Skip to content

hcgatewood/kuba

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

28 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Kuba: kubectl wizardry

The magical kubectl companion with fzf, fx, aliases, new output formats, and more!

Kuba logo

Features

Kuba demo

Kuba is an evolution of kubectl that makes it more efficient for power users, especially platform operators and SREs managing multiple clusters, investigating cross-cutting issues, and supporting multiple teams/orgs. It adds a number of key features to kubectl, including:

  • ☁️ Fuzzy arguments for get, describe, logs, exec
  • 🔎 New output formats like fx, lineage, events, pod's node, node's pods, and pod's containers
  • ✈️ Cross namespaces and clusters in one command, no more for-loops
  • 🧠 Guess pod containers automagically, no more -c <container-name>
  • Cut down on keystrokes with an extensible alias language, e.g. kpf to kuba get pods -o json | fx
  • 🧪 Simulate scheduling without the scheduler, try it with kuba sched
  • 🔁 And lots more!

Install

Quick-install:

pip install kuba

Kuba makes use of the following tools you'll likely want to install as well: fzf, fx, kubecolor, and krew for stern and lineage. On macOS, you can install these tools with Homebrew:

brew install fzf fx kubecolor krew && kubectl krew install stern lineage

To use the aliases, add this to one of your dotfiles:

source <(kuba shellenv --kubectl kubecolor)  # omit --kubectl kubecolor if you haven't installed kubecolor

Usage

Start by using kuba get and kuba describe as ~drop-in replacements for kubectl get and kubectl describe. Then try a few examples from the overview video, or check out the commands below.

Help pages

$ kuba --help
Usage: kuba [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...

  The magical kubectl companion.

Options:
  -h, --help  Show this message and exit.

Commands:
  api       Enhances kubectl api-resources.
  cluster   Combines kubectx + kubens for all-in-one switching between clusters.
  ctx       Enhances kubectx.
  describe  Enhances kubectl describe.
  exec      Enhances kubectl exec.
  get       Enhances kubectl get.
  hostname  Convert between node names and hostnames.
  logs      Enhances kubectl logs.
  ns        Enhances kubens.
  sched     Predict which nodes a pod can be scheduled on.
  shellenv  Generate k-aliases and completions for easy kubectl resource access.
  ssh       SSH into a node.

Alias language

$ kuba shellenv --help
Usage: kuba shellenv [OPTIONS]

  Generate k-aliases and completions for easy kubectl resource access.

  E.g. kp for kubectl get pod.

  Generated aliases all forward to kuba, which eventually forwards to kubectl, including any kubectl-specific
  parameters. Passing kubectl arguments and shell completion both have some rough edges.

  GENERAL

  - kns => kuba ns (suffixes: l=list)
  - kctx => kuba ctx (suffixes: l=list, n=ns)
  - kclus => kuba cluster
  - kssh => kuba ssh (suffixes: a=any, p=pods)
  - kapi => kuba api (suffixes: n=name, z=select)
  - ksys => kuba ns kube-system

  RESOURCE-LEVEL

  Default native resource mappings:
  - c=configmap
  - d=deployment
  - j=job
  - m=daemonset
  - n=node
  - o=cronjob
  - p=pod
  - r=secret
  - s=service
  - x=lease

  Alias modifiers, optional and in this order:
  - Search in (a)ll namespaces or (k)ube-system namespace
  - Search across (m)ultiple sibling clusters
  - Restrict to objects e(x)clusively holding a lease
  - Force selection using f(z)f or force (p)icking all
  - Choose an alternative output type:
      - (d)escribe
      - (n)ame
      - (w)ide
      - (y)aml
      - (j)son
      - (f)x
      - (e)vents
      - lo(g)s
      - follow (l)ogs
      - lineage downward i.e. (c)hildren
      - lineage (u)pward
      - p(o)ds (only for nodes, shows pods on the node)
      - n(o)de (only for pods, shows node the pod is on)
      - containe(r)s (only for pods, shows containers in the pod)

  Example alias usage:
  - kp -> kuba get pod
  - kpw -> kuba get pod -o wide
  - kpz  -> kuba get pod (fzf multi-select over all pods)
  - kpzf myapp -> kuba get pod --select -o json | fx (fzf multi-select over all pods fuzzy matching 'myapp')
  - kxd -> kuba describe lease
  - kny -> kuba get node -o yaml
  - kdj -> kuba get deployment -o json
  - ksz -> kuba get service (fzf multi-select over all services)
  - kjf -> kuba get job -o json | fx
  - kcaj -l app=myapp -> kuba get configmap --all-namespaces -o json -l app=myapp

  CONTAINER-LEVEL

  Default kuba aliases:
  - l=logs
  - e=exec

  Alias modifiers, optional and in this order:
  - Search in (a)ll namespaces or (k)ube-system namespace
  - Search across (m)ultiple sibling clusters
  - Restrict to objects e(x)clusively holding a lease (via convenience heuristic)
  - Choose (c)ontainers, or automatically pick a(l)l containers
  - Command-specific
      - logs: (f)ollow logs

  Example alias usage:
  - kl -> kuba logs --guess
  - ke -> kuba exec --guess
  - klx -> kuba logs --leader --guess
  - kexc -> kuba exec --leader
  - klamlf -> kuba logs --all-namespaces --multi-cluster --all --follow

  Usage: source <(kuba shellenv [OPTIONS])

Options:
  --resources TEXT    Add or override resource mappings, formatted as e.g. p=pod,n=node. Can also set via
                      KUBA_SHELLENV_RESOURCES env var.
  --clusters TEXT     List of clusters to consider, formatted as e.g. stag*=k8s-staging-*,prod=k8s-production (use
                      single '*' to match multiple clusters). Can also set via KUBA_CLUSTERS env var.
  --shell [|zsh]      Override shell detection.
  --kubectl TEXT      Name or path of the kubectl binary to use. Can also set via KUBA_KUBECTL env var.
  --no-native         Don't include the default native resource mappings.
  --no-resources      Don't include aliases and completions for resource-level commands.
  --no-containers     Don't include aliases and completions for container-level commands.
  --ssh-bastion TEXT  SSH bastion option to use with kuba ssh. Can also set via KUBA_SSH_BASTION env var.
  --ssh-use-name      Use name option to use with kuba ssh.
  --list              Just list all resource aliases.
  --listq TEXT        Same as --list, but filter for the query.
  --debug             Print debug info to stderr.
  -h, --help          Show this message and exit.

Related

See also

  • 🐙 Jdd: JSON diff diver — the time machine for your JSON
  • ⚡️ Dotsync: dotfiles everywhere, instantly
  • ☁️ Appa: Markdown previews with live reload
  • 🔮 PDate: human-readable dates and times
  • 🔬 Vis: visualize fuzzy tabular data