Usage
SSH
To get to the dashboard, you can run:
ssh anything@my-remote-host-or-ip -p 2222
The provided username is not used as your identity is authenticated via other mechanisms.
Ingress Tunnel (ssh -L
)
You can forward requests from a local port into a resource on the remote
cluster. The supported resources are nodes
, pods
and services
. See the
[authorization][auth] section for details on required RBAC.
To forward port 9090 on your local system to 80 on the cluster, you can run:
ssh me@my-cluster -p 2222 -L 9090:service/default/remote-service:80
The first time 9090 is accessed, a connection will be made. Pay attention to the dashboard as any errors establishing this session will be reflected there.
The connection string format is <resource>/<namespace>/<name>
. As nodes are
not namespaced, the format is <resource>/<name>
.
Unlike the API server proxy, this works for any TCP service and is not limited to HTTP/HTTPS. For example, you can ssh directly to a node in the cluster with:
ssh me@my-cluster -p 2222 -L 3333:no/my-node:22
With that running in one terminal, you can run this in another:
ssh my-node-username@localhost -p 3333
Egress Tunnel (ssh -R
)
You can forward a remote service on your cluster to a port on your local host.
To forward port 8080 on service default/kty
to port 9090
on your local
system, you can run:
ssh me@my-cluster -p 2222 -R default/kty:8080:localhost:9090
The format for service definitions is <namespace>/<service-name>
.
SFTP
The cluster is represented by a file tree:
/<namespace>/<pod-name>/<container-name>/<file-path>
For the nginx
pod running in default
, you would do something like:
scp -P 2222 me@localhost:/default/nginx/nginx/etc/hosts /tmp
It can be a little easier to navigate all this with an sftp client as that’ll render the file tree natively for you.