Advanced Features
Advanced Features¶
- Import Configuration Parameters into Helmfile
- Deploy Kustomization with Helmfile
- Adhoc Kustomization of Helm Charts
- Adding dependencies without forking the chart
Import Configuration Parameters into Helmfile¶
Helmfile integrates vals to import configuration parameters from following backends:
- AWS SSM Parameter Store
- AWS SecretsManager
- Vault
- SOPS
See Vals “Suported Backends” for the full list of available backends.
This feature was implemented in https://github.com/roboll/helmfile/pull/906.
If you’re curious how it’s designed and how it works, please consult the pull request.
Deploy Kustomizations with Helmfile¶
You can deploy kustomize “kustomization”s with Helmfile.
Most of Kustomize operations that is usually done with kustomize edit can be done declaratively via Helm values.yaml files.
Under the hood, Helmfile transforms the kustomization into a local chart in a temporary directory so that it can be helm upgrade --installed.
The transformation is done by generating (1)a temporary kustomization from various options and (2)temporary chart from the temporary kustomization.
An example pseudo code for the transformation logic can be written as:
$ TMPCHART=/tmp/sometmpdir
$ mkdir -p ${TMPCHART}/templates
$ somehow_generate_chart_yaml ${TMPCHART}/Chart.yaml
$ TMPKUSTOMIZATION=/tmp/sometmpdir2
$ somehow_generate_temp_kustomization_yaml ${TMPKUSTOMIZATION}/kustomization.yaml
$ kustomize build ${TMPKUSTOMIZATION}/kustomization.yaml > ${TMPCHART}/templates/all.yaml
Let’s say you have a helmfile.yaml that looks like the below:
releases:
- name: myapp
chart: mykustomization
values:
- values.yaml
Helmfile firstly generates a temporary kustomization.yaml that looks like:
bases:
- $(ABS_PATH_TO_HELMFILE_YAML}/mykustomization
Followed by the below steps:
- Running
kustomize edit set image $IMAGEfor every$IMAGEgenerated from your values.yaml - Running
kustomize edit set nameprefix $NAMEPREFIXwith the nameprefix specified in your values.yaml - Running
kustomize edit set namesuffix $NAMESUFFIXwith the namesuffix specified in your values.yaml - Running
kustomize edit set namespace $NSwith the namespace specified in your values.yaml
A values.yaml file for kustomization would look like the below:
images:
# kustomize edit set image mysql=eu.gcr.io/my-project/mysql@canary
- name: mysql
newName: eu.gcr.io/my-project/mysql
newTag: canary
# kustomize edit set image myapp=my-registry/my-app@sha256:24a0c4b4a4c0eb97a1aabb8e29f18e917d05abfe1b7a7c07857230879ce7d3d3
- name: myapp
digest: sha256:24a0c4b4a4c0eb97a1aabb8e29f18e917d05abfe1b7a7c07857230879ce7d3d3
newName: my-registry/my-app
# kustomize edit set nameprefix foo-
namePrefix: foo-
# kustomize edit set namesuffix -bar
nameSuffix: -bar
# kustomize edit set namespace myapp
namespace: myapp
At this point, Helmfile can generate a complete kustomization from the base kustomization you specified in releases[].chart of your helmfile.yaml and values.yaml,
which can be included in the temporary chart.
After all, Helmfile just installs the temporary chart like standard charts, which allows you to manage everything with Helmfile regardless of each app is declared using a Helm chart or a kustomization.
Please also see test/advanced/helmfile.yaml for an example of kustomization support and more.
Adhoc Kustomization of Helm charts¶
With Helmfile’s integration with Helmfile, not only deploying Kustomization as a Helm chart, you can kustomize charts before installation.
Currently, Helmfile allows you to set the following fields for kustomizing the chart:
releases[].strategicMergePatchesreleases[].jsonPatchesreleases[].transformers
strategicMergePatches¶
You can add/update any Kubernetes resource field rendered from a Helm chart by specifying releases[].strategicMergePatches:
repositories:
- name: incubator
url: https://kubernetes-charts-incubator.storage.googleapis.com
releases:
- name: raw1
chart: incubator/raw
values:
- resources:
- apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: raw1
namespace: default
data:
foo: FOO
strategicMergePatches:
- apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: raw1
namespace: default
data:
bar: BAR
Running helmfile template on the above example results in a ConfigMap called raw whose data is:
foo: FOO
bar: BAR
Please note that the second data field bar is coming from the strategic-merge patch defined in the above helmfile.yaml.
There’s also releases[].jsonPatches that works similarly to strategicMergePatches but has additional capability to remove fields.
Please also see test/advanced/helmfile.yaml for an example of patching support and more.
transformers¶
You can set transformers to apply Kustomize’s transformers.
Each item can be a path to a YAML or go template file, or an embedded transformer declaration as a YAML hash.
It’s often used to add common labels and annotations to your resources.
In the below example. we add common annotations and labels every resource rendered from the aws-load-balancer-controller chart:
releases:
- name: "aws-load-balancer-controller"
namespace: "kube-system"
forceNamespace: "kube-system"
chart: "center/aws/aws-load-balancer-controller"
transformers:
- apiVersion: builtin
kind: AnnotationsTransformer
metadata:
name: notImportantHere
annotations:
area: 51
greeting: take me to your leader
fieldSpecs:
- path: metadata/annotations
create: true
- apiVersion: builtin
kind: LabelTransformer
metadata:
name: notImportantHere
labels:
foo: bar
fieldSpecs:
- path: metadata/labels
create: true
As explained earlier, transformers can be not only a list of embedded transformers, but also YAML or go template files, or a mix of those three kinds.
transformers:
# Embedded transformer
- apiVersion: builtin
kind: AnnotationsTransformer
metadata:
name: notImportantHere
annotations:
area: 51
greeting: take me to your leader
fieldSpecs:
- path: metadata/annotations
create: true
# YAML file
- path/to/transformer.yaml
# Go template
# The same set of template parameters as release values files templates is available.
- path/to/transformer.yaml.gotmpl
Please see https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/kustomize/blob/master/examples/configureBuiltinPlugin.md#configuring-the-builtin-plugins-instead for more information on how to declare transformers.
Adding dependencies without forking the chart¶
With Helmfile, you can add chart dependencies to a Helm chart without forking it.
An example helmfile.yaml that adds a stable/envoy dependency to the release foo looks like the below:
repositories:
- name: stable
url: https://charts.helm.sh/stable
releases:
- name: foo
chart: ./path/to/foo
dependencies:
- chart: stable/envoy
version: 1.5
When Helmfile encounters releases[].dependencies, it creates a another temporary chart from ./path/to/foo and adds the following dependencies to the Chart.yaml, so that you don’t need to fork the chart.
dependencies:
- name: envoy
repo: https://charts.helm.sh/stable
condition: envoy.enabled
A Helm chart can have two or more dependencies for the same chart with different aliases. To give your dependency an alias, defien it like you would do in a standard Chart.yaml:
repositories:
- name: stable
url: https://charts.helm.sh/stable
releases:
- name: foo
chart: ./path/to/foo
dependencies:
- chart: stable/envoy
version: 1.5
alias: bar
- chart: stable/envoy
version: 1.5
alias: baz
which will tweaks the temporary chart’s Chart.yaml to have:
dependencies:
- alias: bar
name: envoy
repo: https://charts.helm.sh/stable
condition: bar.enabled
- alias: baz
name: envoy
repo: https://charts.helm.sh/stable
condition: baz.enabled
Please see #649 for more context around this feature.
After the support for adhoc dependency to local chart (#1765),
you can even write local file paths relative to helmfile.yaml in chart:
releases:
- name: foo
chart: ./path/to/foo
dependencies:
- chart: ./path/to/bar
Internally, Helmfile creates another temporary chart from the local chart ./path/to/foo, and modifies the chart’s Chart.yaml dependencies to look like:
dependencies:
- alias: bar
name: bar
repo: file:///abs/path/to/bar
condition: bar.enabled
Please read https://github.com/roboll/helmfile/issues/1762#issuecomment-816341251 for more details.