5335667721 | ||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
charts | ||
templates | ||
Chart.lock | ||
Chart.yaml | ||
README.md | ||
values.schema.json | ||
values.yaml |
README.md
WordPress packaged by Bitnami
WordPress is the world's most popular blogging and content management platform. Powerful yet simple, everyone from students to global corporations use it to build beautiful, functional websites.
TL;DR
$ helm repo add my-repo https://charts.bitnami.com/bitnami
$ helm install my-release my-repo/wordpress
Introduction
This chart bootstraps a WordPress deployment on a Kubernetes cluster using the Helm package manager.
It also packages the Bitnami MariaDB chart which is required for bootstrapping a MariaDB deployment for the database requirements of the WordPress application, and the Bitnami Memcached chart that can be used to cache database queries.
Bitnami charts can be used with Kubeapps for deployment and management of Helm Charts in clusters.
Prerequisites
- Kubernetes 1.19+
- Helm 3.2.0+
- PV provisioner support in the underlying infrastructure
- ReadWriteMany volumes for deployment scaling
Installing the Chart
To install the chart with the release name my-release
:
helm install my-release my-repo/wordpress
The command deploys WordPress 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
Uninstalling the Chart
To uninstall/delete the my-release
deployment:
helm delete my-release
The command removes all the Kubernetes components associated with the chart and deletes the release.
Parameters
Global parameters
Name | Description | Value |
---|---|---|
global.imageRegistry |
Global Docker image registry | "" |
global.imagePullSecrets |
Global Docker registry secret names as an array | [] |
global.storageClass |
Global StorageClass for Persistent Volume(s) | "" |
Common parameters
Name | Description | Value |
---|---|---|
kubeVersion |
Override Kubernetes version | "" |
nameOverride |
String to partially override common.names.fullname template (will maintain the release name) | "" |
fullnameOverride |
String to fully override common.names.fullname template | "" |
commonLabels |
Labels to add to all deployed resources | {} |
commonAnnotations |
Annotations to add to all deployed resources | {} |
clusterDomain |
Kubernetes Cluster Domain | cluster.local |
extraDeploy |
Array of extra objects to deploy with the release | [] |
diagnosticMode.enabled |
Enable diagnostic mode (all probes will be disabled and the command will be overridden) | false |
diagnosticMode.command |
Command to override all containers in the deployment | ["sleep"] |
diagnosticMode.args |
Args to override all containers in the deployment | ["infinity"] |
WordPress Image parameters
Name | Description | Value |
---|---|---|
image.registry |
WordPress image registry | docker.io |
image.repository |
WordPress image repository | bitnami/wordpress |
image.tag |
WordPress image tag (immutable tags are recommended) | 6.1.1-debian-11-r1 |
image.digest |
WordPress image digest in the way sha256:aa.... Please note this parameter, if set, will override the tag | "" |
image.pullPolicy |
WordPress image pull policy | IfNotPresent |
image.pullSecrets |
WordPress image pull secrets | [] |
image.debug |
Specify if debug values should be set | false |
WordPress Configuration parameters
Name | Description | Value |
---|---|---|
wordpressUsername |
WordPress username | user |
wordpressPassword |
WordPress user password | "" |
existingSecret |
Name of existing secret containing WordPress credentials | "" |
wordpressEmail |
WordPress user email | user@example.com |
wordpressFirstName |
WordPress user first name | FirstName |
wordpressLastName |
WordPress user last name | LastName |
wordpressBlogName |
Blog name | User's Blog! |
wordpressTablePrefix |
Prefix to use for WordPress database tables | wp_ |
wordpressScheme |
Scheme to use to generate WordPress URLs | http |
wordpressSkipInstall |
Skip wizard installation | false |
wordpressExtraConfigContent |
Add extra content to the default wp-config.php file | "" |
wordpressConfiguration |
The content for your custom wp-config.php file (advanced feature) | "" |
existingWordPressConfigurationSecret |
The name of an existing secret with your custom wp-config.php file (advanced feature) | "" |
wordpressConfigureCache |
Enable W3 Total Cache plugin and configure cache settings | false |
wordpressPlugins |
Array of plugins to install and activate. Can be specified as all or none . |
none |
apacheConfiguration |
The content for your custom httpd.conf file (advanced feature) | "" |
existingApacheConfigurationConfigMap |
The name of an existing secret with your custom httpd.conf file (advanced feature) | "" |
customPostInitScripts |
Custom post-init.d user scripts | {} |
smtpHost |
SMTP server host | "" |
smtpPort |
SMTP server port | "" |
smtpUser |
SMTP username | "" |
smtpPassword |
SMTP user password | "" |
smtpProtocol |
SMTP protocol | "" |
smtpExistingSecret |
The name of an existing secret with SMTP credentials | "" |
allowEmptyPassword |
Allow the container to be started with blank passwords | true |
allowOverrideNone |
Configure Apache to prohibit overriding directives with htaccess files | false |
overrideDatabaseSettings |
Allow overriding the database settings persisted in wp-config.php | false |
htaccessPersistenceEnabled |
Persist custom changes on htaccess files | false |
customHTAccessCM |
The name of an existing ConfigMap with custom htaccess rules | "" |
command |
Override default container command (useful when using custom images) | [] |
args |
Override default container args (useful when using custom images) | [] |
extraEnvVars |
Array with extra environment variables to add to the WordPress container | [] |
extraEnvVarsCM |
Name of existing ConfigMap containing extra env vars | "" |
extraEnvVarsSecret |
Name of existing Secret containing extra env vars | "" |
WordPress Multisite Configuration parameters
Name | Description | Value |
---|---|---|
multisite.enable |
Whether to enable WordPress Multisite configuration. | false |
multisite.host |
WordPress Multisite hostname/address. This value is mandatory when enabling Multisite mode. | "" |
multisite.networkType |
WordPress Multisite network type to enable. Allowed values: subfolder , subdirectory or subdomain . |
subdomain |
multisite.enableNipIoRedirect |
Whether to enable IP address redirection to nip.io wildcard DNS. Useful when running on an IP address with subdomain network type. | false |
WordPress deployment parameters
Name | Description | Value |
---|---|---|
replicaCount |
Number of WordPress replicas to deploy | 1 |
updateStrategy.type |
WordPress deployment strategy type | RollingUpdate |
updateStrategy.rollingUpdate |
WordPress deployment rolling update configuration parameters | {} |
schedulerName |
Alternate scheduler | "" |
topologySpreadConstraints |
Topology Spread Constraints for pod assignment spread across your cluster among failure-domains. Evaluated as a template | [] |
priorityClassName |
Name of the existing priority class to be used by WordPress pods, priority class needs to be created beforehand | "" |
hostAliases |
WordPress pod host aliases | [] |
extraVolumes |
Optionally specify extra list of additional volumes for WordPress pods | [] |
extraVolumeMounts |
Optionally specify extra list of additional volumeMounts for WordPress container(s) | [] |
sidecars |
Add additional sidecar containers to the WordPress pod | [] |
initContainers |
Add additional init containers to the WordPress pods | [] |
podLabels |
Extra labels for WordPress pods | {} |
podAnnotations |
Annotations for WordPress pods | {} |
podAffinityPreset |
Pod affinity preset. Ignored if affinity is set. Allowed values: soft or hard |
"" |
podAntiAffinityPreset |
Pod anti-affinity preset. Ignored if affinity is set. Allowed values: soft or hard |
soft |
nodeAffinityPreset.type |
Node affinity preset type. Ignored if affinity is set. Allowed values: soft or hard |
"" |
nodeAffinityPreset.key |
Node label key to match. Ignored if affinity is set |
"" |
nodeAffinityPreset.values |
Node label values to match. Ignored if affinity is set |
[] |
affinity |
Affinity for pod assignment | {} |
nodeSelector |
Node labels for pod assignment | {} |
tolerations |
Tolerations for pod assignment | [] |
resources.limits |
The resources limits for the WordPress containers | {} |
resources.requests.memory |
The requested memory for the WordPress containers | 512Mi |
resources.requests.cpu |
The requested cpu for the WordPress containers | 300m |
containerPorts.http |
WordPress HTTP container port | 8080 |
containerPorts.https |
WordPress HTTPS container port | 8443 |
extraContainerPorts |
Optionally specify extra list of additional ports for WordPress container(s) | [] |
podSecurityContext.enabled |
Enabled WordPress pods' Security Context | true |
podSecurityContext.fsGroup |
Set WordPress pod's Security Context fsGroup | 1001 |
podSecurityContext.seccompProfile.type |
Set WordPress container's Security Context seccomp profile | RuntimeDefault |
containerSecurityContext.enabled |
Enabled WordPress containers' Security Context | true |
containerSecurityContext.runAsUser |
Set WordPress container's Security Context runAsUser | 1001 |
containerSecurityContext.runAsNonRoot |
Set WordPress container's Security Context runAsNonRoot | true |
containerSecurityContext.allowPrivilegeEscalation |
Set WordPress container's privilege escalation | false |
containerSecurityContext.capabilities.drop |
Set WordPress container's Security Context runAsNonRoot | ["ALL"] |
livenessProbe.enabled |
Enable livenessProbe on WordPress containers | true |
livenessProbe.initialDelaySeconds |
Initial delay seconds for livenessProbe | 120 |
livenessProbe.periodSeconds |
Period seconds for livenessProbe | 10 |
livenessProbe.timeoutSeconds |
Timeout seconds for livenessProbe | 5 |
livenessProbe.failureThreshold |
Failure threshold for livenessProbe | 6 |
livenessProbe.successThreshold |
Success threshold for livenessProbe | 1 |
readinessProbe.enabled |
Enable readinessProbe on WordPress containers | true |
readinessProbe.initialDelaySeconds |
Initial delay seconds for readinessProbe | 30 |
readinessProbe.periodSeconds |
Period seconds for readinessProbe | 10 |
readinessProbe.timeoutSeconds |
Timeout seconds for readinessProbe | 5 |
readinessProbe.failureThreshold |
Failure threshold for readinessProbe | 6 |
readinessProbe.successThreshold |
Success threshold for readinessProbe | 1 |
startupProbe.enabled |
Enable startupProbe on WordPress containers | false |
startupProbe.initialDelaySeconds |
Initial delay seconds for startupProbe | 30 |
startupProbe.periodSeconds |
Period seconds for startupProbe | 10 |
startupProbe.timeoutSeconds |
Timeout seconds for startupProbe | 5 |
startupProbe.failureThreshold |
Failure threshold for startupProbe | 6 |
startupProbe.successThreshold |
Success threshold for startupProbe | 1 |
customLivenessProbe |
Custom livenessProbe that overrides the default one | {} |
customReadinessProbe |
Custom readinessProbe that overrides the default one | {} |
customStartupProbe |
Custom startupProbe that overrides the default one | {} |
lifecycleHooks |
for the WordPress container(s) to automate configuration before or after startup | {} |
Traffic Exposure Parameters
Name | Description | Value |
---|---|---|
service.type |
WordPress service type | LoadBalancer |
service.ports.http |
WordPress service HTTP port | 80 |
service.ports.https |
WordPress service HTTPS port | 443 |
service.httpsTargetPort |
Target port for HTTPS | https |
service.nodePorts.http |
Node port for HTTP | "" |
service.nodePorts.https |
Node port for HTTPS | "" |
service.sessionAffinity |
Control where client requests go, to the same pod or round-robin | None |
service.sessionAffinityConfig |
Additional settings for the sessionAffinity | {} |
service.clusterIP |
WordPress service Cluster IP | "" |
service.loadBalancerIP |
WordPress service Load Balancer IP | "" |
service.loadBalancerSourceRanges |
WordPress service Load Balancer sources | [] |
service.externalTrafficPolicy |
WordPress service external traffic policy | Cluster |
service.annotations |
Additional custom annotations for WordPress service | {} |
service.extraPorts |
Extra port to expose on WordPress service | [] |
ingress.enabled |
Enable ingress record generation for WordPress | false |
ingress.pathType |
Ingress path type | ImplementationSpecific |
ingress.apiVersion |
Force Ingress API version (automatically detected if not set) | "" |
ingress.ingressClassName |
IngressClass that will be be used to implement the Ingress (Kubernetes 1.18+) | "" |
ingress.hostname |
Default host for the ingress record | wordpress.local |
ingress.path |
Default path for the ingress record | / |
ingress.annotations |
Additional annotations for the Ingress resource. To enable certificate autogeneration, place here your cert-manager annotations. | {} |
ingress.tls |
Enable TLS configuration for the host defined at ingress.hostname parameter |
false |
ingress.selfSigned |
Create a TLS secret for this ingress record using self-signed certificates generated by Helm | false |
ingress.extraHosts |
An array with additional hostname(s) to be covered with the ingress record | [] |
ingress.extraPaths |
An array with additional arbitrary paths that may need to be added to the ingress under the main host | [] |
ingress.extraTls |
TLS configuration for additional hostname(s) to be covered with this ingress record | [] |
ingress.secrets |
Custom TLS certificates as secrets | [] |
ingress.extraRules |
Additional rules to be covered with this ingress record | [] |
Persistence Parameters
Name | Description | Value |
---|---|---|
persistence.enabled |
Enable persistence using Persistent Volume Claims | true |
persistence.storageClass |
Persistent Volume storage class | "" |
persistence.accessModes |
Persistent Volume access modes | [] |
persistence.accessMode |
Persistent Volume access mode (DEPRECATED: use persistence.accessModes instead) |
ReadWriteOnce |
persistence.size |
Persistent Volume size | 10Gi |
persistence.dataSource |
Custom PVC data source | {} |
persistence.existingClaim |
The name of an existing PVC to use for persistence | "" |
persistence.selector |
Selector to match an existing Persistent Volume for WordPress data PVC | {} |
persistence.annotations |
Persistent Volume Claim annotations | {} |
volumePermissions.enabled |
Enable init container that changes the owner/group of the PV mount point to runAsUser:fsGroup |
false |
volumePermissions.image.registry |
Bitnami Shell image registry | docker.io |
volumePermissions.image.repository |
Bitnami Shell image repository | bitnami/bitnami-shell |
volumePermissions.image.tag |
Bitnami Shell image tag (immutable tags are recommended) | 11-debian-11-r52 |
volumePermissions.image.digest |
Bitnami Shell image digest in the way sha256:aa.... Please note this parameter, if set, will override the tag | "" |
volumePermissions.image.pullPolicy |
Bitnami Shell image pull policy | IfNotPresent |
volumePermissions.image.pullSecrets |
Bitnami Shell image pull secrets | [] |
volumePermissions.resources.limits |
The resources limits for the init container | {} |
volumePermissions.resources.requests |
The requested resources for the init container | {} |
volumePermissions.containerSecurityContext.runAsUser |
User ID for the init container | 0 |
Other Parameters
Name | Description | Value |
---|---|---|
serviceAccount.create |
Enable creation of ServiceAccount for WordPress pod | false |
serviceAccount.name |
The name of the ServiceAccount to use. | "" |
serviceAccount.automountServiceAccountToken |
Allows auto mount of ServiceAccountToken on the serviceAccount created | true |
serviceAccount.annotations |
Additional custom annotations for the ServiceAccount | {} |
pdb.create |
Enable a Pod Disruption Budget creation | false |
pdb.minAvailable |
Minimum number/percentage of pods that should remain scheduled | 1 |
pdb.maxUnavailable |
Maximum number/percentage of pods that may be made unavailable | "" |
autoscaling.enabled |
Enable Horizontal POD autoscaling for WordPress | false |
autoscaling.minReplicas |
Minimum number of WordPress replicas | 1 |
autoscaling.maxReplicas |
Maximum number of WordPress replicas | 11 |
autoscaling.targetCPU |
Target CPU utilization percentage | 50 |
autoscaling.targetMemory |
Target Memory utilization percentage | 50 |
Metrics Parameters
Name | Description | Value |
---|---|---|
metrics.enabled |
Start a sidecar prometheus exporter to expose metrics | false |
metrics.image.registry |
Apache exporter image registry | docker.io |
metrics.image.repository |
Apache exporter image repository | bitnami/apache-exporter |
metrics.image.tag |
Apache exporter image tag (immutable tags are recommended) | 0.11.0-debian-11-r62 |
metrics.image.digest |
Apache exporter image digest in the way sha256:aa.... Please note this parameter, if set, will override the tag | "" |
metrics.image.pullPolicy |
Apache exporter image pull policy | IfNotPresent |
metrics.image.pullSecrets |
Apache exporter image pull secrets | [] |
metrics.containerPorts.metrics |
Prometheus exporter container port | 9117 |
metrics.livenessProbe.enabled |
Enable livenessProbe on Prometheus exporter containers | true |
metrics.livenessProbe.initialDelaySeconds |
Initial delay seconds for livenessProbe | 15 |
metrics.livenessProbe.periodSeconds |
Period seconds for livenessProbe | 10 |
metrics.livenessProbe.timeoutSeconds |
Timeout seconds for livenessProbe | 5 |
metrics.livenessProbe.failureThreshold |
Failure threshold for livenessProbe | 3 |
metrics.livenessProbe.successThreshold |
Success threshold for livenessProbe | 1 |
metrics.readinessProbe.enabled |
Enable readinessProbe on Prometheus exporter containers | true |
metrics.readinessProbe.initialDelaySeconds |
Initial delay seconds for readinessProbe | 5 |
metrics.readinessProbe.periodSeconds |
Period seconds for readinessProbe | 10 |
metrics.readinessProbe.timeoutSeconds |
Timeout seconds for readinessProbe | 3 |
metrics.readinessProbe.failureThreshold |
Failure threshold for readinessProbe | 3 |
metrics.readinessProbe.successThreshold |
Success threshold for readinessProbe | 1 |
metrics.startupProbe.enabled |
Enable startupProbe on Prometheus exporter containers | false |
metrics.startupProbe.initialDelaySeconds |
Initial delay seconds for startupProbe | 10 |
metrics.startupProbe.periodSeconds |
Period seconds for startupProbe | 10 |
metrics.startupProbe.timeoutSeconds |
Timeout seconds for startupProbe | 1 |
metrics.startupProbe.failureThreshold |
Failure threshold for startupProbe | 15 |
metrics.startupProbe.successThreshold |
Success threshold for startupProbe | 1 |
metrics.customLivenessProbe |
Custom livenessProbe that overrides the default one | {} |
metrics.customReadinessProbe |
Custom readinessProbe that overrides the default one | {} |
metrics.customStartupProbe |
Custom startupProbe that overrides the default one | {} |
metrics.resources.limits |
The resources limits for the Prometheus exporter container | {} |
metrics.resources.requests |
The requested resources for the Prometheus exporter container | {} |
metrics.service.ports.metrics |
Prometheus metrics service port | 9150 |
metrics.service.annotations |
Additional custom annotations for Metrics service | {} |
metrics.serviceMonitor.enabled |
Create ServiceMonitor Resource for scraping metrics using Prometheus Operator | false |
metrics.serviceMonitor.namespace |
Namespace for the ServiceMonitor Resource (defaults to the Release Namespace) | "" |
metrics.serviceMonitor.interval |
Interval at which metrics should be scraped. | "" |
metrics.serviceMonitor.scrapeTimeout |
Timeout after which the scrape is ended | "" |
metrics.serviceMonitor.labels |
Additional labels that can be used so ServiceMonitor will be discovered by Prometheus | {} |
metrics.serviceMonitor.selector |
Prometheus instance selector labels | {} |
metrics.serviceMonitor.relabelings |
RelabelConfigs to apply to samples before scraping | [] |
metrics.serviceMonitor.metricRelabelings |
MetricRelabelConfigs to apply to samples before ingestion | [] |
metrics.serviceMonitor.honorLabels |
Specify honorLabels parameter to add the scrape endpoint | false |
metrics.serviceMonitor.jobLabel |
The name of the label on the target service to use as the job name in prometheus. | "" |
NetworkPolicy parameters
Name | Description | Value |
---|---|---|
networkPolicy.enabled |
Enable network policies | false |
networkPolicy.metrics.enabled |
Enable network policy for metrics (prometheus) | false |
networkPolicy.metrics.namespaceSelector |
Monitoring namespace selector labels. These labels will be used to identify the prometheus' namespace. | {} |
networkPolicy.metrics.podSelector |
Monitoring pod selector labels. These labels will be used to identify the Prometheus pods. | {} |
networkPolicy.ingress.enabled |
Enable network policy for Ingress Proxies | false |
networkPolicy.ingress.namespaceSelector |
Ingress Proxy namespace selector labels. These labels will be used to identify the Ingress Proxy's namespace. | {} |
networkPolicy.ingress.podSelector |
Ingress Proxy pods selector labels. These labels will be used to identify the Ingress Proxy pods. | {} |
networkPolicy.ingressRules.backendOnlyAccessibleByFrontend |
Enable ingress rule that makes the backend (mariadb) only accessible by testlink's pods. | false |
networkPolicy.ingressRules.customBackendSelector |
Backend selector labels. These labels will be used to identify the backend pods. | {} |
networkPolicy.ingressRules.accessOnlyFrom.enabled |
Enable ingress rule that makes testlink only accessible from a particular origin | false |
networkPolicy.ingressRules.accessOnlyFrom.namespaceSelector |
Namespace selector label that is allowed to access testlink. This label will be used to identified the allowed namespace(s). | {} |
networkPolicy.ingressRules.accessOnlyFrom.podSelector |
Pods selector label that is allowed to access testlink. This label will be used to identified the allowed pod(s). | {} |
networkPolicy.ingressRules.customRules |
Custom network policy ingress rule | {} |
networkPolicy.egressRules.denyConnectionsToExternal |
Enable egress rule that denies outgoing traffic outside the cluster, except for DNS (port 53). | false |
networkPolicy.egressRules.customRules |
Custom network policy rule | {} |
Database Parameters
Name | Description | Value |
---|---|---|
mariadb.enabled |
Deploy a MariaDB server to satisfy the applications database requirements | true |
mariadb.architecture |
MariaDB architecture. Allowed values: standalone or replication |
standalone |
mariadb.auth.rootPassword |
MariaDB root password | "" |
mariadb.auth.database |
MariaDB custom database | bitnami_wordpress |
mariadb.auth.username |
MariaDB custom user name | bn_wordpress |
mariadb.auth.password |
MariaDB custom user password | "" |
mariadb.primary.persistence.enabled |
Enable persistence on MariaDB using PVC(s) | true |
mariadb.primary.persistence.storageClass |
Persistent Volume storage class | "" |
mariadb.primary.persistence.accessModes |
Persistent Volume access modes | [] |
mariadb.primary.persistence.size |
Persistent Volume size | 8Gi |
externalDatabase.host |
External Database server host | localhost |
externalDatabase.port |
External Database server port | 3306 |
externalDatabase.user |
External Database username | bn_wordpress |
externalDatabase.password |
External Database user password | "" |
externalDatabase.database |
External Database database name | bitnami_wordpress |
externalDatabase.existingSecret |
The name of an existing secret with database credentials. Evaluated as a template | "" |
memcached.enabled |
Deploy a Memcached server for caching database queries | false |
memcached.auth.enabled |
Enable Memcached authentication | false |
memcached.auth.username |
Memcached admin user | "" |
memcached.auth.password |
Memcached admin password | "" |
memcached.service.port |
Memcached service port | 11211 |
externalCache.host |
External cache server host | localhost |
externalCache.port |
External cache server port | 11211 |
The above parameters map to the env variables defined in bitnami/wordpress. For more information please refer to the bitnami/wordpress image documentation.
Specify each parameter using the --set key=value[,key=value]
argument to helm install
. For example,
helm install my-release \
--set wordpressUsername=admin \
--set wordpressPassword=password \
--set mariadb.auth.rootPassword=secretpassword \
my-repo/wordpress
The above command sets the WordPress administrator account username and password to admin
and password
respectively. Additionally, it sets the MariaDB root
user password to secretpassword
.
NOTE: Once this chart is deployed, it is not possible to change the application's access credentials, such as usernames or passwords, using Helm. To change these application credentials after deployment, delete any persistent volumes (PVs) used by the chart and re-deploy it, or use the application's built-in administrative tools if available.
Alternatively, a YAML file that specifies the values for the above parameters can be provided while installing the chart. For example,
helm install my-release -f values.yaml my-repo/wordpress
Tip: You can use the default values.yaml
Configuration and installation details
Rolling VS Immutable tags
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.
Known limitations
When performing admin operations that require activating the maintenance mode (such as updating a plugin or theme), it's activated in only one replica (see: bug report). This implies that WP could be attending requests on other replicas while performing admin operations, with unpredictable consequences.
To avoid that, you can manually activate/deactivate the maintenance mode on every replica using the WP CLI. For instance, if you installed WP with three replicas, you can run the commands below to activate the maintenance mode in all of them (assuming that the release name is wordpress
):
kubectl exec $(kubectl get pods -l app.kubernetes.io/name=wordpress -o jsonpath='{.items[0].metadata.name}') -c wordpress -- wp maintenance-mode activate
kubectl exec $(kubectl get pods -l app.kubernetes.io/name=wordpress -o jsonpath='{.items[1].metadata.name}') -c wordpress -- wp maintenance-mode activate
kubectl exec $(kubectl get pods -l app.kubernetes.io/name=wordpress -o jsonpath='{.items[2].metadata.name}') -c wordpress -- wp maintenance-mode activate
External database support
You may want to have WordPress connect to an external database rather than installing one inside your cluster. Typical reasons for this are to use a managed database service, or to share a common database server for all your applications. To achieve this, the chart allows you to specify credentials for an external database with the externalDatabase
parameter. You should also disable the MariaDB installation with the mariadb.enabled
option. Here is an example:
mariadb.enabled=false
externalDatabase.host=myexternalhost
externalDatabase.user=myuser
externalDatabase.password=mypassword
externalDatabase.database=mydatabase
externalDatabase.port=3306
Refer to the documentation on using an external database with WordPress and the tutorial on integrating WordPress with a managed cloud database for more information.
Memcached
This chart provides support for using Memcached to cache database queries and objects improving the website performance. To enable this feature, set wordpressConfigureCache
and memcached.enabled
parameters to true
.
When this feature is enabled, a Memcached server will be deployed in your K8s cluster using the Bitnami Memcached chart and the W3 Total Cache plugin will be activated and configured to use the Memcached server for database caching.
It is also possible to use an external cache server rather than installing one inside your cluster. To achieve this, the chart allows you to specify credentials for an external cache server with the externalCache
parameter. You should also disable the Memcached installation with the memcached.enabled
option. Here is an example:
wordpressConfigureCache=true
memcached.enabled=false
externalCache.host=myexternalcachehost
externalCache.port=11211
Ingress
This chart provides support for Ingress resources. If an Ingress controller, such as nginx-ingress or traefik, that Ingress controller can be used to serve WordPress.
To enable Ingress integration, set ingress.enabled
to true
. The ingress.hostname
property can be used to set the host name. The ingress.tls
parameter can be used to add the TLS configuration for this host. It is also possible to have more than one host, with a separate TLS configuration for each host. Learn more about configuring and using Ingress.
TLS secrets
The chart also facilitates the creation of TLS secrets for use with the Ingress controller, with different options for certificate management. Learn more about TLS secrets.
.htaccess
files
For performance and security reasons, it is a good practice to configure Apache with the AllowOverride None
directive. Instead of using .htaccess
files, Apache will load the same directives at boot time. These directives are located in /opt/bitnami/wordpress/wordpress-htaccess.conf
.
By default, the container image includes all the default .htaccess
files in WordPress (together with the default plugins). To enable this feature, install the chart with the value allowOverrideNone=yes
.
Learn more about working with .htaccess
files.
Persistence
The Bitnami WordPress image stores the WordPress data and configurations at the /bitnami
path of the container. Persistent Volume Claims are used to keep the data across deployments.
If you encounter errors when working with persistent volumes, refer to our troubleshooting guide for persistent volumes.
Additional environment variables
In case you want to add extra environment variables (useful for advanced operations like custom init scripts), you can use the extraEnvVars
property.
wordpress:
extraEnvVars:
- name: LOG_LEVEL
value: error
Alternatively, you can use a ConfigMap or a Secret with the environment variables. To do so, use the extraEnvVarsCM
or the extraEnvVarsSecret
values.
Sidecars
If additional containers are needed in the same pod as WordPress (such as additional metrics or logging exporters), they can be defined using the sidecars
parameter. If these sidecars export extra ports, extra port definitions can be added using the service.extraPorts
parameter. Learn more about configuring and using sidecar containers.
Pod affinity
This chart allows you to set your custom affinity using the affinity
parameter. Learn more about Pod affinity in the kubernetes documentation.
As an alternative, use one 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
, podAntiAffinityPreset
, or nodeAffinityPreset
parameters.
Troubleshooting
Find more information about how to deal with common errors related to Bitnami's Helm charts in this troubleshooting guide.
Notable changes
13.2.0
Removed support for limiting auto-updates to WordPress core via the wordpressAutoUpdateLevel
option. To update WordPress core, we recommend you use the helm upgrade
command to update your deployment instead of using the built-in update functionality.
11.0.0
The Bitnami WordPress image was refactored and now the source code is published in GitHub in the rootfs
folder of the container image.
In addition, several new features have been implemented:
- Multisite mode is now supported via
multisite.*
options. - Plugins can be installed and activated on the first deployment via the
wordpressPlugins
option. - Added support for limiting auto-updates to WordPress core via the
wordpressAutoUpdateLevel
option. In addition, auto-updates have been disabled by default. To update WordPress core, we recommend to swap the container image version for your deployment instead of using the built-in update functionality.
To enable the new features, it is not possible to do it by upgrading an existing deployment. Instead, it is necessary to perform a fresh deploy.
Upgrading
To 14.0.0
This major release bumps the MariaDB version to 10.6. Follow the upstream instructions for upgrading from MariaDB 10.5 to 10.6. No major issues are expected during the upgrade.
To 13.0.0
This major release renames several values in this chart and adds missing features, in order to be inline with the rest of assets in the Bitnami charts repository.
service.port
andservice.httpsPort
have been regrouped under theservice.ports
map.metrics.service.port
has been regrouped under themetrics.service.ports
map.serviceAccountName
has been deprecated in favor ofserviceAccount
map.
Additionally updates the MariaDB & Memcached subcharts to their newest major 10.x.x
and 6.x.x
, respectively, which contain similar changes.
To 12.0.0
WordPress version was bumped to its latest major, 5.8.x
. Though no incompatibilities are expected while upgrading from previous versions, WordPress recommends backing up your application first.
Site backups can be easily performed using tools such as VaultPress or All-in-One WP Migration.
To 11.0.0
The Bitnami WordPress image was refactored and now the source code is published in GitHub in the rootfs
folder of the container image.
Compatibility is not guaranteed due to the amount of involved changes, however no breaking changes are expected.
To 10.0.0
On November 13, 2020, Helm v2 support was formally finished, this major version is the result of the required changes applied to the Helm Chart to be able to incorporate the different features added in Helm v3 and to be consistent with the Helm project itself regarding the Helm v2 EOL.
Learn more about this change and related upgrade considerations.
Additional upgrade notes
- MariaDB dependency version was bumped to a new major version that introduces several incompatibilities. Therefore, backwards compatibility is not guaranteed unless an external database is used. Check MariaDB Upgrading Notes for more information.
- If you want to upgrade to this version from a previous one installed with Helm v3, there are two alternatives:
- Install a new WordPress chart, and migrate your WordPress site using backup/restore tools such as VaultPress or All-in-One WP Migration.
- Reuse the PVC used to hold the MariaDB data on your previous release. To do so, follow the instructions below (the following example assumes that the release name is
wordpress
).
Warning: please create a backup of your database before running any of these actions. The steps below would be only valid if your application (e.g. any plugins or custom code) is compatible with MariaDB 10.5.
Obtain the credentials and the name of the PVC used to hold the MariaDB data on your current release:
$ export WORDPRESS_PASSWORD=$(kubectl get secret --namespace default wordpress -o jsonpath="{.data.wordpress-password}" | base64 -d)
$ export MARIADB_ROOT_PASSWORD=$(kubectl get secret --namespace default wordpress-mariadb -o jsonpath="{.data.mariadb-root-password}" | base64 -d)
$ export MARIADB_PASSWORD=$(kubectl get secret --namespace default wordpress-mariadb -o jsonpath="{.data.mariadb-password}" | base64 -d)
$ export MARIADB_PVC=$(kubectl get pvc -l app.kubernetes.io/instance=wordpress,app.kubernetes.io/name=mariadb,app.kubernetes.io/component=primary -o jsonpath="{.items[0].metadata.name}")
Upgrade your release (maintaining the version) disabling MariaDB and scaling WordPress replicas to 0:
$ helm upgrade wordpress my-repo/wordpress --set wordpressPassword=$WORDPRESS_PASSWORD --set replicaCount=0 --set mariadb.enabled=false --version 9.6.4
Finally, upgrade you release to 10.0.0
reusing the existing PVC, and enabling back MariaDB:
$ helm upgrade wordpress my-repo/wordpress --set mariadb.primary.persistence.existingClaim=$MARIADB_PVC --set mariadb.auth.rootPassword=$MARIADB_ROOT_PASSWORD --set mariadb.auth.password=$MARIADB_PASSWORD --set wordpressPassword=$WORDPRESS_PASSWORD
You should see the lines below in MariaDB container logs:
$ kubectl logs $(kubectl get pods -l app.kubernetes.io/instance=wordpress,app.kubernetes.io/name=mariadb,app.kubernetes.io/component=primary -o jsonpath="{.items[0].metadata.name}")
...
mariadb 12:13:24.98 INFO ==> Using persisted data
mariadb 12:13:25.01 INFO ==> Running mysql_upgrade
...
To 9.0.0
The Bitnami WordPress image was migrated to a "non-root" user approach. Previously the container ran as the root
user and the Apache daemon was started as the daemon
user. From now on, both the container and the Apache daemon run as user 1001
. You can revert this behavior by setting the parameters securityContext.runAsUser
, and securityContext.fsGroup
to 0
.
Chart labels and Ingress configuration were also adapted to follow the Helm charts best practices.
Consequences:
- The HTTP/HTTPS ports exposed by the container are now
8080/8443
instead of80/443
. - No writing permissions will be granted on
wp-config.php
by default. - Backwards compatibility is not guaranteed.
To upgrade to 9.0.0
, it's recommended to install a new WordPress chart, and migrate your WordPress site using backup/restore tools such as VaultPress or All-in-One WP Migration.
To 8.0.0
Helm performs a lookup for the object based on its group (apps), version (v1), and kind (Deployment). Also known as its GroupVersionKind, or GVK. Changing the GVK is considered a compatibility breaker from Kubernetes' point of view, so you cannot "upgrade" those objects to the new GVK in-place. Earlier versions of Helm 3 did not perform the lookup correctly which has since been fixed to match the spec.
In https://github.com/helm/charts/pulls/12642 the apiVersion
of the deployment resources was updated to apps/v1
in tune with the API's deprecated, resulting in compatibility breakage.
This major version signifies this change.
To 3.0.0
Backwards compatibility is not guaranteed unless you modify the labels used on the chart's deployments.
Use the workaround below to upgrade from versions previous to 3.0.0
. The following example assumes that the release name is wordpress
:
kubectl patch deployment wordpress-wordpress --type=json -p='[{"op": "remove", "path": "/spec/selector/matchLabels/chart"}]'
kubectl delete statefulset wordpress-mariadb --cascade=false
License
Copyright © 2022 Bitnami
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.