You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
helm/docs/chart_best_practices/labels.md

33 lines
1.7 KiB

# Labels and Annotations
This part of the Best Practices Guide discusses the best practices for using
labels and annotations in your chart.
## Is it a Label or an Annotation?
An item of metadata should be a label under the following conditions:
- It is used by Kubernetes to identify this resource
- It is useful to expose to operators for the purpose of querying the system.
For example, we suggest using `chart: NAME-VERSION` as a label so that operators
can conveniently find all of the instances of a particular chart to use.
If an item of metadata is not used for querying, it should be set as an annotation
instead.
Helm hooks are always annotations.
## Standard Labels
The following table defines common labels that Helm charts use. Helm itself never requires that a particular label be present. Labels that are marked REC
are recommended, and _should_ be placed onto a chart for global consistency. Those marked OPT are optional. These are idiomatic or commonly in use, but are not relied upon frequently for operational purposes.
Name|Status|Description
-----|------|----------
heritage | REC | This should always be set to `{{ .Release.Service }}`. It is for finding all things managed by Tiller.
release | REC | This should be the `{{ .Release.Name }}`.
chart | REC | This should be the chart name and version: `{{ .Chart.Name }}-{{ .Chart.Version \| replace "+" "_" }}`.
app | REC | This should be the app name, reflecting the entire app. Usually `{{ template "name" . }}` is used for this. This is used by many Kubernetes manifests, and is not Helm-specific.
component | OPT | This is a common label for marking the different roles that pieces may play in an application. For example, `component: frontend`.