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charts | helm | |
---|---|---|
88 | 206 | |
8,391 | 26,013 | |
2.5% | 1.1% | |
10.0 | 9.0 | |
3 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Smarty | Go | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
charts
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Coexistence of containers and Helm charts - OCI based registries
Both of these examples seem pretty obvious and something you wouldn’t mess up, but as your chart grows, so does your values.yaml file. A great example is the Redis chart by Bitnami. I encourage you to scroll through its values file. See you in a minute!
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How to deploy and manage a RabbitMQ cluster on Amazon EKS using Terraform and Helm
We will write a Terraform module that will take a list of configurations for each required RabbitMQ instance. Luckily for us, we don't have to write the Kubernetes yaml configurations since the helm charts by Bitnami does a great job of doing all the things we discussed above. All we need to do is leverage Terraform Helm Provider and deploy the chart with the required values for our use case.
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Master Helm, Chart the Kubernetes Seas 🌊🧭🏴☠️
💡 The full details of helm charts can be referenced in their associated GitHub Repository.
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Bitnami Kibana dashboard import
I have a configmap with the ndjson set up under data:, similar to https://github.com/bitnami/charts/issues/6159 and it's subsequent answer.
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Deploy Kubernetes Helm Charts in Minutes
This way, you can easily deploy any Helm charts from this public repo - https://github.com/bitnami/charts/tree/main/bitnami in just minutes.
- [Kubernetes] Comment déployez-vous un cluster Postgres sur Kubernetes en 2022?
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Is there any tutorial, blog post that shows you how to use the bitnami-mysql helm chart?
The Bitnami Github Pages themselves usually cover everything you need to know. Configure a values.yaml file, or modify that to your liking, and you run helm install, as written in their docs.
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Dynamic Volume Provisioning in Kubernetes with AWS and Terraform
The actual reason that our pods are not coming up is found when we review the helm installation that we are trying to run. If you check the dependencies in the GitHub repository (https://github.com/bitnami/charts/blob/main/bitnami/drupal/values.yaml) you find out that persistent storage is enabled by default and set to 8Gi. Also, the helm package uses MariaDB and the database size is specified to a default of 8Gi, thus setting the minimum storage for this installation to be 16Gi.
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Experience setting up Spark and Hudi on Kubernetes
We're using https://github.com/bitnami/charts/tree/main/bitnami/spark, but I have heard good things about https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/spark-on-k8s-operator as well. Hudi should not need any long running deployments as per the docs https://hudi.apache.org/docs/0.5.1/deployment/#deploying
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"helm crearte" command for bitnami charts/common Library?
Bitnami has its own scaffolding published at https://github.com/bitnami/charts/tree/main/template
helm
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Kubernetes CI/CD Pipelines
Applying Kubernetes manifests individually is problematic because files can get overlooked. Packaging your applications as Helm charts lets you version your manifests and easily repeat deployments into different environments. Helm tracks the state of each deployment as a "release" in your cluster.
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deploying a minio service to kubernetes
helm
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How to take down production with a single Helm command
Explanation here: https://github.com/helm/helm/issues/12681#issuecomment-19593...
Looks like it's a bug in Helm, but actually isn't Helm's fault, the issue was introduced by Fedora Linux.
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Building a VoIP Network with Routr on DigitalOcean Kubernetes: Part I
Helm (Get from here https://helm.sh/)
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The 2024 Web Hosting Report
It’s also well understood that having a k8s cluster is not enough to make developers able to host their services - you need a devops team to work with them, using tools like delivery pipelines, Helm, kustomize, infra as code, service mesh, ingress, secrets management, key management - the list goes on! Developer Portals like Backstage, Port and Cortex have started to emerge to help manage some of this complexity.
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Deploying a Web Service on a Cloud VPS Using Kubernetes MicroK8s: A Comprehensive Guide
Kubernetes orchestrates deployments and manages resources through yaml configuration files. While Kubernetes supports a wide array of resources and configurations, our aim in this tutorial is to maintain simplicity. For the sake of clarity and ease of understanding, we will use yaml configurations with hardcoded values. This method simplifies the learning process but isn’t ideal for production environments due to the need for manual updates with each new deployment. Although there are methods to streamline and automate this process, such as using Helm charts or bash scripts, we’ll not delve into those techniques to keep the tutorial manageable and avoid fatigue — you might be quite tired by that point!
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Deploy Kubernetes in Minutes: Effortless Infrastructure Creation and Application Deployment with Cluster.dev and Helm Charts
Helm is a package manager that automates Kubernetes applications' creation, packaging, configuration, and deployment by combining your configuration files into a single reusable package. This eliminates the requirement to create the mentioned Kubernetes resources by ourselves since they have been implemented within the Helm chart. All we need to do is configure it as needed to match our requirements. From the public Helm chart repository, we can get the charts for common software packages like Consul, Jenkins SonarQube, etc. We can also create our own Helm charts for our custom applications so that we don’t need to repeat ourselves and simplify deployments.
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Kubernets Helm Chart
We can search for charts https://helm.sh/ . Charts can be pulled(downloaded) and optionally unpacked(untar).
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Introduction to Helm: Comparison to its less-scary cousin APT
Generally I felt as if I was diving in the deepest of waters without the correct equipement and that was horrifying. Unfortunately to me, I had to dive even deeper before getting equiped with tools like ArgoCD, and k8slens. I had to start working with... HELM.
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🎀 Five tools to make your K8s experience more enjoyable 🎀
Within the architecture of Cyclops, a central component is the Helm engine. Helm is very popular within the Kubernetes community; chances are you have already run into it. The popularity of Helm plays to Cyclops's strength because of its straightforward integration.
What are some alternatives?
helm-charts - A curated set of Helm charts brought to you by codecentric
crossplane - The Cloud Native Control Plane
oauth2-proxy - A reverse proxy that provides authentication with Google, Azure, OpenID Connect and many more identity providers.
kubespray - Deploy a Production Ready Kubernetes Cluster
renovate - Universal dependency automation tool.
Packer - Packer is a tool for creating identical machine images for multiple platforms from a single source configuration.
promscale - [DEPRECATED] Promscale is a unified metric and trace observability backend for Prometheus, Jaeger and OpenTelemetry built on PostgreSQL and TimescaleDB.
krew - 📦 Find and install kubectl plugins
kube-thanos - Kubernetes specific configuration for deploying Thanos.
skaffold - Easy and Repeatable Kubernetes Development
kubegres - Kubegres is a Kubernetes operator allowing to deploy one or many clusters of PostgreSql instances and manage databases replication, failover and backup.
dapr-demo - Distributed application runtime demo with ASP.NET Core, Apache Kafka and Redis on Kubernetes cluster.