# {{ .Project.ShortName }}
[{{ .Project.Name }}]({{ .Project.URL }}) - {{ .Project.Description }}
## TL;DR;
```console
$ helm repo add {{ .Repository.Name }} {{ .Repository.URL }}
$ helm repo update
$ helm install {{ .Release.Name }} {{ .Repository.Name }}/{{ .Chart.Name }} -n {{ .Release.Namespace }}{{ with .Chart.Version }} --version={{.}}{{ end }}
```
## Introduction
This chart deploys {{ .Project.App }} on a [Kubernetes](http://kubernetes.io) cluster using the [Helm](https://helm.sh) package manager.
## Prerequisites
{{ range .Prerequisites }}
- {{ . }}
{{- end }}
## Installing the Chart
To install the chart with the release name `{{ .Release.Name }}`:
```console
$ helm install {{ .Release.Name }} {{ .Repository.Name }}/{{ .Chart.Name }} -n {{ .Release.Namespace }}{{ with .Chart.Version }} --version={{.}}{{ end }}
```
The command deploys {{ .Project.App }} on the Kubernetes cluster in the default configuration. The [configuration](#configuration) section lists the parameters that can be configured during installation.
> **Tip**: List all releases using `helm list`
## Uninstalling the Chart
To uninstall/delete the `{{ .Release.Name }}`:
```console
$ helm delete {{ .Release.Name }} -n {{ .Release.Namespace }}
```
The command removes all the Kubernetes components associated with the chart and deletes the release.
## Configuration
The following table lists the configurable parameters of the `{{ .Chart.Name }}` chart and their default values.
{{ .Chart.Values }}
Specify each parameter using the `--set key=value[,key=value]` argument to `helm install`. For example:
```console
$ helm install {{ .Release.Name }} {{ .Repository.Name }}/{{ .Chart.Name }} -n {{ .Release.Namespace }}{{ with .Chart.Version }} --version={{.}}{{ end }} --set {{ .Chart.ValuesExample }}
```
Alternatively, a YAML file that specifies the values for the parameters can be provided while
installing the chart. For example:
```console
$ helm install {{ .Release.Name }} {{ .Repository.Name }}/{{ .Chart.Name }} -n {{ .Release.Namespace }}{{ with .Chart.Version }} --version={{.}}{{ end }} --values values.yaml
```
AssetDir returns the file names below a certain
directory embedded in the file by go-bindata.
For example if you run go-bindata on data/... and data contains the
following hierarchy:
data/
foo.txt
img/
a.png
b.png
then AssetDir("data") would return []string{"foo.txt", "img"}
AssetDir("data/img") would return []string{"a.png", "b.png"}
AssetDir("foo.txt") and AssetDir("notexist") would return an error
AssetDir("") will return []string{"data"}.