$ mh --help
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mh simplifies multi-chart Helm workflows by rendering ephemeral Helm
chart override files based on templates populated with values from mh
YAML config files.
In other words: We heard you like templates, so we templated your Helm value
overrides.
Usage:
mh [command]
Available Commands:
apply Apply apps
destroy Destroy apps
help Help about any command
license Print license information.
simulate Simulate apps
status Get status of apps
version Print version information.
Flags:
-c, --config string config file (you can instead set MH_CONFIG)
-h, --help help for mh
-j, --json set logging to JSON format
Use "mh [command] --help" for more information about a command.
$ mh license
Copyright © 2018 Cisco Systems, Inc.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.
go get -u github.com/cisco-sso/mh
(In general, this is when you "choose a Kubernetes cluster" to manage.)
kubectl config get-contexts
kubectl config use-context minikube
(There's usally one mh config per kubetl context, but we've left it open ended so that multple teams can more easily work together on one cluster.)
export MH_CONFIG="/path/to/clusters/minikube/mh/main.yaml"
(This basically runs helm status
for each app you target.)
mh status
# ^ get status for all apps in `main.yaml`
mh status wordpress
# ^ get status for just these app(s)
(For each app you target, simulate runs a Helm upgrade/install with debug and dry-run modes enabled.)
mh simulate
# ^ simulate install/upgrade for all apps in `main.yaml`
mh simulate --printRendered
# ^ simulate install/upgrade for all apps in `main.yaml`
# (verbosely printing app template renderings)
mh simulate wordpress
# ^ simulate install/upgrade just these app(s),
# even if they are not in `main.yaml`
mh simulate --set "wordpress.image.tag=1.0.0"
# ^ simulate by setting mh values on the command line
# (can specify multiple or separate values with commas: key1=val1,key2=val2)
(For each app you target, apply runs a Helm upgrade/install).
mh apply
# ^ apply install/upgrade for all apps in `main.yaml`
mh apply --printRendered
# ^ apply install/upgrade for all apps in `main.yaml`
# (verbosely printing app template renderings)
mh apply wordpress
# ^ apply install/upgrade just these app(s),
# even if they are not in `main.yaml`
mh apply --set "wordpress.image.tag=1.0.0"
# ^ apply by setting mh values on the command line
# (can specify multiple or separate values with commas: key1=val1,key2=val2)
(For each app you target, apply runs a Helm delete without purge).
mh destroy
# ^ destroy all apps in `main.yaml`
mh destroy wordpress
# ^ destroy just these app(s),
# even if they are not in `main.yaml`
mh status foo --json 2>&1 | jq --slurp
docker run --rm \
-v $(pwd):/platform-deploy \
-v ~/.kube:/.kube \
-v ~/.helm:/root/.helm \
-e KUBECONFIG=/.kube/mycluster.example.org \
-e MH_CONFIG=/platform-deploy/clusters/mycluster.example.org/mh/main.yaml \
ciscosso/mh simulate
NOTE: The MH apps and config in this example exist in the platform-deploy tree.
Apps should be stored relative to MH config. (use configPath
instead of path
).
appSources:
- name: apps
kind: configPath
source: ../../../apps
For information on contributing to this repo, please see the accompanying CONTRIBUTING.md
file.