I had a need to delete a number of Namespaces all at once that were created as part of some automated platform testing.
Each namespace had a common naming convention starting with “e2e”, the below command will get all namespaces without the initial returned header line from Kubectl, look for anything with the pattern “e2e” using the awk command, and print them to a variable $1, xargs then uses each object in the variable array into the “kubectl delete ns”
You can also do the same for deleting pods. The below command, would delete any pods with “veducate” in their name, you would need to input the necessary namespace.
kubectl get pods -n {namespace} --no-headers=true | awk '/veducate/{print $1}'| xargs kubectl delete -n {namespace} pod
Quick link to this Stackoverflow post which pointed me in the right direction, I just had to modify it from pods to namespaces as the use case.
It’s not uncommon for me to see the question asking for an explanation of VMware Tanzu Kubernetes terminology and differences between similar named products. As per the below tweet. This is my blog post to address the Tanzu Kubernetes terminology and use.
First, we’ll break down the high level names and products. Then move into Tanzu Kubernetes products.
What is VMware Tanzu?
VMware Tanzu is a brand name covering VMware’s modern applications suite of products, just like vRealize is the suite name for VMware’s cloud management products.
What products are covered by the VMware Tanzu brand?
This blog post is an accompaniment to the session “vSphere with Tanzu Kubernetes – Day 2 Operations for the VI Admin” created by myself and Simon Conyard, with special thanks to the VMware LiveFire Team for allowing us access to their lab environments to create the technical demo recordings.
You can see the full video with technical demos below (1hr 4 minutes). This blog post acts a supplement to the recording.
This session is 44 minutes long (and is a little shorter than the one above).
The basic premise of the presentation was set at around a level-100/150 introduction to the Kubernetes world and marrying that to your knowledge of VMware vSphere as a VI Admin. Giving you an insight into most of the common areas you will need to think about when all of a sudden you are asked to deploy Tanzu Kubernetes and support a team of developers.
Scene Setting
So why are we talking about VMware and Kubernetes? Isn’t VMware the place where I run those legacy things called virtual machines?
Essentially the definition of an application has changed. On the left of the below image, we have the typical Application, we usually talk about the three tier model (Web, App, DB).
However, the landscape is moving towards the right hand side, applications running more like distributed systems. Where the data your need to function is being served, serviced, recorded, and presented not only by virtual machines, but Kubernetes services as well. Kubernetes introduces its own architectures and frameworks, and finally this new buzzword, serverless and functions.
Although you may not be seeing this change happen immediately in your workplace and infrastructure today. It is the direction of the industry.
Within vSphere there are two types of Kubernetes clusters that run natively within ESXi.
Supervisor Kubernetes cluster control plane for vSphere
Tanzu Kubernetes Cluster, sometimes also referred to as a “Guest Cluster.”
Supervisor Kubernetes Cluster
This is a special Kubernetes cluster that uses ESXi as its worker nodes instead of Linux.
This is achieved by integrating the Kubernetes worker agents, Spherelets, directly into the ESXi hypervisor. This cluster uses vSphere Pod Service to run container workloads natively on the vSphere host, taking advantage of the security, availability, and performance of the ESXi hypervisor.
To learn more about how vSphere delivers Kubernetes natively
The supervisor cluster is not a conformant Kubernetes cluster, by design, using Kubernetes to enhance vSphere. This ultimately provides you the ability to run pods directly on the ESXi host alongside virtual machines, and as the management of Tanzu Kubernetes Clusters.
Tanzu Kubernetes Cluster
To deliver Kubernetes clusters to your developers, that are standards aligned and fully conformant with upstream Kubernetes, you can use Tanzu Kubernetes Clusters (also referred to as “Guest” clusters.)
A Tanzu Kubernetes Cluster is a Kubernetes cluster that runs inside virtual machines on the Supervisor layer and not on vSphere Pods.
As a fully upstream-compliant Kubernetes it is guaranteed to work with all your Kubernetes applications and tools. Tanzu Kubernetes Clusters in vSphere use the open source Cluster API project for lifecycle management, which in turn uses the VM Operator to manage the VMs that make up the cluster.
Supervisor Cluster or Tanzu Kubernetes Cluster, which one should I choose to run my application?
Supervisor Cluster:
Has additional capabilities that are inherent in the vSphere environment and are available to Kubernetes via the kubectl command
Provides the ability to manage containers just as you would manage virtual machines
Provides stronger security and resource isolation due to the use of vSphere Pods
VMware Cloud Foundation is an integrated full stack solution, delivering customers a validated architecture bringing together vSphere, NSX for software defined networking, vSAN for software defined storage, and the vRealize Suite for Cloud Management automation and operation capabilities.
Deploying the vSphere Tanzu Kubernetes solution is as simple as a few clicks in a deployment wizard, providing you a fully integrated Kubernetes deployment into the VMware solutions.
Don’t have VCF? Then you can still enable Kubernetes yourself in your vSphere environment using vSphere 7.0 U1 and beyond. There will be extra steps for you to do this, and some of the integrations to the VMware software stack will not be automatic.
The below graphic summarises the deployment steps between both options discussed.
Building on top of the explanation of Tanzu Kubernetes Cluster explained earlier, Tanzu Kubernetes Grid (TKG) is the same easy-to-upgrade, conformant Kubernetes, with pre-integrated and validated components. This multi-cloud Kubernetes offering that you can run both on-premises in vSphere and in the public cloud on Amazon and Microsoft Azure, fully supported by VMware.
Tanzu Kubernetes Grid (TKG) is the name used for the deployment option which is multi-cloud focused.
Tanzu Kubernetes Cluster (TKC) is the name used for a Tanzu Kubernetes deployment deployed and managed by vSphere Namespace.
Introducing vSphere Namespaces
When enabling Kubernetes within a vSphere environment a supervisor cluster is created within the VMware Data Center. This supervisor cluster is responsible for managing all Kubernetes objects within the VMware Data Center, including vSphere Namespaces. The supervisor cluster communicating with ESXi forms the Kubernetes control plane, for enabled clusters.
A vSphere Namespace is a logical object that is created on the vSphere Kubernetes supervisor cluster. This object tracks and provides a mechanism to edit the assignment of resources (Compute, Memory, Storage & Network) and access control to Kubernetes resources, such as containers or virtual machines.
You can provide the URL of the Kubernetes control plane to developers as required, where they can then deploy containers to the vSphere Namespaces for which they have permissions.
Resources and permissions are defined on a vSphere Namespace for both Kubernetes containers, consuming resources directly via vSphere, or Virtual Machines configured and provisioned to operate Tanzu Kubernetes Grid (TKG).
For a Virtual Administrator the way access can be assigned to various Tanzu elements within the Virtual Infrastructure is very similar to any other logical object.
Create Roles
Assign Permissions to the Role
Allocate the Role to Groups or Individuals
Link the Group or Individual to inventory objects
With Tanzu those inventory objects include Namespaces’ and Resources.
What I also wanted to highlight was if a Virtual Administrator gave administrative permissions to a Kubernetes cluster, then this has similarities to granting ‘root’ or ‘administrator’ access to a virtual machine. An individual with these permissions could create and grant permissions themselves, outside of the virtual infrastructure.