Helm 3 is storing description of it's releases in secrets. You can simply find them via
$ kubectl get secrets
NAME TYPE DATA AGE
sh.helm.release.v1.wordpress.v1 helm.sh/release.v1 1 1h
If you want to get more info about the secret, you can try to describe the secret
$ kubectl describe secret sh.helm.release.v1.wordpress.v1
Name: sh.helm.release.v1.wordpress.v1
Namespace: default
Labels: createdAt=1578561400
name=wordpress
owner=helm
status=superseded
version=1
Annotations: <none>
Type: helm.sh/release.v1
Data
====
release: 34976 bytes
Now you can see, that the secret is holding one file release
which has ~35kB. In order to read that, you need to know, that kubernetes secrets are base64 encoded by default. But after decoding, you still don't get the data because Helm3 is encoding those data further.
So in order to decode the data, you have to:
- base64 decode - Kubernetes secrets encoding
- base64 decode (again) - Helm encoding
- gzip decompress - Helm zipping
The final command to get the Helm's release data can look like this:
kubectl get secrets sh.helm.release.v1.wordpress.v1 -o json | jq .data.release | tr -d '"' | base64 -d | base64 -d | gzip -d
Voilà, now you have JSON data of Helm resources. It stores every Chart's file and further encode it via base64.