## @section Global parameters
## Global Docker image parameters
## Please, note that this will override the image parameters, including dependencies, configured to use the global value
## Current available global Docker image parameters: imageRegistry, imagePullSecrets and storageClass

## @param global.imageRegistry Global Docker image registry
## @param global.imagePullSecrets Global Docker registry secret names as an array
## @param global.storageClass Global StorageClass for Persistent Volume(s)
##
global:
  imageRegistry: ""
  ## E.g.
  ## imagePullSecrets:
  ##   - myRegistryKeySecretName
  ##
  imagePullSecrets: []
  storageClass: "managed-csi"

## @section Common parameters

## @param kubeVersion Override Kubernetes version
##
kubeVersion: ""
## @param nameOverride String to partially override common.names.fullname
##
nameOverride: ""
## @param fullnameOverride String to fully override common.names.fullname
##
fullnameOverride: ""
## @param commonLabels Labels to add to all deployed objects
##
commonLabels: {}
## @param commonAnnotations Annotations to add to all deployed objects
##
commonAnnotations: {}
## @param clusterDomain Kubernetes cluster domain name
##
clusterDomain: cluster.local
## @param extraDeploy Array of extra objects to deploy with the release
##
extraDeploy: []

## Enable diagnostic mode in the deployment
##
diagnosticMode:
  ## @param diagnosticMode.enabled Enable diagnostic mode (all probes will be disabled and the command will be overridden)
  ##
  enabled: false
  ## @param diagnosticMode.command Command to override all containers in the deployment
  ##
  command:
    - sleep
  ## @param diagnosticMode.args Args to override all containers in the deployment
  ##
  args:
    - infinity

## @section WordPress Image parameters

## Bitnami WordPress image
## ref: https://hub.docker.com/r/bitnami/wordpress/tags/
## @param image.registry WordPress image registry
## @param image.repository WordPress image repository
## @param image.tag WordPress image tag (immutable tags are recommended)
## @param image.pullPolicy WordPress image pull policy
## @param image.pullSecrets WordPress image pull secrets
## @param image.debug Enable image debug mode
##
image:
  registry: docker.io
  repository: bitnami/wordpress
  tag: 5.8.0-debian-10-r33
  ## Specify a imagePullPolicy
  ## Defaults to 'Always' if image tag is 'latest', else set to 'IfNotPresent'
  ## ref: http://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/images/#pre-pulling-images
  ##
  pullPolicy: IfNotPresent
  ## Optionally specify an array of imagePullSecrets.
  ## Secrets must be manually created in the namespace.
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/pull-image-private-registry/
  ## e.g:
  ## pullSecrets:
  ##   - myRegistryKeySecretName
  ##
  pullSecrets: []
  ## Enable debug mode
  ##
  debug: false

## @section WordPress Configuration parameters
## WordPress settings based on environment variables
## ref: https://github.com/bitnami/bitnami-docker-wordpress#environment-variables

## @param wordpressUsername WordPress username
##
wordpressUsername: user
## @param wordpressPassword WordPress user password
## Defaults to a random 10-character alphanumeric string if not set
##
wordpressPassword: ""
## @param existingSecret Name of existing secret containing WordPress credentials
## NOTE: Must contain key `wordpress-password`
## NOTE: When it's set, the `wordpressPassword` parameter is ignored
##
existingSecret: ""
## @param wordpressEmail WordPress user email
##
wordpressEmail: user@example.com
## @param wordpressFirstName WordPress user first name
##
wordpressFirstName: FirstName
## @param wordpressLastName WordPress user last name
##
wordpressLastName: LastName
## @param wordpressBlogName Blog name
##
wordpressBlogName: User's Blog!
## @param wordpressTablePrefix Prefix to use for WordPress database tables
##
wordpressTablePrefix: wp_
## @param wordpressScheme Scheme to use to generate WordPress URLs
##
wordpressScheme: http
## @param wordpressSkipInstall Skip wizard installation
## NOTE: useful if you use an external database that already contains WordPress data
## ref: https://github.com/bitnami/bitnami-docker-wordpress#connect-wordpress-docker-container-to-an-existing-database
##
wordpressSkipInstall: false
## @param wordpressExtraConfigContent Add extra content to the default wp-config.php file
## e.g:
## wordpressExtraConfigContent: |
##   @ini_set( 'post_max_size', '128M');
##   @ini_set( 'memory_limit', '256M' );
##
wordpressExtraConfigContent: ""
## @param wordpressConfiguration The content for your custom wp-config.php file (advanced feature)
## NOTE: This will override configuring WordPress based on environment variables (including those set by the chart)
## NOTE: Currently only supported when `wordpressSkipInstall=true`
##
wordpressConfiguration: ""
## @param existingWordPressConfigurationSecret The name of an existing secret with your custom wp-config.php file (advanced feature)
## NOTE: When it's set the `wordpressConfiguration` parameter is ignored
##
existingWordPressConfigurationSecret: ""
## @param wordpressConfigureCache Enable W3 Total Cache plugin and configure cache settings
## NOTE: useful if you deploy Memcached for caching database queries or you use an external cache server
##
wordpressConfigureCache: false
## @param wordpressAutoUpdateLevel Level of auto-updates to allow. Allowed values: `major`, `minor` or `none`.
##
wordpressAutoUpdateLevel: none
## @param wordpressPlugins Array of plugins to install and activate. Can be specified as `all` or `none`.
## NOTE: If set to all, only plugins that are already installed will be activated, and if set to none, no plugins will be activated
##
wordpressPlugins: none
## @param apacheConfiguration The content for your custom httpd.conf file (advanced feature)
##
apacheConfiguration: ""
## @param existingApacheConfigurationConfigMap The name of an existing secret with your custom httpd.conf file (advanced feature)
## NOTE: When it's set the `apacheConfiguration` parameter is ignored
##
existingApacheConfigurationConfigMap: ""
## @param customPostInitScripts Custom post-init.d user scripts
## ref: https://github.com/bitnami/bitnami-docker-wordpress/tree/master/5/debian-10/rootfs/post-init.d
## NOTE: supported formats are `.sh`, `.sql` or `.php`
## NOTE: scripts are exclusively executed during the 1st boot of the container
## e.g:
## customPostInitScripts:
##   enable-multisite.sh: |
##     #!/bin/bash
##     chmod +w /bitnami/wordpress/wp-config.php
##     wp core multisite-install --url=example.com --title="Welcome to the WordPress Multisite" --admin_user="doesntmatternotreallyused" --admin_password="doesntmatternotreallyused" --admin_email="user@example.com"
##     cat /docker-entrypoint-init.d/.htaccess > /bitnami/wordpress/.htaccess
##     chmod -w bitnami/wordpress/wp-config.php
##   .htaccess: |
##     RewriteEngine On
##     RewriteBase /
##     ...
##
customPostInitScripts: {}
## SMTP mail delivery configuration
## ref: https://github.com/bitnami/bitnami-docker-wordpress/#smtp-configuration
## @param smtpHost SMTP server host
## @param smtpPort SMTP server port
## @param smtpUser SMTP username
## @param smtpPassword SMTP user password
## @param smtpProtocol SMTP protocol
##
smtpHost: ""
smtpPort: ""
smtpUser: ""
smtpPassword: ""
smtpProtocol: ""
## @param smtpExistingSecret The name of an existing secret with SMTP credentials
## NOTE: Must contain key `smtp-password`
## NOTE: When it's set, the `smtpPassword` parameter is ignored
##
smtpExistingSecret: ""
## @param allowEmptyPassword Allow the container to be started with blank passwords
##
allowEmptyPassword: true
## @param allowOverrideNone Configure Apache to prohibit overriding directives with htaccess files
##
allowOverrideNone: false
## @param htaccessPersistenceEnabled Persist custom changes on htaccess files
## If `allowOverrideNone` is `false`, it will persist `/opt/bitnami/wordpress/wordpress-htaccess.conf`
## If `allowOverrideNone` is `true`, it will persist `/opt/bitnami/wordpress/.htaccess`
##
htaccessPersistenceEnabled: false
## @param customHTAccessCM The name of an existing ConfigMap with custom htaccess rules
## NOTE: Must contain key `wordpress-htaccess.conf` with the file content
## NOTE: Requires setting `allowOverrideNone=false`
##
customHTAccessCM: ""
## @param command Override default container command (useful when using custom images)
##
command: []
## @param args Override default container args (useful when using custom images)
##
args: []
## @param extraEnvVars Array with extra environment variables to add to the WordPress container
## e.g:
## extraEnvVars:
##   - name: FOO
##     value: "bar"
##
extraEnvVars: []
## @param extraEnvVarsCM Name of existing ConfigMap containing extra env vars
##
extraEnvVarsCM: ""
## @param extraEnvVarsSecret Name of existing Secret containing extra env vars
##
extraEnvVarsSecret: ""

## @section WordPress Multisite Configuration parameters
## ref: https://github.com/bitnami/bitnami-docker-wordpress#multisite-configuration

## @param multisite.enable Whether to enable WordPress Multisite configuration.
## @param multisite.host WordPress Multisite hostname/address. This value is mandatory when enabling Multisite mode.
## @param multisite.networkType WordPress Multisite network type to enable. Allowed values: `subfolder`, `subdirectory` or `subdomain`.
## @param multisite.enableNipIoRedirect Whether to enable IP address redirection to nip.io wildcard DNS. Useful when running on an IP address with subdomain network type.
##
multisite:
  enable: false
  host: ""
  networkType: subdomain
  enableNipIoRedirect: false

## @section WordPress deployment parameters

## @param replicaCount Number of WordPress replicas to deploy
## NOTE: ReadWriteMany PVC(s) are required if replicaCount > 1
##
replicaCount: 1
## @param updateStrategy.type WordPress deployment strategy type
## @param updateStrategy.rollingUpdate WordPress deployment rolling update configuration parameters
## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/controllers/deployment/#strategy
## NOTE: Set it to `Recreate` if you use a PV that cannot be mounted on multiple pods
## e.g:
## updateStrategy:
##  type: RollingUpdate
##  rollingUpdate:
##    maxSurge: 25%
##    maxUnavailable: 25%
##
updateStrategy:
  type: RollingUpdate
  rollingUpdate: {}
## @param schedulerName Alternate scheduler
## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/administer-cluster/configure-multiple-schedulers/
##
schedulerName: ""
## @param serviceAccountName ServiceAccount name
##
serviceAccountName: default
## @param hostAliases [array] WordPress pod host aliases
## https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/add-entries-to-pod-etc-hosts-with-host-aliases/
##
hostAliases:
  ## Required for apache-exporter to work
  - ip: "127.0.0.1"
    hostnames:
      - "status.localhost"
## @param extraVolumes Optionally specify extra list of additional volumes for WordPress pods
##
extraVolumes: []
## @param extraVolumeMounts Optionally specify extra list of additional volumeMounts for WordPress container(s)
##
extraVolumeMounts: []
## @param extraContainerPorts Optionally specify extra list of additional ports for WordPress container(s)
## e.g:
## extraContainerPorts:
##   - name: myservice
##     containerPort: 9090
##
extraContainerPorts: []
## @param sidecars Add additional sidecar containers to the WordPress pod
## e.g:
## sidecars:
##   - name: your-image-name
##     image: your-image
##     imagePullPolicy: Always
##     ports:
##       - name: portname
##         containerPort: 1234
##
sidecars: []
## @param initContainers Add additional init containers to the WordPress pods
## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/init-containers/
## e.g:
## initContainers:
##  - name: your-image-name
##    image: your-image
##    imagePullPolicy: Always
##    command: ['sh', '-c', 'copy themes and plugins from git and push to /bitnami/wordpress/wp-content. Should work with extraVolumeMounts and extraVolumes']
##
initContainers: []
## @param podLabels Extra labels for WordPress pods
## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/labels/
##
podLabels: {}
## @param podAnnotations Annotations for WordPress pods
## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/annotations/
##
podAnnotations: {}
## @param podAffinityPreset Pod affinity preset. Ignored if `affinity` is set. Allowed values: `soft` or `hard`
## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/scheduling-eviction/assign-pod-node/#inter-pod-affinity-and-anti-affinity
##
podAffinityPreset: ""
## @param podAntiAffinityPreset Pod anti-affinity preset. Ignored if `affinity` is set. Allowed values: `soft` or `hard`
## Ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/scheduling-eviction/assign-pod-node/#inter-pod-affinity-and-anti-affinity
##
podAntiAffinityPreset: soft
## Node affinity preset
## Ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/scheduling-eviction/assign-pod-node/#node-affinity
##
nodeAffinityPreset:
  ## @param nodeAffinityPreset.type Node affinity preset type. Ignored if `affinity` is set. Allowed values: `soft` or `hard`
  ##
  type: ""
  ## @param nodeAffinityPreset.key Node label key to match. Ignored if `affinity` is set
  ##
  key: ""
  ## @param nodeAffinityPreset.values Node label values to match. Ignored if `affinity` is set
  ## E.g.
  ## values:
  ##   - e2e-az1
  ##   - e2e-az2
  ##
  values: []
## @param affinity Affinity for pod assignment
## Ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/assign-pod-node/#affinity-and-anti-affinity
## NOTE: podAffinityPreset, podAntiAffinityPreset, and  nodeAffinityPreset will be ignored when it's set
##
affinity: {}
## @param nodeSelector Node labels for pod assignment
## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/node-selection/
##
nodeSelector: {}
## @param tolerations Tolerations for pod assignment
## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/taint-and-toleration/
##
tolerations: []
## WordPress containers' resource requests and limits
## ref: http://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/compute-resources/
## @param resources.limits The resources limits for the WordPress container
## @param resources.requests [object] The requested resources for the WordPress container
##
resources:
  limits: {}
  requests:
    memory: 512Mi
    cpu: 300m
## Container ports
## @param containerPorts.http WordPress HTTP container port
## @param containerPorts.https WordPress HTTPS container port
##
containerPorts:
  http: 8080
  https: 8443
## Configure Pods Security Context
## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/security-context/#set-the-security-context-for-a-pod
## @param podSecurityContext.enabled Enabled WordPress pods' Security Context
## @param podSecurityContext.fsGroup Set WordPress pod's Security Context fsGroup
##
podSecurityContext:
  enabled: true
  fsGroup: 1001
## Configure Container Security Context (only main container)
## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/security-context/#set-the-security-context-for-a-container
## @param containerSecurityContext.enabled Enabled WordPress containers' Security Context
## @param containerSecurityContext.runAsUser Set WordPress container's Security Context runAsUser
## @param containerSecurityContext.runAsNonRoot Set WordPress container's Security Context runAsNonRoot
##
containerSecurityContext:
  enabled: true
  runAsUser: 1001
  runAsNonRoot: true
## Configure extra options for WordPress containers' liveness and readiness probes
## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/configure-liveness-readiness-probes/#configure-probes
## @param livenessProbe.enabled Enable livenessProbe
## @skip livenessProbe.httpGet
## @param livenessProbe.initialDelaySeconds Initial delay seconds for livenessProbe
## @param livenessProbe.periodSeconds Period seconds for livenessProbe
## @param livenessProbe.timeoutSeconds Timeout seconds for livenessProbe
## @param livenessProbe.failureThreshold Failure threshold for livenessProbe
## @param livenessProbe.successThreshold Success threshold for livenessProbe
##
livenessProbe:
  enabled: true
  httpGet:
    path: /wp-admin/install.php
    port: http
    scheme: HTTP
    ## If using an HTTPS-terminating load-balancer, the probes may need to behave
    ## like the balancer to prevent HTTP 302 responses. According to the Kubernetes
    ## docs, 302 should be considered "successful", but this issue on GitHub
    ## (https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/issues/47893) shows that it isn't.
    ## E.g.
    ## httpHeaders:
    ## - name: X-Forwarded-Proto
    ##   value: https
    ##
    httpHeaders: []
  initialDelaySeconds: 120
  periodSeconds: 10
  timeoutSeconds: 5
  failureThreshold: 6
  successThreshold: 1
## @param readinessProbe.enabled Enable readinessProbe
## @skip readinessProbe.httpGet
## @param readinessProbe.initialDelaySeconds Initial delay seconds for readinessProbe
## @param readinessProbe.periodSeconds Period seconds for readinessProbe
## @param readinessProbe.timeoutSeconds Timeout seconds for readinessProbe
## @param readinessProbe.failureThreshold Failure threshold for readinessProbe
## @param readinessProbe.successThreshold Success threshold for readinessProbe
##
readinessProbe:
  enabled: true
  httpGet:
    path: /wp-login.php
    port: http
    scheme: HTTP
    ## If using an HTTPS-terminating load-balancer, the probes may need to behave
    ## like the balancer to prevent HTTP 302 responses. According to the Kubernetes
    ## docs, 302 should be considered "successful", but this issue on GitHub
    ## (https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/issues/47893) shows that it isn't.
    ## E.g.
    ## httpHeaders:
    ## - name: X-Forwarded-Proto
    ##   value: https
    ##
    httpHeaders: []
  initialDelaySeconds: 30
  periodSeconds: 10
  timeoutSeconds: 5
  failureThreshold: 6
  successThreshold: 1
## @param customLivenessProbe Custom livenessProbe that overrides the default one
##
customLivenessProbe: {}
## @param customReadinessProbe Custom readinessProbe that overrides the default one
##
customReadinessProbe: {}

## @section Traffic Exposure Parameters

## WordPress service parameters
##
service:
  ## @param service.type WordPress service type
  ##
  type: LoadBalancer
  ## @param service.port WordPress service HTTP port
  ##
  port: 80
  ## @param service.httpsPort WordPress service HTTPS port
  ##
  httpsPort: 443
  ## @param service.httpsTargetPort Target port for HTTPS
  ##
  httpsTargetPort: https
  ## Node ports to expose
  ## @param service.nodePorts.http Node port for HTTP
  ## @param service.nodePorts.https Node port for HTTPS
  ## NOTE: choose port between <30000-32767>
  ##
  nodePorts:
    http: ""
    https: ""
  ## @param service.clusterIP WordPress service Cluster IP
  ## e.g.:
  ## clusterIP: None
  ##
  clusterIP: ""
  ## @param service.loadBalancerIP WordPress service Load Balancer IP
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/service/#type-loadbalancer
  ##
  loadBalancerIP: ""
  ## @param service.loadBalancerSourceRanges WordPress service Load Balancer sources
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/access-application-cluster/configure-cloud-provider-firewall/#restrict-access-for-loadbalancer-service
  ## e.g:
  ## loadBalancerSourceRanges:
  ##   - 10.10.10.0/24
  ##
  loadBalancerSourceRanges: []
  ## @param service.externalTrafficPolicy WordPress service external traffic policy
  ## ref http://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/access-application-cluster/create-external-load-balancer/#preserving-the-client-source-ip
  ##
  externalTrafficPolicy: Cluster
  ## @param service.annotations Additional custom annotations for WordPress service
  ##
  annotations: {}
  ## @param service.extraPorts Extra port to expose on WordPress service
  ##
  extraPorts: []
## Configure the ingress resource that allows you to access the WordPress installation
## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/ingress/
##
ingress:
  ## @param ingress.enabled Enable ingress record generation for WordPress
  ##
  enabled: false
  ## @param ingress.certManager Add the corresponding annotations for cert-manager integration
  ##
  certManager: false
  ## @param ingress.pathType Ingress path type
  ##
  pathType: ImplementationSpecific
  ## @param ingress.apiVersion Force Ingress API version (automatically detected if not set)
  ##
  apiVersion: ""
  ## @param ingress.ingressClassName IngressClass that will be be used to implement the Ingress (Kubernetes 1.18+)
  ## This is supported in Kubernetes 1.18+ and required if you have more than one IngressClass marked as the default for your cluster .
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/blog/2020/04/02/improvements-to-the-ingress-api-in-kubernetes-1.18/
  ##
  ingressClassName: ""
  ## @param ingress.hostname Default host for the ingress record
  ##
  hostname: wordpress.local
  ## @param ingress.path Default path for the ingress record
  ## NOTE: You may need to set this to '/*' in order to use this with ALB ingress controllers
  ##
  path: /
  ## @param ingress.annotations Additional custom annotations for the ingress record
  ## NOTE: If `ingress.certManager=true`, annotation `kubernetes.io/tls-acme: "true"` will automatically be added
  ##
  annotations: {}
  ## @param ingress.tls Enable TLS configuration for the host defined at `ingress.hostname` parameter
  ## TLS certificates will be retrieved from a TLS secret with name: `{{- printf "%s-tls" .Values.ingress.hostname }}`
  ## You can:
  ##   - Use the `ingress.secrets` parameter to create this TLS secret
  ##   - Relay on cert-manager to create it by setting `ingress.certManager=true`
  ##   - Relay on Helm to create self-signed certificates by setting `ingress.tls=true` and `ingress.certManager=false`
  ##
  tls: false
  ## @param ingress.extraHosts An array with additional hostname(s) to be covered with the ingress record
  ## e.g:
  ## extraHosts:
  ##   - name: wordpress.local
  ##     path: /
  ##
  extraHosts: []
  ## @param ingress.extraPaths An array with additional arbitrary paths that may need to be added to the ingress under the main host
  ## e.g:
  ## extraPaths:
  ## - path: /*
  ##   backend:
  ##     serviceName: ssl-redirect
  ##     servicePort: use-annotation
  ##
  extraPaths: []
  ## @param ingress.extraTls TLS configuration for additional hostname(s) to be covered with this ingress record
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/ingress/#tls
  ## e.g:
  ## extraTls:
  ## - hosts:
  ##     - wordpress.local
  ##   secretName: wordpress.local-tls
  ##
  extraTls: []
  ## @param ingress.secrets Custom TLS certificates as secrets
  ## NOTE: 'key' and 'certificate' are expected in PEM format
  ## NOTE: 'name' should line up with a 'secretName' set further up
  ## If it is not set and you're using cert-manager, this is unneeded, as it will create a secret for you with valid certificates
  ## If it is not set and you're NOT using cert-manager either, self-signed certificates will be created valid for 365 days
  ## It is also possible to create and manage the certificates outside of this helm chart
  ## Please see README.md for more information
  ## e.g:
  ## secrets:
  ##   - name: wordpress.local-tls
  ##     key: |-
  ##       -----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
  ##       ...
  ##       -----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
  ##     certificate: |-
  ##       -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
  ##       ...
  ##       -----END CERTIFICATE-----
  ##
  secrets: []

## @section Persistence Parameters

## Persistence Parameters
## ref: http://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/persistent-volumes/
##
persistence:
  ## @param persistence.enabled Enable persistence using Persistent Volume Claims
  ##
  enabled: true
  ## @param persistence.storageClass Persistent Volume storage class
  ## If defined, storageClassName: <storageClass>
  ## If set to "-", storageClassName: "", which disables dynamic provisioning
  ## If undefined (the default) or set to null, no storageClassName spec is set, choosing the default provisioner
  ##
  storageClass: "managed-csi"
  ## @param persistence.accessModes [array] Persistent Volume access modes
  ##
  accessModes:
    - ReadWriteOnce
  ## @param persistence.accessMode Persistent Volume access mode (DEPRECATED: use `persistence.accessModes` instead)
  ##
  accessMode: ReadWriteOnce
  ## @param persistence.size Persistent Volume size
  ##
  size: 10Gi
  ## @param persistence.dataSource Custom PVC data source
  ##
  dataSource: {}
  ## @param persistence.existingClaim The name of an existing PVC to use for persistence
  ##
  existingClaim: ""
## 'volumePermissions' init container parameters
## Changes the owner and group of the persistent volume mount point to runAsUser:fsGroup values
##   based on the podSecurityContext/containerSecurityContext parameters
##
volumePermissions:
  ## @param volumePermissions.enabled Enable init container that changes the owner/group of the PV mount point to `runAsUser:fsGroup`
  ##
  enabled: true
  ## Bitnami Shell image
  ## ref: https://hub.docker.com/r/bitnami/bitnami-shell/tags/
  ## @param volumePermissions.image.registry Bitnami Shell image registry
  ## @param volumePermissions.image.repository Bitnami Shell image repository
  ## @param volumePermissions.image.tag Bitnami Shell image tag (immutable tags are recommended)
  ## @param volumePermissions.image.pullPolicy Bitnami Shell image pull policy
  ## @param volumePermissions.image.pullSecrets Bitnami Shell image pull secrets
  ##
  image:
    registry: docker.io
    repository: bitnami/bitnami-shell
    tag: 10-debian-10-r186
    pullPolicy: Always
    ## Optionally specify an array of imagePullSecrets.
    ## Secrets must be manually created in the namespace.
    ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/pull-image-private-registry/
    ## e.g:
    ## pullSecrets:
    ##   - myRegistryKeySecretName
    ##
    pullSecrets: []
  ## Init container's resource requests and limits
  ## ref: http://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/compute-resources/
  ## @param volumePermissions.resources.limits The resources limits for the init container
  ## @param volumePermissions.resources.requests The requested resources for the init container
  ##
  resources:
    limits: {}
    requests: {}
  ## Init container Container Security Context
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/security-context/#set-the-security-context-for-a-container
  ## @param volumePermissions.securityContext.runAsUser Set init container's Security Context runAsUser
  ## NOTE: when runAsUser is set to special value "auto", init container will try to chown the
  ##   data folder to auto-determined user&group, using commands: `id -u`:`id -G | cut -d" " -f2`
  ##   "auto" is especially useful for OpenShift which has scc with dynamic user ids (and 0 is not allowed)
  ##
  securityContext:
    runAsUser: 0

## @section Other Parameters

## Wordpress Pod Disruption Budget configuration
## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/run-application/configure-pdb/
## @param pdb.create Enable a Pod Disruption Budget creation
## @param pdb.minAvailable Minimum number/percentage of pods that should remain scheduled
## @param pdb.maxUnavailable Maximum number/percentage of pods that may be made unavailable
##
pdb:
  create: false
  minAvailable: 1
  maxUnavailable: ""
## Wordpress Autoscaling configuration
## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/run-application/horizontal-pod-autoscale/
## @param autoscaling.enabled Enable Horizontal POD autoscaling for WordPress
## @param autoscaling.minReplicas Minimum number of WordPress replicas
## @param autoscaling.maxReplicas Maximum number of WordPress replicas
## @param autoscaling.targetCPU Target CPU utilization percentage
## @param autoscaling.targetMemory Target Memory utilization percentage
##
autoscaling:
  enabled: false
  minReplicas: 1
  maxReplicas: 11
  targetCPU: 50
  targetMemory: 50

## @section Metrics Parameters

## Prometheus Exporter / Metrics configuration
##
metrics:
  ## @param metrics.enabled Start a sidecar prometheus exporter to expose metrics
  ##
  enabled: false
  ## Bitnami Apache Exporter image
  ## ref: https://hub.docker.com/r/bitnami/apache-exporter/tags/
  ## @param metrics.image.registry Apache Exporter image registry
  ## @param metrics.image.repository Apache Exporter image repository
  ## @param metrics.image.tag Apache Exporter image tag (immutable tags are recommended)
  ## @param metrics.image.pullPolicy Apache Exporter image pull policy
  ## @param metrics.image.pullSecrets Apache Exporter image pull secrets
  ##
  image:
    registry: docker.io
    repository: bitnami/apache-exporter
    tag: 0.10.0-debian-10-r40
    pullPolicy: IfNotPresent
    ## Optionally specify an array of imagePullSecrets.
    ## Secrets must be manually created in the namespace.
    ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/pull-image-private-registry/
    ## e.g:
    ## pullSecrets:
    ##   - myRegistryKeySecretName
    ##
    pullSecrets: []
  ## Prometheus exporter container's resource requests and limits
  ## ref: http://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/compute-resources/
  ## @param metrics.resources.limits The resources limits for the Prometheus exporter container
  ## @param metrics.resources.requests The requested resources for the Prometheus exporter container
  ##
  resources:
    limits: {}
    requests: {}
  ## Prometheus exporter service parameters
  ##
  service:
    ## @param metrics.service.port Metrics service port
    ##
    port: 9117
    ## @param metrics.service.annotations [object] Additional custom annotations for Metrics service
    ##
    annotations:
      prometheus.io/scrape: "true"
      prometheus.io/port: "{{ .Values.metrics.service.port }}"
  ## Prometheus Service Monitor
  ## ref: https://github.com/coreos/prometheus-operator
  ##      https://github.com/coreos/prometheus-operator/blob/master/Documentation/api.md#endpoint
  ##
  serviceMonitor:
    ## @param metrics.serviceMonitor.enabled Create ServiceMonitor Resource for scraping metrics using PrometheusOperator
    ##
    enabled: false
    ## @param metrics.serviceMonitor.namespace The namespace in which the ServiceMonitor will be created
    ##
    namespace: ""
    ## @param metrics.serviceMonitor.interval The interval at which metrics should be scraped
    ##
    interval: 30s
    ## @param metrics.serviceMonitor.scrapeTimeout The timeout after which the scrape is ended
    ##
    scrapeTimeout: ""
    ## @param metrics.serviceMonitor.relabellings Metrics relabellings to add to the scrape endpoint
    ##
    relabellings: []
    ## @param metrics.serviceMonitor.honorLabels Labels to honor to add to the scrape endpoint
    ##
    honorLabels: false
    ## @param metrics.serviceMonitor.additionalLabels Additional custom labels for the ServiceMonitor
    ##
    additionalLabels: {}

## @section Database Parameters

## MariaDB chart configuration
## ref: https://github.com/bitnami/charts/blob/master/bitnami/mariadb/values.yaml
##
mariadb:
  volumePermissions: 
   enabled: true
  ## @param mariadb.enabled Deploy a MariaDB server to satisfy the applications database requirements
  ## To use an external database set this to false and configure the `externalDatabase.*` parameters
  ##
  enabled: true
  ## @param mariadb.architecture MariaDB architecture. Allowed values: `standalone` or `replication`
  ##
  architecture: standalone
  ## MariaDB Authentication parameters
  ## @param mariadb.auth.rootPassword MariaDB root password
  ## @param mariadb.auth.database MariaDB custom database
  ## @param mariadb.auth.username MariaDB custom user name
  ## @param mariadb.auth.password MariaDB custom user password
  ## ref: https://github.com/bitnami/bitnami-docker-mariadb#setting-the-root-password-on-first-run
  ##      https://github.com/bitnami/bitnami-docker-mariadb/blob/master/README.md#creating-a-database-on-first-run
  ##      https://github.com/bitnami/bitnami-docker-mariadb/blob/master/README.md#creating-a-database-user-on-first-run
  auth:
    rootPassword: ""
    database: bitnami_wordpress
    username: bn_wordpress
    password: ""
  ## MariaDB Primary configuration
  ##
  primary:
    ## MariaDB Primary Persistence parameters
    ## ref: http://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/persistent-volumes/
    ## @param mariadb.primary.persistence.enabled Enable persistence on MariaDB using PVC(s)
    ## @param mariadb.primary.persistence.storageClass Persistent Volume storage class
    ## @param mariadb.primary.persistence.accessModes [array] Persistent Volume access modes
    ## @param mariadb.primary.persistence.size Persistent Volume size
    ##
    persistence:
      enabled: true
      storageClass: "managed-csi"
      accessModes:
        - ReadWriteOnce
      size: 8Gi
## External Database Configuration
## All of these values are only used if `mariadb.enabled=false`
##
externalDatabase:
  ## @param externalDatabase.host External Database server host
  ##
  host: localhost
  ## @param externalDatabase.port External Database server port
  ##
  port: 3306
  ## @param externalDatabase.user External Database username
  ##
  user: bn_wordpress
  ## @param externalDatabase.password External Database user password
  ##
  password: ""
  ## @param externalDatabase.database External Database database name
  ##
  database: bitnami_wordpress
  ## @param externalDatabase.existingSecret The name of an existing secret with database credentials
  ## NOTE: Must contain key `mariadb-password`
  ## NOTE: When it's set, the `externalDatabase.password` parameter is ignored
  ##
  existingSecret: ""
## Memcached chart configuration
## ref: https://github.com/bitnami/charts/blob/master/bitnami/memcached/values.yaml
##
memcached:
  ## @param memcached.enabled Deploy a Memcached server for caching database queries
  ##
  enabled: false
  ## Service parameters
  ##
  service:
    ## @param memcached.service.port Memcached service port
    ##
    port: 11211
## External Memcached Configuration
## All of these values are only used if `memcached.enabled=false`
##
externalCache:
  ## @param externalCache.host External cache server host
  ##
  host: localhost
  ## @param externalCache.port External cache server port
  ##
  port: 11211