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gardenctl-v2

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What is gardenctl?

gardenctl is a command-line client for the Gardener. It facilitates the administration of one or many garden, seed and shoot clusters. Use this tool to configure access to clusters and configure cloud provider CLI tools. It also provides support for accessing cluster nodes via ssh.

Installation

Install the latest release from Homebrew, Chocolatey or GitHub Releases.

Install using Package Managers

# Homebrew (macOS and Linux)
brew install gardener/tap/gardenctl-v2

# Chocolatey (Windows)
# default location C:\ProgramData\chocolatey\bin\gardenctl-v2.exe
choco install gardenctl-v2

Attention brew users: gardenctl-v2 uses the same binary name as the legacy gardenctl (gardener/gardenctl) CLI. If you have an existing installation you should remove it with brew uninstall gardenctl before attempting to install gardenctl-v2. Alternatively, you can choose to link the binary using a different name. If you try to install without removing or relinking the old installation, brew will run into an error and provide instructions how to resolve it.

Install from Github Release

If you install via GitHub releases, you need to

The other install methods do this for you.

# Example for macOS

# set operating system and architecture
os=darwin # choose between darwin, linux, windows
arch=amd64 # choose between amd64, arm64

# Get latest version. Alternatively set your desired version
version=$(curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/gardener/gardenctl-v2/master/LATEST)

# Download gardenctl
curl -LO "https://github.com/gardener/gardenctl-v2/releases/download/${version}/gardenctl_v2_${os}_${arch}"

# Make the gardenctl binary executable
chmod +x "./gardenctl_v2_${os}_${arch}"

# Move the binary in to your PATH
sudo mv "./gardenctl_v2_${os}_${arch}" /usr/local/bin/gardenctl

Configuration

gardenctl requires a configuration file. The default location is in ~/.garden/gardenctl-v2.yaml.

You can modify this file directly using the gardenctl config command. It allows adding, modifying and deleting gardens.

Example config command:

# Adapt the path to your kubeconfig file for the garden cluster (not to be mistaken with your shoot cluster)
export KUBECONFIG=~/relative/path/to/kubeconfig.yaml

# Fetch cluster-identity of garden cluster from the configmap
cluster_identity=$(kubectl -n kube-system get configmap cluster-identity -ojsonpath={.data.cluster-identity})

# Configure garden cluster
gardenctl config set-garden $cluster_identity --kubeconfig $KUBECONFIG

This command will create or update a garden with the provided identity and kubeconfig path of your garden cluster.

Example Config

gardens:
  - identity: landscape-dev # Unique identity of the garden cluster. See cluster-identity ConfigMap in kube-system namespace of the garden cluster
    kubeconfig: ~/relative/path/to/kubeconfig.yaml
# name: my-name # An alternative, unique garden name for targeting
# context: different-context # Overrides the current-context of the garden cluster kubeconfig
# patterns: ~ # List of regex patterns for pattern targeting

Note: You need to have gardenlogin installed as kubectl plugin in order to use the kubeconfigs for Shoot clusters provided by gardenctl.

Config Path Overwrite

export GCTL_HOME=/alternate/garden/config/dir
export GCTL_CONFIG_NAME=myconfig # without extension!
# config is expected to be under /alternate/garden/config/dir/myconfig.yaml

Shell Session

The state of gardenctl is bound to a shell session and is not shared across windows, tabs or panes. A shell session is defined by the environment variable GCTL_SESSION_ID. If this is not defined, the value of the TERM_SESSION_ID environment variable is used instead. If both are not defined, this leads to an error and gardenctl cannot be executed. The target.yaml and temporary kubeconfig.*.yaml files are store in the following directory ${TMPDIR}/garden/${GCTL_SESSION_ID}.

You can make sure that GCTL_SESSION_ID or TERM_SESSION_ID is always present by adding the following code to your terminal profile ~/.profile, ~/.bashrc or comparable file.

bash and zsh: [ -n "$GCTL_SESSION_ID" ] || [ -n "$TERM_SESSION_ID" ] || export GCTL_SESSION_ID=$(uuidgen)
fish:         [ -n "$GCTL_SESSION_ID" ] || [ -n "$TERM_SESSION_ID" ] || set -gx GCTL_SESSION_ID (uuidgen)
powershell:   if ( !(Test-Path Env:GCTL_SESSION_ID) -and !(Test-Path Env:TERM_SESSION_ID) ) { $Env:GCTL_SESSION_ID = [guid]::NewGuid().ToString() }

Completion

Gardenctl supports completion that will help you working with the CLI and save you typing effort. It will also help you find clusters by providing suggestions for gardener resources such as shoots or projects. Completion is supported for bash, zsh, fish and powershell. You will find more information on how to configure your shell completion for gardenctl by executing the help for your shell completion command. Example:

gardenctl completion bash --help

Usage

Targeting

You can set a target to use it in subsequent commands. You can also overwrite the target for each command individually.

Note that this will not affect your KUBECONFIG env variable. To update the KUBECONFIG env for your current target see Configure KUBECONFIG section

Example:

# target control plane
gardenctl target --garden landscape-dev --project my-project --shoot my-shoot --control-plane

Find more information in the documentation.

Configure KUBECONFIG for Shoot Clusters

Generate a script that points KUBECONFIG to the targeted cluster for the specified shell. Use together with eval to configure your shell. Example for bash:

eval "$(gardenctl kubectl-env bash)"

To load the kubectl configuration for each bash session add the command at the end of the ~/.bashrc file.

Configure Cloud Provider CLIs

Generate the cloud provider CLI configuration script for the specified shell. Use together with eval to configure your shell. Example for bash:

eval "$(gardenctl provider-env bash)"

SSH

Establish an SSH connection to a Shoot cluster's node.

gardenctl ssh my-node