Helm Rollback
helm rollback
roll back a release to a previous revision
Synopsis
This command rolls back a release to a previous revision.
The first argument of the rollback command is the name of a release, and the second is a revision (version) number. If this argument is omitted or set to 0, it will roll back to the previous release.
To see revision numbers, run ‘helm history RELEASE’.
helm rollback <RELEASE> [REVISION] [flags]
Options
--cleanup-on-fail allow deletion of new resources created in this rollback when rollback fails
--dry-run simulate a rollback
--force force resource update through delete/recreate if needed
-h, --help help for rollback
--history-max int limit the maximum number of revisions saved per release. Use 0 for no limit (default 10)
--no-hooks prevent hooks from running during rollback
--recreate-pods performs pods restart for the resource if applicable
--timeout duration time to wait for any individual Kubernetes operation (like Jobs for hooks) (default 5m0s)
--wait if set, will wait until all Pods, PVCs, Services, and minimum number of Pods of a Deployment, StatefulSet, or ReplicaSet are in a ready state before marking the release as successful. It will wait for as long as --timeout
--wait-for-jobs if set and --wait enabled, will wait until all Jobs have been completed before marking the release as successful. It will wait for as long as --timeout
Options inherited from parent commands
--burst-limit int client-side default throttling limit (default 100)
--debug enable verbose output
--kube-apiserver string the address and the port for the Kubernetes API server
--kube-as-group stringArray group to impersonate for the operation, this flag can be repeated to specify multiple groups.
--kube-as-user string username to impersonate for the operation
--kube-ca-file string the certificate authority file for the Kubernetes API server connection
--kube-context string name of the kubeconfig context to use
--kube-insecure-skip-tls-verify if true, the Kubernetes API server's certificate will not be checked for validity. This will make your HTTPS connections insecure
--kube-tls-server-name string server name to use for Kubernetes API server certificate validation. If it is not provided, the hostname used to contact the server is used
--kube-token string bearer token used for authentication
--kubeconfig string path to the kubeconfig file
-n, --namespace string namespace scope for this request
--qps float32 queries per second used when communicating with the Kubernetes API, not including bursting
--registry-config string path to the registry config file (default "~/.config/helm/registry/config.json")
--repository-cache string path to the directory containing cached repository indexes (default "~/.cache/helm/repository")
--repository-config string path to the file containing repository names and URLs (default "~/.config/helm/repositories.yaml")
SEE ALSO
- helm - The Helm package manager for Kubernetes.