Kubectl get JSONPath Support: Difference between revisions

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kubectl get pod <pod-name> -o jsonpath=".status.conditions[*].lastTransitionTime"
kubectl get pod <pod-name> -o jsonpath=".status.conditions[*].lastTransitionTime"
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
More details: [[JSONPath#.2A_.28Wildcard.29|JSONPath * (wildcard)]]
More details: {{Internal|JSONPath#.2A_.28Wildcard.29|JSONPath * (wildcard)}}


==@==
==@==

Revision as of 04:26, 16 March 2021

External

Internal

Overview

kubectl get -o jsonpath='{<jsonpath-expression>}' ...

supports a JSONPath template, which consists in JSONPath expressions enclosed by curly braces.

kubectl get pod some-pod -o jsonpath='{.status.phase}'

More than one JSONPath expressions can be concatenated in a JSON template:

kubectl get pod some-pod -o jsonpath='the pod name {.metadata.name} and phase {.status.phase}'

The JSONPath expression are mainly used to:

  • Filter the JSON content to only allow specific fields in the JSON object, using filter expressions.
  • Format the output.

The result object is printed as its String() function.

In addition to the original JSONPath syntax, kubectl provides the following extensions:

  • The possibility to use double quotes to quote text inside JSONPath expressions.
  • The availability of the range and end operators to iterate lists.

Note that when the result of the kubectl query contains more than one item, it is returned as a "List" top-level JSON Object, where individual results are element of an ".items" array:

{
  "apiVersion": "v1",
  "kind": "List",
  "metadata": {
    "resourceVersion": "..."
    ...
  }
  "items": [ 
    {
      "apiVersion": "v1",
      "kind": "Namespace", 
      ...
    },
    ...
  ]
}

The result should be processed as such:

kubectl get pods -o jsonpath="{.items[*]...}"

Syntax

$

As in the generic case, the $ operator is optional, since the expression always starts from the root object by default. However, the leading dot is not optional. More details on $:

JSONPath $

Element Selection

Object Fields Selection

Individual Fields

JSONPath .field
JSONPath ['field']

The value of a specified field can be obtained with the child operator:

kubectl get pod <pod-name> -o jsonpath="{.status.phase}"
kubectl get pod <pod-name> -o jsonpath="{['status']['phase']}"

When more than one resource is returned as result, the result is a JSON "List" Object with an .items field, which can be queried as such:

kubectl get pods -o jsonpath="{.items[*].status.phase}"

Field Recursive Descent

All values for a specific field can be obtained recursively with:

kubectl get pod <pod-name> -o jsonpath="{..name}"

More details:

JSONPath ..field (field recursive descent)

Array Element Selection

Wildcard

kubectl get pod <pod-name> -o jsonpath=".status.conditions[*].lastTransitionTime"

More details:

JSONPath * (wildcard)

@

"@" represents the current object. For more details, see:

JSONPath @

Filter Expressions

[?(expression)]
JSONPath Filter Expressions

JSONPath Extensions

range and end Operators

Organizatorium

Removing Leading and Trailing Single Quotes

... | sed -e 's/^'\''//' > ...

Get an Individual Attribute Only

TODO: https://gist.github.com/so0k/42313dbb3b547a0f51a547bb968696ba


kubectl ... -o jsonpath="{.items[?(@.spec.unschedulable)].metadata.name}"

Alternative, to explore and document:

kubectl get pods  --no-headers -o custom-columns=\":metadata.name\" ...

Filter Elements of an Array based on a Key Value

We assume that the elements of the array are maps, which contain the specified key:

kubectl ... -o jsonpath="{.users[?(@.name=="blue")].user.password}"
kubectl get pod ... -o jsonpath='{.items[0].spec.volumes[?(@.name=="vault")].hostPath.path}' 2>/dev/null

Select and Combine Two or More Elements

kubectl get pod \
-o jsonpath='{.items[0].spec.volumes[?(@.name=="A")].hostPath.path}'+'{.items[0].spec.volumes[?(@.name=="B")].hostPath.path}'

returns "/some/path/a+/some/path/b"

Same Element from Multiple Resources

kubectl get pod -o jsonpath='{.items[*].metadata.name}'

Array Length

jq Array Length

TODO

kubectl get pods -o=jsonpath='{.items[?(@.metadata.labels.name=="web")].metadata.name}'
Iterate over the Elements of an Array
kubectl get nodes -o jsonpath='{.items[*]}'
Iterate over the Elements of an Array and Select a Specific Key
kubectl get nodes -o jsonpath='{.items[*].status}'

Filter by an element:

kubectl get nodes -o jsonpath='{.items[*].status.addresses[?(@.type=="InternalIP")]}'

Print the element "address"

kubectl get nodes -o jsonpath='{.items[*].status.addresses[?(@.type=="InternalIP")].address}'