Universal-Kubernetes-Helm-Charts
Helm-Chart-Boilerplates
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Universal-Kubernetes-Helm-Charts | Helm-Chart-Boilerplates | |
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101 | 8 | |
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20 days ago | over 1 year ago | |
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Universal-Kubernetes-Helm-Charts
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Dedpulication standards of Helm Charts values file for a global chart with subcharts for our app. What's the right way to only need to specify a value once?
I would point you to what I call the "Universal Helm Charts" and some examples of how to use them.
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Monitoring many cluster k8s
Shameless Plug: Here's one of my dashboards I made for Ingress-Nginx, which is my recommended border router/gateway into all the services. It adds deep robust metrics and configurability, and if you've got years of experience with Nginx also, it allows you rich complex customization via nginx's configuration structure via kubernetes annotations. Besides that I have open-source helm charts which are easy to use, boilerplates showing how to use them, a volume autoscaler to automatically resize your disks as they get full, and a blog where I share various of my experience which is a companion blog to my upcoming book of the same name. Hope this helps! Feel free to ask if you have any further questions.
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Best way of managing Helm?
You may want to check out some other of my Helm Boilerplates to explain and highlight how using subcharts works. This is a companion repo to my upcoming DevOps + Kubernetes book. You also might like to check out my set of open-source universal helm charts which are published in a helm registry right now that you can leverage and has many industry best-practices built into it, such as anti-affinity rules, pod disruption budgets, horizontal pod autoscaling, ingress, service support, etc.
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How do you guys on Mac M1's get around the annoying port forwarding issues with k8s + docker?
References: I use docker and Kubernetes daily. I currently manage numerous clusters and maintain pipelines for hundreds of microservices as I type this. I've been converting microservices into Docker images for companies hundreds if not thousands of times by now over the last bunches of years. I am also an avid and passionate open-source evangelist and Kubernetes/DevOps consultant. I author some Kubernetes controllers such as the Volume Autoscaler and have a set of Open Source Helm Charts and I love to contribute code/fixes wherever I run into issues.
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StatelessSet Resource Type ?
If it helps at all I have some universal helm charts that have a template for easily deploying your application as a deployment or statefulset. You will notice I don’t even have a daemonset chart because it doesn’t make sense to. https://github.com/DevOps-Nirvana/Universal-Kubernetes-Helm-Charts
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Helm makes it overly complex, or is it just me?
See: Open-Source Universal Helm Charts See: Boilerplates of using Open-Source Helm Charts (as a sub-chart)
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The Helmet is a Helm Library Chart that defines many chart templates like Deployment, Service, Ingress, etc which can used in other application charts.
Helm charts - https://github.com/DevOps-Nirvana/Universal-Kubernetes-Helm-Charts Example using helm charts as sub charts - https://github.com/DevOps-Nirvana/Helm-Chart-Boilerplates/tree/master/boilerplate-echoserver
- How do you guys manage your deployment pipelines?
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Monthly 'Shameless Self Promotion' thread - 2023/01
A open-source set of Universal Helm Charts with tons of best-practices baked into it such as autoscaling, PDBs, labeling, and an standardized set of "universal" templates that allows you to pivot between templates easily (meaning, you can easily make a deployment into a Statefulset or a Cronjob). Yes, I need to add more documentation, I know. I'm busy :P
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Creating Kubernetes Templates
Universal Kubernetes Helm Charts
Helm-Chart-Boilerplates
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Dedpulication standards of Helm Charts values file for a global chart with subcharts for our app. What's the right way to only need to specify a value once?
I would point you to what I call the "Universal Helm Charts" and some examples of how to use them.
-
Monitoring many cluster k8s
Shameless Plug: Here's one of my dashboards I made for Ingress-Nginx, which is my recommended border router/gateway into all the services. It adds deep robust metrics and configurability, and if you've got years of experience with Nginx also, it allows you rich complex customization via nginx's configuration structure via kubernetes annotations. Besides that I have open-source helm charts which are easy to use, boilerplates showing how to use them, a volume autoscaler to automatically resize your disks as they get full, and a blog where I share various of my experience which is a companion blog to my upcoming book of the same name. Hope this helps! Feel free to ask if you have any further questions.
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Best way of managing Helm?
Here is an example of a repo that uses an sub-chart: https://github.com/DevOps-Nirvana/Helm-Chart-Boilerplates/tree/master/boilerplate-apache-with-configmap-template/deployment
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Helm makes it overly complex, or is it just me?
Use multi-values files with helm ALWAYS. Allowing an env-specific overlay to tweak your default values files. See: https://github.com/DevOps-Nirvana/Helm-Chart-Boilerplates/tree/master/boilerplate-echoserver/deployment/boilerplate-echoserver
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The Helmet is a Helm Library Chart that defines many chart templates like Deployment, Service, Ingress, etc which can used in other application charts.
Helm charts - https://github.com/DevOps-Nirvana/Universal-Kubernetes-Helm-Charts Example using helm charts as sub charts - https://github.com/DevOps-Nirvana/Helm-Chart-Boilerplates/tree/master/boilerplate-echoserver
- How do you guys manage your deployment pipelines?
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Monthly 'Shameless Self Promotion' thread - 2023/01
Helm Chart Boilerplates are examples of usage of the above Universal Helm Charts to help people understand how to use them more, a stop-gap until I add more documentation
- Deploying with Helm - extra manifests?
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Creating Kubernetes Templates
Helm Chart Usage Boilerplates (Examples of using these helm chart)
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Use Kubernetes to load test my product.
To help you on deploying your service, I've created open source generic/universal Helm Charts to make it easy to do the above. Here are the Universal Helm Charts and here's some boilerplate examples of using them. These built-in have support for HPAs, services, ingresses, etc, making it as easy as autoscaling.enable: true I haven't gotten around to documenting the helm charts yet, but there's lots of comments in the values.yaml file explaining everything.
What are some alternatives?
charts - TrueNAS SCALE Apps Catalogs & Charts
argocd-autopilot - Argo-CD Autopilot
Packer - Packer is a tool for creating identical machine images for multiple platforms from a single source configuration.
helm-charts - A collection of Helm charts
eksctl - The official CLI for Amazon EKS
helmfile - Declaratively deploy your Kubernetes manifests, Kustomize configs, and Charts as Helm releases. Generate all-in-one manifests for use with ArgoCD.
helm-promotion-sample-app - Sample application that is promoted from QA to Staging to Production
Kubernetes-Volume-Autoscaler - Autoscaling volumes for Kubernetes (with the help of Prometheus)
Chalice-PynamoDB-Docker-Starter-Kit - A starter kit with some boilerplate code for getting started making low-cost serverless applications in Python on AWS with a great local development setup via Docker Compose
sparrowci_web - ci.sparrowhub.io website
featbit - A feature flags service written in .NET