# Kubernetes C# Client [![Travis](https://img.shields.io/travis/kubernetes-client/csharp.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/kubernetes-client/csharp) [![Client Capabilities](https://img.shields.io/badge/Kubernetes%20client-Silver-blue.svg?style=flat&colorB=C0C0C0&colorA=306CE8)](http://bit.ly/kubernetes-client-capabilities-badge) [![Client Support Level](https://img.shields.io/badge/kubernetes%20client-beta-green.svg?style=flat&colorA=306CE8)](http://bit.ly/kubernetes-client-support-badge) # Usage [Nuget Package](https://www.nuget.org/packages/KubernetesClient/) ```sh dotnet add package KubernetesClient ``` ## Authentication/Configuration You should be able to use a standard KubeConfig file with this library, see the `BuildConfigFromConfigFile` function below. Most authentication methods are currently supported, but a few are not, see the [known-issues](https://github.com/kubernetes-client/csharp#known-issues). You should also be able to authenticate with the in-cluster service account using the `InClusterConfig` function shown below. ## Monitoring There is optional built-in metric generation for prometheus client metrics. The exported metrics are: * `k8s_dotnet_request_total` - Counter of request, broken down by HTTP Method * `k8s_dotnet_response_code_total` - Counter of responses, broken down by HTTP Method and response code * `k8s_request_latency_seconds` - Latency histograms broken down by method, api group, api version and resource kind There is an example integrating these monitors in the examples/prometheus directory. ## Sample Code ### Creating the client ```c# // Load from the default kubeconfig on the machine. var config = KubernetesClientConfiguration.BuildConfigFromConfigFile(); // Load from a specific file: var config = KubernetesClientConfiguration.BuildConfigFromConfigFile(Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("KUBECONFIG")); // Load from in-cluster configuration: var config = KubernetesClientConfiguration.InClusterConfig() // Use the config object to create a client. var client = new Kubernetes(config); ``` ### Listing Objects ```c# var namespaces = client.ListNamespace(); foreach (var ns in namespaces.Items) { Console.WriteLine(ns.Metadata.Name); var list = client.ListNamespacedPod(ns.Metadata.Name); foreach (var item in list.Items) { Console.WriteLine(item.Metadata.Name); } } ``` ### Creating and Deleting Objects ```c# var ns = new V1Namespace { Metadata = new V1ObjectMeta { Name = "test" } }; var result = client.CreateNamespace(ns); Console.WriteLine(result); var status = client.DeleteNamespace(ns.Metadata.Name, new V1DeleteOptions()); ``` ## Examples There is extensive example code in the [examples directory](https://github.com/kubernetes-client/csharp/tree/master/examples). ### Running the examples ```bash git clone git@github.com:kubernetes-client/csharp.git cd csharp\examples\simple dotnet run ``` ## Known issues While the preferred way of connecting to a remote cluster from local machine is: ```c# var config = KubernetesClientConfiguration.BuildConfigFromConfigFile(); var client = new Kubernetes(config); ``` Not all auth providers are supported at moment [#91](https://github.com/kubernetes-client/csharp/issues/91#issuecomment-362920478). You can still connect to a cluster by starting the proxy command: ```bash $ kubectl proxy Starting to serve on 127.0.0.1:8001 ``` and changing config: ```c# var config = new KubernetesClientConfiguration { Host = "http://127.0.0.1:8001" }; ``` Notice that this is a workaround and is not recommended for production use. ## Testing The project uses [XUnit](https://xunit.github.io) as unit testing framework. To run the tests: ```bash cd csharp\tests dotnet restore dotnet test ``` # Generating the Client Code ## Prerequisites You'll need a Linux machine with Docker. The generated code works on all platforms supported by .NET or .NET Core. Check out the generator project into some other directory (henceforth `$GEN_DIR`). ```bash cd $GEN_DIR/.. git clone https://github.com/kubernetes-client/gen ``` ## Generating code ```bash # Where REPO_DIR points to the root of the csharp repository cd ${REPO_DIR}/csharp/src/KubernetesClient ${GEN_DIR}/openapi/csharp.sh generated ../csharp.settings ``` # Version Compatibility | SDK Version | Kubernetes Version | .NET Targeting | |-------------|--------------------|---------------------------------------| | 7.0 | 1.23 | netstandard2.1;net5;net6 | | 6.0 | 1.22 | netstandard2.1;net5 | | 5.0 | 1.21 | netstandard2.1;net5 | | 4.0 | 1.20 | netstandard2.0;netstandard2.1 | | 3.0 | 1.19 | netstandard2.0;net452 | | 2.0 | 1.18 | netstandard2.0;net452 | | 1.6 | 1.16 | netstandard1.4;netstandard2.0;net452; | | 1.4 | 1.13 | netstandard1.4;net451 | | 1.3 | 1.12 | netstandard1.4;net452 | * Starting from `2.0`, [dotnet sdk versioning](https://github.com/kubernetes-client/csharp/issues/400) adopted * `Kubernetes Version` here means the version sdk models and apis were generated from * Kubernetes api server guarantees the compatibility with `n-2` version. for exmaple, 1.19 based sdk should work with 1.21 cluster, but no guarantee works with 1.22 cluster. see also ## Contributing Please see [CONTRIBUTING.md](CONTRIBUTING.md) for instructions on how to contribute.