From https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/pod-lifecycle/#restart-policy:
A PodSpec has a restartPolicy
field with possible values Always
,
OnFailure
, and Never
. The default value is Always
. restartPolicy
applies to all Containers in the Pod.
In practice this means the following for Pods:
restartPolicy: Never
: if one container terminates then all other containers will keep running
restartPolicy: OnFailure
: if one container terminates in an error state then that container is restarted; if it terminates cleanly (completes) then the container is not restarted. In both cases the other containers keep running. If all containers terminate cleanly the Pod goes into Completed state and stays like that.
restartPolicy: Always
: if one container terminates in an error state then that container is restarted
However, you are most likely using a Deployment, which mandates restartPolicy: OnFailure
in the Pod template. This means that if a container terminates that containers will be restarted. It is not possible to have a container that only runs for a few minutes.
Depending on what you are trying to do initContainers
might be a solution.
Maybe experiment a little with a Pod like this:
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: busybox
spec:
restartPolicy: Always
containers:
- name: date
image: busybox
command: ["sh","-c","while date; do sleep 1; done"]
- name: sleep15
image: busybox
command: ["sh","-c","sleep 15; exit 1"]