Book Image

Managing Kubernetes Resources Using Helm - Second Edition

By : Andrew Block, Austin Dewey
Book Image

Managing Kubernetes Resources Using Helm - Second Edition

By: Andrew Block, Austin Dewey

Overview of this book

Containerization is one of the best ways to implement DevOps, and learning how to execute it effectively is an essential part of a developer’s skillset. Kubernetes is the current industry standard for container orchestration. This book will help you discover the efficiency of managing applications running on Kubernetes with Helm. Starting with a brief introduction to Helm and its impact on users working with containers and Kubernetes, you’ll delve into the primitives of Helm charts and their architecture and use cases. From there, you’ll understand how to write Helm charts in order to automate application deployment on Kubernetes and work your way toward more advanced strategies. These enterprise-ready patterns are focused on concepts beyond the basics so that you can use Helm optimally, looking at topics related to automation, application development, delivery, lifecycle management, and security. By the end of this book, you’ll have learned how to leverage Helm to build, deploy, and manage applications on Kubernetes.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
1
Part 1: Introduction and Setup
5
Part 2: Helm Chart Development
12
Part 3: Advanced Deployment Patterns

Helm template basics

Helm templates are used to dynamically generate Kubernetes YAML Ain’t Markup Language (YAML) (or JavaScript Object Notation (JSON)) resources. They consume a set of default and user-provided values to generate resources that comprise a Kubernetes application. You’ve had some exposure to templates already in Chapter 4, Scaffolding a New Helm Chart, when you ran the helm create command, which generated a set of starter templates. In the Git repository cloned previously, these templates are located at chapter6/guestbook/templates/. Here’s a short snippet of the deployment.yaml Helm template, located within the chapter6/guestbook/templates/deployment.yaml file:

apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  name: {{ include "guestbook.fullname" . }}
  labels:
    {{- include "guestbook.labels" . | nindent 4 }}
spec:
  {{- if not .Values.autoscaling.enabled }}
  ...