Kubernetes API Concepts
The Kubernetes API is a resource-based (RESTful) programmatic interface provided via HTTP. It supports retrieving, creating, updating, and deleting primary resources via the standard HTTP verbs (POST, PUT, PATCH, DELETE, GET).
For some resources, the API includes additional subresources that allow fine grained authorization (such as a separating viewing details for a Pod from retrieving its logs), and can accept and serve those resources in different representations for convenience or efficiency.
Kubernetes supports efficient change notifications on resources via watches. Kubernetes also provides consistent list operations so that API clients can effectively cache, track, and synchronize the state of resources.
You can view the API reference online, or read on to learn about the API in general.
Kubernetes API terminology
Kubernetes generally leverages common RESTful terminology to describe the API concepts:
- A resource type is the name used in the URL (
pods
,namespaces
,services
) - All resource types have a concrete representation (their object schema) which is called a kind
- A list of instances of a resource is known as a collection
- A single instance of a resource type is called a resource, and also usually represents an object
- For some resource types, the API includes one or more sub-resources, which are represented as URI paths below the resource
Most Kubernetes API resource types are
objects:
they represent a concrete instance of a concept on the cluster, like a
pod or namespace. A smaller number of API resource types are virtual in
that they often represent operations on objects, rather than objects, such
as a permission check
(use a POST with a JSON-encoded body of SubjectAccessReview
to the
subjectaccessreviews
resource), or the eviction
sub-resource of a Pod
(used to trigger
API-initiated eviction).
Object names
All objects you can create via the API have a unique object name to allow idempotent creation and retrieval, except that virtual resource types may not have unique names if they are not retrievable, or do not rely on idempotency. Within a namespace, only one object of a given kind can have a given name at a time. However, if you delete the object, you can make a new object with the same name. Some objects are not namespaced (for example: Nodes), and so their names must be unique across the whole cluster.
API verbs
Almost all object resource types support the standard HTTP verbs - GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, and DELETE. Kubernetes also uses its own verbs, which are often written lowercase to distinguish them from HTTP verbs.
Kubernetes uses the term list to describe returning a collection of
resources to distinguish from retrieving a single resource which is usually called
a get. If you sent an HTTP GET request with the ?watch
query parameter,
Kubernetes calls this a watch and not a get (see
Efficient detection of changes for more details).
For PUT requests, Kubernetes internally classifies these as either create or update based on the state of the existing object. An update is different from a patch; the HTTP verb for a patch is PATCH.
Resource URIs
All resource types are either scoped by the cluster (/apis/GROUP/VERSION/*
) or to a
namespace (/apis/GROUP/VERSION/namespaces/NAMESPACE/*
). A namespace-scoped resource
type will be deleted when its namespace is deleted and access to that resource type
is controlled by authorization checks on the namespace scope.
You can also access collections of resources (for example: listing all Nodes). The following paths are used to retrieve collections and resources:
-
Cluster-scoped resources:
GET /apis/GROUP/VERSION/RESOURCETYPE
- return the collection of resources of the resource typeGET /apis/GROUP/VERSION/RESOURCETYPE/NAME
- return the resource with NAME under the resource type
-
Namespace-scoped resources:
GET /apis/GROUP/VERSION/RESOURCETYPE
- return the collection of all instances of the resource type across all namespacesGET /apis/GROUP/VERSION/namespaces/NAMESPACE/RESOURCETYPE
- return collection of all instances of the resource type in NAMESPACEGET /apis/GROUP/VERSION/namespaces/NAMESPACE/RESOURCETYPE/NAME
- return the instance of the resource type with NAME in NAMESPACE
Since a namespace is a cluster-scoped resource type, you can retrieve the list
(“collection”) of all namespaces with GET /api/v1/namespaces
and details about
a particular namespace with GET /api/v1/namespaces/NAME
.
- Cluster-scoped subresource:
GET /apis/GROUP/VERSION/RESOURCETYPE/NAME/SUBRESOURCE
- Namespace-scoped subresource:
GET /apis/GROUP/VERSION/namespaces/NAMESPACE/RESOURCETYPE/NAME/SUBRESOURCE
The verbs supported for each subresource will differ depending on the object - see the API reference for more information. It is not possible to access sub-resources across multiple resources - generally a new virtual resource type would be used if that becomes necessary.
Efficient detection of changes
The Kubernetes API allows clients to make an initial request for an object or a collection, and then to track changes since that initial request: a watch. Clients can send a list or a get and then make a follow-up watch request.
To make this change tracking possible, every Kubernetes object has a resourceVersion
field representing the version of that resource as stored in the underlying persistence
layer. When retrieving a collection of resources (either namespace or cluster scoped),
the response from the API server contains a resourceVersion
value. The client can
use that resourceVersion
to initiate a watch against the API server.
When you send a watch request, the API server responds with a stream of
changes. These changes itemize the outcome of operations (such as create, delete,
and update) that occurred after the resourceVersion
you specified as a parameter
to the watch request. The overall watch mechanism allows a client to fetch
the current state and then subscribe to subsequent changes, without missing any events.
If a client watch is disconnected then that client can start a new watch from
the last returned resourceVersion
; the client could also perform a fresh get /
list request and begin again. See Resource Version Semantics
for more detail.
For example:
-
List all of the pods in a given namespace.
GET /api/v1/namespaces/test/pods --- 200 OK Content-Type: application/json { "kind": "PodList", "apiVersion": "v1", "metadata": {"resourceVersion":"10245"}, "items": [...] }
-
Starting from resource version 10245, receive notifications of any API operations (such as create, delete, apply or update) that affect Pods in the test namespace. Each change notification is a JSON document. The HTTP response body (served as
application/json
) consists a series of JSON documents.GET /api/v1/namespaces/test/pods?watch=1&resourceVersion=10245 --- 200 OK Transfer-Encoding: chunked Content-Type: application/json { "type": "ADDED", "object": {"kind": "Pod", "apiVersion": "v1", "metadata": {"resourceVersion": "10596", ...}, ...} } { "type": "MODIFIED", "object": {"kind": "Pod", "apiVersion": "v1", "metadata": {"resourceVersion": "11020", ...}, ...} } ...
A given Kubernetes server will only preserve a historical record of changes for a
limited time. Clusters using etcd 3 preserve changes in the last 5 minutes by default.
When the requested watch operations fail because the historical version of that
resource is not available, clients must handle the case by recognizing the status code
410 Gone
, clearing their local cache, performing a new get or list operation,
and starting the watch from the resourceVersion
that was returned.
For subscribing to collections, Kubernetes client libraries typically offer some form
of standard tool for this list-then-watch logic. (In the Go client library,
this is called a Reflector
and is located in the k8s.io/client-go/tools/cache
package.)
Watch bookmarks
To mitigate the impact of short history window, the Kubernetes API provides a watch
event named BOOKMARK
. It is a special kind of event to mark that all changes up
to a given resourceVersion
the client is requesting have already been sent. The
document representing the BOOKMARK
event is of the type requested by the request,
but only includes a .metadata.resourceVersion
field. For example:
GET /api/v1/namespaces/test/pods?watch=1&resourceVersion=10245&allowWatchBookmarks=true
---
200 OK
Transfer-Encoding: chunked
Content-Type: application/json
{
"type": "ADDED",
"object": {"kind": "Pod", "apiVersion": "v1", "metadata": {"resourceVersion": "10596", ...}, ...}
}
...
{
"type": "BOOKMARK",
"object": {"kind": "Pod", "apiVersion": "v1", "metadata": {"resourceVersion": "12746"} }
}
As a client, you can request BOOKMARK
events by setting the
allowWatchBookmarks=true
query parameter to a watch request, but you shouldn't
assume bookmarks are returned at any specific interval, nor can clients assume that
the API server will send any BOOKMARK
event even when requested.
Retrieving large results sets in chunks
Kubernetes v1.9 [beta]
On large clusters, retrieving the collection of some resource types may result in very large responses that can impact the server and client. For instance, a cluster may have tens of thousands of Pods, each of which is equivalent to roughly 2 KiB of encoded JSON. Retrieving all pods across all namespaces may result in a very large response (10-20MB) and consume a large amount of server resources.
Provided that you don't explicitly disable the APIListChunking
feature gate, the
Kubernetes API server supports the ability to break a single large collection request
into many smaller chunks while preserving the consistency of the total request. Each
chunk can be returned sequentially which reduces both the total size of the request and
allows user-oriented clients to display results incrementally to improve responsiveness.
You can request that the API server handles a list by serving single collection
using pages (which Kubernetes calls chunks). To retrieve a single collection in
chunks, two query parameters limit
and continue
are supported on requests against
collections, and a response field continue
is returned from all list operations
in the collection's metadata
field. A client should specify the maximum results they
wish to receive in each chunk with limit
and the server will return up to limit
resources in the result and include a continue
value if there are more resources
in the collection.
As an API client, you can then pass this continue
value to the API server on the
next request, to instruct the server to return the next page (chunk) of results. By
continuing until the server returns an empty continue
value, you can retrieve the
entire collection.
Like a watch operation, a continue
token will expire after a short amount
of time (by default 5 minutes) and return a 410 Gone
if more results cannot be
returned. In this case, the client will need to start from the beginning or omit the
limit
parameter.
For example, if there are 1,253 pods on the cluster and you wants to receive chunks of 500 pods at a time, request those chunks as follows:
-
List all of the pods on a cluster, retrieving up to 500 pods each time.
GET /api/v1/pods?limit=500 --- 200 OK Content-Type: application/json { "kind": "PodList", "apiVersion": "v1", "metadata": { "resourceVersion":"10245", "continue": "ENCODED_CONTINUE_TOKEN", ... }, "items": [...] // returns pods 1-500 }
-
Continue the previous call, retrieving the next set of 500 pods.
GET /api/v1/pods?limit=500&continue=ENCODED_CONTINUE_TOKEN --- 200 OK Content-Type: application/json { "kind": "PodList", "apiVersion": "v1", "metadata": { "resourceVersion":"10245", "continue": "ENCODED_CONTINUE_TOKEN_2", ... }, "items": [...] // returns pods 501-1000 }
-
Continue the previous call, retrieving the last 253 pods.
GET /api/v1/pods?limit=500&continue=ENCODED_CONTINUE_TOKEN_2 --- 200 OK Content-Type: application/json { "kind": "PodList", "apiVersion": "v1", "metadata": { "resourceVersion":"10245", "continue": "", // continue token is empty because we have reached the end of the list ... }, "items": [...] // returns pods 1001-1253 }
Notice that the resourceVersion
of the collection remains constant across each request,
indicating the server is showing you a consistent snapshot of the pods. Pods that
are created, updated, or deleted after version 10245
would not be shown unless
you make a separate list request without the continue
token. This allows you
to break large requests into smaller chunks and then perform a watch operation
on the full set without missing any updates.
remainingItemCount
is the number of subsequent items in the collection that are not
included in this response. If the list request contained label or field
selectors then the number of
remaining items is unknown and the API server does not include a remainingItemCount
field in its response.
If the list is complete (either because it is not chunking, or because this is the
last chunk), then there are no more remaining items and the API server does not include a
remainingItemCount
field in its response. The intended use of the remainingItemCount
is estimating the size of a collection.
Collections
In Kubernetes terminology, the response you get from a list is
a collection. However, Kubernetes defines concrete kinds for
collections of different types of resource. Collections have a kind
named for the resource kind, with List
appended.
When you query the API for a particular type, all items returned by that query are
of that type.
For example, when you list Services, the collection response
has kind
set to
ServiceList
; each item in that collection represents a single Service. For example:
GET /api/v1/services
{
"kind": "ServiceList",
"apiVersion": "v1",
"metadata": {
"resourceVersion": "2947301"
},
"items": [
{
"metadata": {
"name": "kubernetes",
"namespace": "default",
...
"metadata": {
"name": "kube-dns",
"namespace": "kube-system",
...
There are dozens of collection types (such as PodList
, ServiceList
,
and NodeList
) defined in the Kubernetes API.
You can get more information about each collection type from the
Kubernetes API documentation.
Some tools, such as kubectl
, represent the Kubernetes collection
mechanism slightly differently from the Kubernetes API itself.
Because the output of kubectl
might include the response from
multiple list operations at the API level, kubectl
represents
a list of items using kind: List
. For example:
kubectl get services -A -o yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: List
metadata:
resourceVersion: ""
selfLink: ""
items:
- apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
creationTimestamp: "2021-06-03T14:54:12Z"
labels:
component: apiserver
provider: kubernetes
name: kubernetes
namespace: default
...
- apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
annotations:
prometheus.io/port: "9153"
prometheus.io/scrape: "true"
creationTimestamp: "2021-06-03T14:54:14Z"
labels:
k8s-app: kube-dns
kubernetes.io/cluster-service: "true"
kubernetes.io/name: CoreDNS
name: kube-dns
namespace: kube-system
Keep in mind that the Kubernetes API does not have a kind
named List
.
kind: List
is a client-side, internal implementation detail for processing
collections that might be of different kinds of object. Avoid depending on
kind: List
in automation or other code.
Receiving resources as Tables
When you run kubectl get
, the default output format is a simple tabular
representation of one or more instances of a particular resource type. In the past,
clients were required to reproduce the tabular and describe output implemented in
kubectl
to perform simple lists of objects.
A few limitations of that approach include non-trivial logic when dealing with
certain objects. Additionally, types provided by API aggregation or third party
resources are not known at compile time. This means that generic implementations
had to be in place for types unrecognized by a client.
In order to avoid potential limitations as described above, clients may request
the Table representation of objects, delegating specific details of printing to the
server. The Kubernetes API implements standard HTTP content type negotiation: passing
an Accept
header containing a value of application/json;as=Table;g=meta.k8s.io;v=v1
with a GET
call will request that the server return objects in the Table content
type.
For example, list all of the pods on a cluster in the Table format.
GET /api/v1/pods
Accept: application/json;as=Table;g=meta.k8s.io;v=v1
---
200 OK
Content-Type: application/json
{
"kind": "Table",
"apiVersion": "meta.k8s.io/v1",
...
"columnDefinitions": [
...
]
}
For API resource types that do not have a custom Table definition known to the control
plane, the API server returns a default Table response that consists of the resource's
name
and creationTimestamp
fields.
GET /apis/crd.example.com/v1alpha1/namespaces/default/resources
---
200 OK
Content-Type: application/json
...
{
"kind": "Table",
"apiVersion": "meta.k8s.io/v1",
...
"columnDefinitions": [
{
"name": "Name",
"type": "string",
...
},
{
"name": "Created At",
"type": "date",
...
}
]
}
Not all API resource types support a Table response; for example, a
CustomResourceDefinitions
might not define field-to-table mappings, and an APIService that
extends the core Kubernetes API
might not serve Table responses at all. If you are implementing a client that
uses the Table information and must work against all resource types, including
extensions, you should make requests that specify multiple content types in the
Accept
header. For example:
Accept: application/json;as=Table;g=meta.k8s.io;v=v1, application/json
Alternate representations of resources
By default, Kubernetes returns objects serialized to JSON with content type
application/json
. This is the default serialization format for the API. However,
clients may request the more efficient
Protobuf representation of these objects for better performance at scale.
The Kubernetes API implements standard HTTP content type negotiation: passing an
Accept
header with a GET
call will request that the server tries to return
a response in your preferred media type, while sending an object in Protobuf to
the server for a PUT
or POST
call means that you must set the Content-Type
header appropriately.
The server will return a response with a Content-Type
header if the requested
format is supported, or the 406 Not acceptable
error if none of the media types you
requested are supported. All built-in resource types support the application/json
media type.
See the Kubernetes API reference for a list of supported content types for each API.
For example:
-
List all of the pods on a cluster in Protobuf format.
GET /api/v1/pods Accept: application/vnd.kubernetes.protobuf --- 200 OK Content-Type: application/vnd.kubernetes.protobuf ... binary encoded PodList object
-
Create a pod by sending Protobuf encoded data to the server, but request a response in JSON.
POST /api/v1/namespaces/test/pods Content-Type: application/vnd.kubernetes.protobuf Accept: application/json ... binary encoded Pod object --- 200 OK Content-Type: application/json { "kind": "Pod", "apiVersion": "v1", ... }
Not all API resource types support Protobuf; specifically, Protobuf isn't available for
resources that are defined as
CustomResourceDefinitions
or are served via the
aggregation layer.
As a client, if you might need to work with extension types you should specify multiple
content types in the request Accept
header to support fallback to JSON.
For example:
Accept: application/vnd.kubernetes.protobuf, application/json
Kubernetes Protobuf encoding
Kubernetes uses an envelope wrapper to encode Protobuf responses. That wrapper starts with a 4 byte magic number to help identify content in disk or in etcd as Protobuf (as opposed to JSON), and then is followed by a Protobuf encoded wrapper message, which describes the encoding and type of the underlying object and then contains the object.
The wrapper format is:
A four byte magic number prefix:
Bytes 0-3: "k8s\x00" [0x6b, 0x38, 0x73, 0x00]
An encoded Protobuf message with the following IDL:
message Unknown {
// typeMeta should have the string values for "kind" and "apiVersion" as set on the JSON object
optional TypeMeta typeMeta = 1;
// raw will hold the complete serialized object in protobuf. See the protobuf definitions in the client libraries for a given kind.
optional bytes raw = 2;
// contentEncoding is encoding used for the raw data. Unspecified means no encoding.
optional string contentEncoding = 3;
// contentType is the serialization method used to serialize 'raw'. Unspecified means application/vnd.kubernetes.protobuf and is usually
// omitted.
optional string contentType = 4;
}
message TypeMeta {
// apiVersion is the group/version for this type
optional string apiVersion = 1;
// kind is the name of the object schema. A protobuf definition should exist for this object.
optional string kind = 2;
}
application/vnd.kubernetes.protobuf
that does
not match the expected prefix should reject the response, as future versions may need
to alter the serialization format in an incompatible way and will do so by changing
the prefix.
Resource deletion
When you delete a resource this takes place in two phases.
- finalization
- removal
{
"kind": "ConfigMap",
"apiVersion": "v1",
"metadata": {
"finalizers": {"url.io/neat-finalization", "other-url.io/my-finalizer"},
"deletionTimestamp": nil,
}
}
When a client first sends a delete to request removal of a resource, the .metadata.deletionTimestamp
is set to the current time.
Once the .metadata.deletionTimestamp
is set, external controllers that act on finalizers
may start performing their cleanup work at any time, in any order.
Order is not enforced between finalizers because it would introduce significant
risk of stuck .metadata.finalizers
.
The .metadata.finalizers
field is shared: any actor with permission can reorder it.
If the finalizer list were processed in order, then this might lead to a situation
in which the component responsible for the first finalizer in the list is
waiting for some signal (field value, external system, or other) produced by a
component responsible for a finalizer later in the list, resulting in a deadlock.
Without enforced ordering, finalizers are free to order amongst themselves and are not vulnerable to ordering changes in the list.
Once the last finalizer is removed, the resource is actually removed from etcd.
Single resource API
The Kubernetes API verbs get, create, apply, update, patch, delete and proxy support single resources only. These verbs with single resource support have no support for submitting multiple resources together in an ordered or unordered list or transaction.
When clients (including kubectl) act on a set of resources, the client makes a series of single-resource API requests, then aggregates the responses if needed.
By contrast, the Kubernetes API verbs list and watch allow getting multiple resources, and deletecollection allows deleting multiple resources.
Dry-run
Kubernetes v1.18 [stable]
When you use HTTP verbs that can modify resources (POST
, PUT
, PATCH
, and
DELETE
), you can submit your request in a dry run mode. Dry run mode helps to
evaluate a request through the typical request stages (admission chain, validation,
merge conflicts) up until persisting objects to storage. The response body for the
request is as close as possible to a non-dry-run response. Kubernetes guarantees that
dry-run requests will not be persisted in storage or have any other side effects.
Make a dry-run request
Dry-run is triggered by setting the dryRun
query parameter. This parameter is a
string, working as an enum, and the only accepted values are:
- [no value set]
- Allow side effects. You request this with a query string such as
?dryRun
or?dryRun&pretty=true
. The response is the final object that would have been persisted, or an error if the request could not be fulfilled. All
- Every stage runs as normal, except for the final storage stage where side effects are prevented.
When you set ?dryRun=All
, any relevant
admission controllers
are run, validating admission controllers check the request post-mutation, merge is
performed on PATCH
, fields are defaulted, and schema validation occurs. The changes
are not persisted to the underlying storage, but the final object which would have
been persisted is still returned to the user, along with the normal status code.
If the non-dry-run version of a request would trigger an admission controller that has
side effects, the request will be failed rather than risk an unwanted side effect. All
built in admission control plugins support dry-run. Additionally, admission webhooks can
declare in their
configuration object
that they do not have side effects, by setting their sideEffects
field to None
.
sideEffects
field should be
set to "NoneOnDryRun". That change is appropriate provided that the webhook is also
be modified to understand the DryRun
field in AdmissionReview, and to prevent side
effects on any request marked as dry runs.
Here is an example dry-run request that uses ?dryRun=All
:
POST /api/v1/namespaces/test/pods?dryRun=All
Content-Type: application/json
Accept: application/json
The response would look the same as for non-dry-run request, but the values of some generated fields may differ.
Generated values
Some values of an object are typically generated before the object is persisted. It is important not to rely upon the values of these fields set by a dry-run request, since these values will likely be different in dry-run mode from when the real request is made. Some of these fields are:
name
: ifgenerateName
is set,name
will have a unique random namecreationTimestamp
/deletionTimestamp
: records the time of creation/deletionUID
: uniquely identifies the object and is randomly generated (non-deterministic)resourceVersion
: tracks the persisted version of the object- Any field set by a mutating admission controller
- For the
Service
resource: Ports or IP addresses that the kube-apiserver assigns to Service objects
Dry-run authorization
Authorization for dry-run and non-dry-run requests is identical. Thus, to make a dry-run request, you must be authorized to make the non-dry-run request.
For example, to run a dry-run patch for a Deployment, you must be authorized to perform that patch. Here is an example of a rule for Kubernetes RBAC that allows patching Deployments:
rules:
- apiGroups: ["apps"]
resources: ["deployments"]
verbs: ["patch"]
Server Side Apply
Kubernetes' Server Side Apply
feature allows the control plane to track managed fields for newly created objects.
Server Side Apply provides a clear pattern for managing field conflicts,
offers server-side Apply
and Update
operations, and replaces the
client-side functionality of kubectl apply
.
The API verb for Server-Side Apply is apply. See Server Side Apply for more details.
Resource versions
Resource versions are strings that identify the server's internal version of an object. Resource versions can be used by clients to determine when objects have changed, or to express data consistency requirements when getting, listing and watching resources. Resource versions must be treated as opaque by clients and passed unmodified back to the server.
You must not assume resource versions are numeric or collatable. API clients may only compare two resource versions for equality (this means that you must not compare resource versions for greater-than or less-than relationships).
resourceVersion
fields in metadata
Clients find resource versions in resources, including the resources from the response stream for a watch, or when using list to enumerate resources.
v1.meta/ObjectMeta - The metadata.resourceVersion
of a resource instance identifies the resource version the instance was last modified at.
v1.meta/ListMeta - The metadata.resourceVersion
of a resource collection (the response to a list) identifies the resource version at which the collection was constructed.
resourceVersion
parameters in query strings
The get, list, and watch operations support the resourceVersion
parameter.
From version v1.19, Kubernetes API servers also support the resourceVersionMatch
parameter on list requests.
The API server interprets the resourceVersion
parameter differently depending
on the operation you request, and on the value of resourceVersion
. If you set
resourceVersionMatch
then this also affects the way matching happens.
Semantics for get and list
For get and list, the semantics of resourceVersion
are:
get:
resourceVersion unset | resourceVersion="0" | resourceVersion="{value other than 0}" |
---|---|---|
Most Recent | Any | Not older than |
list:
From version v1.19, Kubernetes API servers support the resourceVersionMatch
parameter
on list requests. If you set both resourceVersion
and resourceVersionMatch
, the
resourceVersionMatch
parameter determines how the API server interprets
resourceVersion
.
You should always set the resourceVersionMatch
parameter when setting
resourceVersion
on a list request. However, be prepared to handle the case
where the API server that responds is unaware of resourceVersionMatch
and ignores it.
Unless you have strong consistency requirements, using resourceVersionMatch=NotOlderThan
and
a known resourceVersion
is preferable since it can achieve better performance and scalability
of your cluster than leaving resourceVersion
and resourceVersionMatch
unset, which requires
quorum read to be served.
Setting the resourceVersionMatch
parameter without setting resourceVersion
is not valid.
This table explains the behavior of list requests with various combinations of
resourceVersion
and resourceVersionMatch
:
resourceVersionMatch param | paging params | resourceVersion not set | resourceVersion="0" | resourceVersion="{value other than 0}" |
---|---|---|---|---|
unset | limit unset | Most Recent | Any | Not older than |
unset | limit=<n>, continue unset | Most Recent | Any | Exact |
unset | limit=<n>, continue=<token> | Continue Token, Exact | Invalid, treated as Continue Token, Exact | Invalid, HTTP 400 Bad Request |
resourceVersionMatch=Exact |
limit unset | Invalid | Invalid | Exact |
resourceVersionMatch=Exact |
limit=<n>, continue unset | Invalid | Invalid | Exact |
resourceVersionMatch=NotOlderThan |
limit unset | Invalid | Any | Not older than |
resourceVersionMatch=NotOlderThan |
limit=<n>, continue unset | Invalid | Any | Not older than |
resourceVersionMatch
parameter,
the behavior is the same as if you did not set it.
The meaning of the get and list semantics are:
- Any
- Return data at any resource version. The newest available resource version is preferred, but strong consistency is not required; data at any resource version may be served. It is possible for the request to return data at a much older resource version that the client has previously observed, particularly in high availability configurations, due to partitions or stale caches. Clients that cannot tolerate this should not use this semantic.
- Most recent
- Return data at the most recent resource version. The returned data must be consistent (in detail: served from etcd via a quorum read).
- Not older than
- Return data at least as new as the provided
resourceVersion
. The newest available data is preferred, but any data not older than the providedresourceVersion
may be served. For list requests to servers that honor theresourceVersionMatch
parameter, this guarantees that the collection's.metadata.resourceVersion
is not older than the requestedresourceVersion
, but does not make any guarantee about the.metadata.resourceVersion
of any of the items in that collection. - Exact
- Return data at the exact resource version provided. If the provided
resourceVersion
is unavailable, the server responds with HTTP 410 "Gone". For list requests to servers that honor theresourceVersionMatch
parameter, this guarantees that the collection's.metadata.resourceVersion
is the same as theresourceVersion
you requested in the query string. That guarantee does not apply to the.metadata.resourceVersion
of any items within that collection. - Continue Token, Exact
- Return data at the resource version of the initial paginated list call. The returned continue tokens are responsible for keeping track of the initially provided resource version for all paginated list calls after the initial paginated list.
.metadata.resourceVersion
tracks when that object was last updated, and not how up-to-date
the object is when served.
When using resourceVersionMatch=NotOlderThan
and limit is set, clients must
handle HTTP 410 "Gone" responses. For example, the client might retry with a
newer resourceVersion
or fall back to resourceVersion=""
.
When using resourceVersionMatch=Exact
and limit
is unset, clients must
verify that the collection's .metadata.resourceVersion
matches
the requested resourceVersion
, and handle the case where it does not. For
example, the client might fall back to a request with limit
set.
Semantics for watch
For watch, the semantics of resource version are:
watch:
resourceVersion unset | resourceVersion="0" | resourceVersion="{value other than 0}" |
---|---|---|
Get State and Start at Most Recent | Get State and Start at Any | Start at Exact |
The meaning of those watch semantics are:
- Get State and Start at Any
- Caution: Watches initialized this way may return arbitrarily stale data. Please review this semantic before using it, and favor the other semantics where possible.Start a watch at any resource version; the most recent resource version available is preferred, but not required. Any starting resource version is allowed. It is possible for the watch to start at a much older resource version that the client has previously observed, particularly in high availability configurations, due to partitions or stale caches. Clients that cannot tolerate this apparent rewinding should not start a watch with this semantic. To establish initial state, the watch begins with synthetic "Added" events for all resource instances that exist at the starting resource version. All following watch events are for all changes that occurred after the resource version the watch started at.
- Get State and Start at Most Recent
- Start a watch at the most recent resource version, which must be consistent (in detail: served from etcd via a quorum read). To establish initial state, the watch begins with synthetic "Added" events of all resources instances that exist at the starting resource version. All following watch events are for all changes that occurred after the resource version the watch started at.
- Start at Exact
- Start a watch at an exact resource version. The watch events are for all changes after the provided resource version. Unlike "Get State and Start at Most Recent" and "Get State and Start at Any", the watch is not started with synthetic "Added" events for the provided resource version. The client is assumed to already have the initial state at the starting resource version since the client provided the resource version.
"410 Gone" responses
Servers are not required to serve all older resource versions and may return a HTTP
410 (Gone)
status code if a client requests a resourceVersion
older than the
server has retained. Clients must be able to tolerate 410 (Gone)
responses. See
Efficient detection of changes for details on
how to handle 410 (Gone)
responses when watching resources.
If you request a resourceVersion
outside the applicable limit then, depending
on whether a request is served from cache or not, the API server may reply with a
410 Gone
HTTP response.
Unavailable resource versions
Servers are not required to serve unrecognized resource versions. If you request list or get for a resource version that the API server does not recognize, then the API server may either:
- wait briefly for the resource version to become available, then timeout with a
504 (Gateway Timeout)
if the provided resource versions does not become available in a reasonable amount of time; - respond with a
Retry-After
response header indicating how many seconds a client should wait before retrying the request.
If you request a resource version that an API server does not recognize, the kube-apiserver additionally identifies its error responses with a "Too large resource version" message.
If you make a watch request for an unrecognized resource version, the API server may wait indefinitely (until the request timeout) for the resource version to become available.