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I am trying to test my development helm chat deployment output using --dry-run option. when I run the below command its trying to connect to Kubernetes API server.

Is dry run option required to connect Kubernetes cluster? all I want to check the deployment yaml file output.

helm install mychart-0.1.0.tgz --dry-run --debug

Error: Get http://localhost:8080/api/v1/namespaces/kube-system/pods?labelSelector=app%3Dhelm%2Cname%3Dtiller: dial tcp [::1]:8080: connectex: No connection could be made because the target machine actively refused it.
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4 Answers 4

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There is also an option to run helm template ./mychart to render the generated YAMLs without needing the connection to tiller. Combined with helm lint it's a great set to verify validity of your chart.

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    This answer should be the validated one. Using rancher, we don't have possibility to make a "dry-run" as there is no accessible Tiler. helm template is a very simple way to check the output of templates. Thanks !
    – Metal3d
    May 20, 2019 at 9:33
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    @Metal3d But helm template does not contain the actual value that will be installed, so in many cases, helm install with --dry-run option is the best one to get the actual values instead of templates. Jun 30, 2020 at 7:48
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    Now that helm v3 is out, it's much easier to run the --dry-run option. Jun 30, 2020 at 11:25
  • Note that currently the difference between helm install --dry-run and helm template is that with the latter, the NOTES.txt file is not rendered. Which may be a problem when the workflow involves helm template and kubectl apply -f. See github.com/helm/helm/issues/6901 Dec 19, 2022 at 10:51
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As stated on Helm's documentation

When you want to test the template rendering, but not actually install anything, you can use helm install --debug --dry-run ./mychart. This will send the chart to the Tiller server, which will render the templates. But instead of installing the chart, it will return the rendered template to you so you can see the output

So it still needs to connect to Tiller to render your templates with the right values. The difference when using the --dry-run option is that it won't actually install the chart.

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  • Eldad AK's answer is simpler and does not require a Tiller server.
    – cyfdecyf
    Jul 18, 2019 at 8:08
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    Tiller is removed after helm 3.0.0, which is perceived as security potential.
    – zeisen
    Aug 20, 2020 at 19:41
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There is a small diff between helm install --dry-run and helm template command:

  • helm install --dry-run will send your chart to the tiller which will verify and render the manifest files against the K8S specs along with the YAML validations.

  • helm template will only generate the manifest and verify if your YAML file is valid. However, it won't check if the generated manifests are valid Kubernetes resources. Ref: Helm Docs

Hope this helps!

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Use Helm template or helm lint instead.

helm lint is your go-to tool for verifying that your chart follows best practices.

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