Creating a Helm Chart Repository - Part 3

July 3, 2019   

Introduction

Welcome to a three part blog series on Creating a Helm Chart Repository. In part 1 of this series I demonstrated creating a Helm chart repository using GitHub and GitHub Pages. In part 2 I will add Automation to automatically update the repository, and in part 3 I will add testing for changes to the charts themselves.

If you’re into Videos, I walked JJ through starting with Helm from scratch all the way to creating a Helm Repo and CI/CD.

Use Circle CI to test Helm Charts

Note - You could use any other CI system here, I chose Circle as it is easy to integrate with GitHub and has a free tier. If you do use a different CI system the scripts should still work, but you’ll need to rewrite a config file suitable for your CI choice.

Introducing Chart Testing

The Helm community has built a tool very imaginitively named [Chart Testing]((https://github.com/helm/chart-testing) specifically for testing Helm charts. Not only is it capable of linting and performing test installs of a Helm chart, but its also designed to work within a monorepo and only test those charts that have changed.

You can download and use Chart Testing locally, but really the power of it is using it in CI, so lets go straight to that.

Creat a Chart Testing script and update Circle CI config

Note: While I would usually use Concourse CI for my CI workflows, I wanted to only use managed services and I chose Circle as that is already commonly used in the Helm community.

We need to add a new script, a chart-testing config file, and update the Circle CI config file.

./circleci/config.yaml

Create two new jobs:

These scripts and configs were heavily borrowed from Reinhard Nägele who is a primary maintainer of both chart-testing and chart-releaser.

The first job tells Chart Testing to lint the charts according to the Helm Community Best Practices Guide.

The second job tells Chart Testing to actually install and test the charts using KIND (Kubernetes IN Docker).

  lint-charts:
    docker:
      - image: gcr.io/kubernetes-charts-ci/test-image:v3.3.2
    steps:
      - checkout
      - run:
          name: lint
          command: |
            git remote add upstream https://github.com/paulczar/percona-helm-charts
            git fetch upstream master
            ct lint --config .circleci/ct.yaml

  install-charts:
    machine: true
    steps:
      - checkout
      - run:
          no_output_timeout: 12m
          command: .circleci/install_charts.sh

Add a new workflow telling Circle to lint and test any changes.

Note: it excludes the master branch as we don’t want to try to retest charts as they’re merged in after successfully testing the new commit.:

  lint-and-install:
    jobs:
      - lint-scripts
      - lint-charts:
          filters:
            branches:
              ignore: master
            tags:
              ignore: /.*/
      - install-charts:
          requires:
            - lint-charts

./circleci/ct.yaml

This file provides configuration for Chart Testing. For now all we need is to tell it to provide Helm with a longer timeout:

helm-extra-args: --timeout 600

./circleci/kind-config.yaml

This file provides a configuration for KIND to use:

kind: Cluster
apiVersion: kind.sigs.k8s.io/v1alpha3
nodes:
  - role: control-plane
  - role: worker
  - role: worker

./circleci/install_charts.sh

Finally this script will install KIND and will perform test installations for any changed Helm Charts:

#!/usr/bin/env bash

set -o errexit
set -o nounset
set -o pipefail

readonly CT_VERSION=v2.3.3
readonly KIND_VERSION=0.2.1
readonly CLUSTER_NAME=chart-testing
readonly K8S_VERSION=v1.14.0

run_ct_container() {
    echo 'Running ct container...'
    docker run --rm --interactive --detach --network host --name ct \
        --volume "$(pwd)/.circleci/ct.yaml:/etc/ct/ct.yaml" \
        --volume "$(pwd):/workdir" \
        --workdir /workdir \
        "quay.io/helmpack/chart-testing:$CT_VERSION" \
        cat
    echo
}

cleanup() {
    echo 'Removing ct container...'
    docker kill ct > /dev/null 2>&1

    echo 'Done!'
}

docker_exec() {
    docker exec --interactive ct "$@"
}

create_kind_cluster() {
    echo 'Installing kind...'

    curl -sSLo kind "https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/kind/releases/download/$KIND_VERSION/kind-linux-amd64"
    chmod +x kind
    sudo mv kind /usr/local/bin/kind

    kind create cluster --name "$CLUSTER_NAME" --config .circleci/kind-config.yaml --image "kindest/node:$K8S_VERSION" --wait 60s

    docker_exec mkdir -p /root/.kube

    echo 'Copying kubeconfig to container...'
    local kubeconfig
    kubeconfig="$(kind get kubeconfig-path --name "$CLUSTER_NAME")"
    docker cp "$kubeconfig" ct:/root/.kube/config

    docker_exec kubectl cluster-info
    echo

    docker_exec kubectl get nodes
    echo
}

install_local_path_provisioner() {
    docker_exec kubectl delete storageclass standard
    docker_exec kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/rancher/local-path-provisioner/master/deploy/local-path-storage.yaml
}

install_tiller() {
    echo 'Installing Tiller...'
    docker_exec kubectl --namespace kube-system create sa tiller
    docker_exec kubectl create clusterrolebinding tiller-cluster-rule --clusterrole=cluster-admin --serviceaccount=kube-system:tiller
    docker_exec helm init --service-account tiller --upgrade --wait
    echo
}

install_charts() {
    docker_exec ct install
    echo
}

main() {
    run_ct_container
    trap cleanup EXIT

    changed=$(docker_exec ct list-changed)
    if [[ -z "$changed" ]]; then
        echo 'No chart changes detected.'
        return
    fi

    echo 'Chart changes detected.'
    create_kind_cluster
    install_local_path_provisioner
    install_tiller
    install_charts
}

main

Commit the changes

Next up commit these new changes to your master branch:

$ git add .
$ git commit -m 'add chart testing on PRs'
$ git push origin master

Test the new Automation

Create a new branch:

$ git checkout -b update-app2-chart

Modify the app2 Chart.yaml to be a new version number:

apiVersion: v1
appVersion: "1.0"
description: A Helm chart for Kubernetes
name: app2
version: 0.1.1

Commit and Push the changes:

$ git add charts/app2/Chart.yaml
$ git commit -m 'bump chart2 version'
$ git push origin update-app2-chart

Circle CI should run tests and should fail:

circle fail test

This failure is because when helm create creates your chart, it doesn’t implement all of our best practices. If you check in the Circle CI job log you’ll see:

Error validating data /root/project/charts/app2/Chart.yaml with schema /etc/ct/chart_schema.yaml
  home: Required field missing

The error is quite clear, we should have a field home in our Chart.yaml. In fact there should also be a maintainers field. Let’s add those into both chart’s Chart.yaml files:

home: http://github.com/paulczar/my-helm-charts
maintainers:
  - name: paulczar
    email: username.taken@gmail.com

Note: Since you’re also changing App1, you should bump its version a patch level to 0.1.2, all changes to a Chart, even non functional one should bump the chart version.

Note: Ensure you leave a blank line at the end of the Chart.yaml file. I forgot to and had to resubmit.

Push these new changes:

$ git add .
$ git commit -m 'comply to chart best practices'
$ git push origin update-app2-chart

After a few seconds you should see the new jobs start in CircleCI and this time all three tasks should complete successfully:

circle ci lint and install

It took about 6 minutes to run, because it did a full install of both Charts (as we changed them both) to a disposable KIND cluster.

Note: Since this was a branch, the charts were not released to the Chart Repository as that job is only triggered on the master branch.

Next you’ll want to create a pull request for this change, you can do that via the GitHub web ui:

github pull request

Note: Since Circle CI has already tested the commits in this PR (Pull Request) it shows handy little test pass/fail marks against the commits.

Since the PR is showing as passing tests, you can go ahead and Merge it by clicking that green Merge button (although I like to use Squash and Merge).

This Merge into the master branch will kick off the release-charts workflow and after a few seconds we’ll have an updated Helm Repository:

$ curl http://tech.paulcz.net/my-helm-charts/index.yaml
apiVersion: v1
entries:
...
...
  app1:
    name: app1
    version: 0.1.2
...
...
  app2:
    name: app2
    version: 0.1.1
...
...

Testing Pull Requests

In the advanced settings of Circle CI you can tell it to automatically test Pull Requests that come from forks of your GitHub repository. Adding this is a great feature if you want others to work on your code with you. However you do need to protect your secrets.

For example a bad actor could add “echo $CH_TOKEN” to one of the scripts and steal my GitHub token which they could then use to mess with my Repositories.

For that reason I’ve opted not to include that in this example.

Conclusion

In Part 1 we created set of Helm Charts managed in source control (GitHub).

In Part 2 we added automation via CircleCI to automate building and deploying Chart packages to a Helm Chart Repository hosted in GitHub Pages and GitHub Releases.

In Part 3 we added further automation to test changes in those Helm charts and to pass them through rigorous testing before allowing them to be merged into the master branch.



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