* fix: perform extra validation on paths in tar archives
Signed-off-by: Matt Butcher <matt.butcher@microsoft.com>
* fix: Cover a few Windows cases and also remove a duplicate tar reader
Signed-off-by: Matt Butcher <matt.butcher@microsoft.com>
* fix: removed debug output
Signed-off-by: Matt Butcher <matt.butcher@microsoft.com>
* fix: Expand again preserves the files verbatim
Also added tests for Expand
Signed-off-by: Matt Butcher <matt.butcher@microsoft.com>
* fix: add license block and remove println
Signed-off-by: Matt Butcher <matt.butcher@microsoft.com>
In third-party libraries, charts can be embedded in memory rather than in files, directories or
tarballs. Exposing LoadFiles allows a third-party library the ability to load static templates
in and spit out a *chart.Chart.
For archived files the Chart.yaml file should be contained in a base
directory. This commit adds an error when the Chart.yaml file is found
in the root directory.
Fixes#1171
This causes 'helm dep [up|install]' to ignore files in charts/ that
start with either a dot or an underscore. It also changes the
chartloader to ignore those files.
Also, if a 'helm dep up' does not find a charts/ directory, it creates
one.
Closes#1342
This also refactors significant portions of the CLI, moving much of the
shared code into a library.
Also in this release, a testing repository server has been added.
This adds a few extra settings to the default .helmignore file. In
doing this, I found a bug that some directory patterns are not
evaluated correctly. Fixed that and added tests.
Closes#989Closes#1027
Template rules
Adding chart errors
Added function that checks the existence of all the values in the templates
Adding chartfile unit tests
Testing runLinterRule
Fixing out of range
Fixing out of range
Improving quote detector
This adds support for .helmignore files. These files roughly follow
the conventions established for .gitignore files:
https://git-scm.com/docs/gitignoreCloses#748
This is a refactor of the loader to use in-memory buffers instead of
trying to optimize for memory usage by delaying reads until the last
possible moment. Since charts tend to stay well below 1M in size, this
makes more sense, and is easier to work with.