Helm Overview
Pants has good support for the most common operations for managing Helm charts sources. However there may be use cases not covered yet.
Please share feedback for what you need to use Pants with your Helm charts by either opening a GitHub issue or joining our Slack!
Initial setup
First, activate the relevant backend in pants.toml
:
[GLOBAL]
backend_packages = [
...
"pants.backend.experimental.helm",
...
]
If you have more than one Helm chart in the same repository, organise them such that each of them lives in a separate folder with the chart definition file (Chart.yaml
) at their root. The Helm backend is capable of auto-detecting the root folder of your Helm charts taking the chart definition file Chart.yaml
as the reference for that root.
- src/helm/foo/Chart.yaml
- src/helm/bar/Chart.yaml
apiVersion: v2
description: Foo Helm chart
name: foo
version: 0.1.0
apiVersion: v2
description: Bar Helm chart
name: bar
version: 0.1.0
Adding helm_chart
targets
Helm charts are identified by the presence of a Chart.yaml
or Chart.yml
file, which contains relevant metadata about the chart like its name, version, dependencies, etc. To get started quickly you can create a simple Chart.yaml
file in your sources folder:
apiVersion: v2
description: Example Helm chart
name: example
version: 0.1.0
helm create
You can use the helm create
command to create an initial skeleton for your chart but be sure you have properly configured your source root patterns (as shown in the previous section) since the helm create
command will create a folder name with the name of your chart and place the sources inside.
Then run pants tailor ::
to generate BUILD
files. This will scan your source repository in search of Chart.yaml
or Chart.yml
files and create a helm_chart
target for each of them.
❯ pants tailor ::
Created src/helm/example/BUILD:
- Add helm_chart target example
Basic operations
The given setup is enough to now do some common operations on our Helm chart source code.
Linting
The Helm backend has an implementation of the Pants' lint
goal which hooks it with the helm lint
command:
pants lint ::
==> Linting example
[INFO] Chart.yaml: icon is recommended
1 chart(s) linted, 0 chart(s) failed
✓ helm succeeded.
The linting command is non-strict by default. If you want to enforce strict linting it can be either done globally in the pants.toml
file, or in a per-chart target basis, using one of the two following ways:
- pants.toml
- BUILD
[helm]
# Enables strict linting globally
lint_strict = true
helm_chart(lint_strict=True)
Likewise, in a similar way you could enable strict linting globally and then choose to disable it in a per-target basis. Run pants help helm
or pants help helm_chart
for more information.
You can set the field skip_lint=True
on each helm_chart
target to avoid linting it.
Package
Packing helm charts is supported out of the box via the Pants' package
goal. The final package will be saved as a .tgz
file under the dist
folder at your source root.
pants package ::
10:23:15.24 [INFO] Completed: Packaging Helm chart: testprojects/src/helm/example
10:23:15.24 [INFO] Wrote dist/testprojects.src.helm.example/example/example-0.2.0.tgz
Built Helm chart artifact: testprojects.src.helm.example/example/example-0.2.0.tgz
The final output folder can customised using the output_path
field in the helm_chart
target. Run pants help helm_chart
for more information.
Helm Unit tests
The Helm backend supports running Helm unit tests via the Helm unittest
plugin. To run unit tests follow the instructions on how to use that plugin and then create a BUILD
file in the same folder where your tests live with the following target:
- src/helm/example/tests/BUILD
- src/helm/example/templates/env-configmap.yaml
- src/helm/example/tests/env-configmap_test.yaml
helm_unittest_tests()
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: example-configmap
data:
{{- range $envKey, $envVal := .Values.env }}
{{ $envKey | upper }}: {{ $envVal | quote }}
{{- end }}
suite: test env-configmap
templates:
- env-configmap.yaml
tests:
- it: should contain the env map variables
set:
env:
VAR1_NAME: var1Value
var2_name: var2Value
asserts:
- equal:
path: data.VAR1_NAME
value: "var1Value"
- equal:
path: data.VAR2_NAME
value: "var2Value"
With the test files in places, you can now run pants test ::
and Pants will execute each of your tests individually:
pants test ::
10:50:12.45 [INFO] Completed: Running Helm unittest on: testprojects/src/helm/example/tests/env-configmap_test.yaml
10:50:12.46 [INFO] Completed: Run Helm Unittest - testprojects/src/helm/example/tests/env-configmap_test.yaml succeeded.
✓ testprojects/src/helm/example/tests/env-configmap_test.yaml succeeded in 0.75s.
Feeding additional files to unit tests
In some cases we may want our tests to have access to additional files which are not part of the chart. This can be achieved by setting a dependency between our unit test targets and a resources
target as follows:
- src/helm/example/tests/BUILD
- src/helm/example/templates/env-configmap.yaml
- src/helm/example/tests/extra-values.yml
- src/helm/example/tests/env-configmap_test.yaml
helm_unittest_tests(dependencies=[":extra-values"])
resources(name="extra-values", sources=["extra-values.yml"])
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: example-configmap
data:
{{- range $key, $val := .Values.data }}
{{ $key | upper }}: {{ $val | quote }}
{{- end }}
data:
VAR1_NAME: var1Value
var2_name: var2Value
suite: test env-configmap
templates:
- env-configmap.yaml
values:
- extra-values.yml
tests:
- it: should contain the env map variables
asserts:
- equal:
path: data.VAR1_NAME
value: "var1Value"
- equal:
path: data.VAR2_NAME
value: "var2Value"
Additional files can be referenced from any location inside your workspace. Note that the actual path to the additional files will be relative to the source roots configured in Pants.
In this example, since Helm charts define their source root at the location of the Chart.yaml
file and the extra-values.yml
file is inside the tests
folder relative to the chart, the test suite can access it as being local to it.
However, in the following case, we need to reference the extra file relative to the chart root. Note the ../data/extra-values.yml
path in the test suite.
- pants.toml
- src/extra/data/BUILD
- src/extra/data/extra-values.yml
- src/helm/example/tests/BUILD
- src/helm/example/templates/env-configmap.yaml
- src/helm/example/tests/env-configmap_test.yaml
[source]
root_patterns=["src/extra"]
resources(name="extra-values", sources=["extra-values.yml"])
data:
VAR1_NAME: var1Value
var2_name: var2Value
helm_unittest_tests(dependencies=["src/extra/data:extra-values"])
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: example-configmap
data:
{{- range $key, $val := .Values.data }}
{{ $key | upper }}: {{ $val | quote }}
{{- end }}
suite: test env-configmap
templates:
- env-configmap.yaml
values:
- ../data/extra-values.yml
tests:
- it: should contain the env map variables
asserts:
- equal:
path: data.VAR1_NAME
value: "var1Value"
- equal:
path: data.VAR2_NAME
value: "var2Value"
file
, files
and relocated_files
targetsOther file-centric targets are also supported, just be aware that file
and files
targets are
not affected by the source roots setting. When using relocated_files
, the files will be relative
to the value set in the dest
field.
Timeouts
Pants can cancel tests that take too long, which is useful to prevent tests from hanging indefinitely.
To add a timeout, set the timeout
field to an integer value of seconds, like this:
helm_unittest_test(name="tests", source="env-configmap_test.yaml", timeout=120)
When you set timeout
on the helm_unittest_tests
target generator, the same timeout will apply to every generated helm_unittest_test
target. Instead, you can use the overrides
field:
helm_unittest_tests(
name="tests",
overrides={
"env-configmap_test.yaml": {"timeout": 20},
("deployment_test.yaml", "pod_test.yaml"): {"timeout": 35},
},
)
You can also set a default value and a maximum value in pants.toml
:
[test]
timeout_default = 60
timeout_maximum = 600
If a target sets its timeout
higher than [test].timeout_maximum
, Pants will use the value in [test].timeout_maximum
.
Use the option pants test --no-timeouts
to temporarily disable timeouts, e.g. when debugging.
Publishing Helm charts
Pants only supports publishing Helm charts to OCI registries, a feature that was made generally available in Helm 3.8.
The publishing is done with Pants' publish
goal but first you will need to tell Pants what are the possible destination registries where to upload your charts.
Configuring OCI registries
In a similar way as the docker_image
target, a helm_chart
target takes an optional registries
field whose value is a list of registry endpoints (prefixed by the oci://
protocol):
helm_chart(
name="example",
registries=[
"oci://reg.company.internal"
]
)
The chart published from that given target will be uploaded to the OCI registry specified.
If you have several charts that have to be published into the same registries, you can add them to your pants.toml
file and then reference them by using their alias prefixed by a @
symbol.
You can also designate one or more registries as default and then charts that have no explicit registries
field will use those default registries.
- pants.toml
- src/example/BUILD
[helm.registries.company-registry1]
address = "oci://reg1.company.internal"
default = true
[helm.registries.company-registry2]
address = "oci://reg2.company.internal"
helm_chart(name="demo")
# This is equivalent to the previous target,
# since company-registry1 is the default registry:
helm_chart(
name="demo",
registries=["@company-registry1"],
)
# You can mix named and direct registry references.
helm_chart(
name="demo2",
registries=[
"@company-registry2",
"oci://ext-registry.company-b.net:8443",
]
)
Setting a repository name
When publishing charts into an OCI registry, you most likely will be interested on separating them from other kind of OCI assets (i.e. container images). For doing so you can set a repository
field in the helm_chart
target so the chart artifact will be uploaded to the given path:
helm_chart(
name="example",
repository="charts"
)
With the previous setting, your chart would be published to your default registry under the charts
folder like in oci://myregistry.internal/charts/example-0.1.0.tgz
.
You can also set a default global repository in pants.toml
as in the following example:
[helm]
default_registry_repository = "charts"
Managing Chart Dependencies
Helm charts can depend on other charts, whether first-party charts defined in the same repo, or third-party charts published in a registry. Pants uses this dependency information to know when work needs to be re-run.
To benefit from Pants dependency management and inference in your Helm charts, you will need to use apiVersion: v2
in your Chart.yaml
file.
Chart.yaml
dependencies
Pants will automatically infer dependencies from the Chart.yaml
file.
For example, given two charts foo
and bar
and a dependency between them:
- src/helm/foo/Chart.yaml
- src/helm/foo/BUILD
- src/helm/bar/Chart.yaml
- src/helm/bar/BUILD
apiVersion: v2
description: Foo Helm chart
name: foo
version: 0.1.0
helm_chart()
apiVersion: v2
description: Bar Helm chart
name: bar
version: 0.1.0
dependencies:
- name: foo
helm_chart()
Then, running pants dependencies
on bar
will list foo
as a dependency:
pants dependencies src/helm/bar
src/helm/foo
Explicitly provided dependencies in BUILD
files
If you prefer, you can let your BUILD files be the "source of truth" for dependencies, instead of specifying them in Chart.yaml
:
- src/helm/foo/Chart.yaml
- src/helm/foo/BUILD
- src/helm/bar/Chart.yaml
- src/helm/bar/BUILD
apiVersion: v2
description: Foo Helm chart
name: foo
version: 0.1.0
helm_chart()
apiVersion: v2
description: Bar Helm chart
name: bar
version: 0.1.0
helm_chart(dependencies=["//src/helm/foo"])
In this case, the pants dependencies
command will show the same result and, in addition, Pants will modify its copy of bar
's Chart.yaml
before using it, so that it includes foo
in its dependency list. Note that Pants will not modify the original copy in your source tree, only the copy it uses in the sandboxed execution environment.
Third party chart artifacts
Third party charts are provided to Pants using the helm_artifact
target:
helm_artifact(
artifact="chart_name",
version="0.0.1",
registry="...", # Optional
repository="...", # Optional for OCI registries
)
Third party artifacts are resolved using helm pull
. Other charts can reference them in the same way as first-party charts (either in the Chart.yaml
or in the BUILD
file).
When adding third party artifacts, the artifact
and version
fields are mandatory, in addition to one origin from which to download the actual archive. There are two different origins supported: classic Helm repositories and OCI registries.
For classic repositories, provide with the full URL to the location of the chart archive, excluding the archive file itself:
helm_artifact(
artifact="cert-manager",
version="v0.7.0",
repository="https://charts.jetstack.io",
)
For OCI registries, you must provide with the URL to the registry in the registry
field and an optional repository
field with the path inside that registry.
helm_artifact(
artifact="foo",
version="1.0.0",
registry="oci://registry.example.com",
repository="charts",
)