global: # -- Overrides the Docker registry globally for all images imageRegistry: null # To help compatibility with other charts which use global.imagePullSecrets. # Allow either an array of {name: pullSecret} maps (k8s-style), or an array of strings (more common helm-style). # Can be templated. # global: # imagePullSecrets: # - name: pullSecret1 # - name: pullSecret2 # or # global: # imagePullSecrets: # - pullSecret1 # - pullSecret2 imagePullSecrets: [] rbac: create: true ## Use an existing ClusterRole/Role (depending on rbac.namespaced false/true) # useExistingRole: name-of-some-role # useExistingClusterRole: name-of-some-clusterRole pspEnabled: false pspUseAppArmor: false namespaced: false extraRoleRules: [] # - apiGroups: [] # resources: [] # verbs: [] extraClusterRoleRules: [] # - apiGroups: [] # resources: [] # verbs: [] serviceAccount: create: true name: "" nameTest: "" ## ServiceAccount labels. labels: {} ## Service account annotations. Can be templated. # annotations: # eks.amazonaws.com/role-arn: arn:aws:iam::123456789000:role/iam-role-name-here ## autoMount is deprecated in favor of automountServiceAccountToken # autoMount: false automountServiceAccountToken: false replicas: 1 ## Create a headless service for the deployment headlessService: false ## Should the service account be auto mounted on the pod automountServiceAccountToken: true ## Create HorizontalPodAutoscaler object for deployment type # autoscaling: enabled: false minReplicas: 1 maxReplicas: 5 targetCPU: "60" targetMemory: "" behavior: {} ## See `kubectl explain poddisruptionbudget.spec` for more ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/run-application/configure-pdb/ podDisruptionBudget: {} # apiVersion: "" # minAvailable: 1 # maxUnavailable: 1 # unhealthyPodEvictionPolicy: IfHealthyBudget ## See `kubectl explain deployment.spec.strategy` for more ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/controllers/deployment/#strategy deploymentStrategy: type: RollingUpdate readinessProbe: httpGet: path: /api/health port: grafana livenessProbe: httpGet: path: /api/health port: grafana initialDelaySeconds: 60 timeoutSeconds: 30 failureThreshold: 10 ## Use an alternate scheduler, e.g. "stork". ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/administer-cluster/configure-multiple-schedulers/ ## # schedulerName: "default-scheduler" image: # -- The Docker registry registry: docker.io # -- Docker image repository repository: grafana/grafana # Overrides the Grafana image tag whose default is the chart appVersion tag: "" sha: "" pullPolicy: IfNotPresent ## Optionally specify an array of imagePullSecrets. ## Secrets must be manually created in the namespace. ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/pull-image-private-registry/ ## Can be templated. ## pullSecrets: [] # - myRegistrKeySecretName testFramework: enabled: true ## The type of Helm hook used to run this test. Defaults to test. ## ref: https://helm.sh/docs/topics/charts_hooks/#the-available-hooks ## # hookType: test image: # -- The Docker registry registry: docker.io repository: bats/bats tag: "1.13.0" imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent securityContext: {} containerSecurityContext: {} resources: {} # limits: # cpu: 100m # memory: 128Mi # requests: # cpu: 100m # memory: 128Mi # dns configuration for pod dnsPolicy: ~ dnsConfig: {} # nameservers: # - 8.8.8.8 # options: # - name: ndots # value: "2" # - name: edns0 hostUsers: ~ securityContext: runAsNonRoot: true runAsUser: 472 runAsGroup: 472 fsGroup: 472 containerSecurityContext: allowPrivilegeEscalation: false privileged: false capabilities: drop: - ALL seccompProfile: type: RuntimeDefault # Enable creating the grafana configmap createConfigmap: true # Extra configmaps to mount in grafana pods # Values are templated. extraConfigmapMounts: [] # - name: certs-configmap # mountPath: /etc/grafana/ssl/ # subPath: certificates.crt # (optional) # configMap: certs-configmap # readOnly: true # optional: false extraEmptyDirMounts: [] # - name: provisioning-notifiers # mountPath: /etc/grafana/provisioning/notifiers # Apply extra labels to common labels. extraLabels: {} ## Assign a PriorityClassName to pods if set # priorityClassName: downloadDashboardsImage: # -- The Docker registry registry: docker.io repository: curlimages/curl tag: 8.19.0 sha: "" pullPolicy: IfNotPresent downloadDashboards: env: {} envFromSecret: "" resources: {} securityContext: allowPrivilegeEscalation: false capabilities: drop: - ALL seccompProfile: type: RuntimeDefault envValueFrom: {} # ENV_NAME: # configMapKeyRef: # name: configmap-name # key: value_key ## Pod Annotations # podAnnotations: {} ## ConfigMap Annotations # configMapAnnotations: {} # argocd.argoproj.io/sync-options: Replace=true ## Pod Labels # podLabels: {} podPortName: grafana gossipPortName: gossip ## Deployment annotations # annotations: {} ## Expose the grafana service to be accessed from outside the cluster (LoadBalancer service). ## or access it from within the cluster (ClusterIP service). Set the service type and the port to serve it. ## ref: http://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/services/ ## service: enabled: true type: ClusterIP # Set the ip family policy to configure dual-stack see [Configure dual-stack](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/dual-stack/#services) ipFamilyPolicy: "" # Sets the families that should be supported and the order in which they should be applied to ClusterIP as well. Can be IPv4 and/or IPv6. ipFamilies: [] loadBalancerIP: "" loadBalancerClass: "" loadBalancerSourceRanges: [] port: 80 targetPort: 3000 # targetPort: 4181 To be used with a proxy extraContainer ## Service annotations. Can be templated. annotations: {} labels: {} portName: service # Adds the appProtocol field to the service. This allows to work with istio protocol selection. Ex: "http" or "tcp" appProtocol: "" sessionAffinity: "" # trafficDistribution allows specifying how traffic is distributed to Service endpoints. # Valid values: "" (default - standard load balancing),"PreferSameZone" (K8s 1.34+), "PreferSameNode" (K8s 1.35+), "PreferClose" (deprecated, use PreferSameZone), trafficDistribution: "" serviceMonitor: ## If true, a ServiceMonitor CR is created for a prometheus operator ## https://github.com/coreos/prometheus-operator ## enabled: false path: /metrics # namespace: monitoring (defaults to use the namespace this chart is deployed to) labels: {} interval: 30s scheme: http tlsConfig: {} scrapeTimeout: 30s relabelings: [] metricRelabelings: [] basicAuth: {} targetLabels: [] extraExposePorts: [] # - name: keycloak # port: 8080 # targetPort: 8080 # overrides pod.spec.hostAliases in the grafana deployment's pods hostAliases: [] # - ip: "1.2.3.4" # hostnames: # - "my.host.com" ingress: enabled: false # ingressClassName: nginx # Values can be templated annotations: {} # kubernetes.io/ingress.class: nginx # kubernetes.io/tls-acme: "true" labels: {} path: / pathType: Prefix hosts: - chart-example.local ## Extra paths to prepend to every host configuration. This is useful when working with annotation based services. extraPaths: [] # - path: /* # pathType: Prefix # backend: # service: # name: ssl-redirect # port: # name: use-annotation tls: [] # - secretName: chart-example-tls # hosts: # - chart-example.local # -- BETA: Configure the gateway routes for the chart here. # More routes can be added by adding a dictionary key like the 'main' route. # Be aware that this is an early beta of this feature, # kube-prometheus-stack does not guarantee this works and is subject to change. # Being BETA this can/will change in the future without notice, do not use unless you want to take that risk # [[ref]](https://gateway-api.sigs.k8s.io/references/spec/#gateway.networking.k8s.io%2fv1alpha2) route: main: # -- Enables or disables the route enabled: false # -- Set the route apiVersion, e.g. gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1 or gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1alpha2 apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1 # -- Set the route kind # Valid options are GRPCRoute, HTTPRoute, TCPRoute, TLSRoute, UDPRoute kind: HTTPRoute annotations: {} labels: {} hostnames: [] # - my-filter.example.com parentRefs: [] # - name: acme-gw matches: - path: type: PathPrefix value: / ## Timeouts define the timeouts that can be configured for an HTTP request. ## Ref. https://gateway-api.sigs.k8s.io/api-types/httproute/#timeouts-optional timeouts: {} # request: 10s # backendRequest: 5s ## SessionPersistence defines and configures session persistence for the route rule. ## Ref. https://gateway-api.sigs.k8s.io/geps/gep-1619/ sessionPersistence: {} # sessionName: grafana-session # type: Cookie # absoluteTimeout: 48h # cookieConfig: # lifetimeType: Permanent ## Filters define the filters that are applied to requests that match this rule. filters: [] ## Additional custom rules that can be added to the route additionalRules: [] ## httpsRedirect adds a filter for redirecting to https (HTTP 301 Moved Permanently). ## To redirect HTTP traffic to HTTPS, you need to have a Gateway with both HTTP and HTTPS listeners. ## Matches and filters do not take effect if enabled. ## Ref. https://gateway-api.sigs.k8s.io/guides/http-redirect-rewrite/ httpsRedirect: false resources: {} # limits: # cpu: 100m # memory: 128Mi # requests: # cpu: 100m # memory: 128Mi ## Node labels for pod assignment ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/node-selection/ # nodeSelector: {} ## Tolerations for pod assignment ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/taint-and-toleration/ ## tolerations: [] ## Affinity for pod assignment (evaluated as template) ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/assign-pod-node/#affinity-and-anti-affinity ## affinity: {} ## Topology Spread Constraints ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/pod-topology-spread-constraints/ ## topologySpreadConstraints: [] ## Additional init containers (evaluated as template) ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/init-containers/ ## extraInitContainers: [] ## Enable an Specify container in extraContainers. This is meant to allow adding an authentication proxy to a grafana pod extraContainers: "" # extraContainers: | # - name: proxy # image: quay.io/gambol99/keycloak-proxy:latest # args: # - -provider=github # - -client-id= # - -client-secret= # - -github-org= # - -email-domain=* # - -cookie-secret= # - -http-address=http://0.0.0.0:4181 # - -upstream-url=http://127.0.0.1:3000 # ports: # - name: proxy-web # containerPort: 4181 ## Volumes that can be used in init containers that will not be mounted to deployment pods extraContainerVolumes: [] # - name: volume-from-secret # secret: # secretName: secret-to-mount # - name: empty-dir-volume # emptyDir: {} ## Enable persistence using Persistent Volume Claims ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/persistent-volumes/ ## persistence: type: pvc enabled: false # storageClassName: default ## (Optional) Use this to bind the claim to an existing PersistentVolume (PV) by name. volumeName: "" accessModes: - ReadWriteOnce size: 10Gi # annotations: {} finalizers: - kubernetes.io/pvc-protection # selectorLabels: {} ## Sub-directory of the PV to mount. Can be templated. # subPath: "" ## Name of an existing PVC. Can be templated. # existingClaim: ## Extra labels to apply to a PVC. extraPvcLabels: {} disableWarning: false ## If persistence is not enabled, this allows to mount the ## local storage in-memory to improve performance ## inMemory: enabled: false ## The maximum usage on memory medium EmptyDir would be ## the minimum value between the SizeLimit specified ## here and the sum of memory limits of all containers in a pod ## # sizeLimit: 300Mi ## If 'lookupVolumeName' is set to true, Helm will attempt to retrieve ## the current value of 'spec.volumeName' and incorporate it into the template. lookupVolumeName: true initChownData: ## If false, data ownership will not be reset at startup ## This allows the grafana-server to be run with an arbitrary user ## enabled: true ## initChownData container image ## image: # -- The Docker registry registry: docker.io repository: library/busybox tag: "1.37.0" sha: "" pullPolicy: IfNotPresent ## initChownData resource requests and limits ## Ref: http://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/compute-resources/ ## resources: {} # limits: # cpu: 100m # memory: 128Mi # requests: # cpu: 100m # memory: 128Mi securityContext: readOnlyRootFilesystem: false runAsNonRoot: false runAsUser: 0 seccompProfile: type: RuntimeDefault capabilities: add: - CHOWN drop: - ALL # Administrator credentials when not using an existing secret (see below) adminUser: admin # adminPassword: strongpassword # Use an existing secret for the admin user. admin: ## Name of the secret. Can be templated. existingSecret: "" userKey: admin-user passwordKey: admin-password ## Define command to be executed at startup by grafana container ## Needed if using `vault-env` to manage secrets (ref: https://banzaicloud.com/blog/inject-secrets-into-pods-vault/) ## Default is "run.sh" as defined in grafana's Dockerfile # command: # - "sh" # - "/run.sh" ## Optionally define args if command is used ## Needed if using `hashicorp/envconsul` to manage secrets ## By default no arguments are set # args: # - "-secret" # - "secret/grafana" # - "./grafana" ## Extra environment variables that will be pass onto deployment pods ## ## to provide grafana with access to CloudWatch on AWS EKS: ## 1. create an iam role of type "Web identity" with provider oidc.eks.* (note the provider for later) ## 2. edit the "Trust relationships" of the role, add a line inside the StringEquals clause using the ## same oidc eks provider as noted before (same as the existing line) ## also, replace NAMESPACE and prometheus-operator-grafana with the service account namespace and name ## ## "oidc.eks.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/id/XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX:sub": "system:serviceaccount:NAMESPACE:prometheus-operator-grafana", ## ## 3. attach a policy to the role, you can use a built in policy called CloudWatchReadOnlyAccess ## 4. use the following env: (replace 123456789000 and iam-role-name-here with your aws account number and role name) ## ## env: ## AWS_ROLE_ARN: arn:aws:iam::123456789000:role/iam-role-name-here ## AWS_WEB_IDENTITY_TOKEN_FILE: /var/run/secrets/eks.amazonaws.com/serviceaccount/token ## AWS_REGION: us-east-1 ## ## 5. uncomment the EKS section in extraSecretMounts: below ## 6. uncomment the annotation section in the serviceAccount: above ## make sure to replace arn:aws:iam::123456789000:role/iam-role-name-here with your role arn env: {} ## "valueFrom" environment variable references that will be added to deployment pods. Name is templated. ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/generated/kubernetes-api/v1.19/#envvarsource-v1-core ## Renders in container spec as: ## env: ## ... ## - name: ## valueFrom: ## envValueFrom: {} # ENV_NAME: # configMapKeyRef: # name: configmap-name # key: value_key ## The name of a secret in the same kubernetes namespace which contain values to be added to the environment ## This can be useful for auth tokens, etc. Value is templated. envFromSecret: "" ## Sensible environment variables that will be rendered as new secret object ## This can be useful for auth tokens, etc. ## If the secret values contains "{{", they'll need to be properly escaped so that they are not interpreted by Helm ## ref: https://helm.sh/docs/howto/charts_tips_and_tricks/#using-the-tpl-function envRenderSecret: {} ## The names of secrets in the same kubernetes namespace which contain values to be added to the environment ## Each entry should contain a name key, and can optionally specify whether the secret must be defined with an optional key. ## Name is templated. envFromSecrets: [] ## - name: secret-name ## prefix: prefix ## optional: true ## The names of configmaps in the same kubernetes namespace which contain values to be added to the environment ## Each entry should contain a name key, and can optionally specify whether the configmap must be defined with an optional key. ## Name is templated. ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/generated/kubernetes-api/v1.23/#configmapenvsource-v1-core envFromConfigMaps: [] ## - name: configmap-name ## prefix: prefix ## optional: true # Inject Kubernetes services as environment variables. # See https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/connect-applications-service/#environment-variables enableServiceLinks: true ## Additional grafana server secret mounts # Defines additional mounts with secrets. Secrets must be manually created in the namespace. extraSecretMounts: [] # - name: secret-files # mountPath: /etc/secrets # secretName: grafana-secret-files # readOnly: true # optional: false # subPath: "" # # for AWS EKS (cloudwatch) use the following (see also instruction in env: above) # - name: aws-iam-token # mountPath: /var/run/secrets/eks.amazonaws.com/serviceaccount # readOnly: true # projected: # defaultMode: 420 # sources: # - serviceAccountToken: # audience: sts.amazonaws.com # expirationSeconds: 86400 # path: token # # for CSI e.g. Azure Key Vault use the following # - name: secrets-store-inline # mountPath: /run/secrets/vault.azure.com # readOnly: true # csi: # driver: secrets-store.csi.k8s.io # readOnly: true # volumeAttributes: # secretProviderClass: "akv-grafana-spc" # nodePublishSecretRef: # Only required when using service principal mode # name: grafana-akv-creds # Only required when using service principal mode ## Additional grafana server volume mounts # Defines additional volume mounts. extraVolumeMounts: [] # - name: extra-volume-0 # mountPath: /mnt/volume0 # readOnly: true # - name: extra-volume-1 # mountPath: /mnt/volume1 # readOnly: true # - name: grafana-secrets # mountPath: /mnt/volume2 ## Additional Grafana server volumes extraVolumes: [] # - name: extra-volume-0 # existingClaim: volume-claim # - name: extra-volume-1 # hostPath: # path: /usr/shared/ # type: "" # - name: grafana-secrets # csi: # driver: secrets-store.csi.k8s.io # readOnly: true # volumeAttributes: # secretProviderClass: "grafana-env-spc" ## Container Lifecycle Hooks. Execute a specific bash command or make an HTTP request lifecycleHooks: {} # postStart: # exec: # command: [] ## Pass the plugins you want installed as a list. ## plugins: [] # - digrich-bubblechart-panel # - grafana-clock-panel ## You can also use other plugin download URL, as long as they are valid zip files, ## and specify the name of the plugin as prefix, with an version. Like this: # - marcusolsson-json-datasource@1.3.24@https://grafana.com/api/plugins/marcusolsson-json-datasource/versions/1.3.24/download ## Configure grafana datasources ## ref: http://docs.grafana.org/administration/provisioning/#datasources ## datasources: {} # datasources.yaml: # apiVersion: 1 # datasources: # - name: Prometheus # type: prometheus # url: http://prometheus-prometheus-server # access: proxy # isDefault: true # - name: CloudWatch # type: cloudwatch # access: proxy # uid: cloudwatch # editable: false # jsonData: # authType: default # defaultRegion: us-east-1 # deleteDatasources: [] # - name: Prometheus ## Configure grafana alerting (can be templated) ## ref: https://docs.grafana.com/alerting/set-up/provision-alerting-resources/file-provisioning/ ## alerting: {} # policies.yaml: # apiVersion: 1 # policies: # - orgId: 1 # receiver: first_uid # # rules.yaml: # apiVersion: 1 # groups: # - orgId: 1 # name: '{{ .Chart.Name }}_my_rule_group' # folder: my_first_folder # interval: 60s # rules: # - uid: my_id_1 # title: my_first_rule # condition: A # data: # - refId: A # datasourceUid: '-100' # model: # conditions: # - evaluator: # params: # - 3 # type: gt # operator: # type: and # query: # params: # - A # reducer: # type: last # type: query # datasource: # type: __expr__ # uid: '-100' # expression: 1==0 # intervalMs: 1000 # maxDataPoints: 43200 # refId: A # type: math # dashboardUid: my_dashboard # panelId: 123 # noDataState: Alerting # for: 60s # annotations: # some_key: some_value # labels: # team: sre_team_1 # # contactpoints.yaml: # secret: # apiVersion: 1 # contactPoints: # - orgId: 1 # name: cp_1 # receivers: # - uid: first_uid # type: pagerduty # settings: # integrationKey: XXX # severity: critical # class: ping failure # component: Grafana # group: app-stack # summary: | # {{ `{{ include "default.message" . }}` }} # # templates.yaml: # apiVersion: 1 # templates: # - orgId: 1 # name: my_first_template # template: | # {{ ` # {{ define "my_first_template" }} # Custom notification message # {{ end }} # ` }} # # mutetimes.yaml # apiVersion: 1 # muteTimes: # - orgId: 1 # name: mti_1 # # refer to https://prometheus.io/docs/alerting/latest/configuration/#time_interval-0 # time_intervals: {} ## Configure notifiers ## ref: http://docs.grafana.org/administration/provisioning/#alert-notification-channels ## notifiers: {} # notifiers.yaml: # notifiers: # - name: email-notifier # type: email # uid: email1 # # either: # org_id: 1 # # or # org_name: Main Org. # is_default: true # settings: # addresses: an_email_address@example.com # delete_notifiers: ## Configure grafana dashboard providers ## ref: http://docs.grafana.org/administration/provisioning/#dashboards ## ## `path` must be /var/lib/grafana/dashboards/ ## dashboardProviders: {} # dashboardproviders.yaml: # apiVersion: 1 # providers: # - name: 'default' # orgId: 1 # folder: '' # type: file # disableDeletion: false # editable: true # options: # path: /var/lib/grafana/dashboards/default ## Configure how curl fetches remote dashboards. The beginning dash is required. ## NOTE: This sets the default short flags for all dashboards, but these ## defaults can be overridden individually for each dashboard by setting ## curlOptions. See the example dashboards section below. ## ## -s - silent mode ## -k - allow insecure (eg: non-TLS) connections ## -f - fail fast ## See the curl documentation for additional options ## defaultCurlOptions: "-skf" ## Configure grafana dashboard to import ## NOTE: To use dashboards you must also enable/configure dashboardProviders ## ref: https://grafana.com/dashboards ## ## dashboards per provider, use provider name as key. ## For dashboards downloaded via gnetId or url, the optional "title" key overrides ## the dashboard title in the downloaded JSON so the UI displays your custom title. ## dashboards: {} # default: # some-dashboard: # json: | # $RAW_JSON # custom-dashboard: # file: dashboards/custom-dashboard.json # prometheus-stats: # title: My Custom Dashboard Title # optional; overrides the dashboard title in the downloaded JSON # gnetId: 2 # revision: 2 # datasource: Prometheus # local-dashboard: # url: https://example.com/repository/test.json # curlOptions: "-sLf" # token: '' # local-dashboard-base64: # url: https://example.com/repository/test-b64.json # token: '' # b64content: true # local-dashboard-gitlab: # url: https://example.com/repository/test-gitlab.json # gitlabToken: '' # local-dashboard-bitbucket: # url: https://example.com/repository/test-bitbucket.json # bearerToken: '' # local-dashboard-azure: # url: https://example.com/repository/test-azure.json # basic: '' # acceptHeader: '*/*' ## Reference to external ConfigMap per provider. Use provider name as key and ConfigMap name as value. ## A provider dashboards must be defined either by external ConfigMaps or in values.yaml, not in both. ## ConfigMap data example: ## ## data: ## example-dashboard.json: | ## RAW_JSON ## dashboardsConfigMaps: {} # default: "" ## Grafana's primary configuration ## NOTE: values in map will be converted to ini format ## ref: http://docs.grafana.org/installation/configuration/ ## grafana.ini: paths: data: /var/lib/grafana/ logs: /var/log/grafana plugins: /var/lib/grafana/plugins provisioning: /etc/grafana/provisioning analytics: check_for_updates: true log: mode: console server: domain: "{{ if (and .Values.ingress.enabled .Values.ingress.hosts) }}{{ tpl (.Values.ingress.hosts | first) . }}{{ else if (and .Values.route.main.enabled .Values.route.main.hostnames) }}{{ tpl (.Values.route.main.hostnames | first) . }}{{ else }}''{{ end }}" unified_storage: index_path: /var/lib/grafana-search/bleve ## grafana Authentication can be enabled with the following values on grafana.ini # server: # The full public facing url you use in browser, used for redirects and emails # root_url: # https://grafana.com/docs/grafana/latest/auth/github/#enable-github-in-grafana # auth.github: # enabled: false # allow_sign_up: false # scopes: user:email,read:org # auth_url: https://github.com/login/oauth/authorize # token_url: https://github.com/login/oauth/access_token # api_url: https://api.github.com/user # team_ids: # allowed_organizations: # client_id: # client_secret: ## LDAP Authentication can be enabled with the following values on grafana.ini ## NOTE: Grafana will fail to start if the value for ldap.toml is invalid # auth.ldap: # enabled: true # allow_sign_up: true # config_file: /etc/grafana/ldap.toml ## Grafana's alerting configuration # unified_alerting: # enabled: true # rule_version_record_limit: "5" ## Grafana's LDAP configuration ## Templated by the template in _helpers.tpl ## NOTE: To enable the grafana.ini must be configured with auth.ldap.enabled ## ref: http://docs.grafana.org/installation/configuration/#auth-ldap ## ref: http://docs.grafana.org/installation/ldap/#configuration ldap: enabled: false # `existingSecret` is a reference to an existing secret containing the ldap configuration # for Grafana in a key `ldap-toml`. existingSecret: "" # `config` is the content of `ldap.toml` that will be stored in the created secret config: "" # config: |- # verbose_logging = true # [[servers]] # host = "my-ldap-server" # port = 636 # use_ssl = true # start_tls = false # ssl_skip_verify = false # bind_dn = "uid=%s,ou=users,dc=myorg,dc=com" # When process namespace sharing is enabled, processes in a container are visible to all other containers in the same pod # This parameter is added because the ldap reload api is not working https://grafana.com/docs/grafana/latest/developers/http_api/admin/#reload-ldap-configuration # To allow an extraContainer to restart the Grafana container shareProcessNamespace: false ## Grafana's SMTP configuration ## NOTE: To enable, grafana.ini must be configured with smtp.enabled ## ref: http://docs.grafana.org/installation/configuration/#smtp smtp: # `existingSecret` is a reference to an existing secret containing the smtp configuration # for Grafana. existingSecret: "" userKey: "user" passwordKey: "password" ## Sidecars that collect the configmaps with specified label and stores the included files them into the respective folders ## Requires at least Grafana 5 to work and can't be used together with parameters dashboardProviders, datasources and dashboards sidecar: image: # -- The Docker registry registry: quay.io repository: kiwigrid/k8s-sidecar tag: 2.6.0 sha: "" imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent resources: {} # limits: # cpu: 100m # memory: 100Mi # requests: # cpu: 50m # memory: 50Mi securityContext: allowPrivilegeEscalation: false capabilities: drop: - ALL seccompProfile: type: RuntimeDefault # skipTlsVerify Set to true to skip tls verification for kube api calls # skipTlsVerify: true enableUniqueFilenames: false readinessProbe: {} livenessProbe: {} # Log level default for all sidecars. Can be one of: DEBUG, INFO, WARN, ERROR, CRITICAL. Defaults to INFO # logLevel: INFO alerts: enabled: false # Additional environment variables for the alerts sidecar env: {} ## "valueFrom" environment variable references that will be added to deployment pods. Name is templated. ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/generated/kubernetes-api/v1.19/#envvarsource-v1-core ## Renders in container spec as: ## env: ## ... ## - name: ## valueFrom: ## envValueFrom: {} # ENV_NAME: # configMapKeyRef: # name: configmap-name # key: value_key # Do not reprocess already processed unchanged resources on k8s API reconnect. # ignoreAlreadyProcessed: true # label that the configmaps with alert are marked with (can be templated) label: grafana_alert # value of label that the configmaps with alert are set to (can be templated) labelValue: "" # Log level. Can be one of: DEBUG, INFO, WARN, ERROR, CRITICAL. # logLevel: INFO # If specified, the sidecar will search for alert config-maps inside this namespace. # Otherwise the namespace in which the sidecar is running will be used. # It's also possible to specify ALL to search in all namespaces searchNamespace: null # Method to use to detect ConfigMap changes. With WATCH the sidecar will do a WATCH requests, with SLEEP it will list all ConfigMaps, then sleep for 60 seconds. watchMethod: WATCH # search in configmap, secret or both resource: both # # resourceName: comma separated list of resource names to be fetched/checked by this sidecar. # per default all resources of the type defined in {{ .Values.sidecar.alerts.resource }} will be checked. # This e.g. allows stricter RBAC rules which are limited to the resources meant for the sidecars. # resourceName: "secret/alerts-1,configmap/alerts-0" resourceName: "" # # watchServerTimeout: request to the server, asking it to cleanly close the connection after that. # defaults to 60sec; much higher values like 3600 seconds (1h) are feasible for non-Azure K8S # watchServerTimeout: 3600 # # watchClientTimeout: is a client-side timeout, configuring your local socket. # If you have a network outage dropping all packets with no RST/FIN, # this is how long your client waits before realizing & dropping the connection. # defaults to 66sec (sic!) # watchClientTimeout: 60 # # maxTotalRetries: Total number of retries to allow for any http request. # Takes precedence over other counts. Applies to all requests to reloadURL and k8s api requests. # Set to 0 to fail on the first retry. # maxTotalRetries: 5 # # maxConnectRetries: How many connection-related errors to retry on for any http request. # These are errors raised before the request is sent to the remote server, which we assume has not triggered the server to process the request. # Applies to all requests to reloadURL and k8s api requests. # Set to 0 to fail on the first retry of this type. # maxConnectRetries: 10 # # maxReadRetries: How many times to retry on read errors for any http request # These errors are raised after the request was sent to the server, so the request may have side-effects. # Applies to all requests to reloadURL and k8s api requests. # Set to 0 to fail on the first retry of this type. # maxReadRetries: 5 # # Endpoint to send request to reload alerts reloadURL: "http://localhost:3000/api/admin/provisioning/alerting/reload" # Absolute path to a script to execute after a configmap got reloaded. # It runs before calls to REQ_URI. If the file is not executable it will be passed to sh. # Otherwise, it's executed as is. Shebangs known to work are #!/bin/sh and #!/usr/bin/env python script: null skipReload: false # This is needed if skipReload is true, to load any alerts defined at startup time. # Deploy the alert sidecar as an initContainer. initAlerts: false # Use native sidecar https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/sidecar-containers/ # restartPolicy: Always # # only applies to native sidecars # startupProbe: # httpGet: # path: /healthz # port: 8080 # initialDelaySeconds: 5 # periodSeconds: 5 # failureThreshold: 60 # 5 minutes # Additional alerts sidecar volume mounts extraMounts: [] # Sets the size limit of the alert sidecar emptyDir volume sizeLimit: "" dashboards: enabled: false # Additional environment variables for the dashboards sidecar env: {} ## "valueFrom" environment variable references that will be added to deployment pods. Name is templated. ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/generated/kubernetes-api/v1.19/#envvarsource-v1-core ## Renders in container spec as: ## env: ## ... ## - name: ## valueFrom: ## envValueFrom: {} # ENV_NAME: # configMapKeyRef: # name: configmap-name # key: value_key # Do not reprocess already processed unchanged resources on k8s API reconnect. # ignoreAlreadyProcessed: true SCProvider: true # label that the configmaps with dashboards are marked with (can be templated) label: grafana_dashboard # value of label that the configmaps with dashboards are set to (can be templated) labelValue: "" # Log level. Can be one of: DEBUG, INFO, WARN, ERROR, CRITICAL. # logLevel: INFO # folder in the pod that should hold the collected dashboards (unless `defaultFolderName` is set) folder: /tmp/dashboards # The default folder name, it will create a subfolder under the `folder` and put dashboards in there instead defaultFolderName: null # Namespaces list. If specified, the sidecar will search for config-maps/secrets inside these namespaces. # Otherwise the namespace in which the sidecar is running will be used. # It's also possible to specify ALL to search in all namespaces. searchNamespace: null # Method to use to detect ConfigMap changes. With WATCH the sidecar will do a WATCH requests, with SLEEP it will list all ConfigMaps, then sleep for 60 seconds. watchMethod: WATCH # search in configmap, secret or both resource: both # If specified, the sidecar will look for annotation with this name to create folder and put graph here. # You can use this parameter together with `provider.foldersFromFilesStructure`to annotate configmaps and create folder structure. folderAnnotation: null # # resourceName: comma separated list of resource names to be fetched/checked by this sidecar. # per default all resources of the type defined in {{ .Values.sidecar.dashboards.resource }} will be checked. # This e.g. allows stricter RBAC rules which are limited to the resources meant for the sidecars. # resourceName: "secret/dashboards-0,configmap/dashboards-1" resourceName: "" # # maxTotalRetries: Total number of retries to allow for any http request. # Takes precedence over other counts. Applies to all requests to reloadURL and k8s api requests. # Set to 0 to fail on the first retry. # maxTotalRetries: 5 # # maxConnectRetries: How many connection-related errors to retry on for any http request. # These are errors raised before the request is sent to the remote server, which we assume has not triggered the server to process the request. # Applies to all requests to reloadURL and k8s api requests. # Set to 0 to fail on the first retry of this type. # maxConnectRetries: 10 # # maxReadRetries: How many times to retry on read errors for any http request # These errors are raised after the request was sent to the server, so the request may have side-effects. # Applies to all requests to reloadURL and k8s api requests. # Set to 0 to fail on the first retry of this type. # maxReadRetries: 5 # # Endpoint to send request to reload alerts reloadURL: "http://localhost:3000/api/admin/provisioning/dashboards/reload" # Absolute path to a script to execute after a configmap got reloaded. # It runs before calls to REQ_URI. If the file is not executable it will be passed to sh. # Otherwise, it's executed as is. Shebangs known to work are #!/bin/sh and #!/usr/bin/env python script: null skipReload: false # This is needed if skipReload is true, to load any dashboards defined at startup time. # Deploy the dashboard sidecar as an initContainer. initDashboards: false # Use native sidecar https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/sidecar-containers/ # restartPolicy: Always # # only applies to native sidecars # startupProbe: # httpGet: # path: /healthz # port: 8083 # initialDelaySeconds: 5 # periodSeconds: 5 # failureThreshold: 60 # 5 minutes # watchServerTimeout: request to the server, asking it to cleanly close the connection after that. # defaults to 60sec; much higher values like 3600 seconds (1h) are feasible for non-Azure K8S # watchServerTimeout: 3600 # # watchClientTimeout: is a client-side timeout, configuring your local socket. # If you have a network outage dropping all packets with no RST/FIN, # this is how long your client waits before realizing & dropping the connection. # defaults to 66sec (sic!) # watchClientTimeout: 60 # # provider configuration that lets grafana manage the dashboards provider: # name of the provider, should be unique name: sidecarProvider # orgid as configured in grafana orgid: 1 # folder in which the dashboards should be imported in grafana folder: '' # folder UID. will be automatically generated if not specified folderUid: '' # type of the provider type: file # disableDelete to activate a import-only behaviour disableDelete: false # allow updating provisioned dashboards from the UI allowUiUpdates: false # allow Grafana to replicate dashboard structure from filesystem foldersFromFilesStructure: false # Additional dashboards sidecar volume mounts extraMounts: [] # Sets the size limit of the dashboard sidecar emptyDir volume sizeLimit: "" datasources: enabled: false # Additional environment variables for the datasourcessidecar env: {} ## "valueFrom" environment variable references that will be added to deployment pods. Name is templated. ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/generated/kubernetes-api/v1.19/#envvarsource-v1-core ## Renders in container spec as: ## env: ## ... ## - name: ## valueFrom: ## envValueFrom: {} # ENV_NAME: # configMapKeyRef: # name: configmap-name # key: value_key # Do not reprocess already processed unchanged resources on k8s API reconnect. # ignoreAlreadyProcessed: true # label that the configmaps with datasources are marked with (can be templated) label: grafana_datasource # value of label that the configmaps with datasources are set to (can be templated) labelValue: "" # Log level. Can be one of: DEBUG, INFO, WARN, ERROR, CRITICAL. # logLevel: INFO # If specified, the sidecar will search for datasource config-maps inside this namespace. # Otherwise the namespace in which the sidecar is running will be used. # It's also possible to specify ALL to search in all namespaces searchNamespace: null # Method to use to detect ConfigMap changes. With WATCH the sidecar will do a WATCH requests, with SLEEP it will list all ConfigMaps, then sleep for 60 seconds. watchMethod: WATCH # search in configmap, secret or both resource: both # # resourceName: comma separated list of resource names to be fetched/checked by this sidecar. # per default all resources of the type defined in {{ .Values.sidecar.datasources.resource }} will be checked. # This e.g. allows stricter RBAC rules which are limited to the resources meant for the sidecars. # resourceName: "secret/datasources-0,configmap/datasources-15" resourceName: "" # # watchServerTimeout: request to the server, asking it to cleanly close the connection after that. # defaults to 60sec; much higher values like 3600 seconds (1h) are feasible for non-Azure K8S # watchServerTimeout: 3600 # # watchClientTimeout: is a client-side timeout, configuring your local socket. # If you have a network outage dropping all packets with no RST/FIN, # this is how long your client waits before realizing & dropping the connection. # defaults to 66sec (sic!) # watchClientTimeout: 60 # # maxTotalRetries: Total number of retries to allow for any http request. # Takes precedence over other counts. Applies to all requests to reloadURL and k8s api requests. # Set to 0 to fail on the first retry. # maxTotalRetries: 5 # # maxConnectRetries: How many connection-related errors to retry on for any http request. # These are errors raised before the request is sent to the remote server, which we assume has not triggered the server to process the request. # Applies to all requests to reloadURL and k8s api requests. # Set to 0 to fail on the first retry of this type. # maxConnectRetries: 10 # # maxReadRetries: How many times to retry on read errors for any http request # These errors are raised after the request was sent to the server, so the request may have side-effects. # Applies to all requests to reloadURL and k8s api requests. # Set to 0 to fail on the first retry of this type. # maxReadRetries: 5 # # Endpoint to send request to reload datasources reloadURL: "http://localhost:3000/api/admin/provisioning/datasources/reload" # Absolute path to a script to execute after a configmap got reloaded. # It runs before calls to REQ_URI. If the file is not executable it will be passed to sh. # Otherwise, it's executed as is. Shebangs known to work are #!/bin/sh and #!/usr/bin/env python script: null skipReload: false # This is needed if skipReload is true, to load any datasources defined at startup time. # Deploy the datasources sidecar as an initContainer. initDatasources: false # Use native sidecar https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/sidecar-containers/ # restartPolicy: Always # # only applies to native sidecars # startupProbe: # httpGet: # path: /healthz # port: 8081 # initialDelaySeconds: 5 # periodSeconds: 5 # failureThreshold: 60 # 5 minutes # Additional datasources sidecar volume mounts extraMounts: [] # Sets the size limit of the datasource sidecar emptyDir volume sizeLimit: "" plugins: enabled: false # Additional environment variables for the plugins sidecar env: {} # Do not reprocess already processed unchanged resources on k8s API reconnect. # ignoreAlreadyProcessed: true # label that the configmaps with plugins are marked with (can be templated) label: grafana_plugin # value of label that the configmaps with plugins are set to (can be templated) labelValue: "" # Log level. Can be one of: DEBUG, INFO, WARN, ERROR, CRITICAL. # logLevel: INFO # If specified, the sidecar will search for plugin config-maps inside this namespace. # Otherwise the namespace in which the sidecar is running will be used. # It's also possible to specify ALL to search in all namespaces searchNamespace: null # Method to use to detect ConfigMap changes. With WATCH the sidecar will do a WATCH requests, with SLEEP it will list all ConfigMaps, then sleep for 60 seconds. watchMethod: WATCH # search in configmap, secret or both resource: both # # resourceName: comma separated list of resource names to be fetched/checked by this sidecar. # per default all resources of the type defined in {{ .Values.sidecar.plugins.resource }} will be checked. # This e.g. allows stricter RBAC rules which are limited to the resources meant for the sidecars. # resourceName: "secret/plugins-0,configmap/plugins-1" resourceName: "" # # watchServerTimeout: request to the server, asking it to cleanly close the connection after that. # defaults to 60sec; much higher values like 3600 seconds (1h) are feasible for non-Azure K8S # watchServerTimeout: 3600 # # watchClientTimeout: is a client-side timeout, configuring your local socket. # If you have a network outage dropping all packets with no RST/FIN, # this is how long your client waits before realizing & dropping the connection. # defaults to 66sec (sic!) # watchClientTimeout: 60 # # maxTotalRetries: Total number of retries to allow for any http request. # Takes precedence over other counts. Applies to all requests to reloadURL and k8s api requests. # Set to 0 to fail on the first retry. # maxTotalRetries: 5 # # maxConnectRetries: How many connection-related errors to retry on for any http request. # These are errors raised before the request is sent to the remote server, which we assume has not triggered the server to process the request. # Applies to all requests to reloadURL and k8s api requests. # Set to 0 to fail on the first retry of this type. # maxConnectRetries: 10 # # maxReadRetries: How many times to retry on read errors for any http request # These errors are raised after the request was sent to the server, so the request may have side-effects. # Applies to all requests to reloadURL and k8s api requests. # Set to 0 to fail on the first retry of this type. # maxReadRetries: 5 # # Endpoint to send request to reload plugins reloadURL: "http://localhost:3000/api/admin/provisioning/plugins/reload" # Absolute path to a script to execute after a configmap got reloaded. # It runs before calls to REQ_URI. If the file is not executable it will be passed to sh. # Otherwise, it's executed as is. Shebangs known to work are #!/bin/sh and #!/usr/bin/env python script: null skipReload: false # Deploy the datasource sidecar as an initContainer in addition to a container. # This is needed if skipReload is true, to load any plugins defined at startup time. initPlugins: false # Additional plugins sidecar volume mounts extraMounts: [] # Sets the size limit of the plugin sidecar emptyDir volume sizeLimit: "" notifiers: enabled: false # Additional environment variables for the notifierssidecar env: {} # Do not reprocess already processed unchanged resources on k8s API reconnect. # ignoreAlreadyProcessed: true # label that the configmaps with notifiers are marked with (can be templated) label: grafana_notifier # value of label that the configmaps with notifiers are set to (can be templated) labelValue: "" # Log level. Can be one of: DEBUG, INFO, WARN, ERROR, CRITICAL. # logLevel: INFO # If specified, the sidecar will search for notifier config-maps inside this namespace. # Otherwise the namespace in which the sidecar is running will be used. # It's also possible to specify ALL to search in all namespaces searchNamespace: null # Method to use to detect ConfigMap changes. With WATCH the sidecar will do a WATCH requests, with SLEEP it will list all ConfigMaps, then sleep for 60 seconds. watchMethod: WATCH # search in configmap, secret or both resource: both # # resourceName: comma separated list of resource names to be fetched/checked by this sidecar. # per default all resources of the type defined in {{ .Values.sidecar.notifiers.resource }} will be checked. # This e.g. allows stricter RBAC rules which are limited to the resources meant for the sidecars. # resourceName: "secret/notifiers-2,configmap/notifiers-1" resourceName: "" # # watchServerTimeout: request to the server, asking it to cleanly close the connection after that. # defaults to 60sec; much higher values like 3600 seconds (1h) are feasible for non-Azure K8S # watchServerTimeout: 3600 # # watchClientTimeout: is a client-side timeout, configuring your local socket. # If you have a network outage dropping all packets with no RST/FIN, # this is how long your client waits before realizing & dropping the connection. # defaults to 66sec (sic!) # watchClientTimeout: 60 # # maxTotalRetries: Total number of retries to allow for any http request. # Takes precedence over other counts. Applies to all requests to reloadURL and k8s api requests. # Set to 0 to fail on the first retry. # maxTotalRetries: 5 # # maxConnectRetries: How many connection-related errors to retry on for any http request. # These are errors raised before the request is sent to the remote server, which we assume has not triggered the server to process the request. # Applies to all requests to reloadURL and k8s api requests. # Set to 0 to fail on the first retry of this type. # maxConnectRetries: 10 # # maxReadRetries: How many times to retry on read errors for any http request # These errors are raised after the request was sent to the server, so the request may have side-effects. # Applies to all requests to reloadURL and k8s api requests. # Set to 0 to fail on the first retry of this type. # maxReadRetries: 5 # # Endpoint to send request to reload notifiers reloadURL: "http://localhost:3000/api/admin/provisioning/notifications/reload" # Absolute path to a script to execute after a configmap got reloaded. # It runs before calls to REQ_URI. If the file is not executable it will be passed to sh. # Otherwise, it's executed as is. Shebangs known to work are #!/bin/sh and #!/usr/bin/env python script: null skipReload: false # Deploy the notifier sidecar as an initContainer in addition to a container. # This is needed if skipReload is true, to load any notifiers defined at startup time. initNotifiers: false # Use native sidecar https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/sidecar-containers/ # restartPolicy: Always # # only applies to native sidecars # startupProbe: # httpGet: # path: /healthz # port: 8082 # initialDelaySeconds: 5 # periodSeconds: 5 # failureThreshold: 60 # 5 minutes # Additional notifiers sidecar volume mounts extraMounts: [] # Sets the size limit of the notifier sidecar emptyDir volume sizeLimit: "" ## Override the deployment namespace ## namespaceOverride: "" ## Number of old ReplicaSets to retain ## revisionHistoryLimit: 10 ## Add a separate remote image renderer deployment/service imageRenderer: deploymentStrategy: {} # Enable the image-renderer deployment & service enabled: false replicas: 1 autoscaling: enabled: false minReplicas: 1 maxReplicas: 5 targetCPU: "60" targetMemory: "" behavior: {} # The url of remote image renderer if it is not in the same namespace with the grafana instance serverURL: "" # The callback url of grafana instances if it is not in the same namespace with the remote image renderer renderingCallbackURL: "" image: # -- The Docker registry registry: docker.io # image-renderer Image repository repository: grafana/grafana-image-renderer # image-renderer Image tag tag: latest # image-renderer Image sha (optional) sha: "" # image-renderer Image pull secrets (optional) pullSecrets: [] # image-renderer ImagePullPolicy pullPolicy: Always # extra environment variables env: HTTP_HOST: "0.0.0.0" # Fixes "Error: Failed to launch the browser process!\nchrome_crashpad_handler: --database is required" XDG_CONFIG_HOME: /tmp/.chromium XDG_CACHE_HOME: /tmp/.chromium # RENDERING_ARGS: --no-sandbox,--disable-gpu,--window-size=1280x758 # RENDERING_MODE: clustered # IGNORE_HTTPS_ERRORS: true ## "valueFrom" environment variable references that will be added to deployment pods. Name is templated. ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/generated/kubernetes-api/v1.19/#envvarsource-v1-core ## Renders in container spec as: ## env: ## ... ## - name: ## valueFrom: ## envValueFrom: {} # ENV_NAME: # configMapKeyRef: # name: configmap-name # key: value_key # image-renderer deployment serviceAccount serviceAccountName: "" automountServiceAccountToken: false # image-renderer deployment hostUsers hostUsers: ~ # image-renderer deployment securityContext securityContext: {} # image-renderer deployment container securityContext containerSecurityContext: seccompProfile: type: RuntimeDefault capabilities: drop: ['ALL'] allowPrivilegeEscalation: false readOnlyRootFilesystem: true ## image-renderer pod annotation podAnnotations: {} # image-renderer deployment Host Aliases hostAliases: [] # image-renderer deployment priority class priorityClassName: '' # Path to the healthcheck endpoint. On Image Renderer v5.0.0 or newer, this is '/healthz'. Older versions use '/'. healthcheckPath: '/healthz' service: # Enable the image-renderer service enabled: true # image-renderer service port name portName: 'http' # image-renderer service port used by both service and deployment port: 8081 targetPort: 8081 # Adds the appProtocol field to the image-renderer service. This allows to work with istio protocol selection. Ex: "http" or "tcp" appProtocol: "" serviceMonitor: ## If true, a ServiceMonitor CRD is created for a prometheus operator ## https://github.com/coreos/prometheus-operator ## enabled: false path: /metrics # namespace: monitoring (defaults to use the namespace this chart is deployed to) labels: {} interval: 1m scheme: http tlsConfig: {} scrapeTimeout: 30s relabelings: [] # See: https://doc.crds.dev/github.com/prometheus-operator/kube-prometheus/monitoring.coreos.com/ServiceMonitor/v1@v0.11.0#spec-targetLabels targetLabels: [] # - targetLabel1 # - targetLabel2 # If https is enabled in Grafana, this needs to be set as 'https' to correctly configure the callback used in Grafana grafanaProtocol: http # In case a sub_path is used this needs to be added to the image renderer callback grafanaSubPath: "" # name of the image-renderer port on the pod podPortName: http # number of image-renderer replica sets to keep revisionHistoryLimit: 10 networkPolicy: # Enable a NetworkPolicy to limit inbound traffic to only the created grafana pods limitIngress: true # Enable a NetworkPolicy to limit outbound traffic to only the created grafana pods limitEgress: false # Allow additional services to access image-renderer (eg. Prometheus operator when ServiceMonitor is enabled) extraIngressSelectors: [] resources: {} # limits: # cpu: 100m # memory: 100Mi # requests: # cpu: 50m # memory: 50Mi ## Node labels for pod assignment ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/node-selection/ # nodeSelector: {} ## Tolerations for pod assignment ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/taint-and-toleration/ ## tolerations: [] ## Affinity for pod assignment (evaluated as template) ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/assign-pod-node/#affinity-and-anti-affinity ## affinity: {} ## Use an alternate scheduler, e.g. "stork". ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/administer-cluster/configure-multiple-schedulers/ ## # schedulerName: "default-scheduler" # Extra configmaps to mount in image-renderer pods extraConfigmapMounts: [] # Extra secrets to mount in image-renderer pods extraSecretMounts: [] # Extra volumes to mount in image-renderer pods extraVolumeMounts: [] # Extra volumes for image-renderer pods extraVolumes: [] networkPolicy: # -- networkPolicy.enabled Enable creation of NetworkPolicy resources. Only Ingress traffic is filtered for now. enabled: false # --networkPolicy.allowExternal Don't require client label for connections # The Policy model to apply. When set to false, only pods with the correct # client label will have network access to grafana port defined. # When true, grafana will accept connections from any source # (with the correct destination port). # ingress: true # -- networkPolicy.ingress When true enables the creation # an ingress network policy allowExternal: true # -- networkPolicy.explicitNamespacesSelector A Kubernetes LabelSelector to explicitly select namespaces from which traffic could be allowed # If explicitNamespacesSelector is missing or set to {}, only client Pods that are in the networkPolicy's namespace # and that match other criteria, the ones that have the good label, can reach the grafana. # But sometimes, we want the grafana to be accessible to clients from other namespaces, in this case, we can use this # LabelSelector to select these namespaces, note that the networkPolicy's namespace should also be explicitly added. #
# # Example: # # ``` # explicitNamespacesSelector: # matchLabels: # role: frontend # matchExpressions: # - {key: role, operator: In, values: [frontend]} # ``` explicitNamespacesSelector: {} # -- networkPolicy.explicitIpBlocks List of CIDR blocks allowed as ingress sources. # Each entry must be a valid CIDR notation string (e.g. 10.0.0.0/8). # When defined, the specified CIDR ranges are added to the ingress `from` rules # using `ipBlock` entries and complement the other configured ingress sources. #
# # Example: # # ``` # explicitIpBlocks: # - 35.191.0.0/16 # - 130.211.0.0/22 # ``` # explicitIpBlocks: [] egress: # -- networkPolicy.egress.enabled When enabled, an egress network policy will be # created allowing grafana to connect to external data sources from kubernetes cluster. enabled: false # -- networkPolicy.egress.blockDNSResolution When enabled, DNS resolution will be blocked # for all pods in the grafana namespace. blockDNSResolution: false # -- networkPolicy.egress.ports Add individual ports to be allowed by the egress ports: [] # Add ports to the egress by specifying - port: # E.X. # - port: 80 # - port: 443 # # -- networkPolicy.egress.to Allow egress traffic to specific destinations to: [] # -- destinations to the egress by specifying - ipBlock: # E.X. # to: # - namespaceSelector: # matchExpressions: # - {key: role, operator: In, values: [grafana]} # Enable backward compatibility of kubernetes where version below 1.13 doesn't have the enableServiceLinks option enableKubeBackwardCompatibility: false useStatefulSet: false # extraObjects could be utilized to add dynamic manifests via values extraObjects: [] # Examples: # extraObjects: # - apiVersion: kubernetes-client.io/v1 # kind: ExternalSecret # metadata: # name: grafana-secrets-{{ .Release.Name }} # spec: # backendType: gcpSecretsManager # data: # - key: grafana-admin-password # name: adminPassword # Alternatively, you can use strings, which lets you use additional templating features: # extraObjects: # - | # apiVersion: kubernetes-client.io/v1 # kind: ExternalSecret # metadata: # name: grafana-secrets-{{ .Release.Name }} # spec: # backendType: gcpSecretsManager # data: # - key: grafana-admin-password # name: {{ include "some-other-template" }} # assertNoLeakedSecrets is a helper function defined in _helpers.tpl that checks if secret # values are not exposed in the rendered grafana.ini configmap. It is enabled by default. # # To pass values into grafana.ini without exposing them in a configmap, use variable expansion: # https://grafana.com/docs/grafana/latest/setup-grafana/configure-grafana/#variable-expansion # # Alternatively, if you wish to allow secret values to be exposed in the rendered grafana.ini configmap, # you can disable this check by setting assertNoLeakedSecrets to false. assertNoLeakedSecrets: true # updateMode options are: # Off: n the Off update mode, the VPA recommender still analyzes resource usage and generates recommendations, but these recommendations are not automatically applied to Pods. The recommendations are only stored in the VPA object's .status field. # Initial: In Initial mode, VPA only sets resource requests when Pods are first created. It does not update resources for already running Pods, even if recommendations change over time. The recommendations apply only during Pod creation. # Recreate: In Recreate mode, VPA actively manages Pod resources by evicting Pods when their current resource requests differ significantly from recommendations. When a Pod is evicted, the workload controller (managing a Deployment, StatefulSet, etc) creates a replacement Pod, and the VPA admission controller applies the updated resource requests to the new Pod. # InPlaceOrRecreate: In Recreate mode, VPA actively manages Pod resources by evicting Pods when their current resource requests differ significantly from recommendations. When a Pod is evicted, the workload controller (managing a Deployment, StatefulSet, etc) creates a replacement Pod, and the VPA admission controller applies the updated resource requests to the new Pod. # Auto (deprecated): The Auto update mode is deprecated since VPA version 1.4.0. Use Recreate for eviction-based updates, or InPlaceOrRecreate for in-place updates with eviction fallback. verticalPodAutoscaler: enabled: false updateMode: "Off" controlledResources: cpu: true memory: true # Default safety bounds minAllowed: cpu: "25m" memory: "128Mi" maxAllowed: cpu: "1000m" memory: "1Gi"