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Chart Hooks
Helm provides a hook mechanism to allow chart developers to intervene at certain points in a release's life cycle. For example, you can use hooks to:
- Load a ConfigMap or Secret during install before any other charts are loaded.
- Execute a Job to back up a database before installing a new chart, and then execute a second job after the upgrade in order to restore data.
- Run a Job before deleting a release to gracefully take a service out of rotation before removing it.
Hooks work like regular templates, but they have special annotations that cause Helm to utilize them differently. In this section, we cover the basic usage pattern for hooks
The following hooks are defined:
Annotation Value | Description |
---|---|
pre-install | Executes after templates are rendered, but before any resources are created in Kubernetes |
post-install | Executes after all resources are loaded into Kubernetes |
pre-delete | Executes on a deletion request before any resources are deleted from Kubernetes |
post-delete | Executes on a deletion request after all of the release's resources have been deleted |
pre-upgrade | Executes on an upgrade request after templates are rendered, but before any resources are updated |
post-upgrade | Executes on an upgrade request after all resources have been upgraded |
pre-rollback | Executes on a rollback request after templates are rendered, but before any resources are rolled back |
post-rollback | Executes on a rollback request after all resources have been modified |
test | Executes when the Helm test subcommand is invoked ( view test docs) |
Hooks are just Kubernetes manifest files with special annotations in the metadata section. Because they are template files, you can use all of the normal template features, including reading .Values, .Release, and .Template.
For example, this template, stored in templates/post-install-job.yaml, declares a job to be run on post-install:
apiVersion: batch/v1
kind: Job
metadata:
name: "{{ .Release.Name }}"
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: {{ .Release.Service | quote }}
app.kubernetes.io/instance: {{ .Release.Name | quote }}
app.kubernetes.io/version: {{ .Chart.AppVersion }}
helm.sh/chart: "{{ .Chart.Name }}-{{ .Chart.Version }}"
annotations:
# This is what defines this resource as a hook. Without this line, the
# job is considered part of the release.
"helm.sh/hook": post-install
"helm.sh/hook-weight": "-5"
"helm.sh/hook-delete-policy": hook-succeeded
spec:
template:
metadata:
name: "{{ .Release.Name }}"
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: {{ .Release.Service | quote }}
app.kubernetes.io/instance: {{ .Release.Name | quote }}
helm.sh/chart: "{{ .Chart.Name }}-{{ .Chart.Version }}"
spec:
restartPolicy: Never
containers:
- name: post-install-job
image: "alpine:3.3"
command: ["/bin/sleep","{{ default "10" .Values.sleepyTime }}"]
What makes this template a hook is the annotation:
annotations:
"helm.sh/hook": post-install
One resource can implement multiple hooks:
annotations:
"helm.sh/hook": post-install,post-upgrade
Similarly, there is no limit to the number of different resources that may implement a given hook. For example, one could declare both a secret and a config map as a pre-install hook.
When subcharts declare hooks, those are also evaluated. There is no way for a top-level chart to disable the hooks declared by subcharts.
It is possible to define a weight for a hook which will help build a deterministic executing order. Weights are defined using the following annotation:
annotations:
"helm.sh/hook-weight": "5"
Hook weights can be positive or negative numbers but must be represented as strings. When Helm starts the execution cycle of hooks of a particular Kind it will sort those hooks in ascending order.
Hook deletion policies It is possible to define policies that determine when to delete corresponding hook resources. Hook deletion policies are defined using the following annotation:
annotations:
"helm.sh/hook-delete-policy": before-hook-creation,hook-succeeded
You can choose one or more defined annotation values:
Annotation Value | Description |
---|---|
before-hook-creation | Delete the previous resource before a new hook is launched (default) |
hook-succeeded | Delete the resource after the hook is successfully executed |
hook-failed | Delete the resource if the hook failed during execution |
If no hook deletion policy annotation is specified, the before-hook-creation behavior applies by default.