# Create, Update & Delete Deployment This example program demonstrates the fundamental operations for managing on [Deployment][1] resources, such as `Create`, `List`, `Update` and `Delete`. You can adopt the source code from this example to write programs that manage other types of resources through the Kubernetes API. ## Running this example Make sure you have a Kubernetes cluster and `kubectl` is configured: kubectl get nodes Compile this example on your workstation: ``` cd create-update-delete-deployment go build -o ./app ``` Now, run this application on your workstation with your local kubeconfig file: ``` ./app # or specify a kubeconfig file with flag ./app -kubeconfig=$HOME/.kube/config ``` Running this command will execute the following operations on your cluster: 1. **Create Deployment:** This will create a 2 replica Deployment. Verify with `kubectl get pods`. 2. **Update Deployment:** This will update the Deployment resource created in previous step by setting the replica count to 1 and changing the container image to `nginx:1.13`. You are encouraged to inspect the retry loop that handles conflicts. Verify the new replica count and container image with `kubectl describe deployment demo`. 3. **Rollback Deployment:** This will rollback the Deployment to the last revision. In this case, it's the revision that was created in Step 1. Use `kubectl describe` to verify the container image is now `nginx:1.12`. Also note that the Deployment's replica count is still 1; this is because a Deployment revision is created if and only if the Deployment's pod template (`.spec.template`) is changed. 4. **List Deployments:** This will retrieve Deployments in the `default` namespace and print their names and replica counts. 5. **Delete Deployment:** This will delete the Deployment object and its dependent ReplicaSet resource. Verify with `kubectl get deployments`. Each step is separated by an interactive prompt. You must hit the Return key to proceed to the next step. You can use these prompts as a break to take time to run `kubectl` and inspect the result of the operations executed. You should see an output like the following: ``` Creating deployment... Created deployment "demo-deployment". -> Press Return key to continue. Updating deployment... Updated deployment... -> Press Return key to continue. Rolling back deployment... Rolled back deployment... -> Press Return key to continue. Listing deployments in namespace "default": * demo-deployment (1 replicas) -> Press Return key to continue. Deleting deployment... Deleted deployment. ``` ## Cleanup Successfully running this program will clean the created artifacts. If you terminate the program without completing, you can clean up the created deployment with: kubectl delete deploy demo-deployment ## Troubleshooting If you are getting the following error, make sure Kubernetes version of your cluster is v1.6 or above in `kubectl version`: panic: the server could not find the requested resource [1]: https://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/deployments/