The one side effect is that for the "kubectl help" commands a newline
is prepended to output, which will alter the yaml output.
Here we use dedent to format the code to match the output.
hack/update-generated-docs.sh has been run and the affected files have
been added.
Note: for describe.go we added a period to the end of an output message.
Automatic merge from submit-queue
Add support for 3rd party objects to kubectl
@deads2k @jlowdermilk
Instructions for playing around with this:
Run an apiserver with third party resources turned on (`--runtime-config=extensions/v1beta1=true,extensions/v1beta1/thirdpartyresources=true`)
Then you should be able to:
```
kubectl create -f rsrc.json
```
```json
{
"metadata": {
"name": "foo.company.com"
},
"apiVersion": "extensions/v1beta1",
"kind": "ThirdPartyResource",
"versions": [
{
"apiGroup": "group",
"name": "v1"
},
{
"apiGroup": "group",
"name": "v2"
}
]
}
```
Once that is done, you should be able to:
```
curl http://<server>/apis/company.com/v1/foos
```
```
curl -X POST -d @${HOME}/foo.json http://localhost:8080/apis/company.com/v1/namespaces/default/foos
```
```json
{
"kind": "Foo",
"apiVersion": "company.com/v1",
"metadata": {
"name": "baz"
},
"someField": "hello world",
"otherField": 1
}
```
After this PR, you can do:
```
kubectl create -f foo.json
```
```
kubectl get foos
```
etc.
reqs:
- the kubectl cmd must support the -f | --filename flag
- the kubectl cmd must support visiting a dir one level deep,
or using more than one resource