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	The Helmfile Best Practices Guide
This guide covers the Helmfile’s considered patterns for writing advanced helmfiles. It focuses on how helmfile should be structured and executed.
Layering
You may occasionally end up with many helmfiles that shares common parts like which repositories to use, and whichi release to be bundled by default.
Use Layering to extract te common parts into a dedicated library helmfiles, so that each helmfile becomes DRY.
Let's assume that your helmfile.yaml looks like:
{ readFile "commons.yaml" }}
---
{{ readFile "environments.yaml" }}
---
releases:
- name: myapp
  chart: mychart
Whereas commons.yaml contained a monitoring agent:
releases:
- name: metricbaet
  chart: stable/metricbeat
And environments.yaml contained well-known environments:
environments:
  development:
  production:
At run time, template expressions in your helmfile.yaml are executed:
releases:
- name: metricbaet
  chart: stable/metricbeat
---
environments:
  development:
  production:
---
releases:
- name: myapp
  chart: mychart
Resulting YAML documents are merged in the order of occurrence,
so that your helmfile.yaml becomes:
environments:
  development:
  production:
releases:
- name: metricbaet
  chart: stable/metricbeat
- name: myapp
  chart: mychart
Great!
Now, repeat the above steps for each your helmfile.yaml, so that all your helmfiles becomes DRY.