I am working my way through killer.sh.for the CKAD. I encountered a pod definition file that has a command field under the readiness probe and the container executes another command but uses args.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
creationTimestamp: null
labels:
run: pod6
name: pod6
spec:
containers:
- args:
- sh
- -c
- touch /tmp/ready && sleep 1d
image: busybox:1.31.0
name: pod6
resources: {}
readinessProbe: # add
exec: # add
command: # add
- sh # add
- -c # add
- cat /tmp/ready # add
initialDelaySeconds: 5 # add
periodSeconds: 10 # add
dnsPolicy: ClusterFirst
restartPolicy: Always
status: {}
If the readiness probe weren't used and this pod were created implicitly, args wouldn't be utilized.
kubectl run pod6 --image=busybox:1.31.0 --dry-run=client --command -- sh -c "touch /tmp/ready && sleep 1d" > 6.yaml
The output YAML would look like this:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
creationTimestamp: null
labels:
run: pod69
name: pod69
spec:
containers:
- command:
- sh
- -c
- touch /tmp/ready && sleep 1d
image: busybox:1.31.9
name: pod69
resources: {}
dnsPolicy: ClusterFirst
restartPolicy: Always
Why is command not used on both the readinessProbe and the container? When do commands become args? Is there a way to tell?
I've read through this document: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/inject-data-application/_print/ but I still haven't had much luck understanding this situation and when to switch to args.