Fix Pod Not Ready¶
Introduction¶
This guide explains fix pod not ready with practical kubectl commands, realistic output, and production-focused checks. Use this workflow when an application is failing and you need evidence before changing manifests.
Symptoms¶
You may see pods stuck in a waiting state, failed rollouts, 4xx or 5xx responses, missing endpoints, failed probes, denied API calls, or repeated events in the namespace.
Common Causes¶
Common causes include events, previous logs, probes, image pulls, resource limits, and rollout state. Always confirm with events and logs before editing the workload.
Step 1: Check Current State¶
kubectl get pods -n app -o wide
kubectl describe pod web-7d9f8c-abcde -n app
Expected output:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
web-7d9f8c-abcde 0/1 CrashLoopBackOff 6 8m
Step 2: Inspect Events and Logs¶
kubectl describe pod web-7d9f8c-abcde -n app
kubectl logs web-7d9f8c-abcde -n app --previous
Events show scheduler, kubelet, image pull, mount, and probe errors. Previous logs are critical when the container restarts quickly.
Step 3: Verify the Manifest or Runtime Setting¶
kubectl rollout status deployment/web -n app
kubectl get pod web-7d9f8c-abcde -n app -o yaml
Check selectors, image names, probes, resource limits, service accounts, volumes, and namespace references.
Step 4: Apply the Fix¶
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: web
namespace: app
spec:
replicas: 3
selector:
matchLabels:
app: web
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: web
spec:
containers:
- name: web
image: nginx:1.27
ports:
- containerPort: 80
Apply only the corrected field, then let the controller reconcile the desired state.
kubectl apply -f manifest.yaml
kubectl rollout status deployment/web -n app
Step 5: Confirm Recovery¶
kubectl get pods -n app
kubectl get events -n app --sort-by=.lastTimestamp
Common Mistakes¶
- Deleting pods before reading the events that explain why they failed.
- Changing probes, resources, images, and RBAC at the same time.
- Troubleshooting only the pod while ignoring the service, PVC, node, or service account.
Quick Checklist¶
- Check pod status and restart count.
- Read describe output and recent events.
- Inspect current and previous container logs.
- Verify dependent objects such as Secrets, ConfigMaps, PVCs, Services, and RBAC.
- Apply one fix and watch the rollout.
Related Guides¶
- kubectl Describe Pod
- kubectl Logs Previous Container
- Troubleshoot Kubernetes Events
- Kubernetes Pod Troubleshooting Checklist
Summary¶
Treat fix pod not ready as an evidence-driven debugging task. Events identify the failing layer, logs explain application behavior, and rollout checks prove the fix worked.