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To access the Kubernetes API [from a Pod](../../docs/user-guide/accessing-the-cluster.md#accessing-the-api-from-a-pod) one of the solution is to run `kubectl proxy` in a so-called sidecar container within the Pod. To do this, you need to package `kubectl` in a container. It is useful when service accounts are being used for accessing the API and the old no-auth KUBERNETES_RO service is not available. Since all containers in a Pod share the same network namespace, containers will be able to reach the API on localhost.
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To access the Kubernetes API [from a Pod](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/cluster-administration/proxies/) one of the solution is to run `kubectl proxy` in a so-called sidecar container within the Pod. To do this, you need to package `kubectl` in a container. It is useful when service accounts are being used for accessing the API and the old no-auth KUBERNETES_RO service is not available. Since all containers in a Pod share the same network namespace, containers will be able to reach the API on localhost.
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This example contains a [Dockerfile](Dockerfile) and [Makefile](Makefile) for packaging up `kubectl` into
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a container and pushing the resulting container image on the Google Container Registry. You can modify the Makefile to push to a different registry if needed.
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