plugin_examples

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Published: Jan 13, 2017 License: Apache-2.0 Imports: 5 Imported by: 0

README

If you have any questions about developing a CLI plugin, ask away on the cf-dev mailing list (many plugin developers there!) or the #cli channel in our Slack community.

Changes in v6.17.0

  • -v is now a global flag to enable verbose logging of API calls, equivalent to CF_TRACE=true. This means that the -v flag will no longer be passed to plugins.

Changes in v6.14.0

  • API AccessToken() now provides a refreshed o-auth token.
  • Examples on how to use fake CliConnection and test RPC server for TDD development.
  • Fix Plugin API file descriptors leakage.
  • Fix bug where some CLI versions does not respect PluginMetadata.MinCliVersion.
  • The field PackageUpdatedAt returned by GetApp() API is now populated.

Complete change log ...

Developing a Plugin

Go here for documentation of the plugin API

This README discusses how to develop a cf CLI plugin. For user-focused documentation, see Using the cf CLI.

*If you wish to share your plugin with the community, see here for plugin submission.

Development Requirements

  • GoLang installed
  • Tagged version of CLI release source code that supports plugins; cf CLI v.6.7.0 and above

Architecture Overview

The cf CLI plugin architecture model follows the remote procedure call (RPC) model. The cf CLI invokes each plugin, runs it as an independent executable, and handles all start, stop, and clean up tasks for plugin executable resources.

Here is an illustration of the work flow when a plugin command is being invoked.

1: CLI launches 2 processes, the rpc server and the independent plugin executable

workflow 1

2: Plugin establishes a connection to the RPC server, the connection is used to invoke core cli commands.

workflow 1

3: When a plugin invokes a cli command, it talks to the rpc server, and the rpc server interacts with cf cli to perform the command. The result is passed back to the plugin through the rpc server.

workflow 1

  • Plugins that you develop for the cf CLI must conform to a predefined plugin interface that we discuss below.

Writing a Plugin

Go here for documentation of the plugin API

To write a plugin for the cf CLI, implement the predefined plugin interface.

The interface uses a Run(...) method as the main entry point between the CLI and a plugin. This method receives the following arguments:

  • A struct plugin.CliConnection that contains methods for invoking cf CLI commands
  • A string array that contains the arguments passed from the cf process

The GetMetadata() function informs the CLI of the name of a plugin, plugin version (optional), minimum Cli version required (optional), the commands it implements, and help text for each command that users can display with cf help.

To initialize a plugin, call plugin.Start(new(MyPluginStruct)) from within the main() method of your plugin. The plugin.Start(...) function requires a new reference to the struct that implements the defined interface.

This repo contains a basic plugin example here.
To see more examples, go here.

Uninstalling A Plugin

Uninstall of the plugin needs to be explicitly handled. When a user calls the cf uninstall-plugin command, CLI notifies the plugin via a call with CLI-MESSAGE-UNINSTALL as the first item in []args from within the plugin's Run(...) method.

Test Driven Development (TDD)

2 libraries are available for TDD

  • FakeCliConnection: stub/mock the plugin.CliConnection object with this fake See example
  • Test RPC server: a RPC server to be used as a back end for the plugin. Allows plugin to be tested as a stand along binary without replying on CLI as a back end. See example
Using Command Line Arguments

The Run(...) method accepts the command line arguments and flags that you define for a plugin.

See the [command line arguments example] (https://github.com/cloudfoundry/cli/blob/master/plugin/plugin_examples/echo.go) included in this repo.

Global Flags

There are several global flags that will not be passed to the plugin. These are:

  • -v: equivalent to CF_TRACE=true, will display any API calls/responses to the user
  • -h: will process the return from the plugin's GetMetadata function to produce a help display
Calling CLI Commands

You can invoke CLI commands with cliConnection.CliCommand([]args) from within a plugin's Run(...) method. The Run(...) method receives the cliConnection as its first argument.

The cliConnection.CliCommand([]args) returns the output printed by the command and an error. The output is returned as a slice of strings. The error will be present if the call to the CLI command fails.

See the calling CLI commands example included in this repo.

Creating Interactive Plugins

Because a plugin has access to stdin during a call to the Run(...) method, you can create interactive plugins. See the interactive plugin example included in this repo.

Creating Plugins with multiple commands

A single plugin binary can have more than one command, and each command can have it's own help text defined. For an example of multi-command plugins, see the multiple commands example

Enforcing a minimum CLI version required for the plugin.
func (c *cmd) GetMetadata() plugin.PluginMetadata {
	return plugin.PluginMetadata{
		Name: "Test1",
		MinCliVersion: plugin.VersionType{
			Major: 6,
			Minor: 12,
			Build: 0,
		},
	}
}

Compiling Plugin Source Code

The cf CLI requires an executable file to install the plugin. You must compile the source code with the go build command before distributing the plugin, or instruct your users to compile the plugin source code before installing the plugin. For information about compiling Go source code, see Compile packages and dependencies.

Using Plugins

After you compile a plugin, use the following commands to install and manage the plugin.

Installing Plugins

To install a plugin, run:

cf install-plugin PATH_TO_PLUGIN_BINARY

Listing Plugins

To display a list of installed plugins and the commands available from each plugin, run:

cf plugins

Uninstalling Plugins

To remove a plugin, run:

cf uninstall-plugin PLUGIN_NAME

Known Issues

  • When invoking a CLI command using cliConnection.CliCommand([]args) a plugin will not receive output generated by the cli package. This includes usage failures when executing a cli command, cf help, or cli SOME-COMMAND -h.
  • When invoking a CLI command using cliConnection.CliCommand([]args) and CF_TRACE=true/cf -v a plugin will receive all the output, including the trace in the returned string array. This may cause problem while trying to debug output with CF_TRACE. As work around, if a plugin is running cf curl via CliCommand, the following can be used to help with debugging (when the CF_DEBUG_CURL=true):
  func RunCurl(cliConnection plugin.CliConnection, args []string) ([]string, error) {
    output, err := cliConnection.CliCommand("curl", args...)
    if os.Getenv("CF_DEBUG_CURL") == "true" {
      fmt.Println(strings.Join(output, "\n"))
    }
    return output, err
  }
  • Due to architectural limitations, calling CLI core commands is not concurrency-safe. The correct execution of concurrent commands is not guaranteed. An architecture restructuring is in the works to fix this in the near future.

Documentation

Overview

* * This is an example plugin where we use both arguments and flags. The plugin * will echo all arguments passed to it. The flag -uppercase will upcase the * arguments passed to the command. *

Directories

Path Synopsis
call_cli_cmd
main
* * This plugin is an example plugin that allows a user to call a cli-command * by typing `cf cli-command name-of-command args.....`.
* * This plugin is an example plugin that allows a user to call a cli-command * by typing `cf cli-command name-of-command args.....`.
* * This plugin demonstrate the use of Test driven development using the test rpc server * This allows the plugin to be tested independently without relying on CF CLI
* * This plugin demonstrate the use of Test driven development using the test rpc server * This allows the plugin to be tested independently without relying on CF CLI

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