The stable repository provides a quick onboarding with a set of
community curated charts. Two problems with the community stable
repository has lead to its need to be removed.
1. The URL is hard coded to a Google Cloud bucket under Google's
control. This was setup when Helm was part of Kubernetes and
Kubernetes was a Google project. The bucket cannot be
transfered to another non-Google controlled project. And,
the bucket is not accessible in some parts of the world
(e.g., China).
2. The number of charts in the stable repository has grown
generally unmaintainable. The repository maintainers cannot
manage the number of PRs coming it cauing delays in response
or no response and PRs are automatically closed. This is
a poor experience.
The alternatice is the Helm Hub that provides a central point of
search for many Helm repositories. Different people and organizations
can maintain their own charts. A central server is not needed as
Helm is setup to be distributed.
Signed-off-by: Matt Farina <matt@mattfarina.com>
Prior to now, helm has been silently ignoring any errors while parsing
the root Persistent flags. This causes an issue when a global flag comes
later on the command line than a localized flag for a subcommand, in
which the value for that global flag is never set. The solution is to
simply tell the Persistent flagset to ignore any unknown flags, since a
later command will process it
Signed-off-by: Ian Howell <ian.howell0@gmail.com>
This fixes#6044, in which error parsing is greedily eating too many
colons, preventing users from using colons in their warning messages to
the `required` function
Signed-off-by: Ian Howell <ian.howell0@gmail.com>
This feature flag allows `helm template` to be used against a live cluster. Some charts need CRDs to be applied to the cluster before calling `helm install`. This allows users to validate their templates will render with those resources set.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Fisher <matt.fisher@microsoft.com>
This fixes an issue where resources that hardcode the metadata.namespace parameter cannot be installed.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Fisher <matt.fisher@microsoft.com>
This restores the ability to pass in parameters at runtime to the
ChartDownloader, enabling users to pass in parameters like the --username
and --password flags.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Fisher <matt.fisher@microsoft.com>
Backport of https://github.com/helm/helm/pull/6010 to dev-v3 (the
description below is a copy-paste from the original v2 branch PR).
As https://github.com/helm/helm/pull/6016 is now merged to dev-v3, the
change is reasonably trivial.
This change is an attempt to address the common problem of json number
unmarshalling where any number is converted into a float64 and
represented in a scientific notation on a marshall call. This behavior
breaks things like: chart versions and image tags if not converted to
yaml strings explicitly.
An example of this behavior: k8s failure to fetch an image tagged with a
big number like: $IMAGE:20190612073634 after a few steps of yaml
re-rendering turns into: $IMAGE:2.0190612073634e+13.
Example issue: #1707
This commit forces yaml parser to use JSON modifiers and explicitly
enables interface{} unmarshalling instead of float64. The change
introduced might be breaking so should be processed with an extra care.
Due to the fact helm mostly dals with human-produced data (charts), we
have a decent level of confidence this change looses no functionality
helm users rely upon (the scientific notation).
Relevant doc: https://golang.org/pkg/encoding/json/#Decoder.UseNumber
Signed-off-by: Oleg Sidorov <oleg.sidorov@booking.com>
Signed-off-by: Oleg Sidorov <me@whitebox.io>
If starter template path is an absolute path, it shouldn't
be prefixed with c.home.Starters() but rather be used as is.
Signed-off-by: Tine Jozelj <tine.jozelj@tjo.space>
This fixes an issue where the kubernetes client was being created using
command line flags before those flags had been parsed, causing the
client to always use the default values.
Signed-off-by: Ian Howell <ian.howell0@gmail.com>
This commit replaces usage of github.com/ghodss/yaml with it's forked
version maintained by SIG community. The replaced library has
low-to-none support activity unlike the latter. We believe the new
Helm branch could benefit from using the community-supported version on
a long-term run as yaml parser is a key component of Helm chart rendering
engine.
This commit locks sigs.k8s.io/yaml dependency version on 1.1.0 which
is backwards compatible with ghodss/yaml 1.0.0.
This change also resolves the outdated dependency version lock for
ghodss/yaml (currently 1.0.0) and makes it possible to port changes from
https://github.com/helm/helm/pull/6010 to dev-v3.
Signed-off-by: Oleg Sidorov <oleg.sidorov@booking.com>