/install knative-serving
Knative Serving
Use this skill for Knative Serving work on Kubernetes clusters. Prefer current cluster state over assumptions: inspect resources with kubectl and kn, then make the smallest manifest or command change that matches the user's deployment model.
Workflow
- Identify the scope: deploy/update, Deployment conversion, autoscaling, revision/traffic, networking, container runtime, or debugging.
- Check the cluster context before changing live resources:
kubectl config current-context kubectl get ns kubectl get ksvc,route,configuration,revision -A - Prefer
knfor fast operational changes and examples; prefer YAML pluskubectl applywhen the user needs reviewable declarative config. - For production manifests, keep all per-revision behavior under
spec.templateso Knative creates a new Revision for behavior-changing changes. - Validate with status, conditions, and traffic targets, not only Pods:
kn service describe \x3Cservice> -n \x3Cnamespace> kubectl get ksvc \x3Cservice> -n \x3Cnamespace> -o yaml kubectl get revision -n \x3Cnamespace> kubectl get route \x3Cservice> -n \x3Cnamespace> -o yaml
References
Read only the files needed for the task:
references/overview-and-crds.md: Serving resource model, CRD schema discovery, core objects, Serving API fields, and important labels/annotations.references/kn-cli.md:knCLI workflows for create, update, describe, revisions, traffic, domain, and service operations.references/autoscaling.md: KPA/HPA, metrics, concurrency, RPS target, scale-to-zero, scale bounds, scale windows/delays, and autoscaling annotations.references/container-settings.md: container image, ports, env, secrets/config, resources, probes, timeouts, volumes, private registries, multi-container, and queue-proxy implications.references/revisions-and-traffic.md: immutable Revisions, rollout, pinning, tagging, splitting, rollback, and garbage collection.references/networking.md: Route, ingress, external URL, cluster-local/private services, DomainMapping, default domains, TLS, ingress class, Kourier/Istio/Contour notes.references/observability.md: Serving metrics, queue-proxy and autoscaler signals, logs, tracing, and config-observability/config-logging.references/debugging.md: diagnosis flow, commands, condition interpretation, logs/events, and common error patterns.references/common-errors.md: quick lookup table for frequent Knative Serving failures and fixes.
Defaults
- Use
Service(ksvc) for normal workloads; reach for lower-level Route/Configuration only when the user explicitly needs them. - Treat annotations under
spec.template.metadata.annotationsas Revision-scoped unless the reference says otherwise. - Treat cluster-local visibility as a label on the Service/Route/Kubernetes Service unless the live installed version says otherwise.
- Do not list full CRD schemas in answers. Show how to inspect them with
kubectl explain,kubectl get crd, and OpenAPI output. - When autoscaling is involved, state whether the setting is global ConfigMap, Operator config, or per-Revision annotation/spec field.
- When debugging, follow the object chain: Service -> Route/Configuration -> Revision -> PodAutoscaler/ServerlessService -> Deployment/Pod -> ingress.
Safety
- Do not assume
kncan install Knative Serving or Eventing; use it for resource operations after Knative is installed. - Do not expose a private Service with DomainMapping unless the user explicitly wants that. A DomainMapping can make a private Service reachable through the mapped domain.
- Do not assume metrics/logging/tracing export is enabled. Check
config-observability,config-logging, and the cluster monitoring stack first. - Avoid setting low
containerConcurrencyas a generic fix. It can increase queueing, latency, and cold starts. - Do not mix KPA-only metrics with HPA-only metrics. KPA supports
concurrencyandrps; HPA handles CPU, memory, and custom metrics when configured. - For traffic changes, ensure traffic percentages sum to 100 before applying manifests or commands.
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install knative-serving - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/knative-serving - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is Knative Serving?
Use this skill when a task involves Knative Serving on Kubernetes, including designing or deploying serverless container workloads, converting Deployments to... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 60 downloads so far.
How do I install Knative Serving?
Run "/install knative-serving" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is Knative Serving free?
Yes, Knative Serving is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does Knative Serving support?
Knative Serving is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created Knative Serving?
It is built and maintained by wei (@wei840222); the current version is v1.0.1.