--- --- Following this example, you will create a secret and a [pod](/docs/user-guide/pods/) that consumes that secret in a [volume](/docs/user-guide/volumes/). See [Secrets design document](https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/blob/{{page.githubbranch}}/docs/design/secrets.md) for more information. ## Step Zero: Prerequisites This example assumes you have a Kubernetes cluster installed and running, and that you have installed the `kubectl` command line tool somewhere in your path. Please see the [getting started](/docs/getting-started-guides/) for installation instructions for your platform. ## Step One: Create the secret A secret contains a set of named byte arrays. Use the [`secret.yaml`](/docs/user-guide/secrets/secret.yaml) file to create a secret: ```shell $ kubectl create -f docs/user-guide/secrets/secret.yaml ``` You can use `kubectl` to see information about the secret: ```shell $ kubectl get secrets NAME TYPE DATA test-secret Opaque 2 $ kubectl describe secret test-secret Name: test-secret Labels: Annotations: Type: Opaque Data ==== data-1: 9 bytes data-2: 11 bytes ``` ## Step Two: Create a pod that consumes a secret Pods consume secrets in volumes. Now that you have created a secret, you can create a pod that consumes it. Use the [`secret-pod.yaml`](/docs/user-guide/secrets/secret-pod.yaml) file to create a Pod that consumes the secret. ```shell $ kubectl create -f docs/user-guide/secrets/secret-pod.yaml ``` This pod runs a binary that displays the content of one of the pieces of secret data in the secret volume: ```shell $ kubectl logs secret-test-pod 2015-04-29T21:17:24.712206409Z content of file "/etc/secret-volume/data-1": value-1 ```