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arkade - The Open Source Marketplace For Kubernetes

arkade is how developers install the latest versions of their favourite tools and Kubernetes apps.

With arkade get, you'll have kubectl, kind, terraform, and jq on your machine faster than you can type apt-get install/brew update.

arkade logo

Sponsor this build GoDoc License: MIT Downloads

With over 100 CLIs and 55 Kubernetes apps (charts, manifests, installers) available for Kubernetes, gone are the days of contending with dozens of README files just to set up a development stack with the usual suspects like ingress-nginx, Postgres and cert-manager.

Support arkade 👋

Arkade is built to save you time at work so you can focus and get productive quickly.

Sponsor this project

You can support Alex's work on arkade via GitHub Sponsors.

Or get a copy of his eBook on Go so you can learn how to build tools like k3sup, arkade and OpenFaaS for yourself:

Buy Everyday Go

Should you try arkade?

I was setting up a new dev environment yesterday. Kind, helm, kustomize, kubectl, all this stuff. My take is - arkade is highly underappreciated. I'd spend an hour in the past to install such tools. With arkade it was under ten minutes.

Ivan Velichko, SRE @ Booking.com

Before arkade whenever I used to spin up an instance, I used to go to multiple sites and download the binary. Arkade is one of my favourite tools.

Kumar Anurag - Cloud Native Enthusiast

It's hard to use K8s without Arkade these days. My team at @lftechnology absolutely loves it.

@Yankexe

arkade is really a great tool to install CLI tools, and system packages, check this blog on how to get started with arkade it's a time saver.

Kiran Satya Raj

This is real magic get #kubernetes up and going in a second; then launch #openfaas a free better than lambda solution that uses docker images.

Greg runs Fullstack JS and is a JavaScript developer

for getting the basics installed, nothing beats arkade it can install commonly used cli tools like kubectl locally for you, as well as common k8s pkgs like ingress-nginx or portainer

@arghzero

I finally got around to installing Arkade, super simple! quicker to install this than the argocli standalone commands, but there are lots of handy little tools in there. also, the neat little part about arkade, not only does it make it easy to install a ton of different apps and CLIs you can also get the info on them as well pretty quickly.

Michael Cade @ Kasten

You've to install latest and greatest tools for your daily @kubernetesio tasks? No problem, check out #arkade the open source #kubernetes marketplace 👍

Thorsten Hans - Cloud Native consultant

If you want to install quickly a new tool in your dev env or in your k8s cluster you can use the Arkade (https://github.com/alexellis/arkade) easy and quick you should try out! Ps. I contribute to this project 🥰

Carlos Panato - Staff engineer @ Mattermost

arkade is the 'brew install' of Kubernetes. You can install and run an application in a single command. Finally! https://github.com/alexellis/arkade / by Alex Ellis

John Arundel - Cloud consultant, author

Getting arkade

# Note: you can also run without `sudo` and move the binary yourself
curl -sLS https://get.arkade.dev | sudo sh

arkade --help
ark --help  # a handy alias

# Windows users with Git Bash
curl -sLS https://get.arkade.dev | sh

Windows users: arkade requires bash to be available, therefore Windows users should install and use Git Bash

An alias of ark is created at installation time, so you can also run ark install APP

Usage overview

Arkade can be used to install Kubernetes apps or to download CLI tools.

  • arkade install - install a Kubernetes app
  • arkade info - see the post installation screen for a Kubernetes app
  • arkade get - download a CLI tool
  • arkade update - update arkade itself

An arkade "app" could represent a helm chart such as openfaas/faas-netes, a custom CLI installer such as istioctl or a set of static manifests (i.e. MetalLB).

An arkade "tool" is a CLI that can be downloaded for your operating system. Arkade downloads statically-linked binaries from their upstream locations on GitHub or a the vendor's chosen URL such as with kubectl and terraform.

Did you know? Arkade users run arkade get both on their local workstations, and on their CI runners such as GitHub Actions or Jenkins.

Download CLI tools with arkade

arkade downloads the correct version of a CLI for your OS and CPU.

With automatic detection of: Windows / MacOS / Linux / Intel / ARM.

# Download a binary release of a tool

arkade get kubectl

# Download a specific version of that tool
arkade get [email protected]

# Download multiple tools at once
arkade get kubectl \
  helm \
  istioctl

# Download multiple specific versions
arkade get [email protected] \
  [email protected]

# Override machine os/arch
arkade get faas-cli \
  --arch arm64 \
  --os linux

# Override machine os/arch
arkade get faas-cli \
  --arch arm64 \
  --os darwin

This is a time saver compared to searching for download pages every time you need a tool.

Think of arkade get TOOL as a doing for CLIs, what arkade install does for helm.

Adding a new tool for download is as simple as editing tools.go.

Click here for the full catalog of CLIs

Install System Packages

System packages are tools designed for installation on a Linux workstation, server or CI runner.

These are a more limited group of applications designed for quick setup, scripting and CI, and generally do not fit into the arkade get pattern, due to additional installation steps or system configuration.

# Show packages
arkade system install

# Show package flags
arkade system install go --help

# Install latest version of Go to /usr/local/bin/go
arkade system install go

# Install Go 1.18 to /tmp/go
arkade system install go \
  --version 1.18 \
  --path /tmp/

# Install containerd for ARM64, 32-bit ARM or x86_64
# with systemd enabled
arkade install system containerd \
  --systemd

Run the following to see what's available arkade system install:

  actions-runner  Install GitHub Actions Runner
  cni             Install CNI plugins
  containerd      Install containerd
  firecracker     Install Firecracker
  go              Install Go
  node            Install Node.js
  prometheus      Install Prometheus
  tc-redirect-tap Install tc-redirect-tap
  registry        Install Open Source Registry implementation for storing and distributing container images using the OCI Distribution Specification

The initial set of system apps is now complete, learn more in the original proposal: Feature: system packages for Linux servers, CI and workstations #654

Install CLIs during CI with GitHub Actions

There are two GitHub Actions available for arkade

    - uses: alexellis/setup-arkade@v2
    - name: Install kubectl & Helm
      run: arkade get 
        kubectl \
        helm

Example downloading faas-cli (specific version) and kubectl (latest), putting them into the PATH automatically, and executing one of them in a subsequent step.

    - uses: alexellis/setup-arkade@v2
    - uses: alexellis/arkade-get@master
      with:
        kubectl: latest
        faas-cli: 0.14.10
    - name: check for faas-cli
      run: |
        faas-cli version

Verify and upgrade images in Helm charts

There are two commands built into arkade designed for software vendors and open source maintainers.

  • arkade helm chart upgrade - run this command to scan for container images and update them automatically by querying a remote registry.
  • arkade helm chart verify - after changing the contents of a values.yaml or docker-compose.yaml file, this command will check each image exists on a remote registry

Whilst end-users may use a GitOps-style tool to deploy charts and update their versions, maintainers need to make conscious decisions about when and which images to change within a Helm chart or compose file.

These two features are used by OpenFaaS Ltd on projects and products like OpenFaaS CE/Pro (Serverless platform) and faasd (docker-compose file).

Upgrade images within a Helm chart

With the command arkade chart upgrade you can upgrade the image tags of a Helm chart from within a values.yaml file to the latest available semantically versioned image.

Original YAML file:

stan:
  # Image used for nats deployment when using async with NATS-Streaming.
  image: nats-streaming:0.24.6

Running the command with --verbose prints the upgraded tags to stderr, allowing the output to stdout to be piped to a file.

arkade chart upgrade -f \
  ~/go/src/github.com/openfaas/faas-netes/chart/openfaas/values.yaml \
  --verbose

2023/01/03 10:12:47 Verifying images in: /home/alex/go/src/github.com/openfaas/faas-netes/chart/openfaas/values.yaml
2023/01/03 10:12:47 Found 18 images
2023/01/03 10:12:48 [natsio/prometheus-nats-exporter] 0.8.0 => 0.10.1
2023/01/03 10:12:50 [nats-streaming] 0.24.6 => 0.25.2
2023/01/03 10:12:52 [prom/prometheus] v2.38.0 => 2.41.0
2023/01/03 10:12:54 [prom/alertmanager] v0.24.0 => 0.25.0
2023/01/03 10:12:54 [nats] 2.9.2 => 2.9.10

Updated YAML file printed to console:

stan:
  # Image used for nats deployment when using async with NATS-Streaming.
  image: nats-streaming:0.25.2

Write the updated image tags back to the file:

arkade chart upgrade -f \
  ~/go/src/github.com/openfaas/faasd/docker-compose.yaml \
  --write

Supported:

  • image: - at the top level
  • component.image: i.e. one level of nesting
  • Docker Hub and GitHub Container Registry

Not supported yet:

  • Custom strings that don't match the word "image": clientImage:
  • Split fields for the image and tag name i.e. image.name and image.tag
  • Third-level nesting openfaas.gateway.image

Verify images within a helm chart

The arkade chart verify command validates that all images specified are accessible on a remote registry and takes a values.yaml file as its input.

Successful checking of a chart with image: ghcr.io/openfaas/cron-connector:TAG:

arkade chart verify  -f ~/go/src/github.com/openfaas/faas-netes/chart/cron-connector/values.yaml

echo $?
0

There is an exit code of zero and no output when the check passed.

You can pass --verbose to see a detailed view of what's happening.

Checking of nested components, where two of the images do not exist autoscaler.image and dashboard.image:

arkade chart verify  -f ~/go/src/github.com/openfaas/faas-netes/chart/openfaas/values.yamlecho $?
2 images are missing in /Users/alex/go/src/github.com/openfaas/faas-netes/chart/openfaas/values.yaml

COMPONENT           IMAGE
dashboard           ghcr.io/openfaasltd/openfaas-dashboard:0.9.8
autoscaler          ghcr.io/openfaasltd/autoscaler:0.2.5

Error: verifying failed

echo $?
1

Supported:

  • image: - at the top level
  • component.image: i.e. one level of nesting

Not supported yet:

  • Custom strings that don't match the word "image": clientImage:
  • Split fields for the image and tag name i.e. image.name and image.tag
  • Third-level nesting openfaas.gateway.image

Installing apps with arkade

You'll need a Kubernetes cluster to arkade. Unlike cloud-based marketplaces, arkade doesn't have any special pre-requirements and can be used with any private or public cluster.

Create a Kubernetes cluster

If you have Docker installed, then you can install Kubernetes using KinD in a matter of moments:

arkade get [email protected] \
  [email protected]

kind create cluster

You can also download k3d k3s in the same way with arkade get k3d.

Install a Kubernetes app

No need to worry about whether you're installing to Intel or ARM architecture, the correct values will be set for you automatically.

arkade install openfaas \
  --gateways 2 \
  --load-balancer false

The post-installation message shows you how to connect. And whenever you want to see those details again, just run arkade info openfaas.

There's even more options you can chose with arkade install openfaas --help - the various flags you see map to settings from the helm chart README, that you'd usually have to look up and set via a values.yaml file.

If there's something missing from the list of flags that you need, arkade also supports --set for any arkade app that uses helm. Note that not every app uses helm.

Remember how awkward it was last time you installed the Kubernetes dashboard? And how you could never remember the command to get the token to log in?

arkade install kubernetes-dashboard

Forgot your token? arkade info kubernetes-dashboard

This is an example of an arkade app that uses static YAML manifests instead of helm.

Prefer Portainer? Just run: arkade install portainer

Uninstall an app

Run arkade uninstall or arkade delete for more information on how to remove applications from a Kubernetes cluster.

Reduce the repetition

Normally up to a dozen commands (including finding and downloading helm), now just one. No searching for the correct CRD to apply, no trying to install helm, no trying to find the correct helm repo to add:

arkade install cert-manager

Other common tools:

arkade install ingress-nginx

arkade install metrics-server

Say goodbye to values.yaml and hello to flags

We use strongly typed Go CLI flags, so that you can run --help instead of trawling through countless Helm chart README files to find the correct --set combination for what you want.

arkade install ingress-nginx --help

Install ingress-nginx. This app can be installed with Host networking for
cases where an external LB is not available. please see the --host-mode
flag and the ingress-nginx docs for more info

Usage:
  arkade install ingress-nginx [flags]

Aliases:
  ingress-nginx, nginx-ingress

Examples:
  arkade install ingress-nginx --namespace default

Flags:
  -h, --help               help for ingress-nginx
      --host-mode          If we should install ingress-nginx in host mode.
  -n, --namespace string   The namespace used for installation (default "default")
      --update-repo        Update the helm repo (default true)

Override with --set

You can also set helm overrides, for apps which use helm via --set

ark install openfaas --set faasIdler.dryRun=false

After installation, an info message will be printed with help for usage, you can get back to this at any time via:

arkade info <NAME>

Compounding apps

Apps are easier to discover and install than helm chart which involve many more manual steps, however when you compound apps together, they really save you time.

Get a self-hosted TLS registry with authentication

Here's how you can get a self-hosted Docker registry with TLS and authentication in just 5 commands on an empty cluster:

Here's how you would bootstrap OpenFaaS with TLS:

arkade install ingress-nginx
arkade install cert-manager
arkade install openfaas
arkade install openfaas-ingress \
  --email [email protected] \
  --domain openfaas.example.com

And here's what it looks like for a private Docker registry with authentication enabled:

arkade install ingress-nginx
arkade install cert-manager
arkade install docker-registry
arkade install docker-registry-ingress \
  --email [email protected] \
  --domain reg.example.com

Get a public IP for a private cluster and your IngressController

And if you're running on a private cloud, on-premises or on your laptop, you can simply add the inlets-operator using inlets to get a secure TCP tunnel and a public IP address.

arkade install inlets-operator \
  --access-token $HOME/digitalocean-token \
  --region lon1 \
  --provider digitalocean

This makes your cluster behave like it was on a public cloud and LoadBalancer IPs go from Pending to a real, functioning IP.

Explore the apps

You can view the various apps available with arkade install / --help, more are available when you run the command yourself.

arkade install --help
ark --help

Examples:
  arkade install
  arkade install openfaas --helm3 --gateways=2
  arkade install inlets-operator --token-file $HOME/do-token

See the full catalog of apps: See all apps

Community & contributing

Tutorials & community blog posts

Watch a video walk-through by Alex Ellis

Install Apps and CLIs to Kubernetes

Featured tutorials

Official blog posts

Community posts

Suggest a new app

To suggest a new app, please check past issues and raise an issue for it. Think also whether your app suggestion would be a good candidate for a Sponsored App.

Sponsored apps

You can now propose your project or product as a Sponsored App. Sponsored Apps work just like any other app that we've curated, however they will have a note next to them in the app description (sponsored) and a link to your chosen site upon installation. An app sponsorship can be purchased for a minimum of 12 months and includes free development of the Sponsored App, with ongoing support via GitHub for the Sponsored App for the duration only. Ongoing support will be limited to a set amount of hours per month.

When your sponsorship expires the Sponsored App will be removed from arkade, and the ongoing support will cease. A Sponsored App can be renewed 60 days prior to expiration subject to a separate agreement and payment.

Example:

arkade VENDOR install PRODUCT
arkade acmeco install dashboard

Contact OpenFaas Ltd to find out how you can have your Sponsored App added to arkade.

FAQ

How does arkade compare to helm?

In the same way that brew uses git and Makefiles to compile applications for your Mac, arkade uses upstream helm charts and kubectl to install applications to your Kubernetes cluster. arkade exposes strongly-typed flags for the various popular options for helm charts, and enables easier discovery through arkade install --help and arkade install APP --help.

Is arkade suitable for production use?

If you consider helm suitable, and kubectl then yes, arkade by definition uses those tools and the upstream artifacts of OSS projects.

Do you want to run arkade in a CI or CD pipeline? Go ahead.

What is in scope for arkade get?

Generally speaking, tools that are used with the various arkade apps or with Kubernetes are in scope. If you want to propose a tool, raise a GitHub issue.

What about package management? arkade get provides a faster alternative to package managers like apt and brew, you're free to use either or both at the same time.

Automatic download of tools

When required, tools, CLIs, and the helm binaries are downloaded and extracted to $HOME/.arkade.

If installing a tool which uses helm3, arkade will check for a cached version and use that, otherwise it will download it on demand.

Did you accidentally run arkade as root? Running as root is not required, and will mean your KUBECONFIG environment variable will be ignored. You can revert this using the notes on release 0.1.18.

Improving the code or fixing an issue

Before contributing code, please see the CONTRIBUTING guide. Note that arkade uses the same guide as inlets.dev.

Both Issues and PRs have their own templates. Please fill out the whole template.

All commits must be signed-off as part of the Developer Certificate of Origin (DCO)

Join us on Slack

Join #contributors at slack.openfaas.io

License

MIT

Catalog of apps and CLIs

An app is software or an add-on for your Kubernetes cluster.

A CLI or "tool" is a command line tool that you run directly on your own workstation or a CI runner.

Catalog of Apps

TOOL DESCRIPTION
docker-registry-ingress Install registry ingress with TLS
inlets-operator Install inlets-operator
kuma Install Kuma
kube-state-metrics Install kube-state-metrics
cert-manager Install cert-manager
docker-registry Install a Docker registry
rabbitmq Install rabbitmq
linkerd Install linkerd
redis Install redis
gitlab Install GitLab
falco Install Falco
registry-creds Install registry-creds
qemu-static Install qemu-user-static
metrics-server Install metrics-server
postgresql Install postgresql
ingress-nginx Install ingress-nginx
jenkins Install jenkins
nginx-inc Install nginx-inc for OpenFaaS
metallb-arp Install MetalLB in L2 (ARP) mode
loki Install Loki for monitoring and tracing
nfs-provisioner Install nfs subdir external provisioner
mqtt-connector Install mqtt-connector for OpenFaaS
kanister Install kanister for application-level data management
openfaas-ingress Install openfaas ingress with TLS
chart Install the specified helm chart
cron-connector Install cron-connector for OpenFaaS
minio Install minio
openfaas Install openfaas
kafka Install Confluent Platform Kafka
kubernetes-dashboard Install kubernetes-dashboard
OSM Install osm
inlets-tcp-client Install inlets PRO TCP client
kong-ingress Install kong-ingress for OpenFaaS
sealed-secret Install sealed-secrets
cassandra Install cassandra
waypoint Install Waypoint
opa-gatekeeper Install Open Policy Agent (OPA) Gatekeeper
mongodb Install mongodb
grafana Install grafana
kube-image-prefetch Install kube-image-prefetch
consul-connect Install Consul Service Mesh
argocd Install argocd
prometheus Install Prometheus for monitoring
istio Install istio
crossplane Install Crossplane
cockroachdb Install CockroachDB
openfaas-loki Install Loki-OpenFaaS and Configure Loki logs provider for OpenFaaS
portainer Install portainer to visualise and manage containers
tekton Install Tekton pipelines and dashboard
traefik2 Install traefik2
kafka-connector Install kafka-connector for OpenFaaS
gitea Install gitea
influxdb Install influxdb
nats-connector Install OpenFaaS connector for NATS
kyverno Install Kyverno
vault Install Vault

There are 56 apps that you can install on your cluster.

Note to contributors, run arkade install --print-table to generate this list

Catalog of CLIs

TOOL DESCRIPTION
argocd Declarative, GitOps continuous delivery tool for Kubernetes.
argocd-autopilot An opinionated way of installing Argo-CD and managing GitOps repositories.
arkade Portable marketplace for downloading your favourite devops CLIs and installing helm charts, with a single command.
autok3s Run Rancher Lab's lightweight Kubernetes distribution k3s everywhere.
buildx Docker CLI plugin for extended build capabilities with BuildKit.
bun Bun is an incredibly fast JavaScript runtime, bundler, transpiler and package manager – all in one.
butane Translates human readable Butane Configs into machine readable Ignition Configs
caddy Caddy is an extensible server platform that uses TLS by default
cilium CLI to install, manage & troubleshoot Kubernetes clusters running Cilium.
civo CLI for interacting with your Civo resources.
clusterawsadm Kubernetes Cluster API Provider AWS Management Utility
clusterctl The clusterctl CLI tool handles the lifecycle of a Cluster API management cluster
conftest Write tests against structured configuration data using the Open Policy Agent Rego query language
cosign Container Signing, Verification and Storage in an OCI registry.
cr Hosting Helm Charts via GitHub Pages and Releases
crane crane is a tool for interacting with remote images and registries
croc Easily and securely send things from one computer to another
dagger A portable devkit for CI/CD pipelines.
devspace Automate your deployment workflow with DevSpace and develop software directly inside Kubernetes.
dive A tool for exploring each layer in a docker image
docker-compose Define and run multi-container applications with Docker.
doctl Official command line interface for the DigitalOcean API.
eksctl Amazon EKS Kubernetes cluster management
eksctl-anywhere Run Amazon EKS on your own infrastructure
faas-cli Official CLI for OpenFaaS.
firectl Command-line tool that lets you run arbitrary Firecracker MicroVMs
flux Continuous Delivery solution for Kubernetes powered by GitOps Toolkit.
flyctl Command line tools for fly.io services
fzf General-purpose command-line fuzzy finder
gh GitHub’s official command line tool.
golangci-lint Go linters aggregator.
gomplate A flexible commandline tool for template rendering. Supports lots of local and remote datasources.
goreleaser Deliver Go binaries as fast and easily as possible
grafana-agent Grafana Agent is a telemetry collector for sending metrics, logs, and trace data to the opinionated Grafana observability stack.
grype A vulnerability scanner for container images and filesystems
hadolint A smarter Dockerfile linter that helps you build best practice Docker images
helm The Kubernetes Package Manager: Think of it like apt/yum/homebrew for Kubernetes.
helmfile Deploy Kubernetes Helm Charts
hey Load testing tool
hostctl Dev tool to manage /etc/hosts like a pro!
hubble CLI for network, service & security observability for Kubernetes clusters running Cilium.
hugo Static HTML and CSS website generator.
influx InfluxDB’s command line interface (influx) is an interactive shell for the HTTP API.
inlets-pro Cloud Native Tunnel for HTTP and TCP traffic.
inletsctl Automates the task of creating an exit-server (tunnel server) on public cloud infrastructure.
istioctl Service Mesh to establish a programmable, application-aware network using the Envoy service proxy.
jq jq is a lightweight and flexible command-line JSON processor
just Just a command runner
k0s Zero Friction Kubernetes
k0sctl A bootstrapping and management tool for k0s clusters
k10multicluster Multi-cluster support for K10.
k10tools Tools for evaluating and debugging K10.
k3d Helper to run Rancher Lab's k3s in Docker.
k3s Lightweight Kubernetes
k3sup Bootstrap Kubernetes with k3s over SSH < 1 min.
k9s Provides a terminal UI to interact with your Kubernetes clusters.
kail Kubernetes log viewer.
kanctl Framework for application-level data management on Kubernetes.
kgctl A CLI to manage Kilo, a multi-cloud network overlay built on WireGuard and designed for Kubernetes.
kim Build container images inside of Kubernetes. (Experimental)
kind Run local Kubernetes clusters using Docker container nodes.
kops Production Grade K8s Installation, Upgrades, and Management.
krew Package manager for kubectl plugins.
kube-bench Checks whether Kubernetes is deployed securely by running the checks documented in the CIS Kubernetes Benchmark.
kubebuilder Framework for building Kubernetes APIs using custom resource definitions (CRDs).
kubecm Easier management of kubeconfig.
kubeconform A FAST Kubernetes manifests validator, with support for Custom Resources
kubectl Run commands against Kubernetes clusters
kubectx Faster way to switch between clusters.
kubens Switch between Kubernetes namespaces smoothly.
kubescape kubescape is the first tool for testing if Kubernetes is deployed securely as defined in Kubernetes Hardening Guidance by to NSA and CISA
kubeseal A Kubernetes controller and tool for one-way encrypted Secrets
kubestr Kubestr discovers, validates and evaluates your Kubernetes storage options.
kubetail Bash script to tail Kubernetes logs from multiple pods at the same time.
kubeval Validate your Kubernetes configuration files, supports multiple Kubernetes versions
kumactl kumactl is a CLI to interact with Kuma and its data
kustomize Customization of kubernetes YAML configurations
lazygit A simple terminal UI for git commands.
linkerd2 Ultralight, security-first service mesh for Kubernetes.
mc MinIO Client is a replacement for ls, cp, mkdir, diff and rsync commands for filesystems and object storage.
metal Official Equinix Metal CLI
minikube Runs the latest stable release of Kubernetes, with support for standard Kubernetes features.
mixctl A tiny TCP load-balancer.
mkcert A simple zero-config tool to make locally trusted development certificates with any names you'd like.
nats Utility to interact with and manage NATS.
nats-server Cloud native message bus and queue server
nerdctl Docker-compatible CLI for containerd, with support for Compose
nova Find outdated or deprecated Helm charts running in your cluster.
oh-my-posh A prompt theme engine for any shell that can display kubernetes information.
opa General-purpose policy engine that enables unified, context-aware policy enforcement across the entire stack.
operator-sdk Operator SDK is a tool for scaffolding and generating code for building Kubernetes operators
osm Open Service Mesh uniformly manages, secures, and gets out-of-the-box observability features.
pack Build apps using Cloud Native Buildpacks.
packer Build identical machine images for multiple platforms from a single source configuration.
polaris Run checks to ensure Kubernetes pods and controllers are configured using best practices.
popeye Scans live Kubernetes cluster and reports potential issues with deployed resources and configurations.
porter With Porter you can package your application artifact, tools, etc. as a bundle that can distribute and install.
promtool Prometheus rule tester and debugging utility
rekor-cli Secure Supply Chain - Transparency Log
rpk Kafka compatible streaming platform for mission critical workloads.
run-job Run a Kubernetes Job and get the logs when it's done.
scaleway-cli Scaleway CLI is a tool to help you pilot your Scaleway infrastructure directly from your terminal.
sops Simple and flexible tool for managing secrets
stern Multi pod and container log tailing for Kubernetes.
syft CLI tool and library for generating a Software Bill of Materials from container images and filesystems
talosctl The command-line tool for managing Talos Linux OS.
tctl Temporal CLI.
terraform Infrastructure as Code for major cloud providers.
terragrunt Terragrunt is a thin wrapper for Terraform that provides extra tools for working with multiple Terraform modules
terrascan Detect compliance and security violations across Infrastructure as Code.
tfsec Security scanner for your Terraform code
tilt A multi-service dev environment for teams on Kubernetes.
tkn A CLI for interacting with Tekton.
trivy Vulnerability Scanner for Containers and other Artifacts, Suitable for CI.
vagrant Tool for building and distributing development environments.
vault A tool for secrets management, encryption as a service, and privileged access management.
vcluster Create fully functional virtual Kubernetes clusters - Each vcluster runs inside a namespace of the underlying k8s cluster.
viddy A modern watch command. Time machine and pager etc.
waypoint Easy application deployment for Kubernetes and Amazon ECS
yq Portable command-line YAML processor.
There are 120 tools, use arkade get NAME to download one.

Note to contributors, run arkade get --output markdown to generate this list

Packages

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Languages

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