--- id: kubectl title: Kubectl Context sidebar_label: Kubectl --- ## What Display the currently active Kubernetes context name and namespace name. ## Sample Configuration ```json { "type": "kubectl", "style": "powerline", "powerline_symbol": "\uE0B0", "foreground": "#000000", "background": "#ebcc34", "template": " \uFD31 {{.Context}}{{if .Namespace}} :: {{.Namespace}}{{end}} " } ``` ## Properties | Name | Type | Description | | ------------------ | --------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `display_error` | `boolean` | show the error context when failing to retrieve the kubectl information - defaults to `false` | | `parse_kubeconfig` | `boolean` | parse kubeconfig files instead of calling out to kubectl to improve performance - defaults to `false` | ## Template ([info][templates]) :::note default template ```template {{ .Context }}{{ if .Namespace }} :: {{ .Namespace }}{{ end }} ``` ::: ### Properties | Name | Type | Description | | ------------ | -------- | ------------------------------------- | | `.Context` | `string` | the current kubectl context | | `.Namespace` | `string` | the current kubectl context namespace | | `.User` | `string` | the current kubectl context user | | `.Cluster` | `string` | the current kubectl context cluster | ## Tips It is common for the Kubernetes "default" namespace to be used when no namespace is provided. If you want your prompt to render an empty current namespace using the word "default", you can use something like this for the template: `{{.Context}} :: {{if .Namespace}}{{.Namespace}}{{else}}default{{end}}` [templates]: /docs/configuration/templates