kubectl config view shows contexts and clusters corresponding to clusters that I have deleted.
How can I remove those entries?
The command
kubectl config unset clusters appears to delete all clusters. Is there a way to selectively delete cluster entries? What about contexts?
4 Answers
kubectl config unset takes a dot-delimited path. You can delete cluster/context/user entries by name. E.g.
kubectl config unset users.gke_project_zone_name kubectl config unset contexts.aws_cluster1-kubernetes kubectl config unset clusters.foobar-baz Side note, if you teardown your cluster using cluster/kube-down.sh (or gcloud if you use Container Engine), it will delete the associated kubeconfig entries. There is also a planned kubectl config rework for a future release to make the commands more intuitive/usable/consistent.
For clusters and contexts you can also do
kubectl config delete-cluster my-cluster kubectl config delete-context my-cluster-context There's nothing specific for users though, so you still have to do
kubectl config unset users.my-cluster-admin 2Run command below to get all contexts you have:
$ kubectl config get-contexts CURRENT NAME CLUSTER AUTHINFO NAMESPACE * Cluster_Name_1 Cluster_1 clusterUser_resource-group_Cluster_1 Delete context:
$ kubectl config delete-context Cluster_Name_1 Unrelated to question, but maybe a useful resource.
Have a look at kubectx + kubens: Power tools for kubectl.
They make it easy to switch contexts and namespace + have the option to delete
e.g.,
kubectx -d my-context