Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) kubectl plugin
MIT License
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This is a release with few changes from the user perspective as it mostly includes some improvements in the documentation and CI.
The most important change is that we are now using the InnovationEngine to validate the code blocks present in the README file. This will help us to ensure that the documentation is always up to date and that the code blocks are working as expected. The same strategy will be applied to the rest of the documentation in the future. Thanks to @mqasimsarfraz for this contribution and to @vmarcella and @mbifeld for the support in this task.
Full Changelog: https://github.com/Azure/kubectl-aks/compare/v0.2.3...v0.2.4
Published by mqasimsarfraz about 1 year ago
This is a bug fix release and allows installing kubectl aks
(via krew
) on darwin arm64, thanks to @kim-sondrup. It also upgrade azure sdk to use newer API versions alongside documentation updates.
Full Changelog: https://github.com/Azure/kubectl-aks/compare/v0.2.2...v0.2.3
Published by github-actions[bot] about 1 year ago
In this release, we bring you more UX improvements with signal handling, redirection of stdout/stderr and spinner while using run-command
. Also, config import
now supports importing node information using Azure API, making it easier to use kubectl-aks
even if you don't have access to the Kubernetes API server.
Full Changelog: https://github.com/Azure/kubectl-aks/compare/v0.2.1...v0.2.2
Published by mqasimsarfraz over 1 year ago
In this release we are bringing in couple of UX improvements with run-command
now having a default timeout of 300
seconds compared to 90
mins and improving the output of run-command
by truncating the tail instead of head by default. For details please refer to changes below:
Full Changelog: https://github.com/Azure/kubectl-aks/compare/v0.2.0...v0.2.1
Published by mqasimsarfraz over 1 year ago
In this release we renamed the project from kubectl-az
to kubectl-aks
to make the usage clearer. Feedback and suggestions are always welcome.
Full Changelog: https://github.com/Azure/kubectl-aks/compare/v0.1.0...v0.2.0
The following commands are available in this version:
run-command
: run a command in a nodecheck-apiserver-connectivity
: check connectivity between the nodes and the Kubernetes API Serverconfig
: manage configurationYou can install kubectl-aks
by downloading the asset for a given release and platform from the releases page on GitHub. Alternatively, you can build kubectl-aks
from source by cloning the repository and running the make install
command.
To use this plugin, run the kubectl aks
command followed by the desired subcommand. The available subcommands are check-apiserver-connectivity
, completion
, config
, help
, run-command
, and version
.
Note that it is necessary to sign in to Azure to run most of kubectl-aks
commands. You can use any authentication method provided by the Azure CLI using the az login
command. If you have not signed in yet, kubectl-aks
will open the default browser and load the Azure sign-in page where you need to authenticate.
Please refer to the documentation for each command to understand how to use them and which one is the most suitable for your case.
Published by github-actions[bot] over 1 year ago
The first version of the kubectl-az
plugin is now available, providing a set of commands to debug an AKS cluster even when the control plane is not working correctly. With this release, users can complement their az CLI experience with additional commands and have a kubectl-like experience when working with an AKS cluster.
The following commands are available in this version:
run-command
: run a command in a nodecheck-apiserver-connectivity
: check connectivity between the nodes and the Kubernetes API Serverconfig
: manage configurationYou can install kubectl-az
by downloading the asset for a given release and platform from the releases page on GitHub. Alternatively, you can build kubectl-az
from source by cloning the repository and running the make install
command.
To use this plugin, run the kubectl az
command followed by the desired subcommand. The available subcommands are check-apiserver-connectivity
, completion
, config
, help
, run-command
, and version
.
Note that it is necessary to sign in to Azure to run most of kubectl-az
commands. You can use any authentication method provided by the Azure CLI using the az login
command. If you have not signed in yet, kubectl-az
will open the default browser and load the Azure sign-in page where you need to authenticate.
Please refer to the documentation for each command to understand how to use them and which one is the most suitable for your case.
Full Changelog: https://github.com/Azure/kubectl-az/commits/v0.1.0