Kubectl plugins repository which contains a few helpers that improve the kubectl experience.
plugin | description |
---|---|
prune-unused | Prune secrets or configmaps that are not being used in a given namespace. It checks against all resources from mounted volumes, env, envFrom and imagePullSecrets. |
exec-cronjob | Run a CronJob immediately as Job by extracting the Job spec and creating a Job instance thereof. |
Install krew to manage Kubectl plugins. Refer to the Krew documentation to get started.
# install the prune-used plugins
$ kubectl krew install prune-unused
Prune unused configmaps/secret resources from a given namespace. It
checks against all resources from mounted volumes, env and envFrom and
imagePullSecrets.
Usage:
kubectl prune-unused <configmaps|secrets> [options]
Options:
-l, --selector='': Selector (label query) to filter on, supports '=', '==', and '!='.(e.g. -l key1=value1,key2=value2)"
--context='': If present, the name of the kubeconfig context for this CLI request
-n, --namespace='': If present, the namespace scope for this CLI request
--dry-run: If true, only print the object that would be pruned, without deleting it.
-h, --help: Display this help
DEPRECATION NOTICE: This plugin isn't necessary anymore, the kubectl cli let you create cronjob with the create subcommand:
$ kubectl create job --from cronjob/my-cronjob my-job
# install the exec-cronjob plugins
$ kubectl krew install exec-cronjob
Run a CronJob immediately as Job by extracting the Job spec and creating a Job
instance thereof.
Usage:
kubectl exec-cronjob <name> [options]
Options:
--context='': If present, the name of the kubeconfig context for this CLI request
-n, --namespace='': If present, the namespace scope for this CLI request
--dry-run: If true, only print the object that would be sent, without sending it.
-h, --help: Display this help