website/docs/user-guide/getting-into-containers.md

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Developers can use `kubectl exec` to run commands in a container. This guide demonstrates two use cases.
## Using kubectl exec to check the environment variables of a container
Kubernetes exposes [services](/docs/user-guide/services/#environment-variables) through environment variables. It is convenient to check these environment variables using `kubectl exec`.
We first create a pod and a service,
```shell
$ kubectl create -f examples/guestbook/redis-master-controller.yaml
$ kubectl create -f examples/guestbook/redis-master-service.yaml
```
wait until the pod is Running and Ready,
```shell
$ kubectl get pod
NAME READY REASON RESTARTS AGE
redis-master-ft9ex 1/1 Running 0 12s
```
then we can check the environment variables of the pod,
```shell
$ kubectl exec redis-master-ft9ex env
...
REDIS_MASTER_SERVICE_PORT=6379
REDIS_MASTER_SERVICE_HOST=10.0.0.219
...
```
We can use these environment variables in applications to find the service.
## Using kubectl exec to check the mounted volumes
It is convenient to use `kubectl exec` to check if the volumes are mounted as expected.
We first create a Pod with a volume mounted at /data/redis,
```shell
kubectl create -f docs/user-guide/walkthrough/pod-redis.yaml
```
wait until the pod is Running and Ready,
```shell
$ kubectl get pods
NAME READY REASON RESTARTS AGE
storage 1/1 Running 0 1m
```
we then use `kubectl exec` to verify that the volume is mounted at /data/redis,
```shell
$ kubectl exec storage ls /data
redis
```
## Using kubectl exec to open a bash terminal in a pod
After all, open a terminal in a pod is the most direct way to introspect the pod. Assuming the pod/storage is still running, run
```shell
$ kubectl exec -ti storage -- bash
root@storage:/data#
```
This gets you a terminal.