global: quayRepository: quay.io # Force the target Kubernetes version (it uses Helm `.Capabilities` if not set). # This is especially useful for `helm template` as capabilities are always empty # due to the fact that it doesn't query an actual cluster kubeVersion: # Oauth client configuration specifics config: # Add config annotations annotations: {} # OAuth client ID clientID: "XXXXXXX" # OAuth client secret clientSecret: "XXXXXXXX" # Create a new secret with the following command # openssl rand -base64 32 | head -c 32 | base64 # Use an existing secret for OAuth2 credentials (see secret.yaml for required fields) # Example: # existingSecret: secret cookieSecret: "XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX" # The name of the cookie that oauth2-proxy will create # If left empty, it will default to the release name cookieName: "" google: {} # adminEmail: xxxx # useApplicationDefaultCredentials: true # targetPrincipal: xxxx # serviceAccountJson: xxxx # Alternatively, use an existing secret (see google-secret.yaml for required fields) # Example: # existingSecret: google-secret # groups: [] # Example: # - group1@example.com # - group2@example.com # Default configuration, to be overridden configFile: |- email_domains = [ "*" ] upstreams = [ "file:///dev/null" ] # Custom configuration file: oauth2_proxy.cfg # configFile: |- # pass_basic_auth = false # pass_access_token = true # Use an existing config map (see configmap.yaml for required fields) # Example: # existingConfig: config alphaConfig: enabled: false # Add config annotations annotations: {} # Arbitrary configuration data to append to the server section serverConfigData: {} # Arbitrary configuration data to append to the metrics section metricsConfigData: {} # Arbitrary configuration data to append configData: {} # Use an existing config map (see configmap-alpha.yaml for required fields) existingConfig: ~ image: #repository: "quay.io/oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy" repository: "oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy" # appVersion is used by default tag: "" pullPolicy: "IfNotPresent" # Optionally specify an array of imagePullSecrets. # Secrets must be manually created in the namespace. # ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/containers/images/#specifying-imagepullsecrets-on-a-pod # imagePullSecrets: # - name: myRegistryKeySecretName # Set a custom containerPort if required. # This will default to 4180 if this value is not set and the httpScheme set to http # This will default to 4443 if this value is not set and the httpScheme set to https # containerPort: 4180 extraArgs: {} extraEnv: [] # -- Custom labels to add into metadata customLabels: {} # To authorize individual email addresses # That is part of extraArgs but since this needs special treatment we need to do a separate section authenticatedEmailsFile: enabled: false # Defines how the email addresses file will be projected, via a configmap or secret persistence: configmap # template is the name of the configmap what contains the email user list but has been configured without this chart. # It's a simpler way to maintain only one configmap (user list) instead changing it for each oauth2-proxy service. # Be aware the value name in the extern config map in data needs to be named to "restricted_user_access" or to the # provided value in restrictedUserAccessKey field. template: "" # The configmap/secret key under which the list of email access is stored # Defaults to "restricted_user_access" if not filled-in, but can be overridden to allow flexibility restrictedUserAccessKey: "" # One email per line # example: # restricted_access: |- # name1@domain # name2@domain # If you override the config with restricted_access it will configure a user list within this chart what takes care of the # config map resource. restricted_access: "" annotations: {} # helm.sh/resource-policy: keep service: type: ClusterIP # when service.type is ClusterIP ... # clusterIP: 192.0.2.20 # when service.type is LoadBalancer ... # loadBalancerIP: 198.51.100.40 # loadBalancerSourceRanges: 203.0.113.0/24 # when service.type is NodePort ... # nodePort: 80 portNumber: 80 # Protocol set on the service appProtocol: http annotations: {} # foo.io/bar: "true" ## Create or use ServiceAccount serviceAccount: ## Specifies whether a ServiceAccount should be created enabled: true ## The name of the ServiceAccount to use. ## If not set and create is true, a name is generated using the fullname template name: automountServiceAccountToken: true annotations: {} ingress: enabled: false # className: nginx path: / # Only used if API capabilities (networking.k8s.io/v1) allow it pathType: ImplementationSpecific # Used to create an Ingress record. # hosts: # - chart-example.local # Extra paths to prepend to every host configuration. This is useful when working with annotation based services. # Warning! The configuration is dependant on your current k8s API version capabilities (networking.k8s.io/v1) # extraPaths: # - path: /* # pathType: ImplementationSpecific # backend: # service: # name: ssl-redirect # port: # name: use-annotation # annotations: # kubernetes.io/ingress.class: nginx # kubernetes.io/tls-acme: "true" # tls: # Secrets must be manually created in the namespace. # - secretName: chart-example-tls # hosts: # - chart-example.local resources: {} # limits: # cpu: "100m" # memory: "300Mi" # requests: # cpu: "100m" # memory: "300Mi" extraVolumes: [] # - name: ca-bundle-cert # secret: # secretName: extraVolumeMounts: [] # - mountPath: /etc/ssl/certs/ # name: ca-bundle-cert # Additional containers to be added to the pod. extraContainers: [] # - name: my-sidecar # image: nginx:latest priorityClassName: "" # Host aliases, useful when working "on premise" where (public) DNS resolver does not know about my hosts. hostAlias: enabled: false # ip: "10.xxx.xxx.xxx" # hostname: "auth.example.com" # [TopologySpreadConstraints](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/pod-topology-spread-constraints/) configuration. # Ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/kubernetes-api/workload-resources/pod-v1/#scheduling # topologySpreadConstraints: [] # Affinity for pod assignment # Ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/assign-pod-node/#affinity-and-anti-affinity # affinity: {} # Tolerations for pod assignment # Ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/taint-and-toleration/ tolerations: [] # Node labels for pod assignment # Ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/node-selection/ nodeSelector: {} # Whether to use secrets instead of environment values for setting up OAUTH2_PROXY variables proxyVarsAsSecrets: true # Configure Kubernetes liveness and readiness probes. # Ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/configure-liveness-readiness-probes/ # Disable both when deploying with Istio 1.0 mTLS. https://istio.io/help/faq/security/#k8s-health-checks livenessProbe: enabled: true initialDelaySeconds: 0 timeoutSeconds: 1 readinessProbe: enabled: true initialDelaySeconds: 0 timeoutSeconds: 5 periodSeconds: 10 successThreshold: 1 # Configure Kubernetes security context for container # Ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/security-context/ securityContext: enabled: false runAsNonRoot: true # allowPrivilegeEscalation: false # runAsUser: 2000 deploymentAnnotations: {} podAnnotations: {} podLabels: {} replicaCount: 1 revisionHistoryLimit: 10 ## PodDisruptionBudget settings ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/disruptions/ podDisruptionBudget: enabled: true minAvailable: 1 # Configure Kubernetes security context for pod # Ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/security-context/ podSecurityContext: {} # whether to use http or https httpScheme: http # Additionally authenticate against a htpasswd file. Entries must be created with "htpasswd -B" for bcrypt encryption. # Alternatively supply an existing secret which contains the required information. htpasswdFile: enabled: false existingSecret: "" entries: {} # One row for each user # example: # entries: # - testuser:$2y$05$gY6dgXqjuzFhwdhsiFe7seM9q9Tile4Y3E.CBpAZJffkeiLaC21Gy # Configure the session storage type, between cookie and redis sessionStorage: # Can be one of the supported session storage cookie|redis type: cookie redis: # Name of the Kubernetes secret containing the redis & redis sentinel password values (see also `sessionStorage.redis.passwordKey`) existingSecret: "" # Redis password value. Applicable for all Redis configurations. Taken from redis subchart secret if not set. `sessionStorage.redis.existingSecret` takes precedence password: "" # Key of the Kubernetes secret data containing the redis password value passwordKey: "redis-password" # Can be one of standalone|cluster|sentinel clientType: "standalone" standalone: # URL of redis standalone server for redis session storage (e.g. `redis://HOST[:PORT]`). Automatically generated if not set connectionUrl: "" cluster: # List of Redis cluster connection URLs (e.g. `["redis://127.0.0.1:8000", "redis://127.0.0.1:8000"]`) connectionUrls: [] sentinel: # Name of the Kubernetes secret containing the redis sentinel password value (see also `sessionStorage.redis.sentinel.passwordKey`). Default: `sessionStorage.redis.existingSecret` existingSecret: "" # Redis sentinel password. Used only for sentinel connection; any redis node passwords need to use `sessionStorage.redis.password` password: "" # Key of the Kubernetes secret data containing the redis sentinel password value passwordKey: "redis-sentinel-password" # Redis sentinel master name masterName: "" # List of Redis sentinel connection URLs (e.g. `["redis://127.0.0.1:8000", "redis://127.0.0.1:8000"]`) connectionUrls: [] # Enables and configure the automatic deployment of the redis subchart redis: # provision an instance of the redis sub-chart enabled: false # Redis specific helm chart settings, please see: # https://github.com/bitnami/charts/tree/master/bitnami/redis#parameters # redisPort: 6379 # cluster: # enabled: false # slaveCount: 1 # Enables apiVersion deprecation checks checkDeprecation: true metrics: # Enable Prometheus metrics endpoint enabled: true # Serve Prometheus metrics on this port port: 44180 # when service.type is NodePort ... # nodePort: 44180 # Protocol set on the service for the metrics port service: appProtocol: http servicemonitor: # Enable Prometheus Operator ServiceMonitor enabled: false # Define the namespace where to deploy the ServiceMonitor resource namespace: "" # Prometheus Instance definition prometheusInstance: default # Prometheus scrape interval interval: 60s # Prometheus scrape timeout scrapeTimeout: 30s # Add custom labels to the ServiceMonitor resource labels: {} # Extra K8s manifests to deploy extraObjects: [] # - apiVersion: secrets-store.csi.x-k8s.io/v1 # kind: SecretProviderClass # metadata: # name: oauth2-proxy-secrets-store # spec: # provider: aws # parameters: # objects: | # - objectName: "oauth2-proxy" # objectType: "secretsmanager" # jmesPath: # - path: "client_id" # objectAlias: "client-id" # - path: "client_secret" # objectAlias: "client-secret" # - path: "cookie_secret" # objectAlias: "cookie-secret" # secretObjects: # - data: # - key: client-id # objectName: client-id # - key: client-secret # objectName: client-secret # - key: cookie-secret # objectName: cookie-secret # secretName: oauth2-proxy-secrets-store # type: Opaque