$ oc new-project vault
You can create Helm releases on an OpenShift Container Platform cluster using the following methods:
The CLI.
The Developer perspective of the web console.
The Developer Catalog, in the Developer perspective of the web console, displays the Helm charts available in the cluster. By default, it lists the Helm charts from the Red Hat OpenShift Helm chart repository. For a list of the charts, see the Red Hat Helm index
file.
As a cluster administrator, you can add multiple cluster-scoped and namespace-scoped Helm chart repositories, separate from the default cluster-scoped Helm repository, and display the Helm charts from these repositories in the Developer Catalog.
As a regular user or project member with the appropriate role-based access control (RBAC) permissions, you can add multiple namespace-scoped Helm chart repositories, apart from the default cluster-scoped Helm repository, and display the Helm charts from these repositories in the Developer Catalog.
In the Developer perspective of the web console, you can use the Helm page to:
Create Helm Releases and Repositories using the Create button.
Create, update, or delete a cluster-scoped or namespace-scoped Helm chart repository.
View the list of the existing Helm chart repositories in the Repositories tab, which can also be easily distinguished as either cluster scoped or namespace scoped.
You have a running OpenShift Container Platform cluster and you have logged into it.
You have installed Helm.
Create a new project:
$ oc new-project vault
Add a repository of Helm charts to your local Helm client:
$ helm repo add openshift-helm-charts https://charts.openshift.io/
"openshift-helm-charts" has been added to your repositories
Update the repository:
$ helm repo update
Install an example HashiCorp Vault:
$ helm install example-vault openshift-helm-charts/hashicorp-vault
NAME: example-vault
LAST DEPLOYED: Fri Mar 11 12:02:12 2022
NAMESPACE: vault
STATUS: deployed
REVISION: 1
NOTES:
Thank you for installing HashiCorp Vault!
Verify that the chart has installed successfully:
$ helm list
NAME NAMESPACE REVISION UPDATED STATUS CHART APP VERSION
example-vault vault 1 2022-03-11 12:02:12.296226673 +0530 IST deployed vault-0.19.0 1.9.2
You can use either the Developer perspective in the web console or the CLI to select and create a release from the Helm charts listed in the Developer Catalog. You can create Helm releases by installing Helm charts and see them in the Developer perspective of the web console.
You have logged in to the web console and have switched to the Developer perspective.
To create Helm releases from the Helm charts provided in the Developer Catalog:
In the Developer perspective, navigate to the +Add view and select a project. Then click Helm Chart option to see all the Helm Charts in the Developer Catalog.
Select a chart and read the description, README, and other details about the chart.
Click Create.
In the Create Helm Release page:
Enter a unique name for the release in the Release Name field.
Select the required chart version from the Chart Version drop-down list.
Configure your Helm chart by using the Form View or the YAML View.
Where available, you can switch between the YAML View and Form View. The data is persisted when switching between the views. |
Click Create to create a Helm release. The web console displays the new release in the Topology view.
If a Helm chart has release notes, the web console displays them.
If a Helm chart creates workloads, the web console displays them on the Topology or Helm release details page. The workloads are DaemonSet
, CronJob
, Pod
, Deployment
, and DeploymentConfig
.
View the newly created Helm release in the Helm Releases page.
You can upgrade, rollback, or delete a Helm release by using the Actions button on the side panel or by right-clicking a Helm release.
You can use Helm by Accessing the web terminal in the Developer perspective of the web console.
Create a new project:
$ oc new-project nodejs-ex-k
Download an example Node.js chart that contains OpenShift Container Platform objects:
$ git clone https://github.com/redhat-developer/redhat-helm-charts
Go to the directory with the sample chart:
$ cd redhat-helm-charts/alpha/nodejs-ex-k/
Edit the Chart.yaml
file and add a description of your chart:
apiVersion: v2 (1)
name: nodejs-ex-k (2)
description: A Helm chart for OpenShift (3)
icon: https://static.redhat.com/libs/redhat/brand-assets/latest/corp/logo.svg (4)
version: 0.2.1 (5)
1 | The chart API version. It should be v2 for Helm charts that require at least Helm 3. |
2 | The name of your chart. |
3 | The description of your chart. |
4 | The URL to an image to be used as an icon. |
5 | The Version of your chart as per the Semantic Versioning (SemVer) 2.0.0 Specification. |
Verify that the chart is formatted properly:
$ helm lint
[INFO] Chart.yaml: icon is recommended
1 chart(s) linted, 0 chart(s) failed
Navigate to the previous directory level:
$ cd ..
Install the chart:
$ helm install nodejs-chart nodejs-ex-k
Verify that the chart has installed successfully:
$ helm list
NAME NAMESPACE REVISION UPDATED STATUS CHART APP VERSION
nodejs-chart nodejs-ex-k 1 2019-12-05 15:06:51.379134163 -0500 EST deployed nodejs-0.1.0 1.16.0
As a cluster administrator, you can add custom Helm chart repositories to your cluster and enable access to the Helm charts from these repositories in the Developer Catalog.
To add a new Helm Chart Repository, you must add the Helm Chart Repository custom resource (CR) to your cluster.
apiVersion: helm.openshift.io/v1beta1
kind: HelmChartRepository
metadata:
name: <name>
spec:
# optional name that might be used by console
# name: <chart-display-name>
connectionConfig:
url: <helm-chart-repository-url>
For example, to add an Azure sample chart repository, run:
$ cat <<EOF | oc apply -f -
apiVersion: helm.openshift.io/v1beta1
kind: HelmChartRepository
metadata:
name: azure-sample-repo
spec:
name: azure-sample-repo
connectionConfig:
url: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Azure-Samples/helm-charts/master/docs
EOF
Navigate to the Developer Catalog in the web console to verify that the Helm charts from the chart repository are displayed.
For example, use the Chart repositories filter to search for a Helm chart from the repository.
If a cluster administrator removes all of the chart repositories, then you cannot view the Helm option in the +Add view, Developer Catalog, and left navigation panel. |
The cluster-scoped HelmChartRepository
custom resource definition (CRD) for Helm repository provides the ability for administrators to add Helm repositories as custom resources. The namespace-scoped ProjectHelmChartRepository
CRD allows project members with the appropriate role-based access control (RBAC) permissions to create Helm repository resources of their choice but scoped to their namespace. Such project members can see charts from both cluster-scoped and namespace-scoped Helm repository resources.
|
As a regular user or project member with the appropriate RBAC permissions, you can add custom namespace-scoped Helm chart repositories to your cluster and enable access to the Helm charts from these repositories in the Developer Catalog.
To add a new namespace-scoped Helm Chart Repository, you must add the Helm Chart Repository custom resource (CR) to your namespace.
apiVersion: helm.openshift.io/v1beta1
kind: ProjectHelmChartRepository
metadata:
name: <name>
spec:
url: https://my.chart-repo.org/stable
# optional name that might be used by console
name: <chart-repo-display-name>
# optional and only needed for UI purposes
description: <My private chart repo>
# required: chart repository URL
connectionConfig:
url: <helm-chart-repository-url>
For example, to add an Azure sample chart repository scoped to your my-namespace
namespace, run:
$ cat <<EOF | oc apply --namespace my-namespace -f -
apiVersion: helm.openshift.io/v1beta1
kind: ProjectHelmChartRepository
metadata:
name: azure-sample-repo
spec:
name: azure-sample-repo
connectionConfig:
url: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Azure-Samples/helm-charts/master/docs
EOF
The output verifies that the namespace-scoped Helm Chart Repository CR is created:
projecthelmchartrepository.helm.openshift.io/azure-sample-repo created
Navigate to the Developer Catalog in the web console to verify that the Helm charts from the chart repository are displayed in your my-namespace
namespace.
For example, use the Chart repositories filter to search for a Helm chart from the repository.
Alternatively, run:
$ oc get projecthelmchartrepositories --namespace my-namespace
NAME AGE azure-sample-repo 1m
If a cluster administrator or a regular user with appropriate RBAC permissions removes all of the chart repositories in a specific namespace, then you cannot view the Helm option in the +Add view, Developer Catalog, and left navigation panel for that specific namespace. |
Some Helm chart repositories need credentials and custom certificate authority (CA) certificates to connect to it. You can use the web console as well as the CLI to add credentials and certificates.
To configure the credentials and certificates, and then add a Helm chart repository using the CLI:
In the openshift-config
namespace, create a ConfigMap
object with a custom CA certificate in PEM encoded format, and store it under the ca-bundle.crt
key within the config map:
$ oc create configmap helm-ca-cert \
--from-file=ca-bundle.crt=/path/to/certs/ca.crt \
-n openshift-config
In the openshift-config
namespace, create a Secret
object to add the client TLS configurations:
$ oc create secret tls helm-tls-configs \
--cert=/path/to/certs/client.crt \
--key=/path/to/certs/client.key \
-n openshift-config
Note that the client certificate and key must be in PEM encoded format and stored under the keys tls.crt
and tls.key
, respectively.
Add the Helm repository as follows:
$ cat <<EOF | oc apply -f -
apiVersion: helm.openshift.io/v1beta1
kind: HelmChartRepository
metadata:
name: <helm-repository>
spec:
name: <helm-repository>
connectionConfig:
url: <URL for the Helm repository>
tlsConfig:
name: helm-tls-configs
ca:
name: helm-ca-cert
EOF
The ConfigMap
and Secret
are consumed in the HelmChartRepository CR using the tlsConfig
and ca
fields. These certificates are used to connect to the Helm repository URL.
By default, all authenticated users have access to all configured charts. However, for chart repositories where certificates are needed, you must provide users with read access to the helm-ca-cert
config map and helm-tls-configs
secret in the openshift-config
namespace, as follows:
$ cat <<EOF | kubectl apply -f -
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: Role
metadata:
namespace: openshift-config
name: helm-chartrepos-tls-conf-viewer
rules:
- apiGroups: [""]
resources: ["configmaps"]
resourceNames: ["helm-ca-cert"]
verbs: ["get"]
- apiGroups: [""]
resources: ["secrets"]
resourceNames: ["helm-tls-configs"]
verbs: ["get"]
---
kind: RoleBinding
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
metadata:
namespace: openshift-config
name: helm-chartrepos-tls-conf-viewer
subjects:
- kind: Group
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
name: 'system:authenticated'
roleRef:
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
kind: Role
name: helm-chartrepos-tls-conf-viewer
EOF
You can filter Helm charts based on their certification level in the Developer Catalog.
In the Developer perspective, navigate to the +Add view and select a project.
From the Developer Catalog tile, select the Helm Chart option to see all the Helm charts in the Developer Catalog.
Use the filters to the left of the list of Helm charts to filter the required charts:
Use the Chart Repositories filter to filter charts provided by Red Hat Certification Charts or OpenShift Helm Charts.
Use the Source filter to filter charts sourced from Partners, Community, or Red Hat. Certified charts are indicated with the () icon.
The Source filter will not be visible when there is only one provider type. |
You can now select the required chart and install it.
You can disable Helm Charts from a particular Helm Chart Repository in the catalog by setting the disabled
property in the HelmChartRepository
custom resource to true
.
To disable a Helm Chart repository by using CLI, add the disabled: true
flag to the custom resource. For example, to remove an Azure sample chart repository, run:
$ cat <<EOF | oc apply -f - apiVersion: helm.openshift.io/v1beta1 kind: HelmChartRepository metadata: name: azure-sample-repo spec: connectionConfig: url:https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Azure-Samples/helm-charts/master/docs disabled: true EOF
To disable a recently added Helm Chart repository by using Web Console:
Go to Custom Resource Definitions and search for the HelmChartRepository
custom resource.
Go to Instances, find the repository you want to disable, and click its name.
Go to the YAML tab, add the disabled: true
flag in the spec
section, and click Save
.
spec: connectionConfig: url: <url-of-the-repositoru-to-be-disabled> disabled: true
The repository is now disabled and will not appear in the catalog.