So we must have some sort of persistent data storage that will survive the destruction of a container. As we already know containers pop in and out of existence and anything written inside of a container vanishes when it is destroyed. I will leave it to you find out how to setup the NFS shares on your own NFS server. I already have FreeNAS running and partitioned my data set with shareable NFS exports. Please seek some basic helm commands like helm repo update, helm install, and helm uninstall. These are the ones I have used: $ helm repo list NAME URL bitnami stable loki gitlab halkeye Please note that you can add additional Helm repositories. Try adding the official Helm stable charts repository: helm repo add stable Once you have Helm installed, add a chart repository. On the master node execute this command: curl -L | bash Step 2: Add the stable repository The easiest way to install complex applications is to use Helm 3, so please follow this quick guide to assist: Step 1: Install Helm 3 from source using a script I am going to show you this and other tools I have installed to make my life easier with Kubernetes. For example Helm: I like Helm… but I don’t love it. These tools make installation easier or at least should make it less difficult. We all have our tools that we prefer in order carry out our tasks. Tools to make the journey easier My bag of tools My Journey to Kubernetes onto Bare Metal - Part 3: Utilities
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