Part-81: Kubernetes — PODs (Imperative Way) Demo

Kubernetes — PODs with Imperative Way

Step-01: PODs Introduction

What is a Pod? (short intro)

A Pod is the smallest deployable object in Kubernetes. It wraps one (usually) container instance of your application and provides a s…


This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Latchu@DevOps

Kubernetes — PODs with Imperative Way

p0

Step-01: PODs Introduction

What is a Pod? (short intro)

A Pod is the smallest deployable object in Kubernetes. It wraps one (usually) container instance of your application and provides a shared networking and storage context for that container. When you want to run a container on Kubernetes, you create a Pod that holds it.

What is a Multi-Container Pod? (short intro)

A Multi-Container Pod contains two or more containers that must run together and share the same network namespace and storage. These are used for tightly-coupled helper patterns (sidecars) like log collectors, data pullers/pushers, or content generators that the main container consumes.

Step-02: PODs Demo (Imperative)

Step-02-01: Get Worker Nodes Status

Verify your kubeconfig is set and that worker nodes are Ready.

# Configure kubeconfig for kubectl (replace placeholders)
gcloud container clusters get-credentials <CLUSTER-NAME> --region <REGION> --project <PROJECT-NAME>

# Example
gcloud container clusters get-credentials standard-public-cluster-1 --region us-central1 --project gcp-zero-to-hero-468909

# Get Worker Node Status
kubectl get nodes

# Get Worker Node Status with wide option
kubectl get nodes -o wide

p1

Step-02-02: Create a Pod

Create a Pod imperatively using kubectl run.

# Template
kubectl run <desired-pod-name> --image <Container-Image> 

# Replace Pod Name & Container Image
kubectl run my-first-pod --image ghcr.io/stacksimplify/kubenginx:1.0.0

Step-02-03: List Pods

# List Pods
kubectl get pods

# Alias: po
kubectl get po

p2

Step-02-04: List Pods with wide option

This shows which node each Pod is running on (and other extra info).

# List Pods with Wide Option
kubectl get pods -o wide

p3

Step-02-05: What happened in the background when the Pod was created?

When you ran kubectl run:

Kubernetes created a Pod object in the cluster.

  • The node agent (kubelet) scheduled the Pod to a worker node (or the scheduler did).
  • The node pulled the Docker image from the registry (Docker Hub, GitHub Packages, etc.).
  • Kubernetes created the container inside the Pod and started it.

These are the key lifecycle actions that lead to a running container inside a Pod.

Step-02-06: Describe Pod (troubleshooting)

kubectl describe is essential for debugging. Look at Events for errors, image pulls, scheduling info, readiness/liveness failures, etc.

# Get list of pod names
kubectl get pods

# Describe the Pod (replace with your pod name)
kubectl describe pod <Pod-Name>
kubectl describe pod my-first-pod

p4

Observation:

Review the Events section closely — it usually tells you why something failed (image pull errors, crashloops, scheduling issues, etc.).

Step-02-07: Access the Application

  • Right now the Pod is only reachable inside the cluster (on the node / cluster network).
  • To access the app externally, create a Service (NodePort or LoadBalancer).
  • Services are a key Kubernetes concept — they provide stable networking (VIP) and load-balancing in front of Pods.

Step-02-08: Delete Pod

Clean up when you’re done.

# Get list of pods
kubectl get pods

# Delete Pod
kubectl delete pod <Pod-Name>
kubectl delete pod my-first-pod

p5

Wrap-up / Tips

  • This is the imperative approach — you used kubectl commands to create and manage Pods directly.
  • For production or repeatable setups, prefer the declarative approach (YAML + kubectl apply -f) so you can version-control manifests.
  • Use kubectl describe and kubectl logs frequently when debugging.

🌟 Thanks for reading! If this post added value, a like ❤️, follow, or share would encourage me to keep creating more content.

— Latchu | Senior DevOps & Cloud Engineer

☁️ AWS | GCP | ☸️ Kubernetes | 🔐 Security | ⚡ Automation
📌 Sharing hands-on guides, best practices & real-world cloud solutions


This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Latchu@DevOps


Print Share Comment Cite Upload Translate Updates
APA

Latchu@DevOps | Sciencx (2025-09-25T03:50:33+00:00) Part-81: Kubernetes — PODs (Imperative Way) Demo. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2025/09/25/part-81-kubernetes-pods-imperative-way-demo/

MLA
" » Part-81: Kubernetes — PODs (Imperative Way) Demo." Latchu@DevOps | Sciencx - Thursday September 25, 2025, https://www.scien.cx/2025/09/25/part-81-kubernetes-pods-imperative-way-demo/
HARVARD
Latchu@DevOps | Sciencx Thursday September 25, 2025 » Part-81: Kubernetes — PODs (Imperative Way) Demo., viewed ,<https://www.scien.cx/2025/09/25/part-81-kubernetes-pods-imperative-way-demo/>
VANCOUVER
Latchu@DevOps | Sciencx - » Part-81: Kubernetes — PODs (Imperative Way) Demo. [Internet]. [Accessed ]. Available from: https://www.scien.cx/2025/09/25/part-81-kubernetes-pods-imperative-way-demo/
CHICAGO
" » Part-81: Kubernetes — PODs (Imperative Way) Demo." Latchu@DevOps | Sciencx - Accessed . https://www.scien.cx/2025/09/25/part-81-kubernetes-pods-imperative-way-demo/
IEEE
" » Part-81: Kubernetes — PODs (Imperative Way) Demo." Latchu@DevOps | Sciencx [Online]. Available: https://www.scien.cx/2025/09/25/part-81-kubernetes-pods-imperative-way-demo/. [Accessed: ]
rf:citation
» Part-81: Kubernetes — PODs (Imperative Way) Demo | Latchu@DevOps | Sciencx | https://www.scien.cx/2025/09/25/part-81-kubernetes-pods-imperative-way-demo/ |

Please log in to upload a file.




There are no updates yet.
Click the Upload button above to add an update.

You must be logged in to translate posts. Please log in or register.