I'm encountering some really weird behaviour while attempting to switch contexts using kubectl
.
My config file declares two contexts; one points to an in-house cluster, while the other points to an Amazon EKS cluster.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Config
clusters:
- cluster:
certificate-authority-data: <..>
server: <..>
name: in-house
- cluster:
certificate-authority-data: <..>
server: <..>
name: eks
contexts:
- context:
cluster: in-house
user: divesh-in-house
name: in-house-context
- context:
cluster: eks
user: divesh-eks
name: eks-context
current-context: in-house-context
preferences: {}
users:
- name: divesh-eks
user:
exec:
apiVersion: client.authentication.k8s.io/v1alpha1
command: aws-iam-authenticator
args:
- "token"
- "-i"
- "eks"
env: null
- name: divesh-in-house
user:
client-certificate-data: <..>
client-key-data: <..>
I'm also using the aws-iam-authenticator
to authenticate to the EKS cluster.
My problem is this - as long as I work with the in-house cluster, everything works fine. But, when I execute kubectl config use-context eks-context
, I observe the following behaviour.
- Any operation I try to perform on the cluster (say,
kubectl get pods -n production
) shows me aPlease enter Username:
prompt. I assumed theaws-iam-authenticator
should have managed the authentication for me. I can confirm that running the authenticator manually (aws-iam-authenticator token -i eks
) works fine for me. Executing
kubectl config view
omits thedivesh-eks
user, so the output looks likeusers: - name: divesh-eks user: {}
Switching back to the in-house cluster by xecuting
kubectl config use-context in-house-context
modifies my config file and deletes thedivesh-eks-user
, so the config file now containsusers: - name: divesh-eks user: {}
My colleagues don't seem to face this problem.
Thoughts?