340 lines
9.6 KiB
Markdown
340 lines
9.6 KiB
Markdown
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---
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title: Update API Objects in Place Using kubectl patch
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description: Use kubectl patch to update Kubernetes API objects in place. Do a strategic merge patch or a JSON merge patch.
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content_template: templates/task
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---
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{{% capture overview %}}
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This task shows how to use `kubectl patch` to update an API object in place. The exercises
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in this task demonstrate a strategic merge patch and a JSON merge patch.
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{{% /capture %}}
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{{% capture prerequisites %}}
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{{< include "task-tutorial-prereqs.md" >}} {{< version-check >}}
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{{% /capture %}}
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{{% capture steps %}}
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## Use a strategic merge patch to update a Deployment
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Here's the configuration file for a Deployment that has two replicas. Each replica
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is a Pod that has one container:
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{{< code file="deployment-patch-demo.yaml" >}}
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Create the Deployment:
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```shell
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kubectl create -f https://k8s.io/docs/tasks/run-application/deployment-patch-demo.yaml
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```
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View the Pods associated with your Deployment:
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```shell
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kubectl get pods
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```
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The output shows that the Deployment has two Pods. The `1/1` indicates that
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each Pod has one container:
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```
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NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
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patch-demo-28633765-670qr 1/1 Running 0 23s
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patch-demo-28633765-j5qs3 1/1 Running 0 23s
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```
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Make a note of the names of the running Pods. Later, you will see that these Pods
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get terminated and replaced by new ones.
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At this point, each Pod has one Container that runs the nginx image. Now suppose
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you want each Pod to have two containers: one that runs nginx and one that runs redis.
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Create a file named `patch-file-containers.yaml` that has this content:
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```yaml
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spec:
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template:
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spec:
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containers:
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- name: patch-demo-ctr-2
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image: redis
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```
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Patch your Deployment:
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```shell
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kubectl patch deployment patch-demo --patch "$(cat patch-file-containers.yaml)"
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```
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View the patched Deployment:
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```shell
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kubectl get deployment patch-demo --output yaml
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```
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The output shows that the PodSpec in the Deployment has two Containers:
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```shell
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containers:
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- image: redis
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imagePullPolicy: Always
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name: patch-demo-ctr-2
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...
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- image: nginx
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imagePullPolicy: Always
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name: patch-demo-ctr
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...
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```
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View the Pods associated with your patched Deployment:
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```shell
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kubectl get pods
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```
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The output shows that the running Pods have different names from the Pods that
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were running previously. The Deployment terminated the old Pods and created two
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new Pods that comply with the updated Deployment spec. The `2/2` indicates that
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each Pod has two Containers:
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```
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NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
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patch-demo-1081991389-2wrn5 2/2 Running 0 1m
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patch-demo-1081991389-jmg7b 2/2 Running 0 1m
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```
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Take a closer look at one of the patch-demo Pods:
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```shell
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kubectl get pod <your-pod-name> --output yaml
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```
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The output shows that the Pod has two Containers: one running nginx and one running redis:
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```
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containers:
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- image: redis
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...
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- image: nginx
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...
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```
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### Notes on the strategic merge patch
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The patch you did in the preceding exercise is called a *strategic merge patch*.
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Notice that the patch did not replace the `containers` list. Instead it added a new
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Container to the list. In other words, the list in the patch was merged with the
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existing list. This is not always what happens when you use a strategic merge patch on a list.
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In some cases, the list is replaced, not merged.
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With a strategic merge patch, a list is either replaced or merged depending on its
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patch strategy. The patch strategy is specified by the value of the `patchStrategy` key
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in a field tag in the Kubernetes source code. For example, the `Containers` field of `PodSpec`
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struct has a `patchStrategy` of `merge`:
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```go
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type PodSpec struct {
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...
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Containers []Container `json:"containers" patchStrategy:"merge" patchMergeKey:"name" ...`
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```
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You can also see the patch strategy in the
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[OpenApi spec](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/master/api/openapi-spec/swagger.json):
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```json
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"io.k8s.api.core.v1.PodSpec": {
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...
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"containers": {
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"description": "List of containers belonging to the pod. ...
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},
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"x-kubernetes-patch-merge-key": "name",
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"x-kubernetes-patch-strategy": "merge"
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},
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```
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And you can see the patch strategy in the
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[Kubernetes API documentation](/docs/reference/generated/kubernetes-api/{{< param "version" >}}/#podspec-v1-core).
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Create a file named `patch-file-tolerations.yaml` that has this content:
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```yaml
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spec:
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template:
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spec:
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tolerations:
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- effect: NoSchedule
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key: disktype
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value: ssd
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```
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Patch your Deployment:
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```shell
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kubectl patch deployment patch-demo --patch "$(cat patch-file-tolerations.yaml)"
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```
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View the patched Deployment:
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```shell
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kubectl get deployment patch-demo --output yaml
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```
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The output shows that the PodSpec in the Deployment has only one Toleration:
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```shell
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tolerations:
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- effect: NoSchedule
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key: disktype
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value: ssd
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```
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Notice that the `tolerations` list in the PodSpec was replaced, not merged. This is because
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the Tolerations field of PodSpec does not have a `patchStrategy` key in its field tag. So the
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strategic merge patch uses the default patch strategy, which is `replace`.
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```go
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type PodSpec struct {
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...
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Tolerations []Toleration `json:"tolerations,omitempty" protobuf:"bytes,22,opt,name=tolerations"`
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```
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## Use a JSON merge patch to update a Deployment
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A strategic merge patch is different from a
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[JSON merge patch](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7386).
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With a JSON merge patch, if you
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want to update a list, you have to specify the entire new list. And the new list completely
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replaces the existing list.
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The `kubectl patch` command has a `type` parameter that you can set to one of these values:
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<table>
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<tr><th>Parameter value</th><th>Merge type</th></tr>
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<tr><td>json</td><td><a href="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6902">JSON Patch, RFC 6902</a></td></tr>
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<tr><td>merge</td><td><a href="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7386">JSON Merge Patch, RFC 7386</a></td></tr>
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<tr><td>strategic</td><td>Strategic merge patch</td></tr>
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</table>
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For a comparison of JSON patch and JSON merge patch, see
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[JSON Patch and JSON Merge Patch](http://erosb.github.io/post/json-patch-vs-merge-patch/).
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The default value for the `type` parameter is `strategic`. So in the preceding exercise, you
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did a strategic merge patch.
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Next, do a JSON merge patch on your same Deployment. Create a file named `patch-file-2.yaml`
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that has this content:
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```yaml
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spec:
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template:
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spec:
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containers:
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- name: patch-demo-ctr-3
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image: gcr.io/google-samples/node-hello:1.0
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```
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In your patch command, set `type` to `merge`:
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```shell
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kubectl patch deployment patch-demo --type merge --patch "$(cat patch-file-2.yaml)"
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```
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View the patched Deployment:
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```shell
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kubectl get deployment patch-demo --output yaml
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```
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The `containers` list that you specified in the patch has only one Container.
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The output shows that your list of one Container replaced the existing `containers` list.
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```shell
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spec:
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containers:
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- image: gcr.io/google-samples/node-hello:1.0
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...
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name: patch-demo-ctr-3
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```
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List the running Pods:
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```shell
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kubectl get pods
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```
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In the output, you can see that the existing Pods were terminated, and new Pods
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were created. The `1/1` indicates that each new Pod is running only one Container.
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```shell
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NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
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patch-demo-1307768864-69308 1/1 Running 0 1m
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patch-demo-1307768864-c86dc 1/1 Running 0 1m
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```
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## Alternate forms of the kubectl patch command
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The `kubectl patch` command takes YAML or JSON. It can take the patch as a file or
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directly on the command line.
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Create a file named `patch-file.json` that has this content:
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```json
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{
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"spec": {
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"template": {
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"spec": {
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"containers": [
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{
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"name": "patch-demo-ctr-2",
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"image": "redis"
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}
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]
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}
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}
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}
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}
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```
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The following commands are equivalent:
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```shell
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kubectl patch deployment patch-demo --patch "$(cat patch-file.yaml)"
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kubectl patch deployment patch-demo --patch $'spec:\n template:\n spec:\n containers:\n - name: patch-demo-ctr-2\n image: redis'
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kubectl patch deployment patch-demo --patch "$(cat patch-file.json)"
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kubectl patch deployment patch-demo --patch '{"spec": {"template": {"spec": {"containers": [{"name": "patch-demo-ctr-2","image": "redis"}]}}}}'
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```
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## Summary
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In this exercise, you used `kubectl patch` to change the live configuration
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of a Deployment object. You did not change the configuration file that you originally used to
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create the Deployment object. Other commands for updating API objects include
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[kubectl annotate](/docs/reference/generated/kubectl/kubectl-commands/#annotate),
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[kubectl edit](/docs/reference/generated/kubectl/kubectl-commands/#edit),
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[kubectl replace](/docs/reference/generated/kubectl/kubectl-commands/#replace),
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[kubectl scale](/docs/reference/generated/kubectl/kubectl-commands/#scale),
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and
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[kubectl apply](/docs/reference/generated/kubectl/kubectl-commands/#apply).
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{{% /capture %}}
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{{% capture whatsnext %}}
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* [Kubernetes Object Management](/docs/concepts/overview/object-management-kubectl/overview/)
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* [Managing Kubernetes Objects Using Imperative Commands](/docs/concepts/overview/object-management-kubectl/imperative-command/)
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* [Imperative Management of Kubernetes Objects Using Configuration Files](/docs/concepts/overview/object-management-kubectl/imperative-config/)
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* [Declarative Management of Kubernetes Objects Using Configuration Files](/docs/concepts/overview/object-management-kubectl/declarative-config/)
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{{% /capture %}}
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