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264 lines
8.5 KiB
264 lines
8.5 KiB
# Named Templates
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It is time to move beyond one template, and begin to create others. In this section, we will see how to define _named templates_ in one file, and then use them elsewhere. A _named template_ (sometimes called a _partial_ or a _subtemplate_) is simply a template defined inside of a file, and given a name. We'll see two ways to create them, and a few different ways to use them.
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In the "Flow Control" section we introduced three actions for declaring and managing templates: `define`, `template`, and `block`. In this section, we'll cover those three actions, and also introduce a special-purpose `include` function that works similarly to the `template` action.
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## Partials and `_` files
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So far, we've used one file, and that one file has contained a single template. But Helm's template language allows you to create named embedded templates, that can be accessed by name elsewhere.
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Before we get to the nuts-and-bolts of writing those templates, there is file naming convention that deserves mention:
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- Most files in `templates/` are treated as if they contain Kubernetes manifests
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- The `NOTES.txt` is one exception
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- But files whose name begins with an underscore (`_`) are assumed to _not_ have a manifest inside. These files are not rendered to Kubernetes object definitions, but are available everywhere within other chart templates for use.
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These files are used to store partials and helpers. In fact, when we first created `mychart`, we saw a file called `_helpers.tpl`. That file is the default location for template partials.
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## Declaring and using templates with `define` and `template`
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The `define` action allows us to create a named template inside of a template file. Its syntax goes like this:
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```yaml
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{{ define "MY_NAME" }}
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# body of template here
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{{ end }}
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```
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For example, we can define a template to encapsulate a Kubernetes block of labels:
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```yaml
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{{- define "my_labels" }}
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labels:
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generator: helm
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date: {{ now | htmlDate }}
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{{- end }}
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```
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Now we can embed this template inside of our existing ConfigMap, and then include it with the `template` action:
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```yaml
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{{- define "my_labels" }}
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labels:
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generator: helm
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date: {{ now | htmlDate }}
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{{- end }}
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: ConfigMap
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metadata:
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name: {{ .Release.Name }}-configmap
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{{- template "my_labels" }}
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data:
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myvalue: "Hello World"
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{{- range $key, $val := .Values.favorite }}
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{{ $key }}: {{ $val | quote }}
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{{- end }}
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```
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When the template engine reads this file, it will store away the reference to `my_labels` until `template "my_labels"` is called. Then it will render that template inline. So the result will look like this:
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```yaml
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# Source: mychart/templates/configmap.yaml
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: ConfigMap
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metadata:
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name: running-panda-configmap
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labels:
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generator: helm
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date: 2016-11-02
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data:
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myvalue: "Hello World"
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drink: "coffee"
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food: "pizza"
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```
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Conventionally, Helm charts put these templates inside of a partials file, usually `_helpers.tpl`. Let's move this function there:
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```yaml
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{{/* Generate basic labels */}}
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{{- define "my_labels" }}
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labels:
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generator: helm
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date: {{ now | htmlDate }}
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{{- end }}
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```
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By convention, `define` functions should have a simple documentation block (`{{/* ... */}}`) describing what they do.
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Even though this definition is in `_helpers.tpl`, it can still be accessed in `configmap.yaml`:
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```yaml
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: ConfigMap
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metadata:
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name: {{ .Release.Name }}-configmap
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{{- template "my_labels" }}
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data:
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myvalue: "Hello World"
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{{- range $key, $val := .Values.favorite }}
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{{ $key }}: {{ $val | quote }}
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{{- end }}
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```
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There is one _really important detail_ to keep in mind when naming templates: **template names are global**. If you declare two templates with the same name, whichever one is loaded last will be the one used. Because templates in subcharts are compiled together with top-level templates, you should be careful to name your templates with chart-specific names.
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One popular naming convention is to prefix each defined template with the name of the chart: `{{ define "mychart.labels" }}` or `{{ define "mychart_labels" }}`.
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## Setting the scope of a template
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In the template we defined above, we did not use any objects. We just used functions. Let's modify our defined template to include the chart name and chart version:
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```yaml
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{{/* Generate basic labels */}}
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{{- define "my_labels" }}
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labels:
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generator: helm
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date: {{ now | htmlDate }}
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chart: {{ .Chart.Name }}
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version: {{ .Chart.Version }}
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{{- end }}
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```
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If we render this, the result will not be what we expect:
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```yaml
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# Source: mychart/templates/configmap.yaml
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: ConfigMap
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metadata:
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name: moldy-jaguar-configmap
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labels:
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generator: helm
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date: 2016-11-02
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chart:
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version:
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```
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What happened to the name and version? They weren't in the scope for our defined template. When a named template (created with `define`) is rendered, it will receive the scope passed in by the `template` call. In our example, we included the template like this:
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```yaml
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{{- template "my_labels" }}
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```
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No scope was passed in, so within the template we cannot access anything in `.`. This is easy enough to fix, though. We simply pass a scope to the template:
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```yaml
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: ConfigMap
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metadata:
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name: {{ .Release.Name }}-configmap
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{{- template "my_labels" . }}
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```
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Note that we pass `.` at the end of the `template` call. We could just as easily pass `.Values` or `.Values.favorite` or whatever scope we want. But what we want is the top-level scope.
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Now when we execute this template with `helm install --dry-run --debug ./mychart`, we get this:
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```yaml
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# Source: mychart/templates/configmap.yaml
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: ConfigMap
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metadata:
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name: plinking-anaco-configmap
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labels:
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generator: helm
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date: 2016-11-02
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chart: mychart
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version: 0.1.0
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```
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Now `{{ .Chart.Name }}` resolves to `mychart`, and `{{ .Chart.Version }}` resolves to `0.1.0`.
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## The `include` function
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Say we've defined a simple template that looks like this:
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```
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{{- define "mychart_app" -}}
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app_name: {{ .Chart.Name }}
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app_version: "{{ .Chart.Version }}+{{ .Release.Time.Seconds }}"
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{{- end -}}
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```
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Now say I want to insert this both into the `labels:` section of my template, and also the `data:` section:
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```yaml
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: ConfigMap
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metadata:
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name: {{ .Release.Name }}-configmap
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labels:
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{{ template "mychart_app" .}}
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data:
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myvalue: "Hello World"
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{{- range $key, $val := .Values.favorite }}
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{{ $key }}: {{ $val | quote }}
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{{- end }}
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{{ template "mychart_app" . }}
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```
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The output will not be what we expect:
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```yaml
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# Source: mychart/templates/configmap.yaml
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: ConfigMap
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metadata:
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name: measly-whippet-configmap
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labels:
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app_name: mychart
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app_version: "0.1.0+1478129847"
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data:
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myvalue: "Hello World"
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drink: "coffee"
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food: "pizza"
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app_name: mychart
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app_version: "0.1.0+1478129847"
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```
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Note that the indentation on `app_version` is wrong in both places. Why? Because the template that is substituted in has the text aligned to the right. Because `template` is an action, and not a function, there is no way to pass the output of a `template` call to other functions; the data is simply inserted inline.
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To work around this case, Helm provides an alternative to `template` that will import the contents of a template into the present pipeline where it can be passed along to other functions in the pipeline.
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Here's the example above, corrected to use `indent` to indent the `mychart_app` template correctly:
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```yaml
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: ConfigMap
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metadata:
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name: {{ .Release.Name }}-configmap
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labels:
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{{ include "mychart_app" . | indent 4 }}
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data:
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myvalue: "Hello World"
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{{- range $key, $val := .Values.favorite }}
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{{ $key }}: {{ $val | quote }}
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{{- end }}
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{{ include "mychart_app" . | indent 2 }}
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```
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Now the produced YAML is correctly indented for each section:
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```yaml
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# Source: mychart/templates/configmap.yaml
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: ConfigMap
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metadata:
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name: edgy-mole-configmap
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labels:
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app_name: mychart
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app_version: "0.1.0+1478129987"
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data:
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myvalue: "Hello World"
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drink: "coffee"
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food: "pizza"
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app_name: mychart
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app_version: "0.1.0+1478129987"
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```
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> It is considered preferable to use `include` over `template` in Helm templates simply so that the output formatting can be handled better for YAML documents.
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Sometimes we want to import content, but not as templates. That is, we want to import files verbatim. We can achieve this by accessing files through the `.Files` object described in the next section.
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