293

I've had a "stuck" namespace that I deleted showing in this eternal "terminating" status.

2

35 Answers 35

308

Assuming you've already tried to force-delete resources like: Pods stuck at terminating status, and your at your wits' end trying to recover the namespace...

You can force-delete the namespace (perhaps leaving dangling resources):

(
NAMESPACE=your-rogue-namespace
kubectl proxy &
kubectl get namespace $NAMESPACE -o json |jq '.spec = {"finalizers":[]}' >temp.json
curl -k -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X PUT --data-binary @temp.json 127.0.0.1:8001/api/v1/namespaces/$NAMESPACE/finalize
)
  • This is a refinement of the answer here, which is based on the comment here.

  • I'm using the jq utility to programmatically delete elements in the finalizers section. You could do that manually instead.

  • kubectl proxy creates the listener at 127.0.0.1:8001 by default. If you know the hostname/IP of your cluster master, you may be able to use that instead.

  • The funny thing is that this approach seems to work even when using kubectl edit making the same change has no effect.

7
  • 1
    Would be better if you move the kubectl edit solution on top as it's much easier and does the same thing, applicable to all objects. Jun 11, 2019 at 4:43
  • 11
    This is bad since it leaves leftovers in the cluster. Its more tricking yourself rather than actually fixing the issue. There is a reason the namespace can't be removed and you better fix that rather than going for a cosmetic solution. Jun 23, 2019 at 8:59
  • 5
    @AntonioGomezAlvarado: Right. This wouldn't normally be the first thing that you try. But, unfortunately, it isn't always easy to discover the underlying problem. In some cases, the need to recover the namespace may be so that you can continue to get your work done -- not just cosmetics. Jul 9, 2019 at 13:56
  • 2
    better soln - stackoverflow.com/a/59667608/429476 please select that as the answer for new clusters - Aug 7, 2020 at 10:42
  • 3
    You should state, that you can bypass the API authentication with curl if you use kubectl proxy.
    – dmorlock
    Jan 13, 2021 at 10:04
170

This is caused by resources still existing in the namespace that the namespace controller is unable to remove.

This command (with kubectl 1.11+) will show you what resources remain in the namespace:

kubectl api-resources --verbs=list --namespaced -o name \
  | xargs -n 1 kubectl get --show-kind --ignore-not-found -n <namespace>

Once you find those and resolve and remove them, the namespace will be cleaned up

9
  • 8
    This shows no resources on my cluster, I don't think is always the solution.
    – Ben Moss
    Jan 19, 2021 at 17:30
  • 7
    But definitely better to try first. Always force deleting the namespace is not good advice.
    – pst
    Feb 24, 2021 at 5:33
  • 7
    Windows Powershell equivalent: Foreach($x in (kubectl api-resources --verbs=list --namespaced -o name)){ kubectl get --show-kind --ignore-not-found -n YOUR_NAMESPACE_HERE $x }
    – Venryx
    Dec 5, 2021 at 4:27
  • 2
    This worked for me. I had a dangling CRD associated with that namespace.
    – 8675309
    Jun 1, 2022 at 12:32
  • 5
    I get error: unable to retrieve the complete list of server APIs: metrics.k8s.io/v1beta1: the server is currently unable to handle the request Jan 17, 2023 at 22:56
169

As mentioned before in this thread there is another way to terminate a namespace using API not exposed by kubectl by using a modern version of kubectl where kubectl replace --raw is available (not sure from which version). This way you will not have to spawn a kubectl proxy process and avoid dependency with curl (that in some environment like busybox is not available). In the hope that this will help someone else I left this here:

kubectl get namespace "stucked-namespace" -o json \
  | tr -d "\n" | sed "s/\"finalizers\": \[[^]]\+\]/\"finalizers\": []/" \
  | kubectl replace --raw /api/v1/namespaces/stucked-namespace/finalize -f -
8
  • 7
    this one worked for me in kubectl version v1.17, k8 v1.16 Apr 5, 2020 at 15:48
  • Great. Only thing that worked for us when there were no nodes up in the cluster.
    – sshow
    Sep 1, 2020 at 12:59
  • Mine errors on "tr". The term tr is not recognized.
    – N-ate
    Dec 18, 2020 at 14:35
  • 1
    export NS=istio-system && kubectl get namespace "$NS" -o json \ | tr -d "\n" | sed "s/\"finalizers\": [[^]]\+]/\"finalizers\": []/" \ | kubectl replace --raw /api/v1/namespaces/$NS/finalize -f -
    – neoakris
    Apr 15, 2021 at 1:10
  • 2
    This one worked for me in Azure
    – Tony
    Jul 14, 2023 at 20:08
96

Solution:

Use command below without any changes. it works like a charm.

NS=`kubectl get ns |grep Terminating | awk 'NR==1 {print $1}'` && kubectl get namespace "$NS" -o json   | tr -d "\n" | sed "s/\"finalizers\": \[[^]]\+\]/\"finalizers\": []/"   | kubectl replace --raw /api/v1/namespaces/$NS/finalize -f -

Enjoy

4
  • 3
    Not the best idea. This will most likely leave some dangling resources which caused the initial problem with termination.
    – bazeusz
    Dec 20, 2020 at 23:35
  • 2
    Tried this and namespace still in "Terminating" status.
    – Dentrax
    Mar 17, 2022 at 12:19
  • 3
    @Dentrax This command remove first terminating namespace in your list. Fore example if you have 3 namespace by terminating status you shold run this commant 3 times. If not work try another way to solve. Apr 12, 2022 at 12:05
  • Note: If your kube/config contain token for autentication of the user maybe got error. You should coppy conf file from /etc/kubernetes by this command and replace it old to Config. sudo cp -i /etc/kubernetes/admin.conf $HOME/.kube/config Oct 18, 2022 at 8:24
95

Need to remove the finalizer for kubernetes.

Step 1:

kubectl get namespace <YOUR_NAMESPACE> -o json > <YOUR_NAMESPACE>.json
  • remove kubernetes from finalizers array which is under spec

Step 2:

kubectl replace --raw "/api/v1/namespaces/<YOUR_NAMESPACE>/finalize" -f ./<YOUR_NAMESPACE>.json

Step 3:

kubectl get namespace

You can see that the annoying namespace is gone.

5
  • I'm missing this namespaces api. Is there a way to install it?
    – N-ate
    Dec 18, 2020 at 14:59
  • 11
    This can also be achieved with kubectl edit <stuck_resource> and delete the item in the 'finalizers' list. This has the advantage that it can be used to delete other stuck resources without knowing their api path. I used it to remove a stubborn CRD.
    – SiHa
    Jun 18, 2021 at 7:34
  • 1
    You can also use a ui-based tool like Lens, which makes this and many other tasks/information very easy to perform/access.
    – Venryx
    Dec 5, 2021 at 11:47
  • 3
    doesnt work for me.. Jan 30, 2022 at 10:58
  • 4
    If you have jq installed, the following snippet might help you to remove the stuck namespace: namespace=stuck-namespace; kubectl get namespace $namespace -o json | jq '.spec.finalizers= []' | kubectl replace --raw "/api/v1/namespaces/$namespace/finalize" -f - Mar 2, 2022 at 15:15
66

I loved this answer extracted from here It is just 2 commands.

In one terminal:

kubectl proxy

In another terminal:

kubectl get ns delete-me -o json | \
  jq '.spec.finalizers=[]' | \
  curl -X PUT http://localhost:8001/api/v1/namespaces/delete-me/finalize -H "Content-Type: application/json" --data @-
9
  • 3
    I tried a few here, this is the first one which worked - thank you!
    – bobmarksie
    May 7, 2021 at 8:41
  • 1
    Removing the finalisers could lead to unregistered hanging resources later on.
    – Luca
    Dec 5, 2021 at 9:38
  • 3
    This worked for me. If you're Mac, first install jq utility using the command brew install jq May 31, 2022 at 8:14
  • 2
    Thank you. I was have issue removing the terminating NS. This helped me to get rid of my terminating rook-ceph namespace.
    – Sanjeev
    Jun 27, 2022 at 18:11
  • 4
    Only one that worked for me. Aug 1, 2022 at 10:38
63

Single line command

kubectl patch ns <Namespace_to_delete> -p '{"metadata":{"finalizers":null}}'

Option : 2

If Patching not working you check the error if it's like in status

kubectl get ns <namespace-name>

Discovery failed for some groups, 1 failing: unable to retrieve the 22 complete list of server APIs: metrics.k8s.io/v1beta1: the server is currently 23 unable to handle the request

You get the error details or API details which is failing for you, list available apiservice

kubectl get apiservice

Look for ones the AVAILABLE is False

kubectl delete apiservice <apiservice-name>

Example

kubectl delete apiservice metrics.k8s.io/v1beta1

and run above patch command again or wait for while namespace will get removed.

Read article for more : https://medium.com/@harsh.manvar111/kubernetes-namespace-stuck-on-terminating-state-25d0cda8e3ff

Extra - Simple trick

You can edit namespace on console only kubectl edit <namespace name> remove/delete "Kubernetes" from inside the finalizer section(Should be like "finalizers": [ ]) and press enter or save/apply changes.

in one step also you can do it.

Trick : 1

  1. kubectl get namespace annoying-namespace-to-delete -o json > tmp.json

  2. then edit tmp.json and remove "kubernetes" from Finalizers

  3. Open another terminal Run command kubectl proxy and run below Curl

curl -k -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X PUT --data-binary @tmp.json https://localhost:8001/api/v1/namespaces/<NAMESPACE NAME TO DELETE>/finalize

and it should delete your namespace.

Step by step guide

Start the proxy using command :

  1. kubectl proxy

kubectl proxy & Starting to serve on 127.0.0.1:8001

find namespace

  1. kubectl get ns

{Your namespace name} Terminating 1d

put it in file

  1. kubectl get namespace {Your namespace name} -o json > tmp.json

edit the file tmp.json and remove the finalizers

}, "spec": { "finalizers": [ "kubernetes" ] },

after editing it should look like this

}, "spec": { "finalizers": [ ] },

we are almost there simply now run the curl with updating namespace value in it

curl -k -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X PUT --data-binary @tmp.json http://127.0.0.1:8001/api/v1/namespaces/{Your namespace name}/finalize

and it's gone

**

3
27

For us it was the metrics-server crashing.

So to check if this is relevant to you'r case with the following run: kubectl api-resources

If you get

error: unable to retrieve the complete list of server APIs: metrics.k8s.io/v1beta1: the server is currently unable to handle the request

Then its probably the same issue

Credits goes to @javierprovecho here

7
  • for us it was a service catalogue CRD leftover: servicecatalog.k8s.io/v1beta1: the server is currently unable to handle the request Feb 4, 2019 at 9:41
  • 7
    And what do you do? @PawełPrażak remove it? Or how do I find it?
    – vonGohren
    Oct 29, 2019 at 10:47
  • @vonGohren AFAIR we removed it CR to solve the issue, but I can't remember how we've figured it out, sorry Oct 30, 2019 at 12:08
  • You can deploy the latest (0.4.1) version of metrics-server to resolve this: kubectl apply -f github.com/kubernetes-sigs/metrics-server/releases/download/…;
    – imriss
    Dec 25, 2020 at 17:36
  • 5
    @vonGohren at that point you should indeed remove that resource. as mentioned in another answer run kubectl api-resources --verbs=list --namespaced -o name \ | xargs -n 1 kubectl get --show-kind --ignore-not-found -n <namespace> to find it; I then removed it with kubectl delete APIService v1beta1.custom.metrics.k8s.io
    – iomv
    Apr 28, 2021 at 0:40
22

I've written a one-liner Python3 script based on the common answers here. This script removes the finalizers in the problematic namespace.

python3 -c "namespace='<my-namespace>';import atexit,subprocess,json,requests,sys;proxy_process = subprocess.Popen(['kubectl', 'proxy']);atexit.register(proxy_process.kill);p = subprocess.Popen(['kubectl', 'get', 'namespace', namespace, '-o', 'json'], stdout=subprocess.PIPE);p.wait();data = json.load(p.stdout);data['spec']['finalizers'] = [];requests.put('http://127.0.0.1:8001/api/v1/namespaces/{}/finalize'.format(namespace), json=data).raise_for_status()"

💡 rename namespace='<my-namespace>' with your namespace. e.g. namespace='trust'

demo


Full script: https://gist.github.com/jossef/a563f8651ec52ad03a243dec539b333d

6
  • 2
    This worked! I finally was able to remove stuck namespaces!
    – Antebios
    Jan 24, 2021 at 19:30
  • Woah that worked after a few other methods didn't, including deleting the finalizer myself by editing! Thank you!
    – insideClaw
    Jul 7, 2021 at 15:06
  • This worked! I finally was able to remove stuck namespaces!
    – sandesh
    Aug 20, 2021 at 10:21
  • This is much easier answer!
    – Abdusoli
    Jan 29, 2022 at 5:04
  • This worked on me too!
    – Eduardo B.
    Jan 31, 2022 at 9:29
22

I write simple script to delete your stucking namespace based on @Shreyangi Saxena 's solution.

cat > delete_stuck_ns.sh << "EOF"
#!/usr/bin/env bash

function delete_namespace () {
    echo "Deleting namespace $1"
    kubectl get namespace $1 -o json > tmp.json
    sed -i 's/"kubernetes"//g' tmp.json
    kubectl replace --raw "/api/v1/namespaces/$1/finalize" -f ./tmp.json
    rm ./tmp.json
}

TERMINATING_NS=$(kubectl get ns | awk '$2=="Terminating" {print $1}')

for ns in $TERMINATING_NS
do
    delete_namespace $ns
done
EOF

chmod +x delete_stuck_ns.sh

This Script can detect all namespaces in Terminating state, and delete it.


PS:

  • This may not work in MacOS, cause the native sed in macos is not compatible with GNU sed.

    you may need install GNU sed in your MacOS, refer to this answer.

  • Please confirm that you can access your kubernetes cluster through command kubectl.

  • Has been tested on kubernetes version v1.15.3


Update

I found a easier solution:

kubectl patch RESOURCE NAME -p '{"metadata":{"finalizers":[]}}' --type=merge
2
  • 2
    A very nice, easy and working solution. Good work and thanks!
    – myuce
    Apr 11, 2021 at 21:57
  • Do not remove the finalizers to force a deletion as some resources will most likely remain dangling.
    – Luca
    Feb 15, 2022 at 17:32
21

here is a (yet another) solution. This uses jq to remove the finalisers block from the json, and does not require kubectl proxy:

namespaceToDelete=blah

kubectl get namespace "$namespaceToDelete" -o json \
  | jq 'del(.spec.finalizers)' \
  | kubectl replace --raw /api/v1/namespaces/$namespaceToDelete/finalize -f -
2
  • It worked on k8 v1.24.6
    – Sanjeev
    Oct 24, 2022 at 12:06
  • it works on k8s 1.20.x .. and it's the only one which works Jun 14, 2023 at 18:17
18

Run kubectl get apiservice

For the above command you will find an apiservice with Available Flag=Flase.

So, just delete that apiservice using kubectl delete apiservice <apiservice name>

After doing this, the namespace with terminating status will disappear.

3
  • 1
    In my case, all are Available=True, so this does not help (at least not always)
    – Asu
    Mar 25, 2020 at 17:17
  • 1
    Was getting a 404 with the other described methods. This solved my issue Jan 21, 2021 at 22:42
  • What is next if all kubectl get apiservice response showing "true" only Dec 8, 2023 at 20:35
18

Forcefully deleting the namespace or removing finalizers is definitely not the way to go since it could leave resources registered to a non existing namespace.

This is often fine but then one day you won't be able to create a resource because it is still dangling somewhere.

The upcoming Kubernetes version 1.16 should give more insights into namespaces finalizers, for now I would rely on identification strategies. A cool script which tries to automate these is: https://github.com/thyarles/knsk

However it works across all namespaces and it could be dangerous. The solution it s based on is: https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/issues/60807#issuecomment-524772920

tl;dr

  1. Checking if any apiservice is unavailable and hence doesn't serve its resources: kubectl get apiservice|grep False
  2. Finding all resources that still exist via kubectl api-resources --verbs=list --namespaced -o name | xargs -n 1 kubectl get -n $your-ns-to-delete

(credit: https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/issues/60807#issuecomment-524772920)

1
  • 2
    Agree, definitely not the way to go. Stuck removal is most often due to some resources not being properly deleted thus blocking the namespace termination. Check and remove those and the namespace will finally be removed. It's worth to mention that the namespace stuck in 'terminating' will block another namespace removal. At least this is what has happened to me, looks like removal is sequential in GKE.
    – bazeusz
    Dec 20, 2020 at 23:23
18

1. Using Curl Command

Issue Mentioned: https://amalgjose.com/2021/07/28/how-to-manually-delete-a-kubernetes-namespace-stuck-in-terminating-state/

export NAMESPACE=<specifice-namespace>
kubectl get namespace $NAMESPACE -o json > tempfile.json

Edit the JSON file and remove all values from spec.finalizers enter image description here

Save it and then apply this command on separate tab (Must be open in separate Tab)

kubectl proxy

And run this command on same tab:

curl -k -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X PUT --data-binary @tempfile.json http://127.0.0.1:8001/api/v1/namespaces/$NAMESPACE/finalize

Check namespace if terminating namespace is removed or not

kubectl get namespaces

2. Using Kubectl Command

Issue Mentioned: https://aws.amazon.com/premiumsupport/knowledge-center/eks- terminated-namespaces/

  1. Save a JSON file similar to the following:
export NAMESPACE=<specific-namespace>
kubectl get namespace $NAMESPACE -o json > tempfile.json
  1. Edit the JSON file and remove all values from spec.finalizers enter image description here
  2. To apply the changes, run a command similar to the following:
kubectl replace --raw "/api/v1/namespaces/$NAMESPACE/finalize" -f ./tempfile.json
  1. Verify that the terminating namespace is removed:
kubectl get namespaces
0
12

Please try with below command:

kubectl patch ns <your_namespace> -p '{"metadata":{"finalizers":null}}'
2
  • 1
    From Review: Command/Code-only answers are discouraged on Stack Overflow because they don't explain how it solves the problem. Please edit your answer to explain what this code does and how it answers the question, so that it is useful to the OP as well as other users with similar issues. See: How do I write a good answer?. Thanks Feb 9, 2021 at 12:29
  • 1
    Only this one worked for me. No other solutions using POST json to finalize api work. Aug 19, 2021 at 21:12
12

In my case the problem was caused by a custom metrics.

To know what is causing the issue, just run this command:

kubectl api-resources | grep -i false

That should give you which api resources are causing the problem. Once identified just delete it:

kubectl delete apiservice v1beta1.custom.metrics.k8s.io

Once deleted, the namespace should disappear.

2
  • 2
    false was lowercase in my case. so maybe: kubectl api-resources | grep -i false Aug 1, 2021 at 22:00
  • Nice. kubectl delete APIService v1beta1.metrics.k8s.io worked.
    – alex
    Feb 4, 2022 at 0:22
9

I tried 3-5 options to remove ns, but only this one works for me.

This sh file will remove all namespaces with Terminating status

$ vi force-delete-namespaces.sh

$ chmod +x force-delete-namespaces.sh

$ ./force-delete-namespaces.sh

#!/usr/bin/env bash

set -e
set -o pipefail

kubectl proxy &
proxy_pid="$!"
trap 'kill "$proxy_pid"' EXIT

for ns in $(kubectl get namespace --field-selector=status.phase=Terminating --output=jsonpath="{.items[*].metadata.name}"); do
    echo "Removing finalizers from namespace '$ns'..."
    curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X PUT "127.0.0.1:8001/api/v1/namespaces/$ns/finalize" -d @- \
        < <(kubectl get namespace "$ns" --output=json | jq '.spec = { "finalizers": [] }')

    echo
    echo "Force-deleting namespace '$ns'..."
    kubectl delete namespace "$ns" --force --grace-period=0 --ignore-not-found=true
done
2
  • This is the best script to delete all stuck namespace kubernetes. A great time saver! Thank you! Apr 27, 2023 at 12:07
  • trap "kill $proxy_pid" SIGINT SIGTERM ERR EXIT is working, your single quotes aren't :) Apr 27, 2023 at 12:21
7

Replace ambassador with your namespace

Check if the namespace is stuck

kubectl get ns ambassador

NAME         STATUS        AGE
ambassador   Terminating   110d

This is stuck from a long time

Open a admin terminal/cmd prompt or powershell and run

kubectl proxy

This will start a local web server: Starting to serve on 127.0.0.1:8001

Open another terminal and run

kubectl get ns ambassador -o json >tmp.json

edit the tmp.json using vi or nano

from this

{
"apiVersion": "v1",
"kind": "Namespace",
"metadata": {
    "annotations": {
        "kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration": "{\"apiVersion\":\"v1\",\"kind\":\"Namespace\",\"metadata\":{\"annotations\":{},\"name\":\"ambassador\"}}\n"
    },
    "creationTimestamp": "2021-01-07T18:23:28Z",
    "deletionTimestamp": "2021-04-28T06:43:41Z",
    "name": "ambassador",
    "resourceVersion": "14572382",
    "selfLink": "/api/v1/namespaces/ambassador",
    "uid": "xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx"
},
"spec": {
    "finalizers": [
        "kubernetes"
    ]
},
"status": {
    "conditions": [
        {
            "lastTransitionTime": "2021-04-28T06:43:46Z",
            "message": "Discovery failed for some groups, 3 failing: unable to retrieve the complete list of server APIs: compose.docker.com/v1alpha3: an error on the server (\"Internal Server Error: \\\"/apis/compose.docker.com/v1alpha3?timeout=32s\\\": Post https://0.0.0.1:443/apis/authorization.k8s.io/v1beta1/subjectaccessreviews: write tcp 0.0.0.0:53284-\u0026gt;0.0.0.0:443: write: broken pipe\") has prevented the request from succeeding, compose.docker.com/v1beta1: an error on the server (\"Internal Server Error: \\\"/apis/compose.docker.com/v1beta1?timeout=32s\\\": Post https://10.96.0.1:443/apis/authorization.k8s.io/v1beta1/subjectaccessreviews: write tcp 0.0.0.0:5284-\u0026gt;10.96.0.1:443: write: broken pipe\") has prevented the request from succeeding, compose.docker.com/v1beta2: an error on the server (\"Internal Server Error: \\\"/apis/compose.docker.com/v1beta2?timeout=32s\\\": Post https://0.0.0.0:443/apis/authorization.k8s.io/v1beta1/subjectaccessreviews: write tcp 1.1.1.1:2284-\u0026gt;0.0.0.0:443: write: broken pipe\") has prevented the request from succeeding",
            "reason": "DiscoveryFailed",
            "status": "True",
            "type": "NamespaceDeletionDiscoveryFailure"
        },
        {
            "lastTransitionTime": "2021-04-28T06:43:49Z",
            "message": "All legacy kube types successfully parsed",
            "reason": "ParsedGroupVersions",
            "status": "False",
            "type": "NamespaceDeletionGroupVersionParsingFailure"
        },
        {
            "lastTransitionTime": "2021-04-28T06:43:49Z",
            "message": "All content successfully deleted",
            "reason": "ContentDeleted",
            "status": "False",
            "type": "NamespaceDeletionContentFailure"
        }
    ],
    "phase": "Terminating"
}

}

to

    {
  "apiVersion": "v1",
  "kind": "Namespace",
  "metadata": {
    "annotations": {
      "kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration": "{\"apiVersion\":\"v1\",\"kind\":\"Namespace\",\"metadata\":{\"annotations\":{},\"name\":\"ambassador\"}}\n"
    },
    "creationTimestamp": "2021-01-07T18:23:28Z",
    "deletionTimestamp": "2021-04-28T06:43:41Z",
    "name": "ambassador",
    "resourceVersion": "14572382",
    "selfLink": "/api/v1/namespaces/ambassador",
    "uid": "xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx"
  },
  "spec": {
    "finalizers": []
  }
}

by deleting status and kubernetes inside finalizers

Now use the command and replace ambassador with your namespace

curl -k -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X PUT --data-binary @tmp.json http://127.0.0.1:8001/api/v1/namespaces/ambassador/finalize

you will see another json like before then run

then run the command

 kubectl get ns ambassador
Error from server (NotFound): namespaces "ambassador" not found

If it still says terminating or any other error make sure you format your json in a proper way and try the steps again.

0
6

There are a couple of things you can run. But what this usually means, is that the automatic deletion of namespace was not able to finish, and there is a process running that has to be manually deleted. To find this you can do these things:

Get all prossesse attached to the name space. If this does not result in anything move on to next suggestions

$ kubectl get all -n your-namespace

Some namespaces have apiserivces attached to them and it can be troublesome to delete. This can for that matter be whatever resources you want. Then you delete that resource if it finds anything

$ kubectl get apiservice|grep False

But the main takeaway, is that there might be some things that is not completly removed. So you can see what you initially had in that namespace, and then see what things is spun up with your YAMLs to see the processes up. Or you can start to google why wont service X be properly removed, and you will find things.

6
  1. Run the following command to view the namespaces that are stuck in the Terminating state:

    kubectl get namespaces

  2. Select a terminating namespace and view the contents of the namespace to find out the finalizer. Run the following command:

    kubectl get namespace -o yaml

  3. Your YAML contents might resemble the following output:

        apiVersion: v1
        kind: Namespace
        metadata:
           creationTimestamp: 2019-12-25T17:38:32Z
           deletionTimestamp: 2019-12-25T17:51:34Z
           name: <terminating-namespace>
           resourceVersion: "4779875"
           selfLink: /api/v1/namespaces/<terminating-namespace>
           uid: ******-****-****-****-fa1dfgerz5
         spec:
           finalizers:
           - kubernetes
         status:
           phase: Terminating
  1. Run the following command to create a temporary JSON file:

    kubectl get namespace -o json >tmp.json

  2. Edit your tmp.json file. Remove the kubernetes value from the finalizers field and save the file. Output would be like:

    {
        "apiVersion": "v1",
        "kind": "Namespace",
        "metadata": {
            "creationTimestamp": "2018-11-19T18:48:30Z",
            "deletionTimestamp": "2018-11-19T18:59:36Z",
            "name": "<terminating-namespace>",
            "resourceVersion": "1385077",
            "selfLink": "/api/v1/namespaces/<terminating-namespace>",
            "uid": "b50c9ea4-ec2b-11e8-a0be-fa163eeb47a5"
        },
        "spec": {
        },

        "status": {
            "phase": "Terminating"
        }
    }
  1. To set a temporary proxy IP and port, run the following command. Be sure to keep your terminal window open until you delete the stuck namespace:

    kubectl proxy

  2. Your proxy IP and port might resemble the following output:

    Starting to serve on 127.0.0.1:8001

  3. From a new terminal window, make an API call with your temporary proxy IP and port:

  curl -k -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X PUT --data-binary @tmp.json http://127.0.0.1:8001/api/v1/namespaces/your_terminating_namespace/finalize

Your output would be like:

    {
       "kind": "Namespace",
       "apiVersion": "v1",
       "metadata": {
         "name": "<terminating-namespace>",
         "selfLink": "/api/v1/namespaces/<terminating-namespace>/finalize",
         "uid": "b50c9ea4-ec2b-11e8-a0be-fa163eeb47a5",
         "resourceVersion": "1602981",
         "creationTimestamp": "2018-11-19T18:48:30Z",
         "deletionTimestamp": "2018-11-19T18:59:36Z"
       },
       "spec": {

       },
       "status": {
         "phase": "Terminating"
       }
    }
  1. The finalizer parameter is removed. Now verify that the terminating namespace is removed, run the following command:

    kubectl get namespaces

6

Edit: It is not recommended to remove finalizers. Correct approach would be:

  • Delete all the resources in the namespace.

Github issue link

My usual workspace is a small k8s cluster which I frequently destroy and rebuild it back, and that's why removing finalizers method works for me.

Original answer: I usually run into same problem.

This is what I do

kubectl get ns your-namespace -o json > ns-without-finalizers.json

Edit ns-without-finalizers.json. replace all finalizers with empty array.

Run kubectl proxy ( usually run it on another terminal )

Then curl this command

curl -X PUT http://localhost:8001/api/v1/namespaces/your-namespace/finalize -H "Content-Type: application/json" --data @ns-without-finalizers.json
6

For anyone looking for few commands for later version of Kubernetes, this helped me.

NAMESPACE=mynamespace
kubectl get namespace $NAMESPACE -o json | sed 's/"kubernetes"//' | kubectl replace --raw "/api/v1/namespaces/$NAMESPACE/finalize" -f -

Tested in Kubernetes v1.24.1

Note: the command replaces all kubernetes strings in the json, please use it with care

1
  • This replaces all "kubernetes" strings in the json. Looks scary to me.
    – guettli
    Sep 18, 2023 at 7:56
5

The only way I found to remove a "terminating" namespace is by deleting the entry inside the "finalizers" section. I've tried to --force delete it and to --grace-period=0 none of them worked, however, this method did:

on a command line display the info from the namespace:

$ kubectl get namespace your-rogue-namespace -o yaml

This will give you yaml output, look for a line that looks similar to this:

deletionTimestamp: 2018-09-17T13:00:10Z
  finalizers:
  - Whatever content it might be here...
  labels:

Then simply edit the namespace configuration and delete the items inside that finalizers container.

$ kubectl edit namespace your-rogue-namespace

This will open an editor (in my case VI), went over the line I wanted to delete and deleted it, I pressed the D key twice to delete the whole line.

Save it, quit your editor, and like magic. The rogue-namespace should be gone.

And to confirm it just:

$ kubectl get namespace your-rogue-namespace -o yaml
2
  • 3
    this short-circuits cleanup of resources associated with the namespace and leaves orphaned resources associated with that namespace Sep 18, 2018 at 0:27
  • it might be crashing/missing metrics API server or service catalogue API server, see answers from JordanLiggitt and AntonioGomezAlvarado Feb 4, 2019 at 9:42
5

If the namespace stuck in Terminating while the resources in that namespace have been already deleted, you can patch the finalizers of the namespace before deleting it:

kubectl patch ns ns_to_be_deleted -p '{"metadata":{"finalizers":null}}';

then

kubectl delete ns ns_to_be_deleted;

Edit:

Please check @Antonio Gomez Alvarado's Answer first. The root cause could be the metrics server that mentioned in that answer.

2

Completing the already great answer by nobar. If you deployed your cluster with Rancher there is a caveat.

Rancher deployments change EVERY api call, prepending /k8s/clusters/c-XXXXX/ to the URLs.

The id of the cluster on rancher (c-XXXXX) is something you can easily get from the Rancher UI, as it will be there on the URL.

Get cluster id

So after you get that cluster id c-xxxx, just do as nobar says, just changing the api call including that rancher bit.

(
NAMESPACE=your-rogue-namespace
kubectl proxy &
kubectl get namespace $NAMESPACE -o json |jq '.spec = {"finalizers":[]}' >temp.json
curl -k -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -X PUT --data-binary @temp.json \
  127.0.0.1:8001/k8s/clusters/c-XXXXX/api/v1/namespaces/$NAMESPACE/finalize
)
1

Something similar happened to me in my case it was pv & pvc , which I forcefully removed by setting finalizers to null. Check if you could do similar with ns

kubectl patch pvc <pvc-name> -p '{"metadata":{"finalizers":null}}'

For namespaces it'd be

kubectl patch ns <ns-name> -p '{"spec":{"finalizers":null}}'
1

Debugging a similar issue.

Two important things to consider:

1 ) Think twice before deleting finalizers from your namespace because there might be resources that you wouldn't want to automatically delete or at least understand what was deleted for troubleshooting.

2 ) Commands like kubectl api-resources --verbs=list might not give you resources that were created by external crds.


In my case:

I viewed my namespace real state (that was stuck on Terminating) with kubectl edit ns <ns-name> and under status -> conditions I saw that some external crds that I installed were failed to be deleted because they add a finalizers defined:

 - lastTransitionTime: "2021-06-14T11:14:47Z"
    message: 'Some content in the namespace has finalizers remaining: finalizer.stackinstall.crossplane.io
      in 1 resource instances, finalizer.stacks.crossplane.io in 1 resource instances'
    reason: SomeFinalizersRemain
    status: "True"
    type: NamespaceFinalizersRemaining
0
curl -k -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X PUT --data-binary @tmp.json 127.0.0.1:8001/k8s/clusters/c-mzplp/api/v1/namespaces/rook-ceph/finalize

This worked for me, the namespace is gone.

Detailed explanation can be found in the link https://github.com/rook/rook/blob/master/Documentation/ceph-teardown.md.

This happened when I interrupted kubernetes installation(Armory Minnaker). Then I proceeded to delete the namespace and reinstall it. I was stuck with pod in terminating status due to finalizers. I got the namespace into tmp.json, removed finalizers from tmp.json file and did the curl command. Once I get past this issue, I used scripts for uninstalling the cluster to remove the residues and did a reinstallation.

1
  • perhaps you would like to break down your URL and explain what is going on?
    – ximbal
    Jun 9, 2020 at 23:32
0
kubectl edit namespace ${stucked_namespace}

Then delete finalizers in vi mode and save.

It worked in my case.

0

Editing NS yaml manually didn't work for me, no error was thrown on editing but changes did not take effect.

This worked for me:

In one session:

kubectl proxy

in another shell:

kubectl get ns <rouge-ns> -o json | jq '.spec.finalizers=[]' | curl -X PUT http://localhost:8001/api/v1/namespaces/<rouge-ns>/finalize -H "Content-Type: application/json" --data @-

source: https://virtual-simon.co.uk/vsphere-kubernetes-force-deleting-stuck-terminating-namespaces-and-contexts/

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