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Follow the steps below to view the details of an individual cluster using the TKGI CLI.

  1. On the command line, run the following command to log in:

     tkgi login -a TKGI-API -u USERNAME -k 
    Where:

    • TKGI-API is the domain name for the TKGI API that you entered in Ops Manager > Tanzu Kubernetes Grid Integrated Edition > TKGI API > API Hostname (FQDN). For example, api.tkgi.example.com.
    • USERNAME is your user name.

      See Logging in to Tanzu Kubernetes Grid Integrated Edition for more information about the tkgi login command.

      Note: If your operator has configured Tanzu Kubernetes Grid Integrated Edition to use a SAML identity provider, you must include an additional SSO flag to use the above command. For information about the SSO flags, see the section for the above command in TKGI CLI. For information about configuring SAML, see Connecting Tanzu Kubernetes Grid Integrated Edition to a SAML Identity Provider

  2. Run the following command to view the details of an individual cluster:

     tkgi cluster CLUSTER-NAME 
    Replace CLUSTER-NAME with the unique name for your cluster. For example:
    $ tkgi cluster my-cluster

  3. Run the following command to view additional details of an individual cluster, including NSX-T network details and Kubernetes settings details:

     tkgi cluster CLUSTER-NAME –details 
    Replace CLUSTER-NAME with the unique name for your cluster. For example:
    $ tkgi cluster my-cluster –details

The following shows the sample output for an example Kubernetes cluster named my-cluster:

 $ tkgi cluster my-cluster –details TKGI Version:              1.9.0-build.1 Name:                     my-cluster K8s Version:              1.18.8 Plan Name:                small UUID:                     4b1a9b6d-3594-4cad-ad0f-22043fb26480 Last Action:              CREATE Last Action State:        succeeded Last Action Description:  Instance provisioning completed Kubernetes Master Host:   example-hostname Kubernetes Master Port:   8443 Worker Nodes:             3 Kubernetes Master IP(s):  10.197.100.130 Network Profile Name:

NSXT Network Details: Load Balancer Size (lb_size): “small” Nodes DNS Setting (nodes_dns): [“10.142.7.2”] Node IP addresses are routable [no-nat] (node_routable): false Nodes subnet prefix (node_subnet_prefix): 24 POD IP addresses are routable [no-nat] (pod_routable): false PODs subnet prefix (pod_subnet_prefix): 24 NS Group ID of master VMs (master_vms_nsgroup_id): "" Tier 0 Router identifier (t0_router_id): “1e8371ac-1718-4617-8734-3975c6cd373b” Floating IP Pool identifiers (fip_pool_ids): [“901341c7-2e14-49d0-a3c1-66748664a062”] Node IP block identifiers (node_ip_block_ids): [“c5f0eb13-9691-4170-a9cd-c988f336ebd2”] POD IP block identifiers (pod_ip_block_ids): [“fead2c9a-96e8-4c5f-98a3-e797f06bc8d4”] Kubernetes Settings Details: Set by Plan: Kubelet Node Drain timeout (mins) (kubelet-drain-timeout): 0 Kubelet Node Drain grace-period (seconds) (kubelet-drain-grace-period): 10 Kubelet Node Drain force (kubelet-drain-force): true Kubelet Node Drain force-node (kubelet-drain-force-node): false Kubelet Node Drain ignore-daemonsets (kubelet-drain-ignore-daemonsets): true Kubelet Node Drain delete-local-data (kubelet-drain-delete-local-data): true

The following image shows another example of tkgi cluster CLUSTER-NAME --details output with NSX-T details:

View NSX-T Network Details

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