The Kubernetes Package Manager
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README.md

Kubernetes Helm

Helm is a tool for managing Kubernetes charts. Charts are packages of pre-configured Kubernetes resources.

Features:

  • Helm now has both a client (helm) and a server (tiller). The server runs inside of Kubernetes, and manages your resources.
  • Helm's chart format has changed for the better:
    • Dependencies are immutable and stored inside of a chart's charts/ directory.
    • Charts are strongly versioned using SemVer 2
    • Charts can be loaded from directories or from chart archive files
    • Helm supports Go templates without requiring you to run generate or template commands.
    • Helm makes it easy to configure your releases -- and share the configuration with the rest of your team.
  • Helm chart repositories now use plain HTTP instead of Git/GitHub. There is no longer any GitHub dependency.
    • A chart server is a simple HTTP server
    • Charts are referenced by version
    • The helm serve command will run a local chart server, though you can easily use object storage (S3, GCS) or a regular web server.
    • And you can still load charts from a local directory.
  • The Helm workspace is gone. You can now work anywhere on your filesystem that you want to work.

Install

Helm is in its early stages of development. At this time there are no releases.

To install Helm from source, follow this process:

Make sure you have the prerequisites:

  • Go 1.6
  • A running Kubernetes cluster
  • kubectl properly configured to talk to your cluster
  • Glide 0.10 or greater
  1. Clone (or otherwise download) this repository
  2. Run make boostrap build

You will now have two binaries built:

  • bin/helm is the client
  • bin/tiller is the server

You can locally run Tiller, or you build a Docker image (make docker-build) and then deploy it (helm init -i IMAGE_NAME).

The documentation folder contains more information about the architecture and usage of Helm/Tiller.

The History of the Project

Kubernetes Helm is the merged result of Helm Classic and the Kubernetes port of GCS Deployment Manager. The project was jointly started by Google and Deis, though it is now part of the CNCF.