Fabric8 Kubernetes Client 7.1 is now available!
On behalf of the Fabric8
team and everyone who has contributed, I'm happy to announce that the Fabric8 Kubernetes Client 7.1.0
has been
released and is now available from
Maven Central 🎉.
This marks the seventh major release of the Fabric8 Kubernetes Client, bringing numerous new features, bug fixes, and improvements while keeping the breaking changes minimal. To assist you with the transition, we've prepared a migration guide to help you update your code to this new version.
Thanks to all of you who have contributed with issue reports, pull requests, feedback, and spreading the word with blogs, videos, comments, and so on. We really appreciate your help, keep it up!
What's new?
Without further ado, let's have a look at the most significant updates:
- Kubernetes model types updated to v1.32
- 📖 Added Javadoc to all the generated classes
- 🐛 Many other bug fixes and minor improvements
You can find the full changelog for this version in our GitHub release page.
Be sure to check out the migration guide for a smooth upgrade.
Kubernetes model types updated to v1.32
The Java types for the Kubernetes API have been updated to the latest v1.32 (Penelope) Kubernetes version.
We didn't add the latest model types in v7.0.0 to avoid having to many breaking changes in a single release. We are now adding the types introduced both in v1.31 and v1.32 in this release.
Note
Please note that you can still access newer Kubernetes clusters with older versions of the Fabric8 client.
The client provides a GenericKubernetesResources class to interact with resources that are not yet supported by the client. We do recommend to always use the latest version of the client to benefit from the latest features and bug fixes, but it's not mandatory.
Using this release
If your project is based on Maven, you just need to add the Fabric8 Kubernetes Client to your Maven dependencies:
<dependency>
<groupId>io.fabric8</groupId>
<artifactId>kubernetes-client</artifactId>
<version>7.1.0</version>
</dependency>
If your project is based on Gradle, you just need to add the Fabric8 Kubernetes Client to your Gradle dependencies:
dependencies {
api "io.fabric8:kubernetes-client:7.1.0"
}
Once your project is ready, you can create a new instance of the client to perform operations. In the following code snippet, I show you how to instantiate the client and retrieve a list of Pods:
try (KubernetesClient client = new KubernetesClientBuilder().build()) {
client.pods().list().getItems().forEach(p -> System.out.println(p.getMetadata().getName()));
}
How can you help?
If you're interested in helping out and are a first-time contributor, check out the "good first issue" tag in the issue repository. We've tagged extremely easy issues so that you can get started contributing to Open Source.
We're also excited to read articles and posts mentioning our project and sharing the user experience. Giving a star to the project, and spreading the word in general, helps us reach more users and broaden the feedback. Feedback is the only way to improve.
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