phpmyadmin
Bitnam Helm chart for phpMyAdmin
1M+
phpMyAdmin is a free software tool written in PHP, intended to handle the administration of MySQL over the Web. phpMyAdmin supports a wide range of operations on MySQL and MariaDB.
Trademarks: This software listing is packaged by Bitnami. The respective trademarks mentioned in the offering are owned by the respective companies, and use of them does not imply any affiliation or endorsement.
helm install my-release oci://REGISTRY_NAME/REPOSITORY_NAME/phpmyadmin
Note: You need to substitute the placeholders
REGISTRY_NAMEandREPOSITORY_NAMEwith a reference to your Helm chart registry and repository.
This chart bootstraps a phpMyAdmin deployment on a Kubernetes cluster using the Helm package manager.
As a portable web application written primarily in PHP, phpMyAdmin has become one of the most popular MySQL administration tools, especially for web hosting services.
To install the chart with the release name my-release:
helm install my-release oci://REGISTRY_NAME/REPOSITORY_NAME/phpmyadmin
Note: You need to substitute the placeholders
REGISTRY_NAMEandREPOSITORY_NAMEwith a reference to your Helm chart registry and repository. For example, in the case of Bitnami, you need to useREGISTRY_NAME=registry-1.docker.ioandREPOSITORY_NAME=bitnamicharts.
The command deploys phpMyAdmin on the Kubernetes cluster in the default configuration. The Parameters section lists the parameters that can be configured during installation.
Tip: List all releases using
helm list
This section describes credentials, configuration, and other installation options.
Bitnami charts allow setting resource requests and limits for all containers inside the chart deployment. These are inside the resources value (check parameter table). Setting requests is essential for production workloads and these should be adapted to your specific use case.
To make this process easier, the chart contains the resourcesPreset values, which automatically sets the resources section according to different presets. Check these presets in the bitnami/common chart. However, in production workloads using resourcesPreset is discouraged as it may not fully adapt to your specific needs. Find more information on container resource management in the official Kubernetes documentation.
This chart can be integrated with Prometheus by setting metrics.enabled to true. This will deploy a sidecar container with apache-exporter in all pods and a metrics service, which can be configured under the metrics.service section. This metrics service will have the necessary annotations to be automatically scraped by Prometheus.
It is necessary to have a working installation of Prometheus or Prometheus Operator for the integration to work. Install the Bitnami Prometheus helm chart or the Bitnami Kube Prometheus helm chart to easily have a working Prometheus in your cluster.
The chart can deploy ServiceMonitor objects for integration with Prometheus Operator installations. To do so, set the value metrics.serviceMonitor.enabled=true. Ensure that the Prometheus Operator CustomResourceDefinitions are installed in the cluster or it will fail with the following error:
no matches for kind "ServiceMonitor" in version "monitoring.coreos.com/v1"
Install the Bitnami Kube Prometheus helm chart for having the necessary CRDs and the Prometheus Operator.
To back up and restore Helm chart deployments on Kubernetes, you need to back up the persistent volumes from the source deployment and attach them to a new deployment using Velero, a Kubernetes backup/restore tool. Find the instructions for using Velero in this guide.
The FIPS parameters only have effect if you are using images from the Bitnami Secure Images catalog.
For more information on this new feature, please refer to the FIPS Compliance section.
It is strongly recommended to use immutable tags in a production environment. This ensures your deployment does not change automatically if the same tag is updated with a different image.
Bitnami will release a new chart updating its containers if a new version of the main container, significant changes, or critical vulnerabilities exist.
This chart provides support for exposing phpMyAdmin using the Gateway API and its HTTPRoute resource. If you have a Gateway controller installed on your cluster, such as APISIX, Contour, Envoy Gateway, NGINX Gateway Fabric or Kong Ingress Controller you can utilize the Gateway controller to serve your application. To enable Gateway API integration, set httpRoute.enabled to true.
The Gateway to be used can be customized by setting the httpRoute.parentRefs parameter. By default, it will reference a Gateway named gateway in the same namespace as the release.
You can specify the list of hostnames to be mapped to the deployment using the httpRoute.hostnames parameter. Additionally, you can customize the rules used to route the traffic to the service by modifying the httpRoute.matches and httpRoute.filters parameters or adding new rules using the httpRoute.extraRules parameter.
This chart provides support for Ingress resources. If you have an ingress controller installed on your cluster, such as nginx-ingress-controller or contour you can utilize the ingress controller to serve your application.
To enable ingress integration, please set ingress.enabled to true.
Most likely you will only want to have one hostname that maps to this phpMyAdmin installation. If that's your case, the property ingress.hostname will set it. However, it is possible to have more than one host. To facilitate this, the ingress.extraHosts object can be specified as an array. You can also use ingress.extraTLS to add the TLS configuration for extra hosts.
For each host indicated at ingress.extraHosts, please indicate a name, path, and any annotations that you may want the ingress controller to know about.
For annotations, please see this document. Not all annotations are supported by all ingress controllers, but this document does a good job of indicating which annotation is supported by many popular ingress controllers.
This chart will facilitate the creation of TLS secrets for use with the ingress controller, however, this is not required. There are some common use cases:
In the second case, a certificate and a key are needed. We would expect them to look like this:
certificate files should look like (and there can be more than one certificate if there is a certificate chain)
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
MIID6TCCAtGgAwIBAgIJAIaCwivkeB5EMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBCwUAMFYxCzAJBgNV
...
jScrvkiBO65F46KioCL9h5tDvomdU1aqpI/CBzhvZn1c0ZTf87tGQR8NK7v7
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
keys should look like:
-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
MIIEogIBAAKCAQEAvLYcyu8f3skuRyUgeeNpeDvYBCDcgq+LsWap6zbX5f8oLqp4
...
wrj2wDbCDCFmfqnSJ+dKI3vFLlEz44sAV8jX/kd4Y6ZTQhlLbYc=
-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
If you are going to generate certificates yourself and want helm to manage the secret, please copy these values into the certificate and key values for a given ingress.secrets entry.
If you want to manage TLS secrets outside of Helm, please know that you can create a TLS secret and pass its name via the parameter ingress.existingSecretName.
To make use of cert-manager, you need to add the the cert-manager.io/cluster-issuer: annotation to the ingress object via ingress.annotations.
In case you want to add extra environment variables (useful for advanced operations like custom init scripts), you can use the extraEnvVars property.
extraEnvVars:
- name: LOG_LEVEL
value: DEBUG
Alternatively, you can use a ConfigMap or a Secret with the environment variables. To do so, use the extraEnvVarsCM or the extraEnvVarsSecret values.
If you have a need for additional containers to run within the same pod as the PhpMyAdmin app (e.g. an additional metrics or logging exporter), you can do so via the sidecars config parameter. Simply define your container according to the Kubernetes container spec.
sidecars:
- name: your-image-name
image: your-image
imagePullPolicy: Always
ports:
- name: portname
containerPort: 1234
Similarly, you can add extra init containers using the initContainers parameter.
initContainers:
- name: your-image-name
image: your-image
imagePullPolicy: Always
ports:
- name: portname
containerPort: 1234
There are cases where you may want to deploy extra objects, such a ConfigMap containing your app's configuration or some extra deployment with a micro service used by your app. For covering this case, the chart allows adding the full specification of other objects using the extraDeploy parameter.
This chart allows you to set your custom affinity using the XXX.affinity parameter(s). Find more information about Pod's affinity in the kubernetes documentation.
As an alternative, you can use of the preset configurations for pod affinity, pod anti-affinity, and node affinity available at the bitnami/common chart. To do so, set the podAffinityPreset, XpodAntiAffinityPreset, or nodeAffinityPreset parameters.
The following subsections list global, common, and component-specific parameters.
| Name | Description | Value |
|---|---|---|
global.imageRegistry | Global Docker image registry | "" |
global.imagePullSecrets | Global Docker registry secret names as an array | [] |
global.defaultStorageClass | Global default StorageClass for Persistent Volume(s) | "" |
global.defaultFips | Default value for the FIPS configuration (allowed values: '', restricted, relaxed, off). Can be overridden by the 'fips' object | restricted |
global.security.allowInsecureImages | Allows skipping image verification | false |
global.compatibility.openshift.adaptSecurityContext | Adapt the securityContext sections of the deployment to make them compatible with Openshift restricted-v2 SCC: remove runAsUser, runAsGroup and fsGroup and let the platform use their allowed default IDs. Possible values: auto (apply if the detected running cluster is Openshift), force (perform the adaptation always), disabled (do not perform adaptation) | disabled |
| Name | Description | Value |
|---|---|---|
kubeVersion | Force target Kubernetes version (using Helm capabilities if not set) | "" |
nameOverride | String to partially override common.names.fullname template (will maintain the release name) | "" |
fullnameOverride | String to fully override common.names.fullname template | "" |
commonLabels | Add labels to all the deployed resources | {} |
commonAnnotations | Add annotations to all the deployed resources | {} |
clusterDomain | Kubernetes Cluster Domain | cluster.local |
extraDeploy | Array of extra objects to deploy with the release | [] |
| Name | Description | Value |
|---|---|---|
image.registry | phpMyAdmin image registry | REGISTRY_NAME |
image.repository | phpMyAdmin image repository | REPOSITORY_NAME/phpmyadmin |
image.digest | phpMyAdmin image digest in the way sha256:aa.... Please note this parameter, if set, will override the tag | "" |
image.pullPolicy | Image pull policy | IfNotPresent |
image.pullSecrets | Specify docker-registry secret names as an array | [] |
image.debug | Enable phpmyadmin image debug mode | false |
command | Override default container command (useful when using custom images) | [] |
args | Override default container args (useful when using custom images) | [] |
lifecycleHooks | for the phpmyadmin container(s) to automate configuration before or after startup | {} |
extraEnvVars | Extra environment variables to be set on PhpMyAdmin container | [] |
extraEnvVarsCM | Name of a existing ConfigMap containing extra env vars | "" |
extraEnvVarsSecret | Name of a existing Secret containing extra env vars | "" |
| Name | Description | Value |
|---|---|---|
automountServiceAccountToken | Mount Service Account token in pod | false |
hostAliases | Deployment pod host aliases | [] |
containerPorts.http | HTTP port to expose at container level | 8080 |
containerPorts.https | HTTPS port to expose at container level | 8443 |
extraContainerPorts | Optionally specify extra list of additional ports for phpMyAdmin container(s) | [] |
updateStrategy.type | Strategy to use to update Pods | RollingUpdate |
podSecurityContext.enabled | Enable phpMyAdmin pods' Security Context | true |
podSecurityContext.fsGroupChangePolicy | Set filesystem group change policy | Always |
podSecurityContext.sysctls | Set kernel settings using the sysctl interface | [] |
podSecurityContext.supplementalGroups | Set filesystem extra groups | [] |
podSecurityContext.fsGroup | User ID for the container | 1001 |
containerSecurityContext.enabled | Enabled containers' Security Context | true |
containerSecurityContext.seLinuxOptions | Set SELinux options in container | {} |
containerSecurityContext.runAsUser | Set containers' Security Context runAsUser | 1001 |
containerSecurityContext.runAsGroup | Set containers' Security Context runAsGroup |
Note: the README for this chart is longer than the DockerHub length limit of 25000, so it has been trimmed. The full README can be found at https://techdocs.broadcom.com/us/en/vmware-tanzu/bitnami-secure-images/bitnami-secure-images/services/bsi-app-doc/apps-charts-phpmyadmin-index.html
Content type
Image
Digest
sha256:a91afc2f4…
Size
7.8 kB
Last updated
11 months ago
docker pull bitnamicharts/phpmyadmin:sha256-bbb868ade4e069027206babdd9a841ee933cf4912919a7d2e8206637f69b3878Pulls:
7,751
Jun 29 to Jul 5