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The Helm Plugins Guide
Helm 2.1.0 introduced the concept of a client-side Helm plugin. A plugin is a
tool that can be accessed through the helm
CLI, but which is not part of the
built-in Helm codebase.
Existing plugins can be found on related section or by searching Github.
This guide explains how to use and create plugins.
An Overview
Helm plugins are add-on tools that integrate seamlessly with Helm. They provide a way to extend the core feature set of Helm, but without requiring every new feature to be written in Go and added to the core tool.
Helm plugins have the following features:
- They can be added and removed from a Helm installation without impacting the core Helm tool.
- They can be written in any programming language.
- They integrate with Helm, and will show up in
helm help
and other places.
Helm plugins live in $(helm home)/plugins
.
The Helm plugin model is partially modeled on Git's plugin model. To that end,
you may sometimes hear helm
referred to as the porcelain layer, with
plugins being the plumbing. This is a shorthand way of suggesting that
Helm provides the user experience and top level processing logic, while the
plugins do the "detail work" of performing a desired action.
Installing a Plugin
Plugins are installed using the $ helm plugin install <path|url>
command. You can pass in a path to a plugin on your local file system or a url of a remote VCS repo. The helm plugin install
command clones or copies the plugin at the path/url given into $ (helm home)/plugins
$ helm plugin install https://github.com/technosophos/helm-template
If you have a plugin tar distribution, simply untar the plugin into the
$(helm home)/plugins
directory.
You can also install tarball plugins directly from url by issuing helm plugin install http://domain/path/to/plugin.tar.gz
Building Plugins
In many ways, a plugin is similar to a chart. Each plugin has a top-level
directory, and then a plugin.yaml
file.
$(helm home)/plugins/
|- keybase/
|
|- plugin.yaml
|- keybase.sh
In the example above, the keybase
plugin is contained inside of a directory
named keybase
. It has two files: plugin.yaml
(required) and an executable
script, keybase.sh
(optional).
The core of a plugin is a simple YAML file named plugin.yaml
.
Here is a plugin YAML for a plugin that adds support for Keybase operations:
name: "keybase"
version: "0.1.0"
usage: "Integrate Keybase.io tools with Helm"
description: |-
This plugin provides Keybase services to Helm.
ignoreFlags: false
command: "$HELM_PLUGIN_DIR/keybase.sh"
The name
is the name of the plugin. When Helm executes it plugin, this is the
name it will use (e.g. helm NAME
will invoke this plugin).
name
should match the directory name. In our example above, that means the
plugin with name: keybase
should be contained in a directory named keybase
.
Restrictions on name
:
name
cannot duplicate one of the existinghelm
top-level commands.name
must be restricted to the characters ASCII a-z, A-Z, 0-9,_
and-
.
version
is the SemVer 2 version of the plugin.
usage
and description
are both used to generate the help text of a command.
The ignoreFlags
switch tells Helm to not pass flags to the plugin. So if a
plugin is called with helm myplugin --foo
and ignoreFlags: true
, then --foo
is silently discarded.
Finally, and most importantly, command
is the command that this plugin will
execute when it is called. Environment variables are interpolated before the plugin
is executed. The pattern above illustrates the preferred way to indicate where
the plugin program lives.
There are some strategies for working with plugin commands:
- If a plugin includes an executable, the executable for a
command:
should be packaged in the plugin directory. - The
command:
line will have any environment variables expanded before execution.$HELM_PLUGIN_DIR
will point to the plugin directory. - The command itself is not executed in a shell. So you can't oneline a shell script.
- Helm injects lots of configuration into environment variables. Take a look at the environment to see what information is available.
- Helm makes no assumptions about the language of the plugin. You can write it in whatever you prefer.
- Commands are responsible for implementing specific help text for
-h
and--help
. Helm will useusage
anddescription
forhelm help
andhelm help myplugin
, but will not handlehelm myplugin --help
.
Downloader Plugins
By default, Helm is able to pull Charts using HTTP/S. As of Helm 2.4.0, plugins can have a special capability to download Charts from arbitrary sources.
Plugins shall declare this special capability in the plugin.yaml
file (top level):
downloaders:
- command: "bin/mydownloader"
protocols:
- "myprotocol"
- "myprotocols"
If such plugin is installed, Helm can interact with the repository using the specified
protocol scheme by invoking the command
. The special repository shall be added
similarly to the regular ones: helm repo add favorite myprotocol://example.com/
The rules for the special repos are the same to the regular ones: Helm must be able
to download the index.yaml
file in order to discover and cache the list of
available Charts.
The defined command will be invoked with the following scheme:
command certFile keyFile caFile full-URL
. The SSL credentials are coming from the
repo definition, stored in $HELM_HOME/repository/repositories.yaml
. Downloader
plugin is expected to dump the raw content to stdout and report errors on stderr.
Environment Variables
When Helm executes a plugin, it passes the outer environment to the plugin, and also injects some additional environment variables.
Variables like KUBECONFIG
are set for the plugin if they are set in the
outer environment.
The following variables are guaranteed to be set:
HELM_PLUGIN
: The path to the plugins directoryHELM_PLUGIN_NAME
: The name of the plugin, as invoked byhelm
. Sohelm myplug
will have the short namemyplug
.HELM_PLUGIN_DIR
: The directory that contains the plugin.HELM_BIN
: The path to thehelm
command (as executed by the user).HELM_HOME
: The path to the Helm home.HELM_PATH_*
: Paths to important Helm files and directories are stored in environment variables prefixed byHELM_PATH
.
A Note on Flag Parsing
When executing a plugin, Helm will parse global flags for its own use. Some of these flags are not passed on to the plugin.
--debug
: If this is specified,$HELM_DEBUG
is set to1
--home
: This is converted to$HELM_HOME
--kube-context
: This is simply dropped.
Plugins should display help text and then exit for -h
and --help
. In all
other cases, plugins may use flags as appropriate.