Setting up k9s skins for different Kubernetes clusters
Ben Selby
Posted on April 1, 2023
This post is going to show you how to define different skins for k9s, so you can quickly see which environment you're working on.
k9s
is a terminal application that allows you to manage your Kubernetes clusters. So if you're managing your production cluster, for example, you probably want to take extra care of what you're doing.
Every time I jump onto a production database for nearly two decades, I have set the background to red. Over the years better tooling has come out, so I now have iTerm profiles that allow me to quickly change the colour of the background when in different environments. Recently I was doing a bit of work on a Kubernetes platform using k9s
and was doing the same thing, setting my iTerm profile. Then I checked on the k9s
docs and realised you can do this within k9s
. More importantly, it would be automatic based on your cluster name, which sounds even better.
So, I've set up the following skins:
- A standard skin
- A testing skin
- A production skin
You can check out the official skins on GitHub. I've based my skins on monokai.yml
.
Once you have picked your base skin, save it to this path:
~/Library/Application\ Support/k9s/skin.yml
When you now fire up k9s
, you should have the skin you have picked. This is what mine looks like as standard.
Now we want to move on to the good stuff and have different skins for different clusters. Well luckily, k9s supports this. It's about naming the skin after the cluster name. So, I have a cluster called prod
, therefore I've created a file called:
~/Library/Application\ Support/k9s/prod_skin.yml
The theme is still the base monokai.yml
skin, but I changed the background
value to:
background: &background '#41000c'
So now, when I connect to the prod
cluster using k9s
, my experience looks like this:
I've also gotten into the habit of having a specific colour for testing environments. So basically only my local development environment looks "normal". Everything else has a colour that can imply how worried I should be about making changes. My testing skin has a dark purple background.
All of these skins are defined in my dotfiles repo and you can see I symlink the skins, so I can easily track changes in git.
Hopefully, you found this useful.
Photo by Venti Views on Unsplash
Posted on April 1, 2023
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