Event Query
Kubernetes events provide insight into what is happening inside a cluster, based on which KubeSphere adds longer historical query and aggregation capabilities, and also supports event query for tenant isolation.
This guide demonstrates how you can do multi-level, fine-grained event queries to track the status of your components.
Prerequisites
KubeSphere Events needs to be enabled.
Query Events
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The event query function is available for all users. Log in to the console with any account, hover over in the lower-right corner and select Resource Event Search.
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In the displayed dialog box, you can view the number of events that the user has permission to view.
Note
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KubeSphere supports event queries on each cluster separately if you have enabled the multi-cluster feature. You can click on the left of the search box and select a target cluster.
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KubeSphere stores events for the last seven days by default.
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You can click the search box and enter a condition to search for events by message, workspace, project, resource type, resource name, reason, category, or time range (for example, use
Time Range:Last 10 minutes
to search for events within the last 10 minutes). -
Click any one of the results from the list, and you can see raw information of it. It is convenient for developers in terms of debugging and analysis.
Note
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