This page shows how to configure access to multiple clusters by using configuration files. After your clusters, users, and contexts are defined in one or more configuration files, you can quickly switch between clusters by using the kubectl config use-context command.
kubeconfig. You need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster. It is recommended to run this tutorial on a cluster with at least two nodes that are not acting as control plane hosts. 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 that kubectl is installed, run kubectl version --client. The kubectl version should be within one minor version of your cluster's API server.
Suppose you have two clusters, one for development work and one for scratch work. In the development cluster, your frontend developers work in a namespace called frontend, and your storage developers work in a namespace called storage. In your scratch cluster, developers work in the default namespace, or they create auxiliary namespaces as they see fit. Access to the development cluster requires authentication by certificate. Access to the scratch cluster requires authentication by username and password.
Create a directory named config-exercise. In your config-exercise directory, create a file named config-demo with this content:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Config
preferences: {}
clusters:
- cluster:
name: development
- cluster:
name: scratch
users:
- name: developer
- name: experimenter
contexts:
- context:
name: dev-frontend
- context:
name: dev-storage
- context:
name: exp-scratch
A configuration file describes clusters, users, and contexts. Your config-demo file has the framework to describe two clusters, two users, and three contexts.
Go to your config-exercise directory. Enter these commands to add cluster details to your configuration file:
kubectl config --kubeconfig=config-demo set-cluster development --server=https://1.2.3.4 --certificate-authority=fake-ca-file
kubectl config --kubeconfig=config-demo set-cluster scratch --server=https://5.6.7.8 --insecure-skip-tls-verify
Add user details to your configuration file:
kubectl config --kubeconfig=config-demo set-credentials developer --client-certificate=fake-cert-file --client-key=fake-key-seefile
kubectl config --kubeconfig=config-demo set-credentials experimenter --username=exp --password=some-password
kubectl --kubeconfig=config-demo config unset users.<name>
kubectl --kubeconfig=config-demo config unset clusters.<name>
kubectl --kubeconfig=config-demo config unset contexts.<name>
Add context details to your configuration file:
kubectl config --kubeconfig=config-demo set-context dev-frontend --cluster=development --namespace=frontend --user=developer
kubectl config --kubeconfig=config-demo set-context dev-storage --cluster=development --namespace=storage --user=developer
kubectl config --kubeconfig=config-demo set-context exp-scratch --cluster=scratch --namespace=default --user=experimenter
Open your config-demo file to see the added details. As an alternative to opening the config-demo file, you can use the config view command.
kubectl config --kubeconfig=config-demo view
The output shows the two clusters, two users, and three contexts:
apiVersion: v1
clusters:
- cluster:
certificate-authority: fake-ca-file
server: https://1.2.3.4
name: development
- cluster:
insecure-skip-tls-verify: true
server: https://5.6.7.8
name: scratch
contexts:
- context:
cluster: development
namespace: frontend
user: developer
name: dev-frontend
- context:
cluster: development
namespace: storage
user: developer
name: dev-storage
- context:
cluster: scratch
namespace: default
user: experimenter
name: exp-scratch
current-context: ""
kind: Config
preferences: {}
users:
- name: developer
user:
client-certificate: fake-cert-file
client-key: fake-key-file
- name: experimenter
user:
password: some-password
username: exp
The fake-ca-file, fake-cert-file and fake-key-file above are the placeholders for the pathnames of the certificate files. You need to change these to the actual pathnames of certificate files in your environment.
Sometimes you may want to use Base64-encoded data embedded here instead of separate certificate files; in that case you need to add the suffix -data to the keys, for example, certificate-authority-data, client-certificate-data, client-key-data.
Each context is a triple (cluster, user, namespace). For example, the dev-frontend context says, "Use the credentials of the developer user to access the frontend namespace of the development cluster".
Set the current context:
kubectl config --kubeconfig=config-demo use-context dev-frontend
Now whenever you enter a kubectl command, the action will apply to the cluster, and namespace listed in the dev-frontend context. And the command will use the credentials of the user listed in the dev-frontend context.
To see only the configuration information associated with the current context, use the --minify flag.
kubectl config --kubeconfig=config-demo view --minify
The output shows configuration information associated with the dev-frontend context:
apiVersion: v1
clusters:
- cluster:
certificate-authority: fake-ca-file
server: https://1.2.3.4
name: development
contexts:
- context:
cluster: development
namespace: frontend
user: developer
name: dev-frontend
current-context: dev-frontend
kind: Config
preferences: {}
users:
- name: developer
user:
client-certificate: fake-cert-file
client-key: fake-key-file
Now suppose you want to work for a while in the scratch cluster.
Change the current context to exp-scratch:
kubectl config --kubeconfig=config-demo use-context exp-scratch
Now any kubectl command you give will apply to the default namespace of the scratch cluster. And the command will use the credentials of the user listed in the exp-scratch context.
View configuration associated with the new current context, exp-scratch.
kubectl config --kubeconfig=config-demo view --minify
Finally, suppose you want to work for a while in the storage namespace of the development cluster.
Change the current context to dev-storage:
kubectl config --kubeconfig=config-demo use-context dev-storage
View configuration associated with the new current context, dev-storage.
kubectl config --kubeconfig=config-demo view --minify
In your config-exercise directory, create a file named config-demo-2 with this content:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Config
preferences: {}
contexts:
- context:
cluster: development
namespace: ramp
user: developer
name: dev-ramp-up
The preceding configuration file defines a new context named dev-ramp-up.
See whether you have an environment variable named KUBECONFIG. If so, save the current value of your KUBECONFIG environment variable, so you can restore it later. For example:
export KUBECONFIG_SAVED=$KUBECONFIG
$Env:KUBECONFIG_SAVED=$ENV:KUBECONFIG
The KUBECONFIG environment variable is a list of paths to configuration files. The list is colon-delimited for Linux and Mac, and semicolon-delimited for Windows. If you have a KUBECONFIG environment variable, familiarize yourself with the configuration files in the list.
Temporarily append two paths to your KUBECONFIG environment variable. For example:
export KUBECONFIG=$KUBECONFIG:config-demo:config-demo-2
$Env:KUBECONFIG=("config-demo;config-demo-2")
In your config-exercise directory, enter this command:
kubectl config view
The output shows merged information from all the files listed in your KUBECONFIG environment variable. In particular, notice that the merged information has the dev-ramp-up context from the config-demo-2 file and the three contexts from the config-demo file:
contexts:
- context:
cluster: development
namespace: frontend
user: developer
name: dev-frontend
- context:
cluster: development
namespace: ramp
user: developer
name: dev-ramp-up
- context:
cluster: development
namespace: storage
user: developer
name: dev-storage
- context:
cluster: scratch
namespace: default
user: experimenter
name: exp-scratch
For more information about how kubeconfig files are merged, see Organizing Cluster Access Using kubeconfig Files
If you already have a cluster, and you can use kubectl to interact with the cluster, then you probably have a file named config in the $HOME/.kube directory.
Go to $HOME/.kube, and see what files are there. Typically, there is a file named config. There might also be other configuration files in this directory. Briefly familiarize yourself with the contents of these files.
If you have a $HOME/.kube/config file, and it's not already listed in your KUBECONFIG environment variable, append it to your KUBECONFIG environment variable now. For example:
export KUBECONFIG=$KUBECONFIG:$HOME/.kube/config
$Env:KUBECONFIG="$Env:KUBECONFIG;$HOME\.kube\config"
View configuration information merged from all the files that are now listed in your KUBECONFIG environment variable. In your config-exercise directory, enter:
kubectl config view
Return your KUBECONFIG environment variable to its original value. For example:
export KUBECONFIG=$KUBECONFIG_SAVED
$Env:KUBECONFIG=$ENV:KUBECONFIG_SAVED
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https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/access-application-cluster/configure-access-multiple-clusters/