## Running your first containers in Kubernetes Ok, you've run one of the [getting started guides](../docs/getting-started-guides/) and you have successfully turned up a Kubernetes cluster. Now what? This guide will help you get oriented to Kubernetes and running your first containers on the cluster. ### Running a container (simple version) From this point onwards, it is assumed that ```kubectl``` is on your path from one of the getting started guides. The `kubectl` line below spins up two containers running [Nginx](http://nginx.org/en/) running on port 80: ```bash kubectl run-container my-nginx --image=nginx --replicas=2 --port=80 ``` Once the pods are created, you can list them to see what is up and running: ```bash kubectl get pods ``` You can also see the replication controller that was created: ```bash kubectl get rc ``` To stop the two replicated containers, stop the replication controller: ```bash kubectl stop rc my-nginx ``` ### Exposing your pods to the internet. On some platforms (for example Google Compute Engine) the kubectl command can integrate with your cloud provider to add a public IP address for the pods, to do this run: ```bash kubectl expose rc my-nginx --port=80 --create-external-load-balancer ``` This should print the service that has been created, and map an external IP address to the service. ### Next: Configuration files Most people will eventually want to use declarative configuration files for creating/modifying their applications. A [simplified introduction](simple-yaml.md) is given in a different document. [![Analytics](https://kubernetes-site.appspot.com/UA-36037335-10/GitHub/examples/simple-nginx.md?pixel)]()