Installing Apps on Kubernetes with Helm 3
Traducciones al EspañolEstamos traduciendo nuestros guías y tutoriales al Español. Es posible que usted esté viendo una traducción generada automáticamente. Estamos trabajando con traductores profesionales para verificar las traducciones de nuestro sitio web. Este proyecto es un trabajo en curso.
What is Helm?
Helm is a tool that assists with installing and managing applications on Kubernetes clusters. It is often referred to as “the package manager for Kubernetes,” and it provides functions that are similar to a package manager for an operating system:
Helm prescribes a common format and directory structure for packaging your Kubernetes resources, known as a Helm chart.
Helm provides a public repository of charts for popular software. You can also retrieve charts from third-party repositories, author and contribute your own charts to someone else’s repository, or run your own chart repository.
The Helm client software offers commands for: listing and searching for charts by keyword, installing applications to your cluster from charts, upgrading those applications, removing applications, and other management functions.
New for Helm 3
Here are the biggest changes for Helm 3. For a complete list and more details, see the FAQ.
The most notable change in Helm 3 was the removal of Tiller. With role-based access controls (RBAC) enabled by default in Kubernetes 1.6+, Tiller became unnecessary and was removed.
Upgrading a chart is better than ever. Helm 3 introduces a 3-way merge patch, an improvement over Helm 2’s 2-way approach. Helm is now able to consider the old manifest, the current state, and the new manifest, instead of just the most recent manifest and the proposed changes. The 3-way merge patch helps to ensure that a user can roll back changes regardless of how they’re applied.
Release names in Helm 3 are scoped to the namespace and have a
sh.helm.release.v1
prefix.Secrets are used as the default storage driver for releases.
The Go import path has changed from
k8s.io/helm
tohelm.sh/helm/v3
.requirements.yaml
has been folded intoChart.yaml
as thedependencies
field.Helm 3 now supports Library charts. These are shared by other charts and are intended to be reused to avoid redundancy.
Helm 3 has moved to XDG Base Directory Specification. This means instead of Helm 2’s
$HELM_HOME
location, you will find information stored in the following:XDG_CACHE_HOME
XDG_CONFIG_HOME
XDG_DATA_HOME
Helm Hub - Helm 3 does not come with chart repositories loaded out of the box. Instead there is now a central hub for charts called Helm Hub.
Migrating from Helm 2 to Helm 3
Helm has provided a plugin to migrate your projects from Helm 2 to Helm 3 called helm-2to3. This plugin works in three stages. First it migrates the configuration, then the release, then it cleans up the configuration, release data, and Tiller.
Charts
The components of a Kubernetes application–deployments, services, ingresses, and other objects–are listed in manifest files (in the YAML file format). Kubernetes does not tell you how you should organize those files, though the Kubernetes documentation does offer a general set of best practices.
Helm charts are the software packaging format for Helm. A chart specifies a file and directory structure that you follow when packaging your manifests. The structure looks as follows:
chart-name/
Chart.yaml
LICENSE
README.md
values.yaml
charts/
crds/
templates/
templates/NOTES.txt
File or Directory | Description |
---|---|
Chart.yaml | General information about the chart, including the chart name, a version number, and a description. Charts can be of two types, application or library. Set this with the type field. Application is the default. You can also set a chart to be deprecated with the optional deprecated field. Note the apiVersion field for Helm 3 will be v2. v1 charts can still be installed by Helm 3 but the dependencies field is located in a separate requirements.yaml file for v1 charts. Note also that the appVersion field is different from the version field, where version references the chart version and appVersion references the application version. |
LICENSE | A plain-text file with licensing information for the chart and for the applications installed by the chart. Optional. |
README.md | A Markdown file with instructions that a user of a chart may want to know when installing and using the chart, including a description of the app that the chart installs and the template values that can be set by the user. Optional. |
templates/NOTES.txt | A plain-text file which will print to a user’s terminal when they install the chart. This text can be used to display post-installation instructions or other information that a user may want to know. Optional. |
charts/ | A directory which stores chart dependencies that you manually copy into your project, instead of linking to them from the Chart.yaml file’s dependencies field. |
values.yaml | Default values for the variables in your manifests’ templates. |
templates/ | Your Kubernetes manifests are stored in the templates/ directory. Helm will interpret your manifests using the Go templating language before applying them to your cluster. You can use the template language to insert variables into your manifests, and users of your chart will be able to enter their own values for those variables. |
Custom Resource Definitions (CRDS) | In Helm 3 CRDS are a special type of global object and are installed first. They should be placed in the crds/ directory inside of the chart. You can have multiple CRDs in the same file as long as they are separated by YAML start and end markers. Note, these are only installed once and will not be upgraded or rolled back. Additionally, deleting a CRD deletes all of that CRD’s contents across all namespaces in the cluster. Therefore, Helm does not do this. You can do it manually, carefully. Alternatively, you can skip with the --skip-crds option. |
Releases
When you tell Helm to install a chart, you can specify variable values to be inserted into the chart’s manifest templates. Helm will then compile those templates into manifests that can be applied to your cluster. When it does this, it creates a new release.
You can install a chart to the same cluster more than once. Each time you tell Helm to install a chart, it creates another release for that chart. A release can be upgraded when a new version of a chart is available, or even when you just want to supply new variable values to the chart. Helm tracks each upgrade to your release, and it allows you to roll back an upgrade. A release can be easily deleted from your cluster, and you can even roll back release deletions when configured to do so in advanced.
Helm Client
The Helm client software issues commands to your cluster. You run the client software on your computer, in your CI/CD environment, or anywhere else you’d like.
Before You Begin
Install the Kubernetes CLI (
kubectl
) on your computer, if it is not already.You should have a Kubernetes cluster running prior to starting this guide. One quick way to get a cluster up is with Linode’s Kubernetes Engine. This guide’s examples only require a cluster with one worker node. We recommend that you create cluster nodes that are at the Linode 4GB tier (g6-standard-2) or higher. This guide also assumes that your cluster has role-based access control (RBAC) enabled. This feature became available in Kubernetes 1.6 and later.
Important The k8s-alpha CLI is deprecated. On March 31st, 2020, it will be removed from the linode-cli. After March 31, 2020, you will no longer be able to create or manage clusters using the k8s-alpha CLI plugin.
However, you will still be able to create and manage these clusters using Terraform. The Terraform module used is a public project officially supported by Linode, and is currently used to power the k8s-alpha CLI.
Other alternatives for creating and managing clusters include:
- The Linode Kubernetes Engine (LKE), which creates clusters managed by Linode.
- Rancher, which provides a graphical user interface for managing clusters.
Note This guide’s example instructions will also result in the creation of a Block Storage Volume and a NodeBalancer, which are also billable resources. If you do not want to keep using the example application after you finish reviewing your guide, make sure to delete these resources afterward.You should also make sure that your Kubernetes CLI is using the right cluster context. Run the
get-contexts
subcommand to check:kubectl config get-contexts
You can set kubectl to use a certain cluster context with the
use-context
subcommand and the cluster name that was previously output from theget-contexts
subcommand:kubectl config use-context your-cluster-name
It is beneficial to have a registered domain name for this guide’s example app, but it is not required.
Install Helm
Install the Helm Client
Install the Helm client software on your computer:
Linux - Run the client installer script that Helm provides:
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/helm/helm/master/scripts/get-helm-3 > get_helm.sh chmod 700 get_helm.sh ./get_helm.sh
macOS - Use Homebrew to install:
brew install helm
Windows - Use Chocolatey to install:
choco install kubernetes-helm
Use Helm Charts to Install Apps
This guide will use the Ghost publishing platform as the example application.
Search for a Chart
Search the Helm Hub for the Ghost chart:
helm search hub ghost
URL CHART VERSION APP VERSION DESCRIPTION https://hub.helm.sh/charts/bitnami/ghost 9.0.3 3.1.1 A simple, powerful publishing platform that all...
This gives you the URL where the chart is located in the central hub. Here you will find all the information about configuration and setup.
Add the
stable
repository:helm repo add stable https://charts.helm.sh/stable
Update the repo to ensure you get the latest chart version:
helm repo update
The full name for the chart is
stable/ghost
. You can inspect the chart for more information:helm show readme stable/ghost
This command’s output will resemble the README text available for the Ghost in the official central hub as linked above.
Install the Chart
The helm install
command is used to install a chart by name. It can be run without any other options, but some charts expect you to pass in configuration values for the chart:
Create a file named
ghost-values.yaml
on your computer for this snippet:- File: ghost-values.yaml
1 2 3 4 5
ghostHost: "ghost.example.com" ghostEmail: "email@example.com" ghostUsername: "admin" ghostPassword: "mySecurePassword123!!" mariadb.mariadbRootPassword: "secretpassword"
Replace the value for
ghostHost
with a domain or subdomain that you own and would like to assign to the app; the value forghostEmail
with your email; the values forghostUsername
andghostPassword
with the credentials you wish to use for logging into your site; and the value formariadb.mariadbRootPassword
for the password you wish to use for logging into the database.Note If you don’t own a domain name and won’t continue to use the Ghost website after finishing this guide, you can make up a domain for this configuration file.Run the
install
command and pass in the configuration file:helm install --values=ghost-values.yaml stable/ghost --generate-name
The
install
command returns immediately and does not wait until the app’s cluster objects are ready. You will see output like the following snippet, which shows that the app’s pods are still in the “Pending” state. The text displayed is generated from the contents of the chart’stemplates/NOTES.txt
file:NAME: ghost-1576075187 LAST DEPLOYED: Wed Dec 11 09:39:50 2019 NAMESPACE: default STATUS: deployed REVISION: 1 NOTES: 1. Get the Ghost URL by running: echo Blog URL : http://ghost.example.com/ echo Admin URL : http://ghost.example.com/ghost 2. Get your Ghost login credentials by running: echo Email: email@example.com echo Password: $(kubectl get secret --namespace default ghost-1576075187 -o jsonpath="{.data.ghost-password}" | base64 --decode)
Helm has created a new release and assigned it a random name. Run the
ls
command to get a list of all of your releases:helm ls
The output will look as follows:
NAME NAMESPACE REVISION UPDATED STATUS CHART APP VERSION ghost-1576075187 default 1 2019-12-11 09:39:50.168546 -0500 EST deployed ghost-9.0.3 3.1.1
You can check on the status of the release by running the
status
command:helm status ghost-1576075187
This command will show the same output that was displayed after the
helm install
command, but the current state of the cluster objects will be updated.
Access Your App
Navigate to the NodeBalancer that was created in Cloud Manager and find the IP address.
The LoadBalancer that was created for the app will be displayed. Because this example uses a cluster created with Linode’s
k8s-alpha
CLI (which pre-installs the Linode CCM), the LoadBalancer will be implemented as a Linode NodeBalancer.Copy the value under the
IP Address
column for the NodeBalancer and then paste it into your web browser. You should see the Ghost website:Revisit the output from the
status
command. Instructions for logging into your Ghost website will be displayed:[...] 1. Get the Ghost URL by running: echo Blog URL : http://ghost.example.com/ echo Admin URL : http://ghost.example.com/ghost 2. Get your Ghost login credentials by running: echo Email: email@example.com echo Password: $(kubectl get secret --namespace default ghost-1576075187 -o jsonpath="{.data.ghost-password}" | base64 --decode)
If you haven’t set up DNS for your site yet, you can instead access the admin interface by visiting the
ghost
URL on your LoadBalancer IP address (e.g.http://104.237.148.66/ghost
). Visit this page in your browser and then follow the steps to complete admin account creation. You should be granted access to the administrative interface.To set up DNS for your app, create an A record for your domain which is assigned to the external IP for your app’s LoadBalancer. Review Linode’s DNS Manager guide for instructions.
Upgrade your App
The upgrade
command can be used to upgrade an existing release to a new version of a chart, or just to supply new chart values:
In your computer’s
ghost-values.yaml
file, add a line for the title of the website:- File: ghost-values.yaml
1 2 3 4 5 6
ghostHost: "ghost.example.com" ghostEmail: "email@example.com" ghostUsername: "admin" ghostPassword: "mySecurePassword123!!" mariadb.mariadbRootPassword: "secretpassword" ghostBlogTitle: "Example Site Name"
Run the upgrade command, specifying the configuration file, release name, and chart name:
helm upgrade --values=ghost-values.yaml ghost-1576075187 stable/ghost
Roll Back a Release
Upgrades (and even deletions) can be rolled back if something goes wrong:
Run the
helm ls
command and observe the number under the “REVISION” column for your release:NAME NAMESPACE REVISION UPDATED STATUS CHART APP VERSION ghost-1576075187 default 2 2019-12-11 11:54:49.136865 -0500 EST deployed ghost-9.0.3 3.1.1
Every time you perform an upgrade, the revision count is incremented by 1 (and the counter starts at 1 when you first install a chart). So, your current revision number is 2. To roll back the upgrade you just performed, enter the previous revision number:
helm rollback ghost-1576075187 1
Delete a Release
--keep-history
flag.Use the
uninstall
command with the name of a release to delete it:helm uninstall ghost-1576075187
You should also confirm in the Linode Cloud Manager that the Volumes and NodeBalancer created for the app are removed as well.
Note In Helm 2, deletions were performed using thedelete
command. This can still be entered to perform the same task, however in helm 3delete
aliases touninstall
.If you wish to keep a history of past releases, you will want to use the
--keep-history
flag. This is a change from Helm 2.helm uninstall --keep-history
Helm will still save information about the uninstalled release. You can list releases including records where
--keep-history
was specified on uninstall:helm list --uninstalled
Note You can no longer rollback a deleted or uninstalled release.
More Information
You may wish to consult the following resources for additional information on this topic. While these are provided in the hope that they will be useful, please note that we cannot vouch for the accuracy or timeliness of externally hosted materials.
This page was originally published on