Do you want BuboFlash to help you learning these things? Or do you want to add or correct something? Click here to log in or create user.



Question
In kubernetes, if you do a rolling update (via "kubectl set image" command) and things go bad (i.e. one or more pods are no longer available), you can rollback via the "kubectl [...] [...] " command
Answer

kubectl rollout undo

^^ you can either rollback to immediate previous version, e.g.: kubectl rollout undo deployment kubernetes-bootcamp

^^^ or you can rollback to a specific previous version number, e.g.: kubectl rollout undo deployment kubernetes-bootcamp --to-revision=2

^^^^ to get the previuos versions/revision of a deployment, you can do "kubectl rollout history deployment kubernetes-bootcamp"


Question
In kubernetes, if you do a rolling update (via "kubectl set image" command) and things go bad (i.e. one or more pods are no longer available), you can rollback via the "kubectl [...] [...] " command
Answer
?

Question
In kubernetes, if you do a rolling update (via "kubectl set image" command) and things go bad (i.e. one or more pods are no longer available), you can rollback via the "kubectl [...] [...] " command
Answer

kubectl rollout undo

^^ you can either rollback to immediate previous version, e.g.: kubectl rollout undo deployment kubernetes-bootcamp

^^^ or you can rollback to a specific previous version number, e.g.: kubectl rollout undo deployment kubernetes-bootcamp --to-revision=2

^^^^ to get the previuos versions/revision of a deployment, you can do "kubectl rollout history deployment kubernetes-bootcamp"


Summary

statusnot learnedmeasured difficulty37% [default]last interval [days]               
repetition number in this series0memorised on               scheduled repetition               
scheduled repetition interval               last repetition or drill

Details

No repetitions


Discussion

Do you want to join discussion? Click here to log in or create user.