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Results 111 - 120 of 459 for secrets (0.05 seconds)

  1. helm-releases/minio-3.5.8.tgz

    displayed in the output of a successful install. ### Existing secret Instead of having this chart create the secret for you, you can supply a preexisting secret, much like an existing PersistentVolumeClai. First, create the secret: ```bash kubectl create secret generic my-minio-secret --from-literal=rootUser=foobarbaz --from-literal=rootPassword=foobarbazqux ``` Then install the chart, specifying that you want to use an existing secret: ```bash helm install --set existingSecret=my-minio-secret minio/minio...
    Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Sun Feb 27 06:44:38 GMT 2022
    - 17.7K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  2. internal/config/config.go

    	// values.
    	resultKVS := make([]KV, 0, len(store[target]))
    	hkvs := HelpSubSysMap[subSys]
    	for _, kv := range store[target] {
    		hkv, _ := hkvs.Lookup(kv.Key)
    		if hkv.Secret && redactSecrets && kv.Value != "" {
    			// Skip returning secrets.
    			continue
    			// clonedKV := kv
    			// clonedKV.Value = redactedSecret
    			// resultKVS = append(resultKVS, clonedKV)
    		}
    		resultKVS = append(resultKVS, kv)
    	}
    
    Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Sun Sep 28 20:59:21 GMT 2025
    - 37.7K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  3. helm-releases/minio-2.0.1.tgz

    displayed in the output of a successful install. Existing secret ---------- Instead of having this chart create the secret for you, you can supply a preexisting secret, much like an existing PersistentVolumeClai. First, create the secret: ```bash kubectl create secret generic my-minio-secret --from-literal=rootUser=foobarbaz --from-literal=rootPassword=foobarbazqux ``` Then install the chart, specifying that you want to use an existing secret: ```bash helm install --set existingSecret=my-minio-secret...
    Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Tue Aug 31 09:09:09 GMT 2021
    - 13.6K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  4. scripts/people.py

    import logging
    import secrets
    import subprocess
    import time
    from collections import Counter
    from collections.abc import Container
    from datetime import datetime, timedelta, timezone
    from math import ceil
    from pathlib import Path
    from typing import Annotated, Any
    
    import httpx
    import yaml
    from github import Github
    from pydantic import BaseModel, BeforeValidator, SecretStr
    from pydantic_settings import BaseSettings
    
    Created: Sun Apr 05 07:19:11 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Mon Mar 23 13:51:24 GMT 2026
    - 15K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  5. helm-releases/minio-1.0.2.tgz

    displayed in the output of a successful install. Existing secret ---------- Instead of having this chart create the secret for you, you can supply a preexisting secret, much like an existing PersistentVolumeClai. First, create the secret: ```bash kubectl create secret generic my-minio-secret --from-literal=rootUser=foobarbaz --from-literal=rootPassword=foobarbazqux ``` Then install the chart, specifying that you want to use an existing secret: ```bash helm install --set existingSecret=my-minio-secret...
    Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Tue Aug 24 18:58:05 GMT 2021
    - 13.6K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  6. helm-releases/minio-3.5.1.tgz

    displayed in the output of a successful install. Existing secret ---------- Instead of having this chart create the secret for you, you can supply a preexisting secret, much like an existing PersistentVolumeClai. First, create the secret: ```bash kubectl create secret generic my-minio-secret --from-literal=rootUser=foobarbaz --from-literal=rootPassword=foobarbazqux ``` Then install the chart, specifying that you want to use an existing secret: ```bash helm install --set existingSecret=my-minio-secret...
    Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Fri Feb 04 22:54:20 GMT 2022
    - 15.4K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  7. helm-releases/minio-3.5.0.tgz

    displayed in the output of a successful install. Existing secret ---------- Instead of having this chart create the secret for you, you can supply a preexisting secret, much like an existing PersistentVolumeClai. First, create the secret: ```bash kubectl create secret generic my-minio-secret --from-literal=rootUser=foobarbaz --from-literal=rootPassword=foobarbazqux ``` Then install the chart, specifying that you want to use an existing secret: ```bash helm install --set existingSecret=my-minio-secret...
    Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Wed Feb 02 00:16:41 GMT 2022
    - 15.2K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  8. helm-releases/minio-3.3.1.tgz

    displayed in the output of a successful install. Existing secret ---------- Instead of having this chart create the secret for you, you can supply a preexisting secret, much like an existing PersistentVolumeClai. First, create the secret: ```bash kubectl create secret generic my-minio-secret --from-literal=rootUser=foobarbaz --from-literal=rootPassword=foobarbazqux ``` Then install the chart, specifying that you want to use an existing secret: ```bash helm install --set existingSecret=my-minio-secret...
    Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Thu Dec 02 20:09:18 GMT 2021
    - 14.6K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  9. helm-releases/minio-3.1.7.tgz

    displayed in the output of a successful install. Existing secret ---------- Instead of having this chart create the secret for you, you can supply a preexisting secret, much like an existing PersistentVolumeClai. First, create the secret: ```bash kubectl create secret generic my-minio-secret --from-literal=rootUser=foobarbaz --from-literal=rootPassword=foobarbazqux ``` Then install the chart, specifying that you want to use an existing secret: ```bash helm install --set existingSecret=my-minio-secret...
    Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Sun Oct 03 22:23:22 GMT 2021
    - 14.6K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  10. docs/en/docs/advanced/settings.md

    In many cases your application could need some external settings or configurations, for example secret keys, database credentials, credentials for email services, etc.
    
    Most of these settings are variable (can change), like database URLs. And many could be sensitive, like secrets.
    
    For this reason it's common to provide them in environment variables that are read by the application.
    
    /// tip
    
    Created: Sun Apr 05 07:19:11 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Thu Mar 05 18:13:19 GMT 2026
    - 10.9K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
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