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Getting Started with Kubeasy: Your First Challenge

Step-by-step tutorial to install the Kubeasy CLI, set up your local cluster, and complete your first Kubernetes challenge in under 10 minutes.

Paul BrissaudPaul Brissaud
3 min read
#beginner

Welcome to Kubeasy! In this guide, you'll go from zero to completing your first Kubernetes challenge in under 10 minutes. No prior Kubernetes experience required.


What is Kubeasy?

Kubeasy is an interactive platform designed to help developers master Kubernetes through practical, real-world problem-solving in isolated local environments. Rather than using browser-based simulations or multiple-choice quizzes, it provides actual Kubernetes scenarios that learners must diagnose and resolve using standard tools like kubectl.

Our philosophy is simple: learning by doing. You'll encounter realistic scenarios, make mistakes, debug issues, and build the muscle memory that makes Kubernetes intuitive.


Prerequisites

Before starting, make sure you have:

  • Docker Desktop (or Docker Engine on Linux) running
  • kubectl installed (installation guide)
  • A terminal (macOS Terminal, Windows Terminal, or any Linux shell)

  • Step 1: Install the Kubeasy CLI

    Download the CLI binary from npm :

    npm install -g @kubeasy-dev/kubeasy-cli 

    Step 2: Authenticate

    Create an API token from your profile on the Kubeasy website. Then authenticate locally:

    kubeasy login

    Follow the prompts to enter your token.


    Step 3: Set Up Your Local Environment

    Kubeasy uses Kind (Kubernetes IN Docker) to create a lightweight local cluster. Initialize your learning environment with:

    kubeasy setup

    This command will:

  • Create a Kind cluster
  • Install ArgoCD for declarative deployment of challenge manifests
  • Install Kyverno for policy enforcement
  • Configure your kubectl context
  • This is typically a one-time operation per machine. The cluster spins up in approximately 30 seconds.


    Step 4: Start Your First Challenge

    Now for the fun part! Let's start with the First Deployment challenge—a beginner-friendly introduction to Kubernetes Deployments.

    kubeasy challenge start first-deployment

    This command creates a dedicated namespace, applies the initial manifests through ArgoCD, and switches your kubectl context to that namespace. The challenge description explains the symptoms you'll observe.


    Step 5: Investigate and Solve

    Use standard Kubernetes tools to diagnose issues:

    kubectl get pods
    kubectl logs <pod-name>
    kubectl describe pod <pod-name>
    kubectl get events

    You have full access to modify resources, edit deployments, create RBAC configurations, and apply fixes—exactly as you would in production.

    Your objective for First Deployment:

  • Create a Deployment named web-server
  • Use the nginx:1.25 image
  • Ensure at least 1 replica is running
  • Here's a hint to get you started:

    kubectl create deployment web-server --image=nginx:1.25

    Verify your deployment:

    kubectl get pods

    Wait until the pod shows Running and 1/1 READY.


    Step 6: Submit Your Solution

    Once you've completed the challenge, submit your solution:

    kubeasy challenge submit first-deployment

    The CLI executes a series of checks defined in the challenge's configuration, including status conditions, log content searches, and more. Results upload to the platform for review.

    If any validation fails, the CLI will tell you what's missing so you can fix it.


    Other Useful Commands

    # View challenge details
    kubeasy challenge get <name>
    
    # Restart from initial state
    kubeasy challenge reset <name>
    
    # Remove all challenge resources
    kubeasy challenge clean <name>
    
    # List all available challenges
    kubeasy challenge list
    
    # List active challenges
    kubeasy challenge list --active

    What's Next?

    Congratulations! You've completed your first Kubeasy challenge. Here's some challenges you can try next :


    Troubleshooting

    Cluster won't start?

    Make sure Docker is running and you have at least 4GB of available RAM.

    Challenge stuck syncing?

    Try kubeasy challenge reset <name> to restart from initial state.

    Need help?

    Join our Discord community or check the documentation.


    Start Learning Kubernetes the Right Way

    Kubeasy turns the complexity of Kubernetes into manageable, hands-on challenges. No more endless documentation—just practical skills you can apply immediately.

    Ready for more challenges? Browse all challenges


    Have feedback on this guide? Let us know on GitHub.

    Written by

    Paul Brissaud

    Paul Brissaud

    Paul Brissaud is a DevOps / Platform Engineer and the creator of Kubeasy. He believes Kubernetes education is often too theoretical and that real understanding comes from hands-on, failure-driven learning.

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