Our basic need is to check whether we are able to copy/push a file to a mountpoint or not. For this, I am advised to run a pod with tar and try to push file into the mount point. I have searched through the web and got the following commands:
-> kubectl cp [file-path] [pod-name]:/[path] (Although not giving any error but this command is not working and the file is not visible in the mentioned location.)
-> Verified the absence of file in the remote pod using the following command:
kubectl exec <pod_name> -- ls -la /
-> Found the below command that uses tar options but I don't want to exclude any file and hence not sure
how to proceed with this:
kubectl exec -n <some-namespace> <some-pod> -- tar cf - --exclude='pattern' /tmp/foo | tar xf - -C
/tmp/bar
-> Is there any other tar option that can help me in pushing the file to the mountpoint?
Also, the kubectl cp help command says that tar binary must be present for copy to work. Maybe this is the reason why I am unable to copy. But, I don't know how to check the tar binary's presence and how to get it if it's not there. Please help me with this.
I'm not sure why cp command not worked for you. However I tried to add a tar file inside the pod and it worked.
I used the following command:
kubectl cp ./<TAR FILE PATH> <NAMESPACE>/<POD NAME>:/<INSIDE POD PATH>
It's not best practice to add a file like this to a pod. You can also init a container or add the file during the build process of the docker image. You can also alternatively use a volume mount.
When testing API using locust distributed mode without UI in docker. The distribution.csv, requests.csv are getting generated but the failures.csv and expection.csv are not getting generated but the requests.csv show failures as given below.
"Method","Name","# requests","# failures","Median response time","Average response time","Min response time","Max response time","Average Content Size","Requests/s"
"POST","/api/something/something",197009,56,470,559,78,156714,1,436.31
Can you please help.
The problem is that file need to be written to a folder that it has permission to, and a volume that is mounted to your host. If you add a mounted folder before the file name, it should work. For example:
Docker file:
# Set base image
FROM locustio/locust
ADD locustfile.py locustfile.py
Docker create Command:
docker build -t mykey/myimage:1.0 .
Docker run command (on Windows, replace with %CD% with $pwd on linux):
docker run --volume "%CD%:/mnt/locust" -e LOCUSTFILE_PATH=/mnt/locust/locustfile.py -e TARGET_URL=https://example.com -e LOCUST_OPTS="--clients=10 --no-web --run-time=600 --csv=/mnt/locust/output" mykey/myimage:1.0
The files will now write to the same folder where locustfile.py is located.
I have a pod running python image as 199 user. My code app.py is place in /tmp/ directory, Now when I run copy command to replace the running app.py then the command simply fails with file exists error.
Please try to use the --no-preserve=true flag with kubectl cp command. It will pass --no-same-owner and --no-same-permissions flags to the tar utility while extracting the copied file in the container.
GNU tar manual suggests to use --skip-old-files or --overwrite flag to tar --extract command, to avoid error message you encountered, but to my knowledge, there is no way to add this optional argument to kubectl cp.
I'm trying to copy files from Kubernetes Pods to my local system. I am getting the below error while running following command:
kubectl cp aks-ssh2-6cd4948f6f-fp9tl:/home/azureuser/test.cap ./test.cap
Output:
tar: home/azureuser/test: Cannot stat: No such file or directory tar:
Exiting with failure status due to previous errors error:
home/azureuser/test no such file or directory
I could see the file under above given path. I am really confused.
Could you please help me out?
As stated inkubectl help:
kubectl cp --help
Copy files and directories to and from containers.
Examples:
# !!!Important Note!!!
# Requires that the 'tar' binary is present in your container
# image. If 'tar' is not present, 'kubectl cp' will fail.
# Copy /tmp/foo_dir local directory to /tmp/bar_dir in a remote pod in the default namespace
kubectl cp /tmp/foo_dir <some-pod>:/tmp/bar_dir
# Copy /tmp/foo local file to /tmp/bar in a remote pod in a specific container
kubectl cp /tmp/foo <some-pod>:/tmp/bar -c <specific-container>
# Copy /tmp/foo local file to /tmp/bar in a remote pod in namespace <some-namespace>
kubectl cp /tmp/foo <some-namespace>/<some-pod>:/tmp/bar
# Copy /tmp/foo from a remote pod to /tmp/bar locally
kubectl cp <some-namespace>/<some-pod>:/tmp/foo /tmp/bar
Options:
-c, --container='': Container name. If omitted, the first container in the pod will be chosen
Usage:
kubectl cp <file-spec-src> <file-spec-dest> [options]
Use "kubectl options" for a list of global command-line options (applies to all commands).
You can also login to your Containter and check if file is there:
kubectl exec -it aks-ssh2-6cd4948f6f-fp9tl /bin/bash
ls -la /home/azureuser/test.cap
If this still doesn't work, try:
You may try to copy your files to workdir and then retry to copy them using just their names. It's weird, but it works for now.
Consider advice of kchugalinskiy here #58692.
Let's say you are copying file from bin folder to local system. The command is
kubectl cp default/POD_NAME:bin/FILE_NAME /Users/username/FILE_NAME
You can connect to POD to verify if you are specifying correct file name
kubectl exec -ti POD_NAME bash
According to https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/generated/kubectl/kubectl-commands
kubectl cp <file-spec-src> <file-spec-dest> is equivalent to using
kubectl exec -n <some-namespace> <some-pod> -- tar cf - <src-file> | tar xf - -C <dest-file>
So technically if you do not have tar installed on the pod, you can do kubectl exec -n <some-namespace> <some-pod> -- cat <src-file> > <dest-file>
Assuming the file is small or already compressed, the effect should be the same, except you cannot use cat on a directory or a set of files.
The command in the question posted is absolutely right. As answered before, this particular issue seems to be a missing tar binary in the container. I actually did not know it was needed, but confirmed that the pod has it:
# find / -name tar
/bin/tar
/usr/lib/mime/packages/tar
/usr/share/doc/tar
My error was using . to copy to the current directory (works with cp and scp) because it needs the full path, as shown in the original question:
kubectl cp pod-name-shown-in-get-pods:path/to/filename /local/dir/filename
But not:
kubectl cp pod-name-shown-in-get-pods:path/to/filename .
Which gives:
error: open .: is a directory
tar: Removing leading `/' from member names
Now the tar in the error message makes sense!
Note that if there is a leading / in the source path, as in the following example:
kubectl cp pod-name-shown-in-get-pods:/etc/resolv.conf /local/dir/resolv.conf
You would also see:
tar: Removing leading `/' from member names
However, the warning can be ignored, as the file would still copied. Use etc/resolv.conf instead of /etc/resolv.conf in the above example, to copy without the warning.
"kubectl cp" command is used to copy files from pods to local path and vice versa
Copying file from pod to local
kubectl cp <pod_name>:<file_path> <destination_path>
Copying file from specific container of pod to local
kubectl cp <pod_name>:<file_path> <destination_path> -c specific_container
Copying file from local to pod
kubectl cp <local_source_path> <pod_name>:<destination_path>
kubectl cp command is already mentioned by some of the users on this thread.
kubectl cp <pod-id>:<path> <local-path> -n <namespace> -c <specific_container>
Note that to run this command tar utility should already be installed on the pod.
However I have come across few errors while running this command on windows PowerShell.
PS P:\Users\nstty\Downloads\k8s-diags> kubectl cp dremio-master-0:/var/log/dremio/server.log P:\Users\nstty\Downloads\k8s-diags\server-logs\
error: one of src or dest must be a local file specification
error: one of src or dest must be a local file specification
When running this command on windows, don't use the full path of the local system. Use relative path instead (. or ..). Now using relative path in the below command but getting a different error.
PS P:\Users\nstty\Downloads\k8s-diags> kubectl cp dremio-master-0:/var/log/dremio/server.log .
tar: Removing leading `/' from member names
error: open .: is a directory
error: open .: is a directory
If you are copying a file, then in the local path use the relative path along with the file name that you want for the copied file. kubectl will first create this file and then copy the contents to this file. Below is the working command.
PS P:\Users\nstty\Downloads\k8s-diags> kubectl cp dremio-master-0:/var/log/dremio/server.log .\server-logs\server.log
tar: Removing leading `/' from member names
tar: Removing leading `/' from member names
This message is just a warning from tar utility in your pod. The file should be copied to your local system.
Alternate option: If you want to avoid kubectl cp, here is another approach which we use.
kubectl cp <pod-id>:<path> <destination-path> -n <namespace>
Worked for me.
You can mount a local directory into the pod.
Update your aks-ssh yaml file:
spec:
...
containers:
...
volumeMounts:
- name: test-dir
mountPath: /home/azureuser
...
volumes:
- name: test-dir
hostPath:
path: /path/to/your/local/dir
Now you can access your files in the local directory.
For people working on a Windows machine there is an additional gotcha: As at October 2021 you cannot include a drive letter in your local path.
So if you were to try a command like:
kubectl cp aks-ssh2-6cd4948f6f-fp9tl:/home/azureuser/test.cap C:/Temp/Test
you would get this error because kubectl cp sees the colon in the Windows path as the separator between a pod name and the path within the pod.
So it would see C:/Temp/Test as a pod named "C" with a path "/Temp/Test"
The way to get around this is to use a relative Windows path instead of an absolute path. It will need to be relative to your current working directory.
So if my current working directory is C:\Users\JoeBloggs and I wanted to copy down to C:\Temp\Test I'd need to use the command:
kubectl cp aks-ssh2-6cd4948f6f-fp9tl:/home/azureuser/test.cap ../../Temp/Test
Note that this issue looks like it may be fixed soon. See https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/pull/94165
Maybe someone could met this error
tar: removing leading '/' from member names
error: open .: is a directory
Which induced by the following command
kc cp -n monitoring <pod name>:/usr/share/grafana/conf/defaults.ini ./
kc cp -n monitoring <pod name>:/usr/share/grafana/conf/defaults.ini ./default.ini
To solve it, we should add a destination folder per doc
kc cp -n monitoring <pod name>:/usr/share/grafana/conf/defaults.ini ./tmp/default.ini
This works for me:
kubectl cp "namespace"/"pod_name":"path_in_pod" "local_path"
Example:
kubectl cp mynamespace/mypod:var/www/html/index.html \Users\myuser\Desktop\index.html
I resolve this problem by set the source folder to be relative path.
If the file location is /home/azureuser/test.cap, and working dir is /home/azureuser/, the cmd is
kubectl cp aks-ssh2-6cd4948f6f-fp9tl:test.cap ./test.cap
If anyone uses windows pods, it may be hard to get files copied to the pods from local machine with those linux paths for kubectl cp command:
Procedure to copy files from local machine to kubernetes pod: (especially windows container)
I want to copy node.aspx from my local machine to
podname:\c:\inetpub\wwwroot
First upload Node.aspx to your cloud drive, path will be
/home/{your_username} in my case /home/pranesh
Then find out the pod name, in my case its
aspx-deployment-84597d88f5-pk5nh, follow below command
PS /home/pranesh> kubectl cp /home/pranesh/Node.aspx aspx-deployment-84597d88f5-pk5nh:/Node.aspx
This copies the file to c drive of container,
then move file from c drive to required path with powershell
PS /home/pranesh> kubectl exec aspx-deployment-84597d88f5-pk5nh powershell "Copy-Item "C:\Node.aspx" -Destination "C:\inetpub\wwwroot""
Use the reverse procedure for copying from container to cloud drive and download.
kubectl cp will not work if your container does not have tar command in the PATH. From your error it sees like tar command is not available on your container.
https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/issues/58512
Please explore other options
Kubernetes gives a file not found error when user does not have permissions to a pod. That was my problem.
On my side the issue was with having multiple containers inside the pod:
kubectl cp -c grafana \
metrics/grafana-5c4f76b49b-p88lc:/etc/grafana \
./grafana/etc
so set the container name with -c grafana and properly prefix the namespace of the pod in my case metrics/
I tried this method on Azure and it worked:
kubectl cp 'POD NAME':xyz.json test
kubectl cp is the command for copying
POD NAME = vote-app
xyz.json is the file that needs to be copied from pod
the test is the file created in the drive of the AZURE directory...
So final command would be:
kubectl cp vote-app:xyz.json test
test will get generated in Azure Directory and later u can download test file from the download option of Azure
I couldn't get kubectl to work for this. Was getting error:
The connection to the server localhost:8080 was refused - did you specify the right host or port?
This worked for me instead:
docker cp CONTAINERID:FILEWITHPATH DESTFILENAME
where "CONTAINERID" was retrieved by calling docker ps.
you need to mention the namespace in which your pod is available.
I have a non-default docker-compose file name (docker-compose-test.yml).
There is only one service defined in it.
I am starting the container using "docker-compose -f docker-compose-test.yml up"
I am trying to stop the container started above using docker-compose down, but it is not working.
I am getting below error,
ERROR:
Can't find a suitable configuration file in this directory or any
parent. Are you in the right directory?
Supported filenames: docker-compose.yml, docker-compose.yaml
I understand that it is looking for default docker compose file name. Is there a way to specify the custom config file name during docker-compose down?
You should run the docker-compose down command with the same flags that when you started the containers.
docker-compose -f docker-compose-test.yml down
You can create a .env file and add the following:
COMPOSE_FILE=docker-compose-test.yml
Note, that the syntax of docker-compose is such that -f needs to be before up/down, and thereafter -d:
docker-compose -f docker-compose.prod.yml up -d
If you put -f after up/down, it doesn't work, and also if you put -d before up/down you get the help display or an error. Down works of course without -d:
docker-compose -f docker-compose.prod.yml down
If you use multiple files for docker-compose AND a custom name, you should write like this:
docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml -f docker-compose.override.yml -p custom_name down