html
file:
Hello shell demo
When you are finished with your shell, enter exit
.
In an ordinary command window, not your shell, list the environment variables in the running Container:
kubectl exec shell-demo env
Experiment running other commands. Here are some examples:
kubectl exec shell-demo ps aux
kubectl exec shell-demo ls /
kubectl exec shell-demo cat /proc/1/mounts
If a Pod has more than one Container, use --container
or -c
to
specify a Container in the kubectl exec
command. For example,
suppose you have a Pod named my-pod, and the Pod has two containers
named main-app and helper-app. The following command would open a
shell to the main-app Container.
kubectl exec -it my-pod --container main-app -- /bin/bash
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