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WARNING WARNING WARNING WARNING WARNING

PLEASE NOTE: This document applies to the HEAD of the source tree

If you are using a released version of Kubernetes, you should refer to the docs that go with that version.

The latest 1.0.x release of this document can be found [here](http://releases.k8s.io/release-1.0/docs/user-guide/quick-start.md).

Documentation for other releases can be found at releases.k8s.io.

Kubernetes User Guide: Managing Applications: Quick start

Table of Contents

This guide will help you get oriented to Kubernetes and running your first containers on the cluster. If you are already familiar with the docker-cli, you can also checkout the docker-cli to kubectl migration guide here.

Launching a simple application

Once your application is packaged into a container and pushed to an image registry, you’re ready to deploy it to Kubernetes.

For example, nginx is a popular HTTP server, with a pre-built container on Docker hub. The kubectl run command below will create two nginx replicas, listening on port 80.

$ kubectl run my-nginx --image=nginx --replicas=2 --port=80
CONTROLLER   CONTAINER(S)   IMAGE(S)   SELECTOR       REPLICAS
my-nginx     my-nginx       nginx      run=my-nginx   2

You can see that they are running by:

$ kubectl get po
NAME             READY     STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
my-nginx-l8n3i   1/1       Running   0          29m
my-nginx-q7jo3   1/1       Running   0          29m

Kubernetes will ensure that your application keeps running, by automatically restarting containers that fail, spreading containers across nodes, and recreating containers on new nodes when nodes fail.

Exposing your application to the Internet

Through integration with some cloud providers (for example Google Compute Engine and AWS EC2), Kubernetes enables you to request that it provision a public IP address for your application. To do this run:

$ kubectl expose rc my-nginx --port=80 --type=LoadBalancer
NAME       LABELS         SELECTOR       IP(S)     PORT(S)
my-nginx   run=my-nginx   run=my-nginx             80/TCP

To find the public IP address assigned to your application, execute:

$ kubectl get svc my-nginx -o json | grep \"ip\"
                   "ip": "130.111.122.213"

In order to access your nginx landing page, you also have to make sure that traffic from external IPs is allowed. Do this by opening a firewall to allow traffic on port 80.

Killing the application

To kill the application and delete its containers and public IP address, do:

$ kubectl delete rc my-nginx
replicationcontrollers/my-nginx
$ kubectl delete svc my-nginx
services/my-nginx

What's next?

Learn about how to configure common container parameters, such as commands and environment variables.

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