# Suspicious pods ![crates.io](https://img.shields.io/crates/v/suspicious-pods.svg) Suspicious pods is a very simple tool, which does a very simple task: print a list of pods in your Kubernetes cluster that might not be working correctly, along with a reason on why that pod is considered suspicious. Example: ``` $ suspicious-pods --help suspicious-pods 1.2.0 Prints a list of k8s pods that might not be working correctly USAGE: suspicious-pods.exe [FLAGS] FLAGS: --all-namespaces Set this flag to scan all namespaces in the cluster -h, --help Prints help information -V, --version Prints version information ARGS: The namespace you want to scan [default: default] $ suspicious-pods fluentd-aggregator-0/fluentd-aggregator Restarted 6 times. Last exit code: 1. (Error) fluentd-dgjm8/fluentd Waiting: PodInitializing jaeger-es-index-cleaner-120860-jd7b4/jaeger-es-index-cleaner Waiting: ImagePullBackOff jaeger-operator-5545d554cb-mf5zt/jaeger-operator Restarted 3 times. Last exit code: 137. (OOMKilled) thanos-store-gateway-0 Stuck on init container: wait-for-prometheus ``` This is useful in big deployments, when you have a large number of pods and you just want to get a quick glimpse of what might be failing in your cluster. ## Installation ### Option 1: Precompiled binaries Head to the [release page](https://github.com/edrevo/suspicious-pods/releases) and download your binary. There are binaries for Windows, Linux and MacOS. On Windows, you need to have OpenSSL installed on your machine. You can install it through [vcpkg](https://github.com/Microsoft/vcpkg) ### Option 2: Cargo Install [rustup](https://rustup.rs/) and run `cargo install suspicious-pods`. If you are on Windows, you need to have OpenSSL installed on your machine through [vcpkg](https://github.com/Microsoft/vcpkg) and set the environment variable `VCPKGRS_DYNAMIC=1`. ## Feedback Feedback and contributions are welcome! Please open an issue or a PR.