Reputation: 4590
I went through the documentation to edit kubernetes resource using kubectl edit
command. Once I execute the command, the file in YAML-format is opened in the editor where I can change the values as per requirement and save it. I am trying to execute these steps by means of sed
. How can the following steps be achieved?
kubectl edit
for a deployment resourcetrue
to false
(using sed)I tried to achieve this in the following way :
$ kubectl edit deployment tiller-deploy -n kube-system | \
sed -i "s/\(automountServiceAccountToken:.*$\)/automountServiceAccountToken: true/g"`
Upvotes: 23
Views: 21831
Reputation: 144
An easy way to do this, just use kubectl-patch instead of sed.
$ kubectl patch deployment tiller-deploy -n kube-system --patch '{"map": {"to": {"the": {"key": {"automountServiceAccountToken": "true"}}}}}'
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 7080
Thanks, @suren for giving what I really looking for, but you don't need to save it in a file. you can directly do kubectl replace
using pipe operations
kubectl get deploy test-deploy -o yaml | sed "s/find/replace/g" | kubectl replace -f -
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 3273
I just found a less convoluted way of doing this:
KUBE_EDITOR="sed -i s/SOMETHING TO CHANGE/CHANGED/g" kubectl edit resource -n your-ns
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 5762
I automate through piping the commands through sed
command without creating a temporary file. Take the below example, where I am replacing nameserver 8.8.8.8
with 1.1.1.1
$ kubectl -n kube-system get configmap/kube-dns -o yaml | sed "s/8.8.8.8/1.1.1.1/" | kubectl replace -f -
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 8786
Your command is missing a backtick. But even though you put it there, it won't work. The reason is because when you do kubectl edit ...
, it edits the file on vim. I am not sure sed would work on vim though. Even though if it does, the output goes to a file, so you get the Vim: Warning: Output is not to a terminal
error, which I don't know how to solve.
I would recommend you to get the file and save it. Replace the desired parameters and run it again:
kubectl get deploy tiller-deploy -n kube-system -o yaml > tiller.yaml && sed -i "s/automountServiceAccountToken:.*$/automountServiceAccountToken: true/g" tiller.yaml && kubectl replace -f tiller.yaml
I tried the command above and it worked.
Note: no need to add -n kube-system
as the yaml file already contains the namespace.
Upvotes: 19
Reputation: 10039
I don't know kubectl but doc seems to explain that it extract data, edit from an editor than send back, not sure sed pipe work in this case
if piping wokrs Don't use -i, you don't change a file in a pipe
kubectl edit deployment tiller-deploy -n kube-system | \
sed 's/automountServiceAccountToken:.*$/automountServiceAccountToken: true/g'
if editing a file (and using group in sed)
kubectl edit deployment tiller-deploy -n kube-system > YourCOnfigFile && \
sed -i 's/\(automountServiceAccountToken:\).*$/\1 true/g' YourConfigFile \
&& Some kubectl to send back YourConfigFile
Upvotes: 1