Can I have multiple values.yaml files for Helm

6/29/2018

Can I have multiple values.yaml files in a Helm chart?

Something like mychart/templates/internalValues.yaml, mychart/templates/customSettings.yaml, etc?

Accessing properties in a values.yaml file can be done by {{ .Values.property1 }}. How would I reference the properties in these custom values.yaml files?

-- James Isaac
kubernetes
kubernetes-helm

2 Answers

6/29/2018

Helm by default will only use the values.yaml file in the root directory of your chart.

You can ask it to load additional values files when you install. For instance, if you have any settings that point to different databases in different environments:

helm install . -f values.production.yaml

You could also get a similar effect by bundling additional settings as a file, and asking Helm to read the bundled file. Helm provides an undocumented fromYaml template function which can parse the file, so in principle you can do something like

{{- $v := $.Files.Get "more-values.yaml" | fromYaml }}
foo: {{ $v.bar }}
-- David Maze
Source: StackOverflow

6/18/2019

Yes, it's possible to have multiple values files with Helm. Just use the --values flag (or -f).

Example:

helm install ./path --values ./internalValues.yaml --values ./customSettings.yaml

You can also pass in a single value using --set.

Example:

helm install ./path --set username=ADMIN --set password=${PASSWORD}

From the official documentation:

There are two ways to pass configuration data during install:

--values (or -f): Specify a YAML file with overrides. This can be specified multiple times and the rightmost file will take precedence

--set (and its variants --set-string and --set-file): Specify overrides on the command line.

If both are used, --set values are merged into --values with higher precedence. Overrides specified with --set are persisted in a configmap. Values that have been --set can be viewed for a given release with helm get values . Values that have been --set can be cleared by running helm upgrade with --reset-values specified.

-- Ethan Strider
Source: StackOverflow