Kubernetes also provides some hooks within the lifecycle of each container that can be used at setup and teardown time for containers. These are called container lifecycle hooks, and are defined for each container, rather than for the Pod overall. When you want to configure some additional functionality specific to the container when you have multiple containers per Pod, these can be extremely useful.
The two hooks you can define for each container are post-start and pre-stop. The post-start and pre-stop hooks are intended to be invoked at least once, but Kubernetes does not make any guarantees that these hooks will be invoked only once. This means while it is likely rare, the post-start or pre-stop hooks may be invoked more than once.
Neither of these hooks accept parameters, and are defined in the same fashion as a container’s run command. When...