A Visual Studio Code extension for interacting with Kubernetes clusters. This extension combines
the vs-kubernetes
extension by @brendandburns and the vs-helm
extension by @technosophos.
This extension assumes that you have a Dockerfile
in the root directory of
your project.
It also assumes that you have the following binaries on your PATH
:
kubectl
docker
git
helm
(optional)draft
(optional)
If you don't have those on your PATH then the extension will fail in unexpected ways.
For setting up kubectl
you have a couple of additional options:
- If
kubectl
is not on your PATH then you can tell the extension its location using thevs-kubernetes.kubectl-path
workspace setting. This should be the full file name and path of the kubectl binary. - If you are using the extension to work with Azure Container Services or Azure Kubernetes Services then you can install and configure
kubectl
using theKubernetes Configure from Cluster
command.
helm
support requires that you have Helm installed and configured. From there you should also install helm-template
:
$ helm plugin install https://github.com/technosophos/helm-template
To use the Helm: DryRun
command, your Kubernetes cluster must be running Tiller.
For setting up draft
you can provide a path to the binary via configuration (vs-kubernetes.draft-path
) if it is not on your PATH.
If you want to use the Kubernetes: Run
and Kubernetes: Debug
features
then you need to have correctly set the user and repository for your
images. You can do this via preferences in VS Code:
File > Preferences
And then add:
{
...
"vsdocker.imageUser": "<your-image-prefix-here>",
...
}
Where <your-image-prefix-here>
is something like docker.io/brendanburns
.
vs-kubernetes
supports a number of commands for interacting with Kubernetes; these are accessible via the command menu (Ctrl+Shift+P
) and may be bound to keys in the normal way.
Kubernetes: Load
- Load a resource from the Kubernetes API and create a new editor window.Kubernetes: Get
- Get the status for a specific resource.Kubernetes: Logs
- Get logs for a pod in an output window.
Kubernetes: Explain
- Use thekubectl explain ...
tool to annotate Kubernetes API objectsKubernetes: Create
- Create an object using the current documentKubernetes: Delete
- Delete an object contained in the current document.Kubernetes: Apply
- Apply changes to an object contained in the current document.Kubernetes: Expose
- Expose the object in the current document as a service.
Kubernetes: Run
- Run the current application as a Kubernetes DeploymentKubernetes: Terminal
- Open an interactive terminal session in a pod of the Kubernetes DeploymentKubernetes: Exec
- Run a command in a pod of the Kubernetes DeploymentKubernetes: Debug
- Run the current application as a Kubernetes Deployment and attach a debugging session to it (currently works only for Node.js deployments)Kubernetes: Remove Debug
- Remove the deployment and/or service created for aKubernetes Debug
session
Kubernetes Configure from Cluster
- Install and configure the Kubernetes command line tool (kubectl) from an Azure Container Service (ACS) or Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) cluster
Helm is the package manager for Kubernetes and provides a way for you to define, install and upgrade applications using 'charts.' This extension provides a set of tools for creating and testing Helm charts:
- Syntax highlighting for YAML + Helm Templates
- Autocomplete for Helm, Sprig, and Go Tpl functions
- Help text (on hover) for Helm, Sprig, and Go Tpl functions
- Snippets for quickly scaffolding new charts and templates
- Commands for...
Helm: Lint
- Lint your chartHelm: Preview Template
- Open a preview window and preview how your template will renderHelm: Template
- Run your chart through the template engineHelm: DryRun
- Run a helm install --dry-run --debug on a remote cluster and get the resultsHelm: Version
- Get the Helm versionHelm: Dependency Update
- Update a chart's dependencies.
- Code lenses for:
- requirements.yaml (Add and update dependencies)
- Right-click on a chart .tgz file, and choose inspect chart to preview all configurable chart values.
Draft is a tool to simplify the process of developing a new Kubernetes application, by creating the necessary deployment components and by keeping code in the cluster in sync with the code on your computer.
Draft: Create
- Set up Draft in the current folder (prerequisite for syncing using Draft)Draft: Up
- Runs Draft to watch the current folder and keep the cluster in sync with it
NOTE: Draft itself is in 'draft' form and is not yet stable. So the extension support for Draft is strictly experimental - assumptions may break, and commands and behavior may change!
vs-kubernetes
- Parent for Kubernetes-related extension settingsvs-kubernetes.namespace
- The namespace to use for all commandsvs-kubernetes.kubectl-path
- File path to the kubectl binary. Note this is the binary file itself, not just the directory containing the file. On Windows, this must contain the.exe
extension.vs-kubernetes.draft-path
- File path to the draft binary. Note this is the binary file itself, not just the directory containing the file. On Windows, this must contain the.exe
extension.
vsdocker.imageUser
- Image prefix for docker images e.g. 'docker.io/brendanburns'
Kubernetes: Debug
command currently works only with Node.js applications- For deeply nested Helm charts, template previews are generated against highest (umbrella) chart values (though for
Helm: Template
calls you can pick your chart)
See the change log.
This project welcomes contributions and suggestions. Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit https://cla.microsoft.com.
When you submit a pull request, a CLA-bot will automatically determine whether you need to provide a CLA and decorate the PR appropriately (e.g., label, comment). Simply follow the instructions provided by the bot. You will only need to do this once across all repos using our CLA.
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.
For technical information about contributing, see CONTRIBUTING.md.