Search

Chapter 18. kubernetes

download PDF

The namespace for Kubernetes-specific metadata

Data type

group

18.1. kubernetes.pod_name

The name of the pod

Data type

keyword

18.2. kubernetes.pod_id

The Kubernetes ID of the pod

Data type

keyword

18.3. kubernetes.namespace_name

The name of the namespace in Kubernetes

Data type

keyword

18.4. kubernetes.namespace_id

The ID of the namespace in Kubernetes

Data type

keyword

18.5. kubernetes.host

The Kubernetes node name

Data type

keyword

18.6. kubernetes.container_name

The name of the container in Kubernetes

Data type

keyword

18.7. kubernetes.annotations

Annotations associated with the Kubernetes object

Data type

group

18.8. kubernetes.labels

Labels present on the original Kubernetes Pod

Data type

group

18.9. kubernetes.event

The Kubernetes event obtained from the Kubernetes master API. This event description loosely follows type Event in Event v1 core.

Data type

group

18.9.1. kubernetes.event.verb

The type of event, ADDED, MODIFIED, or DELETED

Data type

keyword

Example value

ADDED

18.9.2. kubernetes.event.metadata

Information related to the location and time of the event creation

Data type

group

18.9.2.1. kubernetes.event.metadata.name

The name of the object that triggered the event creation

Data type

keyword

Example value

java-mainclass-1.14d888a4cfc24890

18.9.2.2. kubernetes.event.metadata.namespace

The name of the namespace where the event originally occurred. Note that it differs from kubernetes.namespace_name, which is the namespace where the eventrouter application is deployed.

Data type

keyword

Example value

default

18.9.2.4. kubernetes.event.metadata.uid

The unique ID of the event

Data type

keyword

Example value

d828ac69-7b58-11e7-9cf5-5254002f560c

18.9.2.5. kubernetes.event.metadata.resourceVersion

A string that identifies the server’s internal version of the event. Clients can use this string to determine when objects have changed.

Data type

integer

Example value

311987

18.9.3. kubernetes.event.involvedObject

The object that the event is about.

Data type

group

18.9.3.1. kubernetes.event.involvedObject.kind

The type of object

Data type

keyword

Example value

ReplicationController

18.9.3.2. kubernetes.event.involvedObject.namespace

The namespace name of the involved object. Note that it may differ from kubernetes.namespace_name, which is the namespace where the eventrouter application is deployed.

Data type

keyword

Example value

default

18.9.3.3. kubernetes.event.involvedObject.name

The name of the object that triggered the event

Data type

keyword

Example value

java-mainclass-1

18.9.3.4. kubernetes.event.involvedObject.uid

The unique ID of the object

Data type

keyword

Example value

e6bff941-76a8-11e7-8193-5254002f560c

18.9.3.5. kubernetes.event.involvedObject.apiVersion

The version of kubernetes master API

Data type

keyword

Example value

v1

18.9.3.6. kubernetes.event.involvedObject.resourceVersion

A string that identifies the server’s internal version of the pod that triggered the event. Clients can use this string to determine when objects have changed.

Data type

keyword

Example value

308882

18.9.4. kubernetes.event.reason

A short machine-understandable string that gives the reason for generating this event

Data type

keyword

Example value

SuccessfulCreate

18.9.5. kubernetes.event.source_component

The component that reported this event

Data type

keyword

Example value

replication-controller

18.9.6. kubernetes.event.firstTimestamp

The time at which the event was first recorded

Data type

date

Example value

2017-08-07 10:11:57.000000000 Z

18.9.7. kubernetes.event.count

The number of times this event has occurred

Data type

integer

Example value

1

18.9.8. kubernetes.event.type

The type of event, Normal or Warning. New types could be added in the future.

Data type

keyword

Example value

Normal

Red Hat logoGithubRedditYoutubeTwitter

Learn

Try, buy, & sell

Communities

About Red Hat Documentation

We help Red Hat users innovate and achieve their goals with our products and services with content they can trust.

Making open source more inclusive

Red Hat is committed to replacing problematic language in our code, documentation, and web properties. For more details, see the Red Hat Blog.

About Red Hat

We deliver hardened solutions that make it easier for enterprises to work across platforms and environments, from the core datacenter to the network edge.

© 2024 Red Hat, Inc.