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Mastering Terraform

You're reading from   Mastering Terraform A practical guide to building and deploying infrastructure on AWS, Azure, and GCP

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835086018
Length 494 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Mark Tinderholt Mark Tinderholt
Author Profile Icon Mark Tinderholt
Mark Tinderholt
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Toc

Table of Contents (27) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Foundations of Terraform
2. Chapter 1: Understanding Terraform Architecture FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Using HashiCorp Configuration Language 4. Chapter 3: Harnessing HashiCorp Utility Providers 5. Part 2: Concepts of Cloud Architecture and Automation
6. Chapter 4: Foundations of Cloud Architecture – Virtual Machines and Infrastructure-as-a-Services 7. Chapter 5: Beyond VMs – Core Concepts of Containers and Kubernetes 8. Chapter 6: Connecting It All Together – GitFlow, GitOps, and CI/CD 9. Part 3: Building Solutions on AWS
10. Chapter 7: Getting Started on AWS – Building Solutions with AWS EC2 11. Chapter 8: Containerize with AWS – Building Solutions with AWS EKS 12. Chapter 9: Go Serverless with AWS – Building Solutions with AWS Lambda 13. Part 4: Building Solutions on Azure
14. Chapter 10: Getting Started on Azure – Building Solutions with Azure Virtual Machines 15. Chapter 11: Containerize on Azure – Building Solutions with Azure Kubernetes Service 16. Chapter 12: Go Serverless on Azure – Building Solutions with Azure Functions 17. Part 5: Building Solutions on Google Cloud
18. Chapter 13: Getting Started on Google Cloud – Building Solutions with GCE 19. Chapter 14: Containerize on Google Cloud – Building Solutions with GKE 20. Chapter 15: Go Serverless on Google Cloud – Building Solutions with Google Cloud Functions 21. Part 6: Day 2 Operations and Beyond
22. Chapter 16: Already Provisioned? Strategies for Importing Existing Environments 23. Chapter 17: Managing Production Environments with Terraform 24. Chapter 18: Looking Ahead – Certification, Emerging Trends, and Next Steps 25. Index 26. Other Books You May Enjoy

Leveraging the Helm provider to provision Kubernetes resources

As we discussed previously, Kubernetes has a built-in declarative model based on YAML that allows you to provide resources to your cluster. However, as we saw, one of the challenges of using this model is that there is no way to use dynamic values inside your YAML-based specifications. That’s where Helm comes in. In this section, we’ll look at what Helm is exactly, its basic structure, how to use it, and how we can integrate it with our Terraform pipelines or use it directly with the Helm provider for Terraform.

What is Helm?

Helm is widely referred to as a package manager for Kubernetes, but I find this definition a bit perplexing as a software developer who is used to working with package managers for software libraries such as Maven, NuGet, or npm or operating system package managers such as apt or Chocolatey. I suppose at some levels, they share a similarity in aggregating multiple components into...

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