To deploy and manage applications on Kubernetes, you’ll use the Kubernetes command-line tool, [kubectl](kubectl/kubectl.md). It lets you inspect your cluster resources, create, delete, and update components, and much more. You will use it to look at your new cluster and bring up example apps.
In order for kubectl to find and access the Kubernetes cluster, it needs a [kubeconfig file](kubeconfig-file.md), which is created automatically when creating a cluster using kube-up.sh (see the [getting started guides](../../docs/getting-started-guides/) for more about creating clusters). If you need access to a cluster you didn’t create, see the [Sharing Cluster Access document](sharing-clusters.md).
If you used `./cluster/kube-up.sh` to deploy your Kubernetes cluster, kubectl should already be locally configured.
By default, kubectl configuration lives at `~/.kube/config`.
If your cluster was deployed by other means (e.g. a [getting started guide](../getting-started-guides/README.md)) your kubectl client will typically be configured during that process. If for some reason your kubectl client is not yet configured, check out [kubeconfig-file.md](kubeconfig-file.md).