$ oc exec <pod> [-c <container>] <command> [<arg_1> ... <arg_n>]
You can use the CLI to execute remote commands in a container. This allows you to run general Linux commands for routine operations in the container.
For security purposes, the
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Support for remote container command execution is built into the CLI:
$ oc exec <pod> [-c <container>] <command> [<arg_1> ... <arg_n>]
For example:
$ oc exec mypod date Thu Apr 9 02:21:53 UTC 2015
Clients initiate the execution of a remote command in a container by issuing a request to the Kubernetes API server:
/proxy/minions/<node_name>/exec/<namespace>/<pod>/<container>?command=<command>
In the above URL:
<node_name>
is the FQDN of the node.
<namespace>
is the namespace of the target pod.
<pod>
is the name of the target pod.
<container>
is the name of the target container.
<command>
is the desired command to be executed.
For example:
/proxy/minions/node123.openshift.com/exec/myns/mypod/mycontainer?command=date
Additionally, the client can add parameters to the request to indicate if:
the client should send input to the remote container’s command (stdin).
the client’s terminal is a TTY.
the remote container’s command should send output from stdout to the client.
the remote container’s command should send output from stderr to the client.
After sending an exec
request to the API server, the client upgrades the
connection to one that supports multiplexed streams; the current implementation
uses SPDY.
The client creates one stream each for stdin, stdout, and stderr. To distinguish
among the streams, the client sets the streamType
header on the stream to one
of stdin
, stdout
, or stderr
.
The client closes all streams, the upgraded connection, and the underlying connection when it is finished with the remote command execution request.
Administrators can see the Architecture guide for more information. |