--- title: Declarative Management of Kubernetes Objects Using Configuration Files --- {% capture overview %} Kubernetes objects can be created, updated, and deleted by storing multiple object configuration files in a directory and using `kubectl apply` to recursively create and update those objects as needed. This method retains writes made to live objects without merging the changes back into the object configuration files. {% endcapture %} {% capture body %} ## Trade-offs The `kubectl` tool supports three kinds of object management: * Imperative commands * Imperative object configuration * Declarative object configuration See [Kubernetes Object Management](/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/object-management/) for a discussion of the advantages and disadvantage of each kind of object management. ## Before you begin Declarative object configuration requires a firm understanding of the Kubernetes object definitions and configuration. Read and complete the following documents if you have not already: - [Managing Kubernetes Objects Using Imperative Commands](/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/imperative-object-management-command/) - [Imperative Management of Kubernetes Objects Using Configuration Files](/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/imperative-object-management-configuration/) Following are definitions for terms used in this document: - *object configuration file / configuration file*: A file that defines the configuration for a Kubernetes object. This topic shows how to pass configuration files to `kubectl apply`. Configuration files are typically stored in source control, such as Git. - *live object configuration / live configuration*: The live configuration values of an object, as observed by the Kubernetes cluster. These are kept in the Kubernetes cluster storage, typically etcd. - *declarative configuration writer / declarative writer*: A person or software component that makes updates to a live object. The live writers referred to in this topic make changes to object configuration files and run `kubectl apply` to write the changes. ## How to create objects Use `kubectl apply` to create all objects, except those that already exist, defined by configuration files in a specified directory: ```shell kubectl apply -f / ``` This sets the `kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration: '{...}'` annotation on each object. The annotation contains the contents of the object configuration file that was used to create the object. **Note**: Add the `-R` flag to recursively process directories. Here's an example of an object configuration file: {% include code.html language="yaml" file="simple_deployment.yaml" ghlink="/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/simple_deployment.yaml" %} Create the object using `kubectl apply`: ```shell kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/simple_deployment.yaml ``` Print the live configuration using `kubectl get`: ```shell kubectl get -f https://k8s.io/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/simple_deployment.yaml -o yaml ``` The output shows that the `kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration` annotation was written to the live configuration, and it matches the configuration file: ```shell kind: Deployment metadata: annotations: # ... # This is the json representation of simple_deployment.yaml # It was written by kubectl apply when the object was created kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration: | {"apiVersion":"apps/v1beta1","kind":"Deployment", "metadata":{"annotations":{},"name":"nginx-deployment","namespace":"default"}, "spec":{"minReadySeconds":5,"template":{"metadata":{"labels":{"app":"nginx"}}, "spec":{"containers":[{"image":"nginx:1.7.9","name":"nginx", "ports":[{"containerPort":80}]}]}}}} # ... spec: # ... minReadySeconds: 5 template: metadata: # ... labels: app: nginx spec: containers: - image: nginx:1.7.9 # ... name: nginx ports: - containerPort: 80 # ... # ... # ... # ... ``` ## How to update objects You can also use `kubectl apply` to update all objects defined in a directory, even if those objects already exist. This approach accomplishes the following: 1. Sets fields that appear in the configuration file in the live configuration. 2. Clears fields removed from the configuration file in the live configuration. ```shell kubectl apply -f / ``` **Note**: Add the `-R` flag to recursively process directories. Here's an example configuration file: {% include code.html language="yaml" file="simple_deployment.yaml" ghlink="/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/simple_deployment.yaml" %} Create the object using `kubectl apply`: ```shell kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/simple_deployment.yaml ``` **Note:** For purposes of illustration, the preceding command refers to a single configuration file instead of a directory. Print the live configuration using `kubectl get`: ```shell kubectl get -f https://k8s.io/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/simple_deployment.yaml -o yaml ``` The output shows that the `kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration` annotation was written to the live configuration, and it matches the configuration file: ```shell kind: Deployment metadata: annotations: # ... # This is the json representation of simple_deployment.yaml # It was written by kubectl apply when the object was created kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration: | {"apiVersion":"apps/v1beta1","kind":"Deployment", "metadata":{"annotations":{},"name":"nginx-deployment","namespace":"default"}, "spec":{"minReadySeconds":5,"template":{"metadata":{"labels":{"app":"nginx"}}, "spec":{"containers":[{"image":"nginx:1.7.9","name":"nginx", "ports":[{"containerPort":80}]}]}}}} # ... spec: # ... minReadySeconds: 5 template: metadata: # ... labels: app: nginx spec: containers: - image: nginx:1.7.9 # ... name: nginx ports: - containerPort: 80 # ... # ... # ... # ... ``` Directly update the `replicas` field in the live configuration by using `kubectl scale`. This does not use `kubectl apply`: ```shell kubectl scale deployment/nginx-deployment --replicas=2 ``` Print the live configuration using `kubectl get`: ```shell kubectl get -f https://k8s.io/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/simple_deployment.yaml -o yaml ``` The output shows that the `replicas` field has been set to 2, and the `last-applied-configuration` annotation does not contain a `replicas` field: ``` apiVersion: apps/v1beta1 kind: Deployment metadata: annotations: # ... # note that the annotation does not contain replicas # because it was not updated through apply kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration: | {"apiVersion":"apps/v1beta1","kind":"Deployment", "metadata":{"annotations":{},"name":"nginx-deployment","namespace":"default"}, "spec":{"minReadySeconds":5,"template":{"metadata":{"labels":{"app":"nginx"}}, "spec":{"containers":[{"image":"nginx:1.7.9","name":"nginx", "ports":[{"containerPort":80}]}]}}}} # ... spec: replicas: 2 # written by scale # ... minReadySeconds: 5 template: metadata: # ... labels: app: nginx spec: containers: - image: nginx:1.7.9 # ... name: nginx ports: - containerPort: 80 # ... ``` Update the `simple_deployment.yaml` configuration file to change the image from `nginx:1.7.9` to `nginx:1.11.9`, and delete the `minReadySeconds` field: {% include code.html language="yaml" file="update_deployment.yaml" ghlink="/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/update_deployment.yaml" %} Apply the changes made to the configuration file: ```shell kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/update_deployment.yaml ``` Print the live configuration using `kubectl get`: ``` kubectl get -f https://k8s.io/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/simple_deployment.yaml -o yaml ``` The output shows the following changes to the live configuration: - The `replicas` field retains the value of 2 set by `kubectl scale`. This is possible because it is omitted from the configuration file. - The `image` field has been updated to `nginx:1.11.9` from `nginx:1.7.9`. - The `last-applied-configuration` annotation has been updated with the new image. - The `minReadySeconds` field has been cleared. - The `last-applied-configuration` annotation no longer contains the `minReadySeconds` field. ```shell apiVersion: apps/v1beta1 kind: Deployment metadata: annotations: # ... # The annotation contains the updated image to nginx 1.11.9, # but does not contain the updated replicas to 2 kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration: | {"apiVersion":"apps/v1beta1","kind":"Deployment", "metadata":{"annotations":{},"name":"nginx-deployment","namespace":"default"}, "spec":{"template":{"metadata":{"labels":{"app":"nginx"}}, "spec":{"containers":[{"image":"nginx:1.11.9","name":"nginx", "ports":[{"containerPort":80}]}]}}}} # ... spec: replicas: 2 # Set by `kubectl scale`. Ignored by `kubectl apply`. # minReadySeconds cleared by `kubectl apply` # ... template: metadata: # ... labels: app: nginx spec: containers: - image: nginx:1.11.9 # Set by `kubectl apply` # ... name: nginx ports: - containerPort: 80 # ... # ... # ... # ... ``` **Warning**: Mixing `kubectl apply` with the imperative object configuration commands `create` and `replace` is not supported. This is because `create` and `replace` do not retain the `kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration` that `kubectl apply` uses to compute updates. ## How to delete objects There are two approaches to delete objects managed by `kubectl apply`. ### Recommended: `kubectl delete -f ` Manually deleting objects using the imperative command is the recommended approach, as it is more explicit about what is being deleted, and less likely to result in the user deleting something unintentionally: ```shell kubectl delete -f ``` ### Alternative: `kubectl apply -f --prune -l your=label` Only use this if you know what you are doing. **Warning:** `kubectl apply --prune` is in alpha, and backwards incompatible changes might be introduced in subsequent releases. **Warning**: You must be careful when using this command, so that you do not delete objects unintentionally. As an alternative to `kubectl delete`, you can use `kubectl apply` to identify objects to be deleted after their configuration files have been removed from the directory. Apply with `--prune` queries the API server for all objects matching a set of labels, and attempts to match the returned live object configurations against the object configuration files. If an object matches the query, and it does not have a configuration file in the directory, and it does not have a `last-applied-configuration` annotation, it is deleted. {% comment %} TODO(pwittrock): We need to change the behavior to prevent the user from running apply on subdirectories unintentionally. {% endcomment %} ```shell kubectl apply -f --prune -l ``` **Important:** Apply with prune should only be run against the root directory containing the object configuration files. Running against sub-directories can cause objects to be unintentionally deleted if they are returned by the label selector query specified with `-l ` and do not appear in the subdirectory. ## How to view an object You can use `kubectl get` with `-o yaml` to view the configuration of a live object: ```shell kubectl get -f -o yaml ``` ## How apply calculates differences and merges changes **Definition:** A *patch* is an update operation that is scoped to specific fields of an object instead of the entire object. This enables updating only a specific set of fields on an object without reading the object first. When `kubectl apply` updates the live configuration for an object, it does so by sending a patch request to the API server. The patch defines updates scoped to specific fields of the live object configuration. The `kubectl apply` command calculates this patch request using the configuration file, the live configuration, and the `last-applied-configuration` annotation stored in the live configuration. ### Merge patch calculation The `kubectl apply` command writes the contents of the configuration file to the `kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration` annotation. This is used to identify fields that have been removed from the configuration file and need to be cleared from the live configuration. Here are the steps used to calculate which fields should be deleted or set: 1. Calculate the fields to delete. These are the fields present in `last-applied-configuration` and missing from the configuration file. 2. Calculate the fields to add or set. These are the fields present in the configuration file whose values don't match the live configuration. Here's an example. Suppose this is the configuration file for a Deployment object: {% include code.html language="yaml" file="update_deployment.yaml" ghlink="/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/update_deployment.yaml" %} Also, suppose this is the live configuration for the same Deployment object: ```shell apiVersion: apps/v1beta1 kind: Deployment metadata: annotations: # ... # note that the annotation does not contain replicas # because it was not updated through apply kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration: | {"apiVersion":"apps/v1beta1","kind":"Deployment", "metadata":{"annotations":{},"name":"nginx-deployment","namespace":"default"}, "spec":{"minReadySeconds":5,"template":{"metadata":{"labels":{"app":"nginx"}}, "spec":{"containers":[{"image":"nginx:1.7.9","name":"nginx", "ports":[{"containerPort":80}]}]}}}} # ... spec: replicas: 2 # written by scale # ... minReadySeconds: 5 template: metadata: # ... labels: app: nginx spec: containers: - image: nginx:1.7.9 # ... name: nginx ports: - containerPort: 80 # ... ``` Here are the merge calculations that would be performed by `kubectl apply`: 1. Calculate the fields to delete by reading values from `last-applied-configuration` and comparing them to values in the configuration file. In this example, `minReadySeconds` appears in the `last-applied-configuration` annotation, but does not appear in the configuration file. **Action:** Clear `minReadySeconds` from the live configuration. 2. Calculate the fields to set by reading values from the configuration file and comparing them to values in the live configuration. In this example, the value of `image` in the configuration file does not match the value in the live configuration. **Action:** Set the value of `image` in the live configuration. 3. Set the `last-applied-configuration` annotation to match the value of the configuration file. 4. Merge the results from 1, 2, 3 into a single patch request to the API server. Here is the live configuration that is the result of the merge: ```shell apiVersion: apps/v1beta1 kind: Deployment metadata: annotations: # ... # The annotation contains the updated image to nginx 1.11.9, # but does not contain the updated replicas to 2 kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration: | {"apiVersion":"apps/v1beta1","kind":"Deployment", "metadata":{"annotations":{},"name":"nginx-deployment","namespace":"default"}, "spec":{"template":{"metadata":{"labels":{"app":"nginx"}}, "spec":{"containers":[{"image":"nginx:1.11.9","name":"nginx", "ports":[{"containerPort":80}]}]}}}} # ... spec: replicas: 2 # Set by `kubectl scale`. Ignored by `kubectl apply`. # minReadySeconds cleared by `kubectl apply` # ... template: metadata: # ... labels: app: nginx spec: containers: - image: nginx:1.11.9 # Set by `kubectl apply` # ... name: nginx ports: - containerPort: 80 # ... # ... # ... # ... ``` {% comment %} TODO(1.6): For 1.6, add the following bullet point to 1. - clear fields explicitly set to null in the local object configuration file regardless of whether they appear in the last-applied-configuration {% endcomment %} ### How different types of fields are merged How a particular field in a configuration file is merged with the live configuration depends on the type of the field. There are several types of fields: - *primitive*: A field of type string, integer, or boolean. For example, `image` and `replicas` are primitive fields. **Action:** Replace. - *map*, also called *object*: A field of type map or a complex type that contains subfields. For example, `labels`, `annotations`,`spec` and `metadata` are all maps. **Action:** Merge elements or subfields. - *list*: A field containing a list of items that can be either primitive types or maps. For example, `containers`, `ports`, and `args` are lists. **Action:** Varies. When `kubectl apply` updates a map or list field, it typically does not replace the entire field, but instead updates the individual subelements. For instance, when merging the `spec` on a Deployment, the entire `spec` is not replaced. Instead the subfields of `spec`, such as `replicas`, are compared and merged. ### Merging changes to primitive fields Primitive fields are replaced or cleared. **Note:** '-' is used for "not applicable" because the value is not used. | Field in object configuration file | Field in live object configuration | Field in last-applied-configuration | Action | |-------------------------------------|------------------------------------|-------------------------------------|-------------------------------------------| | Yes | Yes | - | Set live to configuration file value. | | Yes | No | - | Set live to local configuration. | | No | - | Yes | Clear from live configuration. | | No | - | No | Do nothing. Keep live value. | ### Merging changes to map fields Fields that represent maps are merged by comparing each of the subfields or elements of of the map: **Note:** '-' is used for "not applicable" because the value is not used. | Key in object configuration file | Key in live object configuration | Field in last-applied-configuration | Action | |-------------------------------------|------------------------------------|-------------------------------------|----------------------------------| | Yes | Yes | - | Compare sub fields values. | | Yes | No | - | Set live to local configuration. | | No | - | Yes | Delete from live configuration. | | No | - | No | Do nothing. Keep live value. | ### Merging changes for fields of type list Merging changes to a list uses one of three strategies: * Replace the list. * Merge individual elements in a list of complex elements. * Merge a list of primitive elements. The choice of strategy is made on a per-field basis. #### Replace the list Treat the list the same as a primitive field. Replace or delete the entire list. This preserves ordering. **Example:** Use `kubectl apply` to update the `args` field of a Container in a Pod. This sets the value of `args` in the live configuration to the value in the configuration file. Any `args` elements that had previously been added to the live configuration are lost. The order of the `args` elements defined in the configuration file is retained in the live configuration. ```yaml # last-applied-configuration value args: ["a, b"] # configuration file value args: ["a", "c"] # live configuration args: ["a", "b", "d"] # result after merge args: ["a", "c"] ``` **Explanation:** The merge used the configuration file value as the new list value. #### Merge individual elements of a list of complex elements: Treat the list as a map, and treat a specific field of each element as a key. Add, delete, or update individual elements. This does not preserve ordering. This merge strategy uses a special tag on each field called a `patchMergeKey`. The `patchMergeKey` is defined for each field in the Kubernetes source code: [types.go](https://git.k8s.io/api/core/v1/types.go#L2565) When merging a list of maps, the field specified as the `patchMergeKey` for a given element is used like a map key for that element. **Example:** Use `kubectl apply` to update the `containers` field of a PodSpec. This merges the list as though it was a map where each element is keyed by `name`. ```yaml # last-applied-configuration value containers: - name: nginx image: nginx:1.10 - name: nginx-helper-a # key: nginx-helper-a; will be deleted in result image: helper:1.3 - name: nginx-helper-b # key: nginx-helper-b; will be retained image: helper:1.3 # configuration file value containers: - name: nginx image: nginx:1.11 - name: nginx-helper-b image: helper:1.3 - name: nginx-helper-c # key: nginx-helper-c; will be added in result image: helper:1.3 # live configuration containers: - name: nginx image: nginx:1.10 - name: nginx-helper-a image: helper:1.3 - name: nginx-helper-b image: helper:1.3 args: ["run"] # Field will be retained - name: nginx-helper-d # key: nginx-helper-d; will be retained image: helper:1.3 # result after merge containers: - name: nginx image: nginx:1.10 # Element nginx-helper-a was deleted - name: nginx-helper-b image: helper:1.3 args: ["run"] # Field was retained - name: nginx-helper-c # Element was added image: helper:1.3 - name: nginx-helper-d # Element was ignored image: helper:1.3 ``` **Explanation:** - The container named "nginx-helper-a" was deleted because no container named "nginx-helper-a" appeared in the configuration file. - The container named "nginx-helper-b" retained the changes to `args` in the live configuration. `kubectl apply` was able to identify that "nginx-helper-b" in the live configuration was the same "nginx-helper-b" as in the configuration file, even though their fields had different values (no `args` in the configuration file). This is because the `patchMergeKey` field value (name) was identical in both. - The container named "nginx-helper-c" was added because no container with that name appeared in the live configuration, but one with that name appeared in the configuration file. - The container named "nginx-helper-d" was retained because no element with that name appeared in the last-applied-configuration. #### Merge a list of primitive elements As of Kubernetes 1.5, merging lists of primitive elements is not supported. **Note:** Which of the above strategies is chosen for a given field is controlled by the `patchStrategy` tag in [types.go](https://git.k8s.io/api/core/v1/types.go#L2565) If no `patchStrategy` is specified for a field of type list, then the list is replaced. {% comment %} TODO(pwittrock): Uncomment this for 1.6 - Treat the list as a set of primitives. Replace or delete individual elements. Does not preserve ordering. Does not preserve duplicates. **Example:** Using apply to update the `finalizers` field of ObjectMeta keeps elements added to the live configuration. Ordering of finalizers is lost. {% endcomment %} ## Default field values The API server sets certain fields to default values in the live configuration if they are not specified when the object is created. Here's a configuration file for a Deployment. The file does not specify `strategy` or `selector`: {% include code.html language="yaml" file="simple_deployment.yaml" ghlink="/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/simple_deployment.yaml" %} Create the object using `kubectl apply`: ```shell kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/simple_deployment.yaml ``` Print the live configuration using `kubectl get`: ```shell kubectl get -f https://k8s.io/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/simple_deployment.yaml -o yaml ``` The output shows that the API server set several fields to default values in the live configuration. These fields were not specified in the configuration file. ```shell apiVersion: apps/v1beta1 kind: Deployment # ... spec: minReadySeconds: 5 replicas: 1 # defaulted by apiserver selector: matchLabels: # defaulted by apiserver - derived from template.metadata.labels app: nginx strategy: rollingUpdate: # defaulted by apiserver - derived from strategy.type maxSurge: 1 maxUnavailable: 1 type: RollingUpdate # defaulted apiserver template: metadata: creationTimestamp: null labels: app: nginx spec: containers: - image: nginx:1.7.9 imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent # defaulted by apiserver name: nginx ports: - containerPort: 80 protocol: TCP # defaulted by apiserver resources: {} # defaulted by apiserver terminationMessagePath: /dev/termination-log # defaulted by apiserver dnsPolicy: ClusterFirst # defaulted by apiserver restartPolicy: Always # defaulted by apiserver securityContext: {} # defaulted by apiserver terminationGracePeriodSeconds: 30 # defaulted by apiserver # ... ``` **Note:** Some of the fields' default values have been derived from the values of other fields that were specified in the configuration file, such as the `selector` field. In a patch request, defaulted fields are not re-defaulted unless they are explicitly cleared as part of a patch request. This can cause unexpected behavior for fields that are defaulted based on the values of other fields. When the other fields are later changed, the values defaulted from them will not be updated unless they are explicitly cleared. For this reason, it is recommended that certain fields defaulted by the server are explicitly defined in the configuration file, even if the desired values match the server defaults. This makes it easier to recognize conflicting values that will not be re-defaulted by the server. **Example:** ```yaml # last-applied-configuration spec: template: metadata: labels: app: nginx spec: containers: - name: nginx image: nginx:1.7.9 ports: - containerPort: 80 # configuration file spec: strategy: type: Recreate # updated value template: metadata: labels: app: nginx spec: containers: - name: nginx image: nginx:1.7.9 ports: - containerPort: 80 # live configuration spec: strategy: type: RollingUpdate # defaulted value rollingUpdate: # defaulted value derived from type maxSurge : 1 maxUnavailable: 1 template: metadata: labels: app: nginx spec: containers: - name: nginx image: nginx:1.7.9 ports: - containerPort: 80 # result after merge - ERROR! spec: strategy: type: Recreate # updated value: incompatible with rollingUpdate rollingUpdate: # defaulted value: incompatible with "type: Recreate" maxSurge : 1 maxUnavailable: 1 template: metadata: labels: app: nginx spec: containers: - name: nginx image: nginx:1.7.9 ports: - containerPort: 80 ``` **Explanation:** 1. The user creates a Deployment without defining `strategy.type`. 2. The server defaults `strategy.type` to `RollingUpdate` and defaults the `strategy.rollingUpdate` values. 3. The user changes `strategy.type` to `Recreate`. The `strategy.rollingUpdate` values remain at their defaulted values, though the server expects them to be cleared. If the `strategy.rollingUpdate` values had been defined initially in the configuration file, it would have been more clear that they needed to be deleted. 4. Apply fails because `strategy.rollingUpdate` is not cleared. The `strategy.rollingupdate` field cannot be defined with a `strategy.type` of `Recreate`. Recommendation: These fields should be explicitly defined in the object configuration file: - Selectors and PodTemplate labels on workloads, such as Deployment, StatefulSet, Job, DaemonSet, ReplicaSet, and ReplicationController - Deployment rollout strategy ### How to clear server-defaulted fields or fields set by other writers As of Kubernetes 1.5, fields that do not appear in the configuration file cannot be cleared by a merge operation. Here are some workarounds: Option 1: Remove the field by directly modifying the live object. **Note:** As of Kubernetes 1.5, `kubectl edit` does not work with `kubectl apply`. Using these together will cause unexpected behavior. Option 2: Remove the field through the configuration file. 1. Add the field to the configuration file to match the live object. 1. Apply the configuration file; this updates the annotation to include the field. 1. Delete the field from the configuration file. 1. Apply the configuration file; this deletes the field from the live object and annotation. {% comment %} TODO(1.6): Update this with the following for 1.6 Fields that do not appear in the configuration file can be cleared by setting their values to `null` and then applying the configuration file. For fields defaulted by the server, this triggers re-defaulting the values. {% endcomment %} ## How to change ownership of a field between the configuration file and direct imperative writers These are the only methods you should use to change an individual object field: - Use `kubectl apply`. - Write directly to the live configuration without modifying the configuration file: for example, use `kubectl scale`. ### Changing the owner from a direct imperative writer to a configuration file Add the field to the configuration file. For the field, discontinue direct updates to the live configuration that do not go through `kubectl apply`. ### Changing the owner from a configuration file to a direct imperative writer As of Kubernetes 1.5, changing ownership of a field from a configuration file to an imperative writer requires manual steps: - Remove the field from the configuration file. - Remove the field from the `kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration` annotation on the live object. ## Changing management methods Kubernetes objects should be managed using only one method at a time. Switching from one method to another is possible, but is a manual process. **Exception:** It is OK to use imperative deletion with declarative management. {% comment %} TODO(pwittrock): We need to make using imperative commands with declarative object configuration work so that it doesn't write the fields to the annotation, and instead. Then add this bullet point. - using imperative commands with declarative configuration to manage where each manages different fields. {% endcomment %} ### Migrating from imperative command management to declarative object configuration Migrating from imperative command management to declarative object configuration involves several manual steps: 1. Export the live object to a local configuration file: kubectl get / -o yaml --export > _.yaml 1. Manually remove the `status` field from the configuration file. **Note:** This step is optional, as `kubectl apply` does not update the status field even if it is present in the configuration file. 1. Set the `kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration` annotation on the object: kubectl replace --save-config -f _.yaml 1. Change processes to use `kubectl apply` for managing the object exclusively. {% comment %} TODO(pwittrock): Why doesn't export remove the status field? Seems like it should. {% endcomment %} ### Migrating from imperative object configuration to declarative object configuration 1. Set the `kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration` annotation on the object: kubectl replace --save-config -f _.yaml 1. Change processes to use `kubectl apply` for managing the object exclusively. ## Defining controller selectors and PodTemplate labels **Warning**: Updating selectors on controllers is strongly discouraged. The recommended approach is to define a single, immutable PodTemplate label used only by the controller selector with no other semantic meaning. **Example:** ```yaml selector: matchLabels: controller-selector: "extensions/v1beta1/deployment/nginx" template: metadata: labels: controller-selector: "extensions/v1beta1/deployment/nginx" ``` ## Known Issues * Prior to Kubernetes 1.6, `kubectl apply` did not support operating on objects stored in a [custom resource](/docs/concepts/api-extension/custom-resources/). For these cluster versions, you should instead use [imperative object configuration](/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/imperative-object-management-configuration/). {% endcapture %} {% capture whatsnext %} - [Managing Kubernetes Objects Using Imperative Commands](/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/imperative-object-management-command/) - [Imperative Management of Kubernetes Objects Using Configuration Files](/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/imperative-object-management-configuration/) - [Kubectl Command Reference](/docs/user-guide/kubectl/{{page.version}}/) - [Kubernetes Object Schema Reference](/docs/resources-reference/{{page.version}}/) {% endcapture %} {% include templates/concept.md %}