kubectl-node-shell
community
kubectl-node-shell | community | |
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4 | 1 | |
1,315 | 32 | |
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5.3 | - | |
6 days ago | almost 2 years ago | |
Shell | ||
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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kubectl-node-shell
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There are only 12 binaries in Talos Linux
Big fan of Talos, have used it in some homelab + cloud clusters over the years, currently powers all my self-hosting. The `talosctl` command is great, and any time you need to do node-level debugging, there's always something like node-shell [1].
[1] https://github.com/kvaps/kubectl-node-shell
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How do we access node filesystem and utilities from a privileged Pod/container?
There is a great tool I use to access nodes in privileged mode called kubectl node-shell https://github.com/kvaps/kubectl-node-shell you just type kubectl-node_shell and that is it. It will start privileged pod for you on that node and give you full access to that node.
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ImagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent - (image doesn’t exist in repo) - Is it possible to pull the micro service image from an EKS node and then push to repo?
If you can ssh into the nodes you can definitely docker export the image and copy it somewhere. If you can't ssh you may be able to run something like this: https://github.com/kvaps/kubectl-node-shell
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Talos Linux
The amount and variety of machine images shipped is honestly impressive:
https://github.com/siderolabs/talos/releases/tag/v1.0.6
First time I have seen a project publish vmware-arm64.ova for ESXi arm edition.
Is it still possible to exec into a shell on a cluster node via something like https://github.com/kvaps/kubectl-node-shell ?
community
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There are only 12 binaries in Talos Linux
I agree number of binaries is an arbitrary metric but also an indicator that things work differently with Talos. You have to use the declarative API for management which some people could see as a bad thing.
I’d also like to point out that the system API is designed to be extendable and adaptable to different operating systems. We’d love for more vendors to create adapters/shims to get the benefits of API managed Linux
https://github.com/cosi-project/community
What are some alternatives?
talos - Talos Linux is a modern Linux distribution built for Kubernetes.
kubespy - pod debugging tool for kubernetes clusters with docker runtimes
kubectl-sudo - Run kubernetes commands with the security privileges of another user
konfig - konfig helps to merge, split or import kubeconfig files
go-containerregistry - Go library and CLIs for working with container registries
kubectl-build - Build dockerfiles directly in your Kubernetes cluster.
kubectl-plugin-ssh-jump - A kubectl plugin to access nodes or remote services using a SSH jump Pod
skopeo - Work with remote images registries - retrieving information, images, signing content