# Quickstart Guide This guide covers how you can quickly get started using Helm. ## Prerequisites - You must have Kubernetes installed. We recommend version 1.4.1 or later. - You should also have a local configured copy of `kubectl`. Helm will figure out where to install Tiller by reading your Kubernetes configuration file (usually `$HOME/.kube/config`). This is the same file that `kubectl` uses. To find out which cluster Tiller would install to, you can run `kubectl config current-context` or `kubectl cluster-info`. ```console $ kubectl config current-context my-cluster ``` ## Install Helm Download a binary release of the Helm client. You can use tools like `homebrew`, or look at [the official releases page](https://github.com/kubernetes/helm/releases). For more details, or for other options, see [the installation guide](install.md). ## Initialize Helm and Install Tiller Once you have Helm ready, you can initialize the local CLI and also install Tiller into your Kubernetes cluster in one step: ```console $ helm init ``` This will install Tiller into the Kubernetes cluster you saw with `kubectl config current-context`. **TIP:** Want to install into a different cluster? Use the `--kube-context` flag. **TIP:** When you want to upgrade Tiller, just run `helm init --upgrade`. ## Install an Example Chart To install a chart, you can run the `helm install` command. Helm has several ways to find and install a chart, but the easiest is to use one of the official `stable` charts. ```console $ helm repo update # Make sure we get the latest list of charts $ helm install stable/mysql Released smiling-penguin ``` In the example above, the `stable/mysql` chart was released, and the name of our new release is `smiling-penguin`. You get a simple idea of the features of this MySQL chart by running `helm inspect stable/mysql`. Whenever you install a chart, a new release is created. So one chart can be installed multiple times into the same cluster. And each can be independently managed and upgraded. The `helm install` command is a very powerful command with many capabilities. To learn more about it, check out the [Using Helm Guide](using_helm.md) ## Learn About Releases It's easy to see what has been released using Helm: ```console $ helm ls NAME VERSION UPDATED STATUS CHART smiling-penguin 1 Wed Sep 28 12:59:46 2016 DEPLOYED mysql-0.1.0 ``` The `helm list` function will show you a list of all deployed releases. ## Uninstall a Release To uninstall a release, use the `helm delete` command: ```console $ helm delete smiling-penguin Removed smiling-penguin ``` This will uninstall `smiling-penguin` from Kubernetes, but you will still be able to request information about that release: ```console $ helm status smiling-penguin Status: DELETED ... ``` Because Helm tracks your releases even after you've deleted them, you can audit a cluster's history, and even undelete a release (with `helm rollback`). ## Reading the Help Text To learn more about the available Helm commands, use `helm help` or type a command followed by the `-h` flag: ```console $ helm get -h ```