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kube-controller-manager | Kubernetes
Synopsis The Kubernetes controller manager is a daemon that embeds the core control loops shipped with Kubernetes. In applications of robotics and automation, a control loop is a non-terminating loop that regulates the state of the system. In Kubernetes, a controller is a control loop that watches the shared state of the cluster through the apiserver and makes changes attempting to move the current state towards the desired state. Examples of controllers that ship with Kubernetes today are the replication controller, endpoints controller, namespace controller, and serviceaccounts controller.kubernetes.io/docs/reference/command-line-tools-reference/kube-controller-manager/Fri Feb 06 08:47:19 GMT 2026 525.8K bytes -
Kubernetes Deprecation Policy | Kubernetes
This document details the deprecation policy for various facets of the system. Kubernetes is a large system with many components and many contributors. As with any such software, the feature set naturally evolves over time, and sometimes a feature may need to be removed. This could include an API, a flag, or even an entire feature. To avoid breaking existing users, Kubernetes follows a deprecation policy for aspects of the system that are slated to be removed.kubernetes.io/docs/reference/using-api/deprecation-policy/Fri Feb 06 08:30:49 GMT 2026 490.2K bytes -
Glossary | Kubernetes
Glossary This glossary is intended to be a comprehensive, standardized list of Kubernetes terminology. It includes te...kubernetes.io/docs/reference/glossary/ -
Kubernetes Metrics Reference | Kubernetes
Details of the metric data that Kubernetes components export.kubernetes.io/docs/reference/instrumentation/metrics/Fri Feb 06 08:32:22 GMT 2026 766.9K bytes -
Kubectl user preferences (kuberc) | Kubernetes
FEATURE STATE: Kubernetes 1.34 [beta] A Kubernetes kuberc configuration file allows you to define preferences for kubectl, such as default options and command aliases. Unlike the kubeconfig file, a kuberc configuration file does not contain cluster details, usernames or passwords. On Linux / POSIX computers, the default location of this configuration file is $HOME/.kube/kuberc. The default path on Windows is similar: %USERPROFILE%\.kube\kuberc. To provide kubectl with a path to a custom kuberc file, use the --kuberc command line option, or set the KUBERC environment variable.kubernetes.io/docs/reference/kubectl/kuberc/Fri Feb 06 08:47:55 GMT 2026 498.6K bytes -
Git - git-config Documentation
English ▾ English Deutsch Français Português (Brasil) українська мова 简体中文 Topics ▾ Setup and Config git config help ...git-scm.com/docs/git-config/2.21.0Thu Feb 05 05:06:59 GMT 2026 494.3K bytes -
Local ephemeral storage | Kubernetes
Nodes have local ephemeral storage, backed by locally-attached writeable devices or, sometimes, by RAM. "Ephemeral" means that there is no long-term guarantee about durability. Pods use ephemeral local storage for scratch space, caching, and for logs. The kubelet can provide scratch space to Pods using local ephemeral storage to mount emptyDir volumes into containers. The kubelet also uses this kind of storage to hold node-level container logs, container images, and the writable layers of running containers.kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/ephemeral-storage/Fri Feb 06 07:43:51 GMT 2026 489.5K bytes -
Configure Minimum and Maximum CPU Constraints f...
Define a range of valid CPU resource limits for a namespace, so that every new Pod in that namespace falls within the range you configure.kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/administer-cluster/manage-resources/cpu-constraint-namespace/Fri Feb 06 07:54:43 GMT 2026 501.9K bytes -
Pull an Image from a Private Registry | Kubernetes
This page shows how to create a Pod that uses a Secret to pull an image from a private container image registry or repository. There are many private registries in use. This task uses Docker Hub as an example registry. 🛇 This item links to a third party project or product that is not part of Kubernetes itself. More information Before you begin You need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster.kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/pull-image-private-registry/Fri Feb 06 08:01:49 GMT 2026 492.8K bytes -
Running Kubernetes Node Components as a Non-roo...
FEATURE STATE: Kubernetes v1.22 [alpha] This document describes how to run Kubernetes Node components such as kubelet, CRI, OCI, and CNI without root privileges, by using a user namespace. This technique is also known as rootless mode. Note:This document describes how to run Kubernetes Node components (and hence pods) as a non-root user. If you are just looking for how to run a pod as a non-root user, see SecurityContext.kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/administer-cluster/kubelet-in-userns/Fri Feb 06 08:01:59 GMT 2026 491.2K bytes