You need to extract the information from etcd and filter what you want.
To illustrate, I will show you how to get the number of total keys from etcd.
NOTE: Tested in kubernetes 1.18.2.
# Getting etcd pod IP and set a local variable:
ADVERTISE_URL="https://$(kubectl get pods -n kube-system -l=component=etcd -o=jsonpath='{ .items[*].status.podIP }'):2379"
# Getting ectd pod name and set a variable ETCD_POD
ETCD_POD=$(kubectl get pods -n kube-system -l=component=etcd -o=jsonpath='{ .items[*].metadata.name}')
# Extracting all etcd keys/values to a file called "etcd-kv.json":
kubectl exec $ETCD_POD -n kube-system -- sh -c \
"ETCDCTL_API=3 etcdctl \
--endpoints $ADVERTISE_URL \
--cacert /etc/kubernetes/pki/etcd/ca.crt \
--key /etc/kubernetes/pki/etcd/server.key \
--cert /etc/kubernetes/pki/etcd/server.crt \
get \"\" --prefix=true -w json" > etcd-kv.json
Now you have all the keys/values pairs from etcd, you just need to filter to extract the information you need. For example, to list all keys you can use the command:
for k in $(cat etcd-kv.json | jq '.kvs[].key' | cut -d '"' -f2); do echo $k | base64 --decode; echo; done
and to count the number of keys, just use the command wc -l
on the end of this command, like:
for k in $(cat etcd-kv.json | jq '.kvs[].key' | cut -d '"' -f2); do echo $k | base64 --decode; echo; done | echo "Total keys=$(wc -l)"
Total keys=308
References:
A closer look at etcd: The brain of a kubernetes cluster