This repository contains the official HashiCorp Helm chart for installing and configuring Consul on Kubernetes. This chart supports multiple use cases of Consul on Kubernetes depending on the values provided.
For full documentation on this Helm chart along with all the ways you can use Consul with Kubernetes, please see the Consul and Kubernetes documentation.
To use the charts here, Helm must be installed in your Kubernetes cluster. Setting up Kubernetes and Helm and is outside the scope of this README. Please refer to the Kubernetes and Helm documentation.
The versions required are:
- Helm 2.10+ - This is the earliest version of Helm tested. It is possible it works with earlier versions but this chart is untested for those versions.
- Kubernetes 2.9+ - This is the earliest version of Kubernetes tested. It is possible that this chart works with earlier versions but it is untested. Other versions verified are Kubernetes 2.10, 2.11.
For now, we do not host a chart repository. To use the charts, you must
download this repository and unpack it into a directory. Either
download a tagged release or
use git checkout
to a tagged release.
Assuming this repository was unpacked into the directory consul-helm
, the chart can
then be installed directly:
helm install ./consul-helm
Please see the many options supported in the values.yaml
file. These are also fully documented directly on the
Consul website.
The Helm chart ships with both unit and acceptance tests.
The unit tests don't require any active Kubernetes cluster and complete
very quickly. These should be used for fast feedback during development.
The acceptance tests require a Kubernetes cluster with a configured kubectl
.
Both require Bats and helm
to
be installed and available on the CLI.
To run the unit tests:
bats ./test/unit
To run the acceptance tests:
bats ./test/acceptance
If the acceptance tests fail, deployed resources in the Kubernetes cluster may not be properly cleaned up. We recommend recycling the Kubernetes cluster to start from a clean slate.
Note: There is a Terraform configuration in the
test/terraform/ directory
that can be used to quickly bring up a GKE cluster and configure
kubectl
and helm
locally. This can be used to quickly spin up a test
cluster for acceptance tests. Unit tests do not require a running Kubernetes
cluster.