Install and Set Up kubectl on Linux
The following methods exist for installing kubectl on Linux:
Download the latest release with the command:
Note:
To download a specific version, replace the
$(curl -L -s https://dl.k8s.io/release/stable.txt)
portion of the command with the specific version.For example, to download version v1.23.0 on Linux, type:
curl -LO https://dl.k8s.io/release/v1.23.0/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl
Validate the binary (optional)
Download the kubectl checksum file:
curl -LO "https://dl.k8s.io/$(curl -L -s https://dl.k8s.io/release/stable.txt)/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl.sha256"
Validate the kubectl binary against the checksum file:
echo "$(<kubectl.sha256) kubectl" | sha256sum --check
If valid, the output is:
kubectl: OK
If the check fails,
sha256
exits with nonzero status and prints output similar to:kubectl: FAILED
sha256sum: WARNING: 1 computed checksum did NOT match
Note: Download the same version of the binary and checksum.
Install kubectl
sudo install -o root -g root -m 0755 kubectl /usr/local/bin/kubectl
Note:
If you do not have root access on the target system, you can still install kubectl to the
~/.local/bin
directory:chmod +x kubectl
mkdir -p ~/.local/bin/kubectl
mv ./kubectl ~/.local/bin/kubectl
# and then add ~/.local/bin/kubectl to $PATH
Install using native package management
Update the
apt
package index and install packages needed to use the Kubernetesapt
repository:sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y apt-transport-https ca-certificates curl
Download the Google Cloud public signing key:
sudo curl -fsSLo /usr/share/keyrings/kubernetes-archive-keyring.gpg https://packages.cloud.google.com/apt/doc/apt-key.gpg
Add the Kubernetes
apt
repository:-
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y kubectl
[kubernetes]
name=Kubernetes
baseurl=https://packages.cloud.google.com/yum/repos/kubernetes-el7-x86_64
enabled=1
gpgcheck=1
repo_gpgcheck=1
gpgkey=https://packages.cloud.google.com/yum/doc/yum-key.gpg https://packages.cloud.google.com/yum/doc/rpm-package-key.gpg
EOF
sudo yum install -y kubectl
If you are on Ubuntu or another Linux distribution that support snap package manager, kubectl is available as a application.
snap install kubectl --classic
kubectl version --client
If you are on Linux and using Homebrew package manager, kubectl is available for .
brew install kubectl
kubectl version --client
In order for kubectl to find and access a Kubernetes cluster, it needs a kubeconfig file, which is created automatically when you create a cluster using or successfully deploy a Minikube cluster. By default, kubectl configuration is located at ~/.kube/config
.
Check that kubectl is properly configured by getting the cluster state:
kubectl cluster-info
If you see a URL response, kubectl is correctly configured to access your cluster.
If you see a message similar to the following, kubectl is not configured correctly or is not able to connect to a Kubernetes cluster.
For example, if you are intending to run a Kubernetes cluster on your laptop (locally), you will need a tool like Minikube to be installed first and then re-run the commands stated above.
If kubectl cluster-info returns the url response but you can’t access your cluster, to check whether it is configured properly, use:
kubectl cluster-info dump
Enable shell autocompletion
kubectl provides autocompletion support for Bash, Zsh, Fish, and PowerShell, which can save you a lot of typing.
Below are the procedures to set up autocompletion for Bash and Zsh.
The kubectl completion script for Bash can be generated with the command kubectl completion bash
. Sourcing the completion script in your shell enables kubectl autocompletion.
However, the completion script depends on , which means that you have to install this software first (you can test if you have bash-completion already installed by running type _init_completion
).
Install bash-completion
bash-completion is provided by many package managers (see ). You can install it with apt-get install bash-completion
or yum install bash-completion
, etc.
The above commands create /usr/share/bash-completion/bash_completion
, which is the main script of bash-completion. Depending on your package manager, you have to manually source this file in your ~/.bashrc
file.
To find out, reload your shell and run type _init_completion
. If the command succeeds, you’re already set, otherwise add the following to your ~/.bashrc
file:
Reload your shell and verify that bash-completion is correctly installed by typing type _init_completion
.
You now need to ensure that the kubectl completion script gets sourced in all your shell sessions. There are two ways in which you can do this:
Source the completion script in your
~/.bashrc
file:echo 'source <(kubectl completion bash)' >>~/.bashrc
-
kubectl completion bash >/etc/bash_completion.d/kubectl
If you have an alias for kubectl, you can extend shell completion to work with that alias:
Note: bash-completion sources all completion scripts in /etc/bash_completion.d
.
Both approaches are equivalent. After reloading your shell, kubectl autocompletion should be working.
The kubectl completion script for Zsh can be generated with the command kubectl completion zsh
. Sourcing the completion script in your shell enables kubectl autocompletion.
To do so in all your shell sessions, add the following to your ~/.zshrc
file:
source <(kubectl completion zsh)
If you have an alias for kubectl, you can extend shell completion to work with that alias:
echo 'alias k=kubectl' >>~/.zshrc
echo 'compdef __start_kubectl k' >>~/.zshrc
After reloading your shell, kubectl autocompletion should be working.
If you get an error like complete:13: command not found: compdef
, then add the following to the beginning of your ~/.zshrc
file:
autoload -Uz compinit
compinit
Install kubectl convert
plugin
A plugin for Kubernetes command-line tool kubectl
, which allows you to convert manifests between different API versions. This can be particularly helpful to migrate manifests to a non-deprecated api version with newer Kubernetes release. For more info, visit
Download the latest release with the command:
curl -LO https://dl.k8s.io/release/$(curl -L -s https://dl.k8s.io/release/stable.txt)/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl-convert
Validate the binary (optional)
Download the kubectl-convert checksum file:
curl -LO "https://dl.k8s.io/$(curl -L -s https://dl.k8s.io/release/stable.txt)/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl-convert.sha256"
Validate the kubectl-convert binary against the checksum file:
echo "$(<kubectl-convert.sha256) kubectl-convert" | sha256sum --check
If valid, the output is:
kubectl-convert: OK
If the check fails,
sha256
exits with nonzero status and prints output similar to:kubectl-convert: FAILED
sha256sum: WARNING: 1 computed checksum did NOT match
Note: Download the same version of the binary and checksum.
Install kubectl-convert
sudo install -o root -g root -m 0755 kubectl-convert /usr/local/bin/kubectl-convert
Verify plugin is successfully installed
- Install Minikube
- See the for more about creating clusters.
- Learn how to launch and expose your application.
- If you need access to a cluster you didn’t create, see the .
- Read the kubectl reference docs