In the created chart from `helm create` is notes a tag overrides
version. It actually overrides appVersion. Updating the docs
to reflect reality.
Signed-off-by: Matt Farina <matt@mattfarina.com>
* return the new values if modifications dont yet exist
Signed-off-by: David Pait <DP19@users.noreply.github.com>
* fix tests
Signed-off-by: David Pait <DP19@users.noreply.github.com>
* removed outter if statement as its not needed now
Signed-off-by: David Pait <DP19@users.noreply.github.com>
The version field in the Chart.yaml has a comment describing it
but it did not note the version needs to follow SemVer. There
have been numerous questions, over time, about this format. Add
note here so it's exposed in more places.
Signed-off-by: Matt Farina <matt@mattfarina.com>
While using the chart version as image tag is the sanest default, it is not uncommon to want to override this if using a custom image, or using helm to manage an in-house app running different tags across different environments.
Signed-off-by: Naseem <naseem@transit.app>
- Removed most right whitespace chomps except those directly following a
template definition where it make sense to not lead with a blank line.
The system applied is now to almost always left whitespace chomp but
also whitespace chomp right if its the first thing in a file or
template definition.
- Updated indentation to be systematic throughout all the boilerplace
files.
Signed-off-by: Erik Sundell <erik.i.sundell@gmail.com>
When archives are created on windows the path spearator in the
archive file is \\. This causes issues when the file is unpacked.
For example, on Linux the files are unpacked in a flat structure
and \ is part of the file name. This causes comp issues. In Helm
v2 the path was set as / when the archive was written. This works
on both Windows and POSIX systems.
The fix being implemented is to use the ToSlash function to ensure
/ is used as the separator.
Fixes#7748
Signed-off-by: Matt Farina <matt@mattfarina.com>
These flags snuck in through a feature that was reverted and removed in Helm 2, but snuck into Helm 3.
They were never hooked up or used, so they were a no-op. This shouldn't affect anyone.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Fisher <matt.fisher@microsoft.com>
Remove references to protobuf and update description of release
object stored representation to Helm v3.
Signed-off-by: Martin Hickey <martin.hickey@ie.ibm.com>
* Include serviceAccount.annotations value
Signed-off-by: Naseem <naseemkullah@gmail.com>
* Add comment about service account annotations
Signed-off-by: Naseem <naseemkullah@gmail.com>
Mercurial VCS (hg) backout's can generate '.orig' files
to avoid these being picked, generate a .helmignore where
also the .orig files are ignored.
Signed-off-by: Jan Heylen <jan.heylen@nokia.com>
* Include requirements.* as Files in APIVersionV1
Fixes#6974.
This ensures that when reading a Chart marked with APIVersion v1, we
maintain the behaviour of Helm v2 and include the requirements.yaml and
requirements.lock in the Files collection, and hence produce charts that
work correctly with Helm v2.
Signed-off-by: Paul "Hampy" Hampson <p_hampson@wargaming.net>
* Write out requirements.lock for APIVersion1 Charts
This keeps the on-disk format consistent after `helm dependency update`
of an APIVersion1 Chart.
Signed-off-by: Paul "Hampy" Hampson <p_hampson@wargaming.net>
* Exclude 'dependencies' from APVersion1 Chart.yaml
This fixes `helm lint` against an APIVersion1 chart packaged with Helm
v3.
Signed-off-by: Paul "Hampy" Hampson <p_hampson@wargaming.net>
* Generate APIVersion v2 charts for dependency tests
As the generated chart contains no requirements.yaml in its files list,
but has dependencies in its metadata, it is not a valid APIVersion v1
chart.
Signed-off-by: Paul "Hampy" Hampson <p_hampson@wargaming.net>
* Generate APIVersion v2 charts for manager tests
Specifically for the charts that have dependencies, the generated chart
contains no requirements.yaml in its files but has dependencies in its
metadata. Hence it is not a valid APIVersion v1 chart.
Signed-off-by: Paul "Hampy" Hampson <p_hampson@wargaming.net>
This reverts commit f94bac0643.
Due to a major numeric regression detected in dev-v2 reported in #6708,
we believe the master branch (former dev-v3) is also impacted by this
change and will expose the same set of problems. In order to not
jeopardize the stability of helm3 this commit is reverted in favor of a
better fix in the future.
Signed-off-by: Oleg Sidorov <me@whitebox.io>
We already had the copystructure library in our dependencies transitively
through sprig. This solves a gob encoding bug that was causing issues with
chart testing
Signed-off-by: Taylor Thomas <taylor.thomas@microsoft.com>
this was partially fixed in #6430 but the fix only
worked for values without nesting. this PR fixes it.
this is done by doing a deep copy of values rather
than a top level keys copy. deep copy ensures
values are not mutated during coalesce()
execution which leads to bugs like #6659
the deep copy code has been copied from:
https://gist.github.com/soroushjp/0ec92102641ddfc3ad5515ca76405f4d
which is in turn inspired by this stackoverflow answer:
http://stackoverflow.com/a/28579297/1366283
Signed-off-by: Karuppiah Natarajan <karuppiah7890@gmail.com>
While working on #6519, it took me hours to figure out why the error
returned from `Save` was nil even though `writeTarContents` returned a
non-nil error. I fixed the bug as part of that PR; the purpose of this
commit is to prevent it from happening again.
What made me (as a Go beginner) so confused was the impression that
there was only ever one `err` variable, global to the entire `Save`
function, when in fact there were also several local ones shadowing it.
(I thought := could be used to reassign an existing variable.)
This commit makes it clear that any `err` defined locally in the last
`if` statement will not be returned at the end, and hence must be
explicitly returned in the body of said `if` statement.
(This commit initially was larger; see #6669.)
Signed-off-by: Simon Alling <alling.simon@gmail.com>
The seemingly redundant `return filename, err` line is related to how
the name `err` is used throughout the function: there is a "global" (to
the function) `err` variable, as well as several locally block-scoped
ones. It took me hours to understand why my code did not work without
that line, but I decided not to clean up the `err` code in this commit.
Signed-off-by: Simon Alling <alling.simon@gmail.com>
Before this commit:
$ helm lint my-chart # Finds errors in values.yaml
$ helm package my-chart
$ helm lint my-chart-1.0.0.tgz # Does not find errors in values.yaml
Signed-off-by: Simon Alling <alling.simon@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Andreas Lindhé <andreas@lindhe.io>