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The Kubernetes Helm Architecture This document describes the Helm architecture at a high level. The Purpose of Helm Helm is a tool for managing Kubernetes packages called charts. Helm can do the following: Create new charts from scratch Package charts into chart archive (tgz) files Interact with chart repositories where charts are stored Install and uninstall charts into an existing Kubernetes clu
λ docker build . Sending build context to Docker daemon 2.048kB Step 1/4 : FROM alpine latest: Pulling from library/alpine ff3a5c916c92: Pull complete Digest: sha256:7df6db5aa61ae9480f52f0b3a06a140ab98d427f86d8d5de0bedab9b8df6b1c0 Status: Downloaded newer image for alpine:latest ---> 3fd9065eaf02 Step 2/4 : WORKDIR /work Removing intermediate container f0915c5abd00 ---> 30821123326c Step 3/4 : RUN
YAML Techniques Most of this guide has been focused on writing the template language. Here, we'll look at the YAML format. YAML has some useful features that we, as template authors, can use to make our templates less error prone and easier to read. Scalars and Collections According to the YAML spec, there are two types of collections, and many scalar types. The two types of collections are maps a
Template Functions and Pipelines So far, we've seen how to place information into a template. But that information is placed into the template unmodified. Sometimes we want to transform the supplied data in a way that makes it more usable to us. Let's start with a best practice: When injecting strings from the .Values object into the template, we ought to quote these strings. We can do that by cal
root@thor:~/mysql-basic-test# docker build . Sending build context to Docker daemon 2.048kB Step 1/3 : FROM debian:wheezy ---> c72c50c45f17 Step 2/3 : RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y mysql-server-5.5 ---> Using cache ---> 692cd7218986 Step 3/3 : RUN service mysql start ---> Running in fedd9ef25d69 Starting MySQL database server: mysqld . . . . . . . . . . . . . . failed! The command '/bin
Using Helm This guide explains the basics of using Helm (and Tiller) to manage packages on your Kubernetes cluster. It assumes that you have already installed the Helm client and the Tiller server (typically by helm init). If you are simply interested in running a few quick commands, you may wish to begin with the Quickstart Guide. This chapter covers the particulars of Helm commands, and explains
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Helm 2.8.0 is a feature release. This version of Helm now has support for Kubernetes 1.9 resources which includes support for the new apps/v1 workloads API, selector immutability, and rollingUpdate as the default update strategy for all workloads from the apps/v1 and extensions/v1beta2 APIs. This release contains a metric tonne of fixes and new features. We would like to take the time to thank eve
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