--- reviewers: - janetkuo title: Tools --- Kubernetes contains several built-in tools to help you work with the Kubernetes system #### Kubectl [`kubectl`](/docs/user-guide/kubectl/) is the command line tool for Kubernetes. It controls the Kubernetes cluster manager. #### Kubeadm [`kubeadm`](/docs/setup/independent/install-kubeadm/) is the command line tool for easily provisioning a secure Kubernetes cluster on top of physical or cloud servers or virtual machines (currently in alpha). #### Kubefed [`kubefed`](/docs/tutorials/federation/set-up-cluster-federation-kubefed/) is the command line tool to help you administrate your federated clusters. #### Minikube [`minikube`](/docs/getting-started-guides/minikube/) is a tool that makes it easy to run a single-node Kubernetes cluster locally on your workstation for development and testing purposes. #### Dashboard [Dashboard](/docs/tasks/web-ui-dashboard/), the web-based user interface of Kubernetes, allows you to deploy containerized applications to a Kubernetes cluster, troubleshoot them, and manage the cluster and its resources itself. #### Helm [Kubernetes Helm](https://github.com/kubernetes/helm) is a tool for managing packages of pre-configured Kubernetes resources, aka Kubernetes charts. Use Helm to: * Find and use popular software packaged as Kubernetes charts * Share your own applications as Kubernetes charts * Create reproducible builds of your Kubernetes applications * Intelligently manage your Kubernetes manifest files * Manage releases of Helm packages #### Kompose [Kompose](https://github.com/kubernetes-incubator/kompose) is a tool to help Docker Compose users move to Kubernetes. Use Kompose to: * Translate a Docker Compose file into Kubernetes objects * Go from local Docker development to managing your application via Kubernetes * Convert v1 or v2 Docker Compose `yaml` files or [Distributed Application Bundles](https://docs.docker.com/compose/bundles/)