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Web UI (Dashboard)

Dashboard is a web-based Kubernetes user interface. You can use Dashboard to deploy containerized applications to a Kubernetes cluster, troubleshoot your containerized application, and manage the cluster itself along with its attendant resources. You can use Dashboard to get an overview of applications running on your cluster, as well as for creating or modifying individual Kubernetes resources (such as Deployments, Jobs, DaemonSets, etc). For example, you can scale a Deployment, initiate a rolling update, restart a pod or deploy new applications using a deploy wizard.

Dashboard also provides information on the state of Kubernetes resources in your cluster, and on any errors that may have occurred.

Kubernetes Dashboard UI

Deploying the Dashboard UI

The Dashboard UI is not deployed by default. To deploy it, run the following command:

kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/dashboard/master/src/deploy/recommended/kubernetes-dashboard.yaml

Accessing the Dashboard UI

There are multiple ways you can access the Dashboard UI; either by using the kubectl command-line interface, or by accessing the Kubernetes master apiserver using your web browser.

Command line proxy

You can access Dashboard using the kubectl command-line tool by running the following command:

kubectl proxy

Kubectl will handle authentication with apiserver and make Dashboard available at http://localhost:8001/api/v1/namespaces/kube-system/services/https:kubernetes-dashboard:/proxy/.

The UI can only be accessed from the machine where the command is executed. See kubectl proxy --help for more options.

Master server

You may access the UI directly via the Kubernetes master apiserver. Open a browser and navigate to https://<master-ip>:<apiserver-port>/api/v1/namespaces/kube-system/services/https:kubernetes-dashboard:/proxy/, where <master-ip> is IP address or domain name of the Kubernetes master.

Please note, this works only if the apiserver is set up to allow authentication with username and password. This is not currently the case with some setup tools (e.g., kubeadm). Refer to the authentication admin documentation for information on how to configure authentication manually.

If the username and password are configured but unknown to you, then use kubectl config view to find it.

Welcome view

When you access Dashboard on an empty cluster, you’ll see the welcome page. This page contains a link to this document as well as a button to deploy your first application. In addition, you can view which system applications are running by default in the kube-system namespace of your cluster, for example the Dashboard itself.

Kubernetes Dashboard welcome page

Deploying containerized applications

Dashboard lets you create and deploy a containerized application as a Deployment and optional Service with a simple wizard. You can either manually specify application details, or upload a YAML or JSON file containing application configuration.

To access the deploy wizard from the Welcome page, click the respective button. To access the wizard at a later point in time, click the CREATE button in the upper right corner of any page.

Deploy wizard

Specifying application details

The deploy wizard expects that you provide the following information:

The application name must be unique within the selected Kubernetes namespace. It must start with a lowercase character, and end with a lowercase character or a number, and contain only lowercase letters, numbers and dashes (-). It is limited to 24 characters. Leading and trailing spaces are ignored.

A Deployment will be created to maintain the desired number of Pods across your cluster.

Other Services that are only visible from inside the cluster are called internal Services.

Irrespective of the Service type, if you choose to create a Service and your container listens on a port (incoming), you need to specify two ports. The Service will be created mapping the port (incoming) to the target port seen by the container. This Service will route to your deployed Pods. Supported protocols are TCP and UDP. The internal DNS name for this Service will be the value you specified as application name above.

If needed, you can expand the Advanced options section where you can specify more settings:

Example:

release=1.0
tier=frontend
environment=pod
track=stable

Dashboard offers all available namespaces in a dropdown list, and allows you to create a new namespace. The namespace name may contain a maximum of 63 alphanumeric characters and dashes (-) but can not contain capital letters. Namespace names should not consist of only numbers. If the name is set as a number, such as 10, the pod will be put in the default namespace.

In case the creation of the namespace is successful, it is selected by default. If the creation fails, the first namespace is selected.

Dashboard offers all available secrets in a dropdown list, and allows you to create a new secret. The secret name must follow the DNS domain name syntax, e.g. new.image-pull.secret. The content of a secret must be base64-encoded and specified in a .dockercfg file. The secret name may consist of a maximum of 253 characters.

In case the creation of the image pull secret is successful, it is selected by default. If the creation fails, no secret is applied.

Uploading a YAML or JSON file

Kubernetes supports declarative configuration. In this style, all configuration is stored in YAML or JSON configuration files using the Kubernetes API resource schemas.

As an alternative to specifying application details in the deploy wizard, you can define your application in YAML or JSON files, and upload the files using Dashboard:

Deploy wizard file upload

Using Dashboard

Following sections describe views of the Kubernetes Dashboard UI; what they provide and how can they be used.

When there are Kubernetes objects defined in the cluster, Dashboard shows them in the initial view. By default only objects from the default namespace are shown and this can be changed using the namespace selector located in the navigation menu.

Dashboard shows most Kubernetes object kinds and groups them in a few menu categories.

Admin

View for cluster and namespace administrators. It lists Nodes, Namespaces and Persistent Volumes and has detail views for them. Node list view contains CPU and memory usage metrics aggregated across all Nodes. The details view shows the metrics for a Node, its specification, status, allocated resources, events and pods running on the node.

Node detail view

Workloads

Entry point view that shows all applications running in the selected namespace. The view lists applications by workload kind (e.g., Deployments, Replica Sets, Stateful Sets, etc.) and each workload kind can be viewed separately. The lists summarize actionable information about the workloads, such as the number of ready pods for a Replica Set or current memory usage for a Pod.

Workloads view

Detail views for workloads show status and specification information and surface relationships between objects. For example, Pods that Replica Set is controlling or New Replica Sets and Horizontal Pod Autoscalers for Deployments.

Deployment detail view

Services and discovery

Services and discovery view shows Kubernetes resources that allow for exposing services to external world and discovering them within a cluster. For that reason, Service and Ingress views show Pods targeted by them, internal endpoints for cluster connections and external endpoints for external users.

Service list partial view

Storage

Storage view shows Persistent Volume Claim resources which are used by applications for storing data.

Config

Config view shows all Kubernetes resources that are used for live configuration of applications running in clusters. This is now Config Maps and Secrets. The view allows for editing and managing config objects and displays secrets hidden by default.

Secret detail view

Logs viewer

Pod lists and detail pages link to logs viewer that is built into Dashboard. The viewer allows for drilling down logs from containers belonging to a single Pod.

Logs viewer

What's next

For more information, see the Kubernetes Dashboard project page.

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