Helm install: Difference between revisions

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# [[#Packaged_Chart|tgz packaged chart on the local filesystem]]
# [[#Packaged_Chart|tgz packaged chart on the local filesystem]]
# [[#URL|Absolute URL of a chart archive in a remote repository]]
# [[#URL|Absolute URL of a chart archive in a remote repository]]
# [[]]
# [[#Using_an_Explicit_Repository_URL_with_--repo|Chart reference in a remote repository]]
# [[#Using_a_Repository_Prefix|Chart is present in a locally cached repository, and specified by its chart name and repository prefix]]
# [[#Using_a_Repository_Prefix|Chart is present in a locally cached repository, and specified by its chart name and repository prefix]]



Revision as of 20:32, 16 December 2019

External

Internal

Overview


Revised for Helm 3


helm install installs a chart archive and creates a release:

helm install <release-name> <chart> [options]

The release name must be specified explicitly, and it must be the first argument. If it should be generated, --generate-name must be used instead of the release name. Charts may come from different sources.

Chart Sources

There are five types of chart sources:

  1. Unpacked charts on the local filesystem
  2. tgz packaged chart on the local filesystem
  3. Absolute URL of a chart archive in a remote repository
  4. Chart reference in a remote repository
  5. Chart is present in a locally cached repository, and specified by its chart name and repository prefix

Path to an Unpacked Chart

The chart argument of the install command can be an unpacked local chart directory. The directory name must be identical with the chart name specified in Chart.yaml).

helm install simplest ./playground/helm/simplest

Path to a Packaged Chart

helm install simplest ./simplest-1.0.0.tgz

Charts can be packaged with helm package command.

Absolute URL

The absolute URL of a chart can be used as such:

helm install something https://example.com/charts/something-1.0.0.tgz

The version is built into the name of the chart, this is the default Helm versioning convention.

Chart Reference

A chart available in a chart repository can be specified by a chart reference (which is the same thing as the chart name) when installed. There are two ways to specify a chart reference:

Using an Explicit Repository URL with --repo

A repository URL can be specified in-line in the install command line with --repo, without being previously added with helm repo add:

helm install --repo https://example.com/charts/ mynginx nginx

Using a Repository Prefix

helm install postgresql example/postgresql

Note that the "example" is a name of a repository that has been previously added locally with helm repo add. If no other version specification is provided, the latest stable version of the chart will be installed. A specific version can be requested with --version.

helm install and Dependencies

If the chart has dependencies, they must be present in the charts/ subdirectory at the time of the installation. helm install does not manage dependencies, helm dependency does. helm install performs some sanity checks, such as comparing the content of requirements.yaml with the content of the charts/ subdirectory and failing if requirements.yaml contains dependencies that are not in charts/. However, if a dependency is present in charts/ but not in requirements.yaml, it will be installed. For more details on dependencies and how they work, see:

How Helm Dependencies Work

TODO: --dependency-update.

Overriding Default Configuration or Providing New Cofiguration

-f|--values

Default configuration can be overridden or new configuration can be specified with:

helm install -f|--values <configuration-overrides-file.yaml> <chart name>

The -f|--values flag can be specified multiple time on the command line, and the rightmost value will take precedence. For more details on Helm configuration see:

Helm Configuration

--set-file

TODO: Clarify use cases and file content syntax.

For more details on Helm configuration see:

Helm Configuration

--set, --set--string

Individual configuration options can be specified with --set or --set-string.

helm install --set size=10 <chart name>

--set can be specified multiple times. If specified multiple time for the same value, the priority will be given to the last (right-most) set specified. For more details on overriding or specifying configuration see:

Helm Configuration

Overriding Tags and Conditions

Use --set to override default tag and condition values at installation time.

Options

--generate-name

Generate a release name:

helm install --generate-name <chart>

If used, the user-supplied name must be omitted from the command line, and a name based on the chart name will be generated. If the chart is named "simplest", the generated name is similar to "simplest-1-1575057340".

--dry-run

In this mode, the installation is simulated, without actually modifying anything on the Kubernetes cluster. Instead of installing the chart, the rendered template are sent to stdout so they can be inspected. Note that in this mode, it is not guaranteed that Kubernetes cluster will accept the generated manifest.

helm install --dry-run ...

--dry-run can be combined with --debug for more information:

helm install --dry-run --debug ...

--debug

helm install --debug ...

The --debug flag displays:

--verify

If --verify is used, the chart must have a provenance file, and the provenance file must pass all verification steps.

--atomic

Installation process purges chart on fail. The --wait flag will be set automatically if --atomic is used.

--version

Specify the exact chart version to install. If this is not specified, the latest version is installed.

--dependency-update

Run helm dependency update before installing the chart. TODO: more research here.

--name-template

Specify template used to name the release.

--output

Prints the output in the specified format. Allowed values: table, json, yaml (default table).

--wait

If set, Helm will wait until all Pods, PVCs, Services, and minimum number of Pods of a Deployment, StatefulSet, or ReplicaSet are in a ready state before marking the release as successful. It will wait for as long as --timeout.

--timeout

The time to wait for any individual Kubernetes operation. The default value is 5 minutes.