This example demonstrates the usage of Kubernetes to perform a [rolling update](/docs/user-guide/kubectl/kubectl_rolling-update/) on a running group of [pods](/docs/user-guide/pods/). See [here](/docs/concepts/cluster-administration/manage-deployment/#updating-your-application-without-a-service-outage) to understand why you need a rolling update. Also check [rolling update design document](https://git.k8s.io/community/contributors/design-proposals/simple-rolling-update.md) for more information.
You can use bash job control to run this in the background (note that you must use the default port -- 8001 -- for the following demonstration to work properly).
This can sometimes spew to the output so you could also run it in a different terminal. You have to run `kubectl proxy` in the root of the
Kubernetes repository. Otherwise you will get "404 page not found" errors as the paths will not match. You can find more information about `kubectl proxy`
After pulling the image from the Docker Hub to your worker nodes (which may take a minute or so) you'll see a couple of squares in the UI detailing the pods that are running along with the image that they are serving up. A cute little nautilus.
### Step Three: Try scaling the replication controller
Now we will increase the number of replicas from two to four:
The rolling-update command in kubectl will do 2 things:
1. Create a new [replication controller](/docs/user-guide/replication-controller/) with a pod template that uses the new image (`gcr.io/google_containers/update-demo:kitten`)
2. Scale the old and new replication controllers until the new controller replaces the old. This will kill the current pods one at a time, spinning up new ones to replace them.
Watch the [demo website](http://localhost:8001/static/index.html), it will update one pod every 10 seconds until all of the pods have the new image.
Note that the new replication controller definition does not include the replica count, so the current replica count of the old replication controller is preserved.
But if the replica count had been specified, the final replica count of the new replication controller will be equal to this number.
### Step Five: Bring down the pods
```shell
$ kubectl delete rc update-demo-kitten
```
This first stops the replication controller by turning the target number of replicas to 0 and then deletes the controller.
### Step Six: Cleanup
After you are done running this demo make sure to kill the proxy running in the background:
```shell
$ jobs
[1]+ Running ./kubectl proxy --www=local/ &
$ kill %1
[1]+ Terminated: 15 ./kubectl proxy --www=local/
```
### Updating the Docker images
If you want to build your own docker images, you can set `$DOCKER_HUB_USER` to your Docker user id and run the included shell script. It can take a few minutes to download/upload stuff.
```shell
$ export DOCKER_HUB_USER=my-docker-id
$ ./docs/user-guide/update-demo/build-images.sh
```
To use your custom docker image in the above examples, you will need to change the image name in `docs/user-guide/update-demo/nautilus-rc.yaml` and `docs/user-guide/update-demo/kitten-rc.yaml`.
### Image Copyright
Note that the images included here are public domain.