"Preserve your precious artifacts... in the cloud!"
ChartMuseum is an open-source Helm Chart Repository written in Go (Golang), with support for cloud storage backends, including Google Cloud Storage and Amazon S3.
Works as a valid Helm Chart Repository, and also provides an API for uploading new chart packages to storage etc.
Powered by some great Go technology:
- Kubernetes Helm - for working with charts, generating repository index
- Gin Web Framework - for HTTP routing
- cli - for command line option parsing
- zap - for logging
"Finally!!"
"ChartMuseum is awesome"
"This is awesome!"
"Oh yes!!!! I’ve been waiting for this for so long. Makes life much easier, especially for the index.yaml creation!"
"I was thinking about writing one of these up myself. This is perfect! thanks!"
"I am jumping for joy over ChartMuseum, a full-fledged Helm repository server with upload!"
"This is really cool ... We currently have a process that generates the index file and then uploads, so this is nice"
"Really a good idea ... really really great, thanks again. I can use nginx to hold the repos and the museum to add/delete the chart. That's a whole life cycle management of chart with the current helm"
"thanks for building the museum!"
GET /index.yaml
- retrieved when you runhelm repo add chartmuseum http://localhost:8080/
GET /charts/mychart-0.1.0.tgz
- retrieved when you runhelm install chartmuseum/mychart
GET /charts/mychart-0.1.0.tgz.prov
- retrieved when you runhelm install
with the--verify
flag
POST /api/charts
- upload a new chart versionPOST /api/prov
- upload a new provenance fileDELETE /api/charts/<name>/<version>
- delete a chart version (and corresponding provenance file)GET /api/charts
- list all chartsGET /api/charts/<name>
- list all versions of a chartGET /api/charts/<name>/<version>
- describe a chart version
GET /health
- returns 200 OK
Follow "How to Run" section below to get ChartMuseum up and running at http://localhost:8080
First create mychart-0.1.0.tgz
using the Helm CLI:
cd mychart/
helm package .
Upload mychart-0.1.0.tgz
:
curl --data-binary "@mychart-0.1.0.tgz" http://localhost:8080/api/charts
If you've signed your package and generated a provenance file, upload it with:
curl --data-binary "@mychart-0.1.0.tgz.prov" http://localhost:8080/api/prov
Both files can also be uploaded at once (or one at a time) on the /api/charts
route using the multipart/form-data
format:
curl -F "chart=@mychart-0.1.0.tgz" -F "prov=@mychart-0.1.0.tgz.prov" http://localhost:8080/api/charts
Add the URL to your ChartMuseum installation to the local repository list:
helm repo add chartmuseum http://localhost:8080
Search for charts:
helm search chartmuseum/
Install chart:
helm install chartmuseum/mychart
Install the binary:
# on Linux
curl -LO https://s3.amazonaws.com/chartmuseum/release/latest/bin/linux/amd64/chartmuseum
# on macOS
curl -LO https://s3.amazonaws.com/chartmuseum/release/latest/bin/darwin/amd64/chartmuseum
# on Windows
curl -LO https://s3.amazonaws.com/chartmuseum/release/latest/bin/windows/amd64/chartmuseum
chmod +x ./chartmuseum
mv ./chartmuseum /usr/local/bin
Using latest
in URLs above will get the latest binary (built from master branch).
Replace latest
with $(curl -s https://s3.amazonaws.com/chartmuseum/release/stable.txt)
to automatically determine the latest stable release (e.g. v0.2.8
).
Determine your version with chartmuseum --version
.
Show all CLI options with chartmuseum --help
. Common configurations can be seen below.
All command-line options can be specified as environment variables, which are defined by the command-line option, capitalized, with all -
's replaced with _
's.
For example, the env var STORAGE_AMAZON_BUCKET
can be used in place of --storage-amazon-bucket
.
Make sure your environment is properly setup to access my-s3-bucket
chartmuseum --debug --port=8080 \
--storage="amazon" \
--storage-amazon-bucket="my-s3-bucket" \
--storage-amazon-prefix="" \
--storage-amazon-region="us-east-1"
You need at least the following permissions inside your IAM Policy
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Sid": "AllowListObjects",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"s3:ListBucket"
],
"Resource": "*"
},
{
"Sid": "AllowObjectsCRUD",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"s3:DeleteObject",
"s3:GetObject",
"s3:PutObject"
],
"Resource": "arn:aws:s3:::my-s3-bucket/*"
}
]
}
Make sure your environment is properly setup to access my-gcs-bucket
chartmuseum --debug --port=8080 \
--storage="google" \
--storage-google-bucket="my-gcs-bucket" \
--storage-google-prefix=""
Make sure you have read-write access to ./chartstorage
(will create if doesn't exist)
chartmuseum --debug --port=8080 \
--storage="local" \
--storage-local-rootdir="./chartstorage"
If both of the following options are provided, basic http authentication will protect all routes:
--basic-auth-user=<user>
- username for basic http authentication--basic-auth-pass=<pass>
- password for basic http authentication
You may want basic auth to only be applied to operations that can change Charts, i.e. PUT, POST and DELETE. So to avoid basic auth on GET operations use
--auth-anonymous-get
- allow anonymous GET operations
If both of the following options are provided, the server will listen and serve HTTPS:
--tls-cert=<crt>
- path to tls certificate chain file--tls-key=<key>
- path to tls key file
You can specify the --gen-index
option if you only wish to use ChartMuseum to generate your index.yaml file.
The contents of index.yaml will be printed to stdout and the program will exit. This is useful if you are satisfied with your current Helm CI/CD process and/or don't want to monitor another webservice.
--log-json
- output structured logs as json--disable-api
- disable all routes prefixed with /api--allow-overwrite
- allow chart versions to be re-uploaded--chart-url=<url>
- absolute url for .tgzs in index.yaml--storage-amazon-endpoint=<endpoint>
- alternative s3 endpoint--chart-post-form-field-name=<field>
- form field which will be queried for the chart file content--prov-post-form-field-name=<field>
- form field which will be queried for the provenance file content
Available via Docker Hub.
Example usage (S3):
docker run --rm -it \
-p 8080:8080 \
-e PORT=8080 \
-e DEBUG=1 \
-e STORAGE="amazon" \
-e STORAGE_AMAZON_BUCKET="my-s3-bucket" \
-e STORAGE_AMAZON_PREFIX="" \
-e STORAGE_AMAZON_REGION="us-east-1" \
-v ~/.aws:/root/.aws:ro \
chartmuseum/chartmuseum:latest
There is a Helm chart for ChartMuseum itself which can be found in the official Kubernetes Charts repository.
You can also view it on Kubeapps Hub.
To install:
helm repo add incubator https://kubernetes-charts-incubator.storage.googleapis.com
helm install incubator/chartmuseum
If interested in making changes, please submit a PR to kubernetes/charts. Before doing any work, please check for any currently open pull requests. Thanks!
The repository index (index.yaml) is dynamically generated based on packages found in storage. If you store your own version of index.yaml, it will be completely ignored.
GET /index.yaml
occurs when you run helm repo add chartmuseum http://localhost:8080
or helm repo update
.
If you manually add/remove a .tgz package from storage, it will be immediately reflected in GET /index.yaml
.
You are no longer required to maintain your own version of index.yaml using helm repo index --merge
.
The --gen-index
CLI option (described above) can be used to generate and print index.yaml to stdout.
Please see scripts/mirror_k8s_repos.sh
for an example of how to download all .tgz packages from the official Kubernetes repositories (both stable and incubator).
You can then use ChartMuseum to serve up an internal mirror:
scripts/mirror_k8s_repos.sh
chartmuseum --debug --port=8080 --storage="local" --storage-local-rootdir="./mirror"
You can reach the ChartMuseum community and developers in the Kubernetes Slack #chartmuseum channel.