 How can I inspect the logs of my running pods? And when I say my pods, in fact, I mean the logs of my containers running inside my pods. Well, there's a really useful command for that called kubectl logs. Let's discover together how it works. So, I have here two running pods, okay? And what I can do is kubectl logs. And then I just need to paste the name of one of my pods that I want to inspect, okay? And that will give me the logs files of this pod. Okay, I can inspect that. Cool. What I also can do is type the same command followed by dash f that will follow my logs. That means it shows me the logs. But then if I do anything around this pod, I will see it here straight in my terminal. So, for instance, let's imagine that I want to log into my pod. So, let me do kubectl exec. There we go. We are. And now I do a code local post 8080. And here you can see the responses appearing, okay? So, kubectl is a really cool feature built into kubectl. But keep in mind that there are a lot of other tools. There's scale, but there's also another tool that I really like, which is called stern. Stern, you can just type the name of your deployment or pod, in this case myboot, okay? And that will show you again all the logs, but from all the pods that are named or that contains the name myboot. And for each different pod, different container, it will use a different color. So, here you can see yellow, but if I go back here, you can see this color is my other pod. So, stern is again another really valid option. That's all for me. Thank you. Thanks for watching. Don't forget to like this video and to subscribe to the channel.