A simple tool to show the current status of a pod and its associated containers
and initContainers
.
This was developed out of frustration with kubectl get pod
not showing much and kubectl describe pod
showing way too much in a cryptic way. Debugging failed pods with a lot of initContainers
and sideCars
usually was done with kubectl get pod -o yaml |less
with a lot of going up and down over a pager to figure out what's going on and a bunch of swearing π. All those techniques for introspection and debugging are still useful and KSS is not planning to fully replace them but now thanks to it you can see quickly what happen and what fails and get your sanity back π
.
You can specify a pod or multiple ones as argument to KSS, if you don't it will launch the lovely fzf and let you choose the pod interactively, if there is only one pod available it will select it automatically. If you would like to choose multiple pods you can use the key [TAB] and select them, KSS will then show them all.
KSS shows a preview when running with fzf, it will try to do the preview with itself if it cannot find itself in the PATH
it will fallback to a good ol' and boring kubectl describe
π΄πΌπ΅π».
If you add the -l
option it will show you the log output of the container, you can adjust how many lines of the log you want to see if you add the flag --maxlines=INT
.
You can use the -r
option if you would like to restrict it to only some containers, it accepts a regexp as an argument, so you can do some fancy matching in there. You would typically use this flag combined when you are outputting the container's log (-l
).
With the -L
flag you will display the labels and with the -A
flag you will do the same but for annotations.
You can install KSS latest with homebrew, you just have to fire up those commands in your shell and KSS and its zsh completions will be installed :
brew tap chmouel/kss https://github.com/chmouel/kss
brew install kss
This has been tested as working on linuxbrew too.
It's available on Arch AUR here.
Install it with your favourite aur installer (i.e: yay)
You just make sure you have >=Python3.6, fzf and kubectl. You then can download the script and put it directly into your PATH
or checkout this GIT repo and link the binary into your path so you can have do some git pull to get the updates.
With zsh you can install the _kss completionfile to your fpath.
I may do a krew plugin if this get requested enough. Watch this space as cool people would say πππ€.
- The code is getting quite tortured, like some sort of spaghetti plate π with greasy meatballs π₯© on the top, the kind of stuff you start to write quickly and dirty out of frustration to fix a problem and it grows it grows until it really become an unreadable beast. I probably going to rewrite it up properly with tests and all (in a compiled language perhaps?) soonish enough.
And I actually did start rewritting the whole thing proper, with a bunch of testcases, nice code and all with all the best practices and all. Starting to write my testcases I realise there is so many crazy edge cases and different status in Kubernetes that would have been getting longer than I tought, so let's say for now that KSS has a i in between and we will keep it "KISS" But hey who cares, since it kinda works! (until I broke it :D) π