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author | Mandeep Khinda <mandeep.khinda@amdocs.com> | 2018-03-09 14:29:37 +0000 |
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committer | Mandeep Khinda <mandeep.khinda@amdocs.com> | 2018-03-09 14:54:49 +0000 |
commit | a57d8dd090a3d3d747ba40ef58e14215e88adfa2 (patch) | |
tree | bc2dcdc8b45cb0d663cb0bd40668737c84b7f1c8 /kubernetes/so/templates/NOTES.txt | |
parent | 41c491482386f37ac876717e0f565ba0781e2d8a (diff) |
iterating on new helm structure for SO
with this change we can now do the following:
can deploy umbrella chart with currently working components:
helm install local/onap --name onap --namespace onap-all
helm install local/onap --name onap-2 --namespace onap-all-2 \
--set global.nodePortPrefix=303
- umbrella includes setup chart
can deploy a-la-carte component by component into a single namespace
- Need to deploy a setup chart first. cannot be made a helm dependency
as there will be conflicts if each app chart has the same setup dependency.
helm install local/setup --name onap-setup --namespace onap-apps
helm install local/so --name so1 --namespace onap-apps \
--set global.nodePortPrefix=304
helm list
NAME REVISION STATUS CHART NAMESPACE
onap 1 DEPLOYED onap-2.0.0 onap-all
onap-2 1 DEPLOYED onap-2.0.0 onap-all-2
onap-setup 1 DEPLOYED setup-2.0.0 onap-apps
so1 1 DEPLOYED so-2.0.0 onap-apps
Unfortunately, the config maps all have fixed names, so installing
the same app in the a-la-carte fashion will fail due to a collision.
Not worrying about this as I'm not sure we want to support this.
-made the common and setup charts standalone to remove relative file paths
from requirements.yaml
This will help when there are different levels of subcharts that
need to include common
Issue-ID: OOM-786
Issue-ID: OOM-789
Issue-ID: OOM-788
Change-Id: I20bacae6f0f20e8f3bb1527af1e7e53f187341d5
Signed-off-by: Mandeep Khinda <mandeep.khinda@amdocs.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'kubernetes/so/templates/NOTES.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | kubernetes/so/templates/NOTES.txt | 8 |
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/kubernetes/so/templates/NOTES.txt b/kubernetes/so/templates/NOTES.txt index 0fa17a6a36..91d8ed42f1 100644 --- a/kubernetes/so/templates/NOTES.txt +++ b/kubernetes/so/templates/NOTES.txt @@ -4,16 +4,16 @@ http://{{ . }} {{- end }} {{- else if contains "NodePort" .Values.service.type }} - export NODE_PORT=$(kubectl get --namespace {{ .Release.Namespace }} -o jsonpath="{.spec.ports[0].nodePort}" services {{ include "common.name" . }}) - export NODE_IP=$(kubectl get nodes --namespace {{ .Release.Namespace }} -o jsonpath="{.items[0].status.addresses[0].address}") + export NODE_PORT=$(kubectl get --namespace {{ include "common.namespace" . }} -o jsonpath="{.spec.ports[0].nodePort}" services {{ include "common.name" . }}) + export NODE_IP=$(kubectl get nodes --namespace {{ include "common.namespace" . }} -o jsonpath="{.items[0].status.addresses[0].address}") echo http://$NODE_IP:$NODE_PORT {{- else if contains "LoadBalancer" .Values.service.type }} NOTE: It may take a few minutes for the LoadBalancer IP to be available. You can watch the status of by running 'kubectl get svc -w {{ include "common.name" . }}' - export SERVICE_IP=$(kubectl get svc --namespace {{ .Release.Namespace }} {{ include "common.name" . }} -o jsonpath='{.status.loadBalancer.ingress[0].ip}') + export SERVICE_IP=$(kubectl get svc --namespace {{ include "common.namespace" . }} {{ include "common.name" . }} -o jsonpath='{.status.loadBalancer.ingress[0].ip}') echo http://$SERVICE_IP:{{ .Values.service.externalPort }} {{- else if contains "ClusterIP" .Values.service.type }} - export POD_NAME=$(kubectl get pods --namespace {{ .Release.Namespace }} -l "app={{ template "so.name" . }},release={{ .Release.Name }}" -o jsonpath="{.items[0].metadata.name}") + export POD_NAME=$(kubectl get pods --namespace {{ include "common.namespace" . }} -l "app={{ template "so.name" . }},release={{ .Release.Name }}" -o jsonpath="{.items[0].metadata.name}") echo "Visit http://127.0.0.1:8080 to use your application" kubectl port-forward $POD_NAME 8080:{{ .Values.service.internalPort }} {{- end }} |