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350 lines
8.6 KiB
350 lines
8.6 KiB
# YAML Techniques
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Most of this guide has been focused on writing the template language. Here,
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we'll look at the YAML format. YAML has some useful features that we, as
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template authors, can use to make our templates less error prone and easier
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to read.
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## Scalars and Collections
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According to the [YAML spec](http://yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html), there are two
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types of collections, and many scalar types.
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The two types of collections are maps and sequences:
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```yaml
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map:
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one: 1
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two: 2
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three: 3
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sequence:
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- one
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- two
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- three
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```
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Scalar values are individual values (as opposed to collections)
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### Scalar Types in YAML
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In Helm's dialect of YAML, the scalar data type of a value is determined by a
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complex set of rules, including the Kubernetes schema for resource definitions.
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But when inferring types, the following rules tend to hold true.
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If an integer or float is an unquoted bare word, it is typically treated as
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a numeric type:
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```yaml
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count: 1
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size: 2.34
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```
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But if they are quoted, they are treated as strings:
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```yaml
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count: "1" # <-- string, not int
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size: '2.34' # <-- string, not float
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```
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The same is true of booleans:
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```yaml
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isGood: true # bool
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answer: "true" # string
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```
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The word for an empty value is `null` (not `nil`).
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Note that `port: "80"` is valid YAML, and will pass through both the
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template engine and the YAML parser, but will fail if Kubernetes expects
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`port` to be an integer.
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In some cases, you can force a particular type inference using YAML node tags:
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```yaml
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coffee: "yes, please"
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age: !!str 21
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port: !!int "80"
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```
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In the above, `!!str` tells the parser that `age` is a string, even if it looks
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like an int. And `port` is treated as an int, even though it is quoted.
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## Strings in YAML
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Much of the data that we place in YAML documents are strings. YAML has more than
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one way to represent a string. This section explains the ways and demonstrates
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how to use some of them.
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There are three "inline" ways of declaring a string:
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```yaml
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way1: bare words
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way2: "double-quoted strings"
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way3: 'single-quoted strings'
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```
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All inline styles must be on one line.
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- Bare words are unquoted, and are not escaped. For this reason, you have to
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be careful what characters you use.
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- Double-quoted strings can have specific characters escaped with `\`. For
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example `"\"Hello\", she said"`. You can escape line breaks with `\n`.
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- Single-quoted strings are "literal" strings, and do not use the `\` to
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escape characters. The only escape sequence is `''`, which is decoded as
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a single `'`.
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In addition to the one-line strings, you can declare multi-line strings:
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```yaml
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coffee: |
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Latte
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Cappuccino
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Espresso
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```
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The above will treat the value of `coffee` as a single string equivalent to
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`Latte\nCappuccino\nEspresso\n`.
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Note that the first line after the `|` must be correctly indented. So we could
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break the example above by doing this:
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```yaml
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coffee: |
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Latte
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Cappuccino
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Espresso
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```
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Because `Latte` is incorrectly indented, we'd get an error like this:
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```
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Error parsing file: error converting YAML to JSON: yaml: line 7: did not find expected key
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```
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In templates, it is sometimes safer to put a fake "first line" of content in a
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multi-line document just for protection from the above error:
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```yaml
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coffee: |
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# Commented first line
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Latte
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Cappuccino
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Espresso
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```
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Note that whatever that first line is, it will be preserved in the output of the
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string. So if you are, for example, using this technique to inject a file's contents
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into a ConfigMap, the comment should be of the type expected by whatever is
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reading that entry.
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### Controlling Spaces in Multi-line Strings
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In the example above, we used `|` to indicate a multi-line string. But notice
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that the content of our string was followed with a trailing `\n`. If we want
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the YAML processor to strip off the trailing newline, we can add a `-` after the
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`|`:
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```yaml
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coffee: |-
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Latte
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Cappuccino
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Espresso
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```
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Now the `coffee` value will be: `Latte\nCappuccino\nEspresso` (with no trailing
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`\n`).
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Other times, we might want all trailing whitespace to be preserved. We can do
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this with the `|+` notation:
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```yaml
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coffee: |+
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Latte
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Cappuccino
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Espresso
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another: value
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```
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Now the value of `coffee` will be `Latte\nCappuccino\nEspresso\n\n\n`.
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Indentation inside of a text block is preserved, and results in the preservation
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of line breaks, too:
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```yaml
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coffee: |-
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Latte
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12 oz
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16 oz
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Cappuccino
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Espresso
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```
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In the above case, `coffee` will be `Latte\n 12 oz\n 16 oz\nCappuccino\nEspresso`.
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### Indenting and Templates
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When writing templates, you may find yourself wanting to inject the contents of
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a file into the template. As we saw in previous chapters, there are two ways
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of doing this:
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- Use `{{ .Files.Get "FILENAME" }}` to get the contents of a file in the chart.
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- Use `{{ include "TEMPLATE" . }}` to render a template and then place its
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contents into the chart.
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When inserting files into YAML, it's good to understand the multi-line rules above.
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Often times, the easiest way to insert a static file is to do something like
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this:
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```yaml
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myfile: |
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{{ .Files.Get "myfile.txt" | indent 2 }}
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```
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Note how we do the indentation above: `indent 2` tells the template engine to
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indent every line in "myfile.txt" with two spaces. Note that we do not indent
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that template line. That's because if we did, the file content of the first line
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would be indented twice.
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### Folded Multi-line Strings
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Sometimes you want to represent a string in your YAML with multiple lines, but
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want it to be treated as one long line when it is interpreted. This is called
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"folding". To declare a folded block, use `>` instead of `|`:
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```yaml
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coffee: >
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Latte
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Cappuccino
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Espresso
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```
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The value of `coffee` above will be `Latte Cappuccino Espresso\n`. Note that all
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but the last line feed will be converted to spaces. You can combine the whitespace
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controls with the folded text marker, so `>-` will replace or trim all newlines.
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Note that in the folded syntax, indenting text will cause lines to be preserved.
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```yaml
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coffee: >-
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Latte
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12 oz
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16 oz
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Cappuccino
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Espresso
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```
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The above will produce `Latte\n 12 oz\n 16 oz\nCappuccino Espresso`. Note that
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both the spacing and the newlines are still there.
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## Embedding Multiple Documents in One File
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It is possible to place more than one YAML documents into a single file. This
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is done by prefixing a new document with `---` and ending the document with
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`...`
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```yaml
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---
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document:1
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...
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---
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document: 2
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...
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```
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In many cases, either the `---` or the `...` may be omitted.
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Some files in Helm cannot contain more than one doc. If, for example, more
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than one document is provided inside of a `values.yaml` file, only the first
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will be used.
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Template files, however, may have more than one document. When this happens,
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the file (and all of its documents) is treated as one object during
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template rendering. But then the resulting YAML is split into multiple
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documents before it is fed to Kubernetes.
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We recommend only using multiple documents per file when it is absolutely
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necessary. Having multiple documents in a file can be difficult to debug.
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## YAML is a Superset of JSON
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Because YAML is a superset of JSON, any valid JSON document _should_ be valid
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YAML.
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```json
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{
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"coffee": "yes, please",
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"coffees": [
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"Latte", "Cappuccino", "Espresso"
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]
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}
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```
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The above is another way of representing this:
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```yaml
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coffee: yes, please
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coffees:
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- Latte
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- Cappuccino
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- Espresso
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```
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And the two can be mixed (with care):
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```yaml
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coffee: "yes, please"
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coffees: [ "Latte", "Cappuccino", "Espresso"]
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```
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All three of these should parse into the same internal representation.
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While this means that files such as `values.yaml` may contain JSON data, Helm
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does not treat the file extension `.json` as a valid suffix.
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## YAML Anchors
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The YAML spec provides a way to store a reference to a value, and later
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refer to that value by reference. YAML refers to this as "anchoring":
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```yaml
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coffee: "yes, please"
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favorite: &favoriteCoffee "Cappucino"
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coffees:
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- Latte
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- *favoriteCoffee
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- Espresso
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```
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In the above, `&favoriteCoffee` sets a reference to `Cappuccino`. Later, that
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reference is used as `*favoriteCoffee`. So `coffees` becomes
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`Latte, Cappuccino, Espresso`.
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While there are a few cases where anchors are useful, there is one aspect of
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them that can cause subtle bugs: The first time the YAML is consumed, the
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reference is expanded and then discarded.
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So if we were to decode and then re-encode the example above, the resulting
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YAML would be:
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```yaml
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coffee: yes, please
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favorite: Cappucino
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coffees:
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- Latte
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- Cappucino
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- Espresso
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```
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Because Helm and Kubernetes often read, modify, and then rewrite YAML files,
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the anchors will be lost.
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