K9s Color Code

K9s is a terminal based UI to interact with your Kubernetes clusters. The aim of this project is to make it easier to navigate, observe and manage your deployed applications in the wild. K9s continually watches Kubernetes for changes and offers subsequent commands to interact with your observed resources. Features Information At Your Finger Tips!

Overview K9s is available on Linux, macOS and Windows platforms. Binaries for Linux, Windows and Mac are available as tarballs in the release page. MacOS

Commands CLI Arguments K9s CLI comes with a view arguments that you can use to launch the tool with different configuration.

Alternatively, you can set K9S_CONFIG_DIR to tell K9s the directory location to pull its configurations from.

k9s color code 4

K9s will launch a pod on the selected node using a special k9s_shell pod. Furthermore, you can refine your shell pod by using a custom docker image preloaded with the shell tools you love. By default k9s uses a BusyBox image, but you can configure it as follows: Work in progress...

k9s color code 5

Kubernetes CLI To Manage Your Clusters In Style! Tutorials And Demos Assets K9s v0.30.0 Sneak peek K9s v0.29.0 VulScan K9s v0.21.X K9s v0.19.X K9s v0.18.0 K9s v0.17.0 K9s Pulses K9s v0.15.1 K9s v0.13.0 K9s v0.9.0 K9s v0.7.0 Features K9s v0 Demo Back

Work in progress... Options and layout may change in future K9s releases as this feature solidifies.

Benchmarking Overview K9s integrates Hey from the brilliant and super talented Jaana Dogan. Hey is a CLI tool to benchmark HTTP endpoints similar to AB bench. This preliminary feature currently supports benchmarking port-forwards and services (Read the paint on this is way fresh!). To setup a port-forward, you will need to navigate to the PodView, select a pod and a container that exposes a ...

k9s color code 8