366

Upon looking at the docs, there is an API call to delete a single pod, but is there a way to delete all pods in all namespaces?

20 Answers 20

617

There is no command to do exactly what you asked.

Here are some close matches.

Be careful before running any of these commands. Make sure you are connected to the right cluster, if you use multiple clusters. Consider running. kubectl config view first.

You can delete all the pods in a single namespace with this command:

kubectl delete --all pods --namespace=foo

You can also delete all deployments in namespace which will delete all pods attached with the deployments corresponding to the namespace

kubectl delete --all deployments --namespace=foo

You can delete all namespaces and every object in every namespace (but not un-namespaced objects, like nodes and some events) with this command:

kubectl delete --all namespaces

However, the latter command is probably not something you want to do, since it will delete things in the kube-system namespace, which will make your cluster not usable.

This command will delete all the namespaces except kube-system, which might be useful:

for each in $(kubectl get ns -o jsonpath="{.items[*].metadata.name}" | grep -v kube-system);
do
  kubectl delete ns $each
done
11
  • 4
    With the current version of k8s, the command "kubectl delete --all namespaces" does not delete the system stuff anymore... It says e.g.: namespaces "default" is forbidden: this namespace may not be deleted Apr 7, 2018 at 9:33
  • Does this delete the deployment or just the pods? Aug 31, 2018 at 1:07
  • 3
    kubectl delete pods --all --all-namespaces seems to work sometimes (not sure what causes it to work in some environments and not in others). It works well from my bastion host but not from laptop. Both running debian and both running the same version of kubectl (cluster version 1.13)
    – Patrick W
    Oct 24, 2019 at 20:37
  • 3
    kube-system, kube-public and default will not be deleted with kubectl delete --all namespaces Sep 30, 2021 at 19:01
  • 1
    @antoineMoPa added warning per your suggestion.
    – Eric Tune
    Oct 2, 2021 at 0:13
142
kubectl delete daemonsets,replicasets,services,deployments,pods,rc,ingress --all --all-namespaces

to get rid of them pesky replication controllers too.

5
  • 4
    This is wrong. This only deletes in the current namespace.
    – PleaseHelp
    Nov 28, 2018 at 18:39
  • Add the -n flag, but sorry that's for one pod at a time and not all at once
    – grbonk
    Mar 15, 2019 at 17:31
  • 2
    You are missing ing to also delete ingresses
    – Druska
    May 29, 2019 at 18:10
  • 3
    you might want to add "statefulset" as well ( if applicable ). Otherwise it will keep forking new pods even after you run above command!
    – buch11
    Jul 9, 2019 at 4:35
  • Also remove apiservice else you end up with namespaces locked in the Terminating state because some apiserivces are attached to them. cf. stackoverflow.com/questions/52369247/…
    – noraj
    Aug 25, 2022 at 16:53
82

You can simply run

kubectl delete all --all --all-namespaces
  • The first all means the common resource kinds (pods, replicasets, deployments, ...)

    • kubectl get all == kubectl get pods,rs,deployments, ...
  • The second --all means to select all resources of the selected kinds


Note that all does not include:

  • non namespaced resourced (e.g., clusterrolebindings, clusterroles, ...)
  • configmaps
  • rolebindings
  • roles
  • secrets
  • ...

In order to clean up perfectly,

  • you could use other tools (e.g., Helm, Kustomize, ...)
  • you could use a namespace.
  • you could use labels when you create resources.
4
  • 4
    This is the perfect solution! Aug 25, 2020 at 10:58
  • This is a super killer !
    – JAN
    Dec 15, 2020 at 11:04
  • This answer should be voted! Works like a charm!
    – lqi
    Aug 5, 2021 at 19:02
  • This is awesome. It also does not remove the default and kube-* namespaces!
    – diviquery
    Feb 3 at 0:39
17

You just need sed to do this:

kubectl get pods --no-headers=true --all-namespaces |sed -r 's/(\S+)\s+(\S+).*/kubectl --namespace \1 delete pod \2/e'

Explains:

  1. use command kubectl get pods --all-namespaces to get the list of all pods in all namespaces.
  2. use --no-headers=true option to hide the headers.
  3. use s command of sed to fetch the first two words, which represent namespace and pod's name respectively, then assemble the delete command using them.
  4. the final delete command is just like: kubectl --namespace kube-system delete pod heapster-eq3yw.
  5. use the e modifier of s command to execute the command assembled above, which will do the actual delete works.

To avoid delete pods in kube-system namespace, just need to add grep -v kube-system to exclude kube-system namespace before the sed command.

3
  • You can also just drop --all-namespaces if you don't want to delete pods in the kube-system namespace
    – ianstarz
    Jan 3, 2018 at 22:39
  • What will be the command to delete only few pod? Example: I had spin 20 Pod and now wish to keep just 1.
    – Jason
    Mar 23, 2018 at 2:15
  • Your sed didn't work on the Mac, but it worked in principle. May 21, 2021 at 15:35
6

I tried commands from listed answers here but pods were stuck in terminating state.
I found below command to delete all pods from particular namespace if stuck in terminating state or you are not able to delete it then you can delete pods forcefully.

kubectl delete pods --all --grace-period=0 --force --namespace namespace

Hope it might be useful to someone.

5

K8s completely works on the fundamental of the namespace. if you like to release all the resource related to specified namespace.

you can use the below mentioned :

kubectl delete namespace k8sdemo-app
5

steps to delete pv:

  1. delete all deployment and pods or resources related to that PV

     kubectl delete --all deployment -n namespace
    
     kubectl delete --all pod -n namespace
    
  2. edit pv

     kubectl edit pv pv_name  -n namespace
    
     remove kubernetes.io/pv-protection
    
  3. delete pv

     kubectl delete pv pv_name  -n namespace
    
1
  • What is a pv? Will be useful to add a abbreviation in the answer to make it more informative.
    – diviquery
    Feb 3 at 0:39
3

Delete all PODs in all Namespace only (restart deployment)

 kubectl get pod -A -o yaml | kubectl delete -f -
3

You can use kubectl delete pods -l dev-lead!=carisa or what label you have.

2

Here is a one-liner that can be extended with grep to filter by name.

kubectl get pods -o jsonpath="{.items[*].metadata.name}" | \
tr " " "\n" | \
xargs -i -P 0 kubectl delete pods {}
1
  • kubectl get pods --selector=app="${DEPLOYMENT_NAME}" -o=jsonpath='{.items[*].metadata.name}' | tr " " "\n" | xargs -n 1 kubectl delete pod
    – Janux
    Apr 22, 2021 at 16:49
2
kubectl delete po,ing,svc,pv,pvc,sc,ep,rc,deploy,replicaset,daemonset --all -A
1
2

One line command to delete all pods in all namespaces.

kubectl get ns -o=custom-columns=Namespace:.metadata.name --no-headers | xargs -n1 kubectl delete pods --all -n
1

#Forcefully complete prune or delete. Assuming foo is our namespace

kubectl delete --all pods --namespace=foo --force

#To keep watch on their removal from the list

watch kubectl get pods -n foo

0

If you already have pods which are recreated, think to delete all deployments first

kubectl delete -n *NAMESPACE deployment *DEPLOYMENT

Just replace the NAMSPACE and the DEPLOYMENT to corresponding ones, you can get all deployments information by the following command

kubectl get deployments --all-namespaces
0

Kubectl bulk (bulk-action on krew) plugin may be useful for you, it gives you bulk operations on selected resources. This is the command for deleting pods

 ' kubectl bulk pods -n namespace delete '

You could check details in this

0

I create a python code to delete all in namespace

delall.py

import json,sys,os;

obj=json.load(sys.stdin);
for item in obj["items"]:
        os.system("kubectl delete " + item["kind"] + "/" +item["metadata"]["name"] + " -n yournamespace")

and then

kubectl get all -n kong -o json | python delall.py
0

If you have multiple pod which are crashing or error and you want to delete them

kubectl delete pods --all -n | gep

0

It was hinted at above, but I just thought I would helpfully point out that the shortcut for "--all-namespaces" is "-A" that's with a capital A. HTH somebody. I've opened a PR to have this helpful hint added to the official Kubernetes Cheat Sheet.

0

If you want to delete pods in all namespaces just to have them restarted and you are aware that some of them will be recreated, I like the following for loop:

for i in $(kubectl get pods -A | awk '{print $1}' | uniq | grep -V NAMESPACE); do kubectl delete --all pods -n $i; done
0

if you have hpa, then scale down.

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