--- --- {% capture overview %} This page shows how to define environment variables when you run a container in a Kubernetes Pod. {% endcapture %} {% capture prerequisites %} {% include task-tutorial-prereqs.md %} {% endcapture %} {% capture steps %} ### Defining an environment variable for a container When you create a Pod, you can set environment variables for the containers that run in the Pod. To set environment variables, include the `env` field in the configuration file. In this exercise, you create a Pod that runs one container. The configuration file for the Pod defines an environment variable with name `DEMO_GREETING` and value `"Hello from the environment"`. Here is the configuration file for the Pod: {% include code.html language="yaml" file="envars.yaml" ghlink="/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/envars.yaml" %} 1. Create a Pod based on the YAML configuration file: kubectl create -f http://k8s.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/envars.yaml 1. List the running Pods: kubectl get pods The output is similar to this: NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE envar-demo 1/1 Running 0 9s 1. Get a shell to the container running in your Pod: kubectl exec -it envar-demo -- /bin/bash 1. In your shell, run the `printenv` command to list the environment variables. root@envar-demo:/# printenv The output is similar to this: NODE_VERSION=4.4.2 EXAMPLE_SERVICE_PORT_8080_TCP_ADDR=10.3.245.237 HOSTNAME=envar-demo ... DEMO_GREETING=Hello from the environment 1. To exit the shell, enter `exit`. {% endcapture %} {% capture whatsnext %} * Learn more about [environment variables](/docs/user-guide/environment-guide/). * Learn about [using secrets as environment variables](/docs/user-guide/secrets/#using-secrets-as-environment-variables). * See [EnvVarSource](/docs/api-reference/v1/definitions/#_v1_envvarsource). {% endcapture %} {% include templates/task.md %}