Helm was founded in 1943 as a commercial trade bindery and at the time was the largest bindery in the Detroit area. In 1959 the Ford Motor Company asked Helm to distribute their service manuals after binding them. This launched Helm into the automotive publication fulfillment and distribution business. To delete all Helm releases in Linux(in Helm v2.X) with a single command, you can use some good old bash. Just pipe the output of helm ls -short to xargs, and run helm delete for each release returned. Helm ls -all -short xargs -L1 helm delete. Adding -purge will delete the charts as well, as per @Yeasin Ar Rahman's comment.
Manage Complexity
Charts describe even the most complex apps, provide repeatable application installation, and serve as a single point of authority.
Easy Updates
Take the pain out of updates with in-place upgrades and custom hooks.
Simple Sharing
Charts are easy to version, share, and host on public or private servers.
Rollbacks
Use helm rollback
to roll back to an older version of a release with ease.
Install Helm with a package manager, or download a binary.
Once installed, unpack the helm binary and add it to your PATH and you are good to go! Check the docs for further installation and usage instructions.
Visit Artifact Hub to explore Helm charts from numerous public repositories.
More information about the Helm project, and how to contribute.
SIG-Apps is a Special Interest Group for deploying and operating apps in Kubernetes.
They meet each week to demo and discuss tools and projects. Community meetings are recorded and shared to YouTube.
These meetings are open to all. Check the community repo for notes and details.
Helm is a big project with a lot of users and contributors. It can be a lot to take in!
We have a list of good first issues if you want to help but don't know where to start.
Before you contribute some code, please read our Contribution Guide. It goes over the processes around creating and reviewing pull requests.
Once you write some code, please sign your commits to ensure Helm adheres to the DCO agreement used by the CNCF.
© Bang Showbiz Jordan PeeleJordan Peele is set to helm another horror movie for release in 2022.
The 41-year-old actor, writer, producer, and director previously helmed the hit horror movies ‘Get Out’ and ‘Us’, and Universal have now confirmed he’s set to bring a third flick to cinema screens in July 2022.
Universal confirmed on Monday (09.11.20) they have lined Peele up for a new movie, but as of the time of writing, there are no other details available.
The movie will mark the third feature film Peele has directed, although he has worked as a producer on several projects, including ‘BlacKkKlansman’, ‘Keanu’, and two films slated for a 2021 release, ‘Wendell and Wild’ and ‘Candyman’.
Gallery: Ethan Hawke at 50: His best films (BANG Showbiz)
‘Candyman’ is being described as a 'spiritual sequel' to the 1992 cult classic supernatural slasher flick of the same name, which will be directed by Nia DaCosta.
Speaking about the movie, Peele said: 'Quite honestly, Nia is better to shoot this than I am. I'm way too obsessed with the original tales in my head. I probably wouldn't be any good.
'But Nia has a steady manner about her which you don't see a lot in the horror space. She's refined, elegant, every shot is beautiful. It's a beautiful, beautiful movie. I'm so glad I didn't mess it up.'
Meanwhile, it was also reported earlier this month that Peele will produce a remake of Wes Craven's 1991 horror movie 'The People Under the Stairs’.
The original movie starred Brandon Adams, Everett McGill and Wendy Robie and follows Poindexter 'Fool' Williams (Adams) who become trapped in a house belonging to the strange Mommy and Daddy Robeson (Robie and McGill) and he discovers a community of cannibal children who have been left to live in secret parts of the house.
It’s unclear whether Peele will have any other roles in the production of the flick.