I'm trying to restrict to my openvpn to allow accessing internal infrastructure and limit it only by 'develop' namespace, so I started with simple policy that denies all egress traffic and see no e...
I'm currently working on a Kubernetes deployment file and I need to set the environment variables that the container will have. Is there a way to set Kubernetes secrets as environment variables in the deployment file?
As far as I understand, to access any application within Kubernetes cluster there should be a Service resource created and that should have an IP address which is accessible from an external network. But in case of port-forward how does kubectl create a connection to the application without an IP address which is accessible externally?
When you run "kubectl get pods -A -o wide" you get a list of pods and a STATUS column. Where can I get a list of the possible status options? What I trying to do is generate a list of sta...
I've created a Kubernetes Scheduled Job, which runs twice a day according to its schedule. However, I would like to trigger it manually for testing purposes. How can I do this?
315 Kubernetes will pull upon Pod creation if either (see updating-images doc): Using images tagged :latest imagePullPolicy: Always is specified This is great if you want to always pull. But what if you want to do it on demand: For example, if you want to use some-public-image:latest but only want to pull a newer version manually when you ask ...
As of Kubernetes 1.14, --export is deprecated; see here. You can use get -o yaml without --export, although that includes information about the current object state, as well as the declarative configuration needed to (re)configure the object.
I'm now trying to run a simple container with shell (/bin/bash) on a Kubernetes cluster. I thought that there was a way to keep a container running on a Docker container by using pseudo-tty and de...
The Kubernetes securityContext, including fsGroup, does not change the ownership or permissions of files on hostPath volumes. This is because hostPath volumes directly mount directories from the host node's filesystem, and Kubernetes does not modify the file ownership or permissions of the host's file system when doing so.