Kubernetes Web View allows to list and view all Kubernetes resources (incl. CRDs) with permalink-friendly URLs in a plain-HTML frontend.
This tool was mainly developed to provide a web-version of kubectl
for troubleshooting and supporting colleagues.
See the Kubernetes Web View Documentation and try out the live demo.
Goals:
- handling of any API resource: both core Kubernetes and CRDs
- permalink-friendly URL paths for giving links to colleagues (e.g. to help troubleshoot)
- option to work with multiple clusters
- allow listing different resource types on the same page (e.g. deployments and CRDs with same label)
- replicate some of the common
kubectl
features, e.g.-l
(label selector) and-L
(label columns) - simple HTML, only add JavaScript where it adds value
- pluggable links, e.g. to link to other tools based on resource properties like labels (monitoring, reports, ..)
- optional: editing resources as YAML manifests (
kubectl edit
)
Non-goals:
- application management
- reporting/visualization
- fancy UI (JS/SPA)
This will run Kubernetes Web View locally with your existing Kubeconfig:
docker run -it -p 8080:8080 -u $(id -u) -v $HOME/.kube:/.kube hjacobs/kube-web-view
Open http://localhost:8080/ in your browser to see the UI.
This will deploy a single Pod with Kubernetes Web View into your cluster:
kubectl apply -f deploy/
kubectl port-forward service/kube-web-view 8080:80
Open http://localhost:8080/ in your browser to see the UI.
This requires Python 3.7 and poetry and will run unit tests and end-to-end tests with Kind:
make test
It is also possible to run static and unit tests in docker env (make test
is equal to make poetry lint test.unit docker
)
docker run -it -v $PWD:/src -w /src python:3.7 /bin/bash -c "pip3 install poetry; make poetry lint test.unit"
make docker
The end-to-end (e2e) tests will bootstrap a new Kind cluster via pytest-kind, you can keep the cluster and run Kubernetes Web View for development against it:
PYTEST_ADDOPTS=--keep-cluster make test
make run.kind
make
To start the Python web server locally with the default kubeconfig (~/.kube/config
):
make run