Kubernetes volumes provide a way for containers in a pod to access and share data via the filesystem. There are different kinds of volume that you can use for different purposes, such as: populating a configuration file based on a ConfigMap or a Secret providing some temporary scratch space for a pod sharing a filesystem between two different containers in the same pod sharing a filesystem between two different pods (even if those Pods run on different nodes) durably storing data so that it s...| Kubernetes
This document details the deprecation policy for various facets of the system. Kubernetes is a large system with many components and many contributors. As with any such software, the feature set naturally evolves over time, and sometimes a feature may need to be removed. This could include an API, a flag, or even an entire feature. To avoid breaking existing users, Kubernetes follows a deprecation policy for aspects of the system that are slated to be removed.| Kubernetes
This page provides an overview of init containers: specialized containers that run before app containers in a Pod. Init containers can contain utilities or setup scripts not present in an app image. You can specify init containers in the Pod specification alongside the containers array (which describes app containers). In Kubernetes, a sidecar container is a container that starts before the main application container and continues to run. This document is about init containers: containers tha...| Kubernetes
FEATURE STATE: Kubernetes v1.30 [stable] This page provides an overview of Validating Admission Policy. What is Validating Admission Policy? Validating admission policies offer a declarative, in-process alternative to validating admission webhooks. Validating admission policies use the Common Expression Language (CEL) to declare the validation rules of a policy. Validation admission policies are highly configurable, enabling policy authors to define policies that can be parameterized and scop...| Kubernetes
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