2. You have a basic understanding of Kubernetes _[Pods](/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/pod/)_, _[Services](/docs/concepts/services-networking/service/)_, and _[Deployments](/docs/concepts/workloads/controllers/deployment/)_.
For this exercise, we will create two additional Kubernetes namespaces to hold our content.
Let's imagine a scenario where an organization is using a shared Kubernetes cluster for development and production use cases.
The development team would like to maintain a space in the cluster where they can get a view on the list of Pods, Services, and Deployments
they use to build and run their application. In this space, Kubernetes resources come and go, and the restrictions on who can or cannot modify resources
are relaxed to enable agile development.
The operations team would like to maintain a space in the cluster where they can enforce strict procedures on who can or cannot manipulate the set of
Pods, Services, and Deployments that run the production site.
One pattern this organization could follow is to partition the Kubernetes cluster into two namespaces: development and production.
A Kubernetes namespace provides the scope for Pods, Services, and Deployments in the cluster.
Users interacting with one namespace do not see the content in another namespace.
To demonstrate this, let's spin up a simple Deployment and Pods in the development namespace.
We first check what is the current context:
```shell
$ kubectl config view
apiVersion: v1
clusters:
- cluster:
certificate-authority-data: REDACTED
server: https://130.211.122.180
name: lithe-cocoa-92103_kubernetes
contexts:
- context:
cluster: lithe-cocoa-92103_kubernetes
user: lithe-cocoa-92103_kubernetes
name: lithe-cocoa-92103_kubernetes
current-context: lithe-cocoa-92103_kubernetes
kind: Config
preferences: {}
users:
- name: lithe-cocoa-92103_kubernetes
user:
client-certificate-data: REDACTED
client-key-data: REDACTED
token: 65rZW78y8HbwXXtSXuUw9DbP4FLjHi4b
- name: lithe-cocoa-92103_kubernetes-basic-auth
user:
password: h5M0FtUUIflBSdI7
username: admin
$ kubectl config current-context
lithe-cocoa-92103_kubernetes
```
The next step is to define a context for the kubectl client to work in each namespace. The value of "cluster" and "user" fields are copied from the current context.
We have just created a deployment whose replica size is 2 that is running the pod called snowflake with a basic container that just serves the hostname.
Note that `kubectl run` creates deployments only on Kubernetes cluster >= v1.2. If you are running older versions, it creates replication controllers instead.
If you want to obtain the old behavior, use `--generator=run/v1` to create replication controllers. See [`kubectl run`](/docs/reference/generated/kubectl/kubectl-commands/#run) for more details.