Redis Helm Chart

dhi.io/redis-chart

Redis Helm Chart

Redis is the world's fastest data platform for caching, vector search, and NoSQL databases.

Installing the chart

Prerequisites

Kubernetes 1.23+ Helm 3.8.0+

Installation steps

All examples in this guide use the public chart and images. If you've mirrored the repository for your own use (for example, to your Docker Hub namespace), update your commands to reference the mirrored chart instead of the public one.

For example:

  • Public chart: dhi.io/<repository>:<tag>
  • Mirrored chart: <your-namespace>/dhi-<repository>:<tag>

For more details about customizing the chart to reference other images, see the documentation.

Step 1: Optional. Mirror the Helm chart and/or its images to your own registry

To optionally mirror a chart to your own third-party registry, you can follow the instructions in How to mirror an image for either the chart, the image, or both.

The same regctl tool that is used for mirroring container images can also be used for mirroring Helm charts, as Helm charts are OCI artifacts.

For example:

 regctl image copy \
     "${SRC_CHART_REPO}:${TAG}" \
     "${DEST_REG}/${DEST_CHART_REPO}:${TAG}" \
     --referrers \
     --referrers-src "${SRC_ATT_REPO}" \
     --referrers-tgt "${DEST_REG}/${DEST_CHART_REPO}" \
     --force-recursive
Step 2: Create a Kubernetes secret for pulling images

The Docker Hardened Images that the chart uses require authentication. To allow your Kubernetes cluster to pull those images, you need to create a Kubernetes secret with your Docker Hub credentials or with the credentials for your own registry.

Follow the authentication instructions for DHI in Kubernetes.

For example:

kubectl create secret docker-registry helm-pull-secret \
  --docker-server=dhi.io \
  --docker-username=<Docker username> \
  --docker-password=<Docker token> \
  --docker-email=<Docker email>
Step 3: Install the Helm chart

To install the chart, use helm install. Make sure you use helm login to log in before running helm install. Optionally, you can also use the --dry-run flag to test the installation without actually installing anything.

helm install my-redis oci://dhi.io/redis-chart --version <version> \
  --set "global.imagePullSecrets[0]=helm-pull-secret"

Replace <version> accordingly. If the chart is in your own registry or repository, replace dhi.io with your own registry and namespace. Replace helm-pull-secret with the name of the image pull secret you created earlier.

Step 4: Verify the installation

Redis pod(s) should show up and running almost immediately:

$ kubectl get all
NAME                      READY   STATUS    RESTARTS      AGE
pod/my-redis-master-0     1/1     Running   0             102s
pod/my-redis-replicas-0   1/1     Running   0             102s
pod/my-redis-replicas-1   1/1     Running   0             62s
pod/my-redis-replicas-2   1/1     Running   0             41s

NAME                        TYPE           CLUSTER-IP      EXTERNAL-IP   PORT(S)                                        AGE
service/my-redis-headless   ClusterIP      None            <none>        6379/TCP                                       102s
service/my-redis-master     ClusterIP      10.105.10.109   <none>        6379/TCP                                       102s
service/my-redis-replicas   ClusterIP      10.108.59.90    <none>        6379/TCP                                       102s

NAME                                 READY   AGE
statefulset.apps/my-redis-master     1/1     102s
statefulset.apps/my-redis-replicas   3/3     102s