OpenShift – CLI Operations


OpenShift – CLI Operations


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OpenShift CLI is capable of performing all basic and advance configuration, management, addition, and deployment of applications.

We can perform different kinds of operations using OC commands. This client helps you develop, build, deploy, and run your applications on any OpenShift or Kubernetes compatible platform. It also includes the administrative commands for managing a cluster under the ”adm” subcommand.

Basic Commands

Following table lists the basic OC commands.

Sr.No. Commands & Description
1

Types

An introduction to concepts and type

2

Login

Log in to a server

3

new-project

Request a new project

4

new-app

Create a new application

5

Status

Show an overview of the current project

6

Project

Switch to another project

7

Projects

Display existing projects

8

Explain

Documentation of resources

9

Cluster

Start and stop OpenShift cluster

Login

Log in to your server and save the login for subsequent use. First-time users of the client should run this command to connect to a server, establish an authenticated session, and save a connection to the configuration file. The default configuration will be saved to your home directory under “.kube/config”.

The information required to login — like username and password, a session token, or the server details can be provided through flags. If not provided, the command will prompt for user input as needed.

Usage

oc login [URL] [options]

Example

# Log in interactively
oc login

# Log in to the given server with the given certificate authority file
oc login localhost:8443 --certificate-authority = /path/to/cert.crt

# Log in to the given server with the given credentials (will not prompt interactively)
oc login localhost:8443 --username = myuser --password=mypass

Options −

-p, –password = “ − Password, will prompt if not provided

-u, –username = “ − Username, will prompt if not provided

–certificate-authority = “ − Path to a cert. file for the certificate authority

–insecure-skip-tls-verify = false − If true, the server”s certificate will not be checked for validity. This will make your HTTPS connections insecure

–token = “ − Bearer token for authentication to the API server

To get the complete details regarding any command, use the oc <Command Name> –help command.

Build and Deploy Commands

Following table lists the build and deploy commands.

Sr.No. Commands & Description
1

Rollout

Manage a Kubernetes deployment or OpenShift deploy

2

Deploy

View, start, cancel, or retry a deployment

3

Rollback

Revert part of an application back to the previous state

4

new-build

Create a new build configuration

5

start-build

Start a new build

6

cancel-build

Cancel running, pending, or new builds

7

import-image

Imports images from a Docker registry

8

Tag

Tag the existing images into image streams

Application Management Commands

Following table lists the application management commands.

Sr.No. Commands & Description
1

Get

Display one or many resources

2

Describe

Show details of a specific resource or a group of resources

3

Edit

Edit a resource on the server

4

Set

Commands that help set specific features on objects

5

Label

Update the labels on a resource

6

Annotate

Update the annotations on a resource

7

Expose

Expose a replicated application as a service or route

8

Delete

Delete one or more resources

9

Scale

Change the number of pods in a deployment

10

Autoscale

Autoscale a deployment config, deployment, replication, Controller or replica set

11

Secrets

Manage secrets

12

Serviceaccounts

Manage service accounts in your project

Troubleshooting and Debugging Commands

Following table lists the troubleshooting and debugging commands.

Sr.No. Commands & Description
1

logs

Print the logs for a resource

2

Rsh

Start a shell session in a pod

3

Rsync

Copy files between the local filesystem and a pod

4

port-forward

Forward one or more local ports to a pod

5

Debug

Launch a new instance of a pod for debugging

6

Exec

Execute a command in a container

7

Procy

Run a proxy to the Kubernetes API server

9

Attach

Attach to a running container

10

Run

Run a particular image on the cluster

11

Cp

Copy files and directories to and from containers

Advanced Commands

Following table lists the advanced commands.

Sr.No. Commands & Description
1

adm

Tools for managing a cluster

2

create

Create a resource by filename or stdin

3

replace

Replace a resource by filename or stdin

4

apply

Apply a configuration to a resource by filename or stdin

5

patch

Update field(s) of a resource using strategic merge patch

6

process

Process a template into list of resources

7

export

Export resources so they can be used elsewhere

8

extract

Extract secrets or config maps to disk

9

idle

Idle scalable resources

10

observe

Observe changes to the resources and react to them (experimental)

11

policy

Manage authorization policy

12

auth

Inspect authorization

13

convert

Convert config files between different API versions

14

import

Commands that import applications

Setting Commands

Following table lists the setting commands.

Sr.No. Commands & Description
1

Logout

End the current server session

2

Config

Change the configuration files for the client

3

Whoami

Return information about the current session

4

Completion

Output shell completion code for the specified shell (bash or zsh)

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