Helmfile is a declarative spec for deploying helm charts. It lets you...
- Keep a directory of chart value files and maintain changes in version control.
- Apply CI/CD to configuration changes.
- Periodically sync to avoid skew in environments.
To avoid upgrades for each iteration of helm
, the helmfile
executable delegates to helm
- as a result, helm
must be installed.
Declarative: Write, version-control, apply the desired state file for visibility and reproducibility.
Modules: Modularize common patterns of your infrastructure, distribute it via Git, S3, etc. to be reused across the entire company (See #648)
Versatility: Manage your cluster consisting of charts, kustomizations, and directories of Kubernetes resources, turning everything to Helm releases (See #673)
Patch: JSON/Strategic-Merge Patch Kubernetes resources before helm-install
ing, without forking upstream charts (See #673)
March 2022 Update - The helmfile project has been moved to helmfile/helmfile from the former home roboll/helmfile
. Please see roboll/helmfile#1824 for more information.
Even though Helmfile is used in production environments across multiple organizations, it is still in its early stage of development, hence versioned 0.x.
Helmfile complies to Semantic Versioning 2.0.0 in which v0.x means that there could be backward-incompatible changes for every release.
Note that we will try our best to document any backward incompatibility. And in reality, helmfile had no breaking change for a year or so.
- download one of releases
- run as a container
- Archlinux: install via
pacman -S helmfile
- openSUSE: install via
zypper in helmfile
assuming you are on Tumbleweed; if you are on Leap you must add the kubic repo for your distribution version once before that command, e.g.zypper ar https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/devel:/kubic/openSUSE_Leap_\$releasever kubic
- Windows (using scoop):
scoop install helmfile
- macOS (using homebrew):
brew install helmfile
Let's start with a simple helmfile
and gradually improve it to fit your use-case!
Suppose the helmfile.yaml
representing the desired state of your helm releases looks like:
repositories:
- name: prometheus-community
url: https://prometheus-community.github.io/helm-charts
releases:
- name: prom-norbac-ubuntu
namespace: prometheus
chart: prometheus-community/prometheus
set:
- name: rbac.create
value: false
Sync your Kubernetes cluster state to the desired one by running:
helmfile apply
Congratulations! You now have your first Prometheus deployment running inside your cluster.
Iterate on the helmfile.yaml
by referencing:
Please read complete documentation
Welcome to contribute together to make helmfile better: contributing doc
We use:
- semtag for automated semver tagging. I greatly appreciate the author(pnikosis)'s effort on creating it and their kindness to share it!