--- weight: 10 --- The simplest, but not incredibly useful, example is likely deploying a bare pod. Which we can do with the `kubernetes.resources.pods` option: {{< source "default.nix" >}} Here, `example` is an arbitrary string which identifies the pod (just as `ex` identifies a container within the pod). {{< hint info >}} **NOTE** The format under {{< option "kubernetes.resources" true >}} largely mirrors that of the [Kubernetes API](https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/generated/kubernetes-api/v1.25/) which can generally be explored with `kubectl`; e.g. ```sh kubectl explain pod.spec.containers ``` However, our format uses the plural form and injects resource names where appropriate. {{< /hint >}} Create a json manifest with: ```sh nix eval -f . --json config.kubernetes.generated ``` which should output something like this: ```json { "apiVersion": "v1", "items": [ { "apiVersion": "v1", "kind": "Pod", "metadata": { "annotations": { "kubenix/k8s-version": "1.24", "kubenix/project-name": "kubenix" }, "labels": { "kubenix/hash": "6e6ccbb6787f9b600737f8882d2487eeef84af9f" }, "name": "example" }, "spec": { "containers": [ { "image": "nginx", "name": "ex" } ] } } ], "kind": "List", "labels": { "kubenix/hash": "6e6ccbb6787f9b600737f8882d2487eeef84af9f", "kubenix/k8s-version": "1.24", "kubenix/project-name": "kubenix" } } ```