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kubecolor

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Colorize your kubectl output

  • get pods

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  • describe pods

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  • something wrong

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  • You can change color theme for light-backgrounded environment

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What's this?

kubecolor colorizes your kubectl command output and does nothing else. kubecolor internally calls kubectl command and try to colorizes the output so you can use kubecolor as a complete alternative of kubectl. It means you can write this in your .bash_profile:

alias kubectl="kubecolor"

If you use your .bash_profile on more than one computer (e.g. synced via git) that might not all have kubecolor installed, you can avoid breaking kubectl like so:

command -v kubecolor >/dev/null 2>&1 && alias kubectl="kubecolor"

For now, not all subcommands are supported and some of them might be in the future. If you want something to be supported by kubecolor, you can open an issue in this GitHub repo. Even if what you want to do is not supported by kubecolor right now, kubecolor still can just show kubectl output without any decorations, so you don't need to switch kubecolor and kubectl but you always can use kubecolor.

Additionally, if kubectl resulted an error, kubecolor just shows the error message in red or yellow.

Please keep in mind that kubecolor has runtime overhead compared to kubectl because it runs kubectl internally and parses the output, then colorizes it.

Installation

Download binary via GitHub release

Go to Release page then download the binary which fits your environment.

Mac and Linux users via Homebrew

brew install hidetatz/tap/kubecolor

Manually via go command

Note: if you install kubecolor via go command, --kubecolor-version might not work

go install github.com/hidetatz/kubecolor/cmd/kubecolor@latest

If you are not using module mode (or if just above doesn't work), try below:

go get -u github.com/hidetatz/kubecolor/cmd/kubecolor

Usage

kubecolor understands every subcommands and options which are available for kubectl. What you have to do is just using kubecolor instead of kubectl like:

kubecolor --context=your_context get pods -o json

If you want to make the colorized kubectl default on your shell, just add this line into your shell configuration file:

alias kubectl="kubecolor"

Dynamic tty support

When the kubecolor output tty is not standard output, it automatically disables the colorization. For example, if you are running kubecolor get pods > result.txt or kubecolor get pods | grep xxx, the output will be passed through to file or another command, so colorization is not applied. You can force kubecolor do colorization at such cases by passing --force-colors flag. See the upcoming section for more details.

Flags

Available flags for kubecolor. When you pass them, kubecolor will understand them but these flags won't be passed to kubectl.

  • --kubecolor-version

Prints the version of kubecolor (not kubectl one).

  • --light-background

When your terminal's background color is something light (e.g white), default color preset might look too bright and not readable. If so, specify --light-background as a command line argument. kubecolor will use a color preset for light-backgrounded environment.

  • --force-colors

By default, kubecolor never output the result in colors when the tty is not a terminal standard output. If you want to force kubecolor to show the result in colors for non-terminal tty, you can specify this flag. For example, when you want to pass kubecolor result to grep (kubecolor get pods | grep pod_name), this option is useful.

  • --plain

When you don't want to colorize output, you can specify --plain. Kubecolor understands this option and outputs the result without colorizing.

Autocompletion

kubectl provides autocompletion feature. If you are already using it, you might have to configure it for kubecolor. Please also refer to kubectl official doc for kubectl autocomplete.

Bash

For Bash, configuring autocompletion requires adding following line in your shell config file.

# autocomplete for kubecolor
complete -o default -F __start_kubectl kubecolor

If you are using an alias like k="kubecolor", then just change above like:

complete -o default -F __start_kubectl k

Zsh

For zsh make sure these lines are present in your zsh config file:

# get zsh complete kubectl
source <(kubectl completion zsh)
alias kubectl=kubecolor
# make completion work with kubecolor
compdef kubecolor=kubectl

fish

Fish completion is officially unsupported by kubectl, so it is unsupported by kubecolor as well.

However, there are 2 ways we can make them work. Please keep in mind these are a kind of "hack" and not officially supported.

  1. Use evanlucas/fish-kubectl-completions with kubecolor:

  2. Use awinecki/fish-kubecolor-completions

    The first way will override kubectl command. If you wish to preserve both kubectl and kubecolor with completions, you need to copy evanlucas/fish-kubectl-completions for the kubecolor command.

    For this purpose, you can use awinecki/fish-kubecolor-completions.

Specify what command to execute as kubectl

Sometimes, you may want to specify which command to use as kubectl internally in kubecolor. For example, when you want to use a versioned-kubectl kubectl.1.19, you can do that by an environment variable:

KUBECTL_COMMAND="kubectl.1.19" kubecolor get po

When you don't set KUBECTL_COMMAND, then kubectl is used by default.

Supported kubectl version

Because kubecolor internally calls kubectl command, if you are using unsupported kubectl version, it's also not supported by kubecolor. Kubernetes version support policy can be found in official doc.

kubectl plugins

Even if kubectl supports plugin feature, it is not supported by kubecolor, including Krew. It means you can use plugins from kubecolor (e.g. you can do kubecolor plugin_name xxx), but the result won't be colorized.

Contributions

Always welcome. Just opening an issue should be also greatful.

LICENSE

MIT

Author

@hidetatz