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Transform Kubernetes Management with Kube9

Kubernetes is powerful, but let’s be honest, managing it can feel like archaeology. You’re digging through YAML files, parsing terminal output, and trying to remember which cluster has which namespace. It’s functional, but it’s common to have a handful of IDE’s and editors for different scenarios, just to wind up back at the terminal anyway.

Kube9 is a new open source VS Code extension from Alto9 that transforms Kubernetes management from a command-line exercise into a visual, intuitive experience. Instead of memorizing `kubectl` commands and scrolling through YAML, you get a visual interface that makes cluster management feel natural.

Why Visual Matters

Not everyone thinks in YAML. Some developers are visual learners who understand relationships better when they can see them. Kube9 gives you:

You can edit YAML when you need to – it’s right there in a tab. But for viewing, organizing, and common operations, you get a visual interface that’s easier to scan and understand.

The Cluster Organizer

If you manage multiple clusters (and who doesn’t?), the Cluster Organizer is probably the feature you’ll use most. It lets you:

The default tree view shows everything from your kubeconfig. But with the Cluster Organizer, you can create views that match how you actually think about your infrastructure. It’s like having a custom dashboard for every project.

What Kube9 Does

Visual Cluster Navigation

Instead of typing `kubectl get pods -n production`, you get a tree view that shows:

Click through your cluster structure just like browsing files in VS Code.

Resource Management

View and manage resources with visual interfaces and YAML editing:

ArgoCD Integration

If you use ArgoCD for GitOps, Kube9 integrates seamlessly:

Developer-Friendly Features

Privacy and Security First

We built Kube9 with privacy as a core principle:

Your kubeconfig credentials stay on your machine. Always.

Getting Started

Installing Kube9 takes about 30 seconds:

  1. Open VS Code
  2. Go to Extensions (`Ctrl/Cmd + Shift + X`)
  3. Search for “Kube9”
  4. Click Install

That’s it. Kube9 automatically reads your kubeconfig and shows your clusters in the sidebar. No configuration needed.

Try It Today

Kube9 for VS Code is free, open source, and available now in the VS Code Marketplace. If you’re working with Kubernetes and using VS Code, give it a try. We think you’ll find it makes cluster management more visual, more organized, and more intuitive.

Install: Search “Kube9” in VS Code Extensions  

GitHub: github.com/alto9/kube9-vscode  

Documentation: alto9.github.io/kube9/vscode

Kube9 Home: www.kube9.io

Alto9 Home: www.alto9.com

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