# Default values for mariadb.
# This is a YAML-formatted file.
# Declare variables to be passed into your templates.
global: # global defaults
  nodePortPrefix: 302
  repositorySecret: eyJuZXh1czMub25hcC5vcmc6MTAwMDEiOnsidXNlcm5hbWUiOiJkb2NrZXIiLCJwYXNzd29yZCI6ImRvY2tlciIsImVtYWlsIjoiQCIsImF1dGgiOiJaRzlqYTJWeU9tUnZZMnRsY2c9PSJ9fQ==
  persistence: {}


# application image
repository: nexus3.onap.org:10001
image: mariadb:10.1.11
pullPolicy: Always

# application configuration
config:
  mariadbRootPassword: password

# override chart name (mariadb) to share a common namespace
# suffix with parent chart (so)
nsSuffix: so


# default number of instances
replicaCount: 1

nodeSelector: {}

affinity: {}

# probe configuration parameters
liveness:
  initialDelaySeconds: 10
  periodSeconds: 10
  # necessary to disable liveness probe when setting breakpoints
  # in debugger so K8s doesn't restart unresponsive container
  enabled: true

readiness:
  initialDelaySeconds: 10
  periodSeconds: 10

## Persist data to a persitent volume
persistence:
  enabled: true
  
  ## A manually managed Persistent Volume and Claim
  ## Requires persistence.enabled: true
  ## If defined, PVC must be created manually before volume will be bound
  # existingClaim:
  volumeReclaimPolicy: Retain

  ## database data Persistent Volume Storage Class
  ## If defined, storageClassName: <storageClass>
  ## If set to "-", storageClassName: "", which disables dynamic provisioning
  ## If undefined (the default) or set to null, no storageClassName spec is
  ##   set, choosing the default provisioner.  (gp2 on AWS, standard on
  ##   GKE, AWS & OpenStack)
  ##
  # storageClass: "-"
  accessMode: ReadWriteMany
  size: 2Gi
  mountPath: /dockerdata-nfs
  mountSubPath: mso/mariadb/data

service:
  type: NodePort
  name: mariadb
  externalPort: 52
  internalPort: 3306

ingress:
  enabled: false

resources: {}
  # We usually recommend not to specify default resources and to leave this as a conscious
  # choice for the user. This also increases chances charts run on environments with little
  # resources, such as Minikube. If you do want to specify resources, uncomment the following
  # lines, adjust them as necessary, and remove the curly braces after 'resources:'.
  #
  # Example:
  # Configure resource requests and limits
  # ref: http://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/compute-resources/
  # Minimum memory for development is 2 CPU cores and 4GB memory 
  # Minimum memory for production is 4 CPU cores and 8GB memory 
#resources:
#  limits:
#    cpu: 2
#    memory: 4Gi
#  requests:
#    cpu: 2
#    memory: 4Gi