Plugin Develop
This documentation is about developing plugin in Lua. For other languages, see external plugin.
#
where to put your pluginsThere are two ways to add new features based on APISIX.
- modify the source of APISIX and redistribute it (not so recommended)
- setup the
extra_lua_path
andextra_lua_cpath
inconf/config.yaml
to load your own code. Your own code will be loaded instead of the builtin one with the same name, so you can use this way to override the builtin behavior if needed.
For example, you can create a directory structure like this:
├── example
│ └── apisix
│ ├── plugins
│ │ └── 3rd-party.lua
│ └── stream
│ └── plugins
│ └── 3rd-party.lua
note
If you need to customize the directory of plugin, please create a subdirectory of /apisix/plugins
under this directory.
Then add this configuration into your conf/config.yaml
:
apisix:
...
extra_lua_path: "/path/to/example/?.lua"
Now using require "apisix.plugins.3rd-party"
will load your plugin, just like require "apisix.plugins.jwt-auth"
will load the jwt-auth
plugin.
Sometimes you may want to override a method instead of a whole file. In this case, you can configure lua_module_hook
in conf/config.yaml
to introduce your hook.
Assumed your configuration is:
apisix:
...
extra_lua_path: "/path/to/example/?.lua"
lua_module_hook: "my_hook"
The example/my_hook.lua
will be loaded when APISIX starts, and you can use this hook to replace a method in APISIX.
The example of my_hook.lua can be found under the example
directory of this project.
#
check dependenciesif you have dependencies on external libraries, check the dependent items. if your plugin needs to use shared memory, it needs to declare via customizing Nginx configuration, for example :
# put this in config.yaml:
nginx_config:
http_configuration_snippet: |
# for openid-connect plugin
lua_shared_dict discovery 1m; # cache for discovery metadata documents
lua_shared_dict jwks 1m; # cache for JWKs
lua_shared_dict introspection 10m; # cache for JWT verification results
The plugin itself provides the init method. It is convenient for plugins to perform some initialization after the plugin is loaded.
Note : if the dependency of some plugin needs to be initialized when Nginx start, you may need to add logic to the initialization method "http_init" in the file apisix/init.lua, and you may need to add some processing on generated part of Nginx configuration file in apisix/cli/ngx_tpl.lua file. But it is easy to have an impact on the overall situation according to the existing plugin mechanism, we do not recommend this unless you have a complete grasp of the code.
#
name, priority and the othersDetermine the name and priority of the plugin, and add to conf/config.yaml. For example, for the example-plugin plugin, you need to specify the plugin name in the code (the name is the unique identifier of the plugin and cannot be duplicate), you can see the code in file "apisix/plugins/example-plugin.lua" :
local plugin_name = "example-plugin"
local _M = {
version = 0.1,
priority = 0,
name = plugin_name,
schema = schema,
metadata_schema = metadata_schema,
}
Note: The priority of the new plugin cannot be same to any existing ones, you can use the /v1/schema
method of control API to view the priority of all plugins. In addition, plugins with higher priority value will be executed first in a given phase (see the definition of phase
in choose-phase-to-run). For example, the priority of example-plugin is 0 and the priority of ip-restriction is 3000. Therefore, the ip-restriction plugin will be executed first, then the example-plugin plugin. It's recommended to use priority 1 ~ 99 for your plugin unless you want it to run before some builtin plugins.
In the "conf/config-default.yaml" configuration file, the enabled plugins (all specified by plugin name) are listed.
plugins: # plugin list
- limit-req
- limit-count
- limit-conn
- key-auth
- prometheus
- node-status
- jwt-auth
- zipkin
- ip-restriction
- grpc-transcode
- serverless-pre-function
- serverless-post-function
- openid-connect
- proxy-rewrite
- redirect
...
Note: the order of the plugins is not related to the order of execution.
To enable your plugin, copy this plugin list into conf/config.yaml
, and add your plugin name. For instance:
apisix:
admin_key:
- name: "admin"
key: edd1c9f034335f136f87ad84b625c8f1 # using fixed API token has security risk, please update it when you deploy to production environment
role: admin
plugins: # copied from config-default.yaml
...
- your-plugin
If your plugin has a new code directory of its own, and you need to redistribute it with the APISIX source code, you will need to modify the Makefile
to create directory, such as:
$(INSTALL) -d $(INST_LUADIR)/apisix/plugins/skywalking
$(INSTALL) apisix/plugins/skywalking/*.lua $(INST_LUADIR)/apisix/plugins/skywalking/
There are other fields in the _M
which affect the plugin's behavior.
local _M = {
...
type = 'auth',
run_policy = 'prefer_route',
}
run_policy
field can be used to control the behavior of the plugin execution.
When this field set to prefer_route
, and the plugin has been configured both
in the global and at the route level, only the route level one will take effect.
type
field is required to be set to auth
if your plugin needs to work with consumer. See the section below.
#
schema and checkWrite JSON Schema descriptions and check functions. Similarly, take the example-plugin plugin as an example to see its configuration data:
{
"example-plugin": {
"i": 1,
"s": "s",
"t": [1]
}
}
Let's look at its schema description :
local schema = {
type = "object",
properties = {
i = {type = "number", minimum = 0},
s = {type = "string"},
t = {type = "array", minItems = 1},
ip = {type = "string"},
port = {type = "integer"},
},
required = {"i"},
}
The schema defines a non-negative number i
, a string s
, a non-empty array of t
, and ip
/ port
. Only i
is required.
At the same time, we need to implement the check_schema(conf) method to complete the specification verification.
function _M.check_schema(conf, schema_type)
return core.schema.check(schema, conf)
end
Note: the project has provided the public method "core.schema.check", which can be used directly to complete JSON verification.
In addition, if the plugin needs to use some metadata, we can define the plugin metadata_schema
, and then we can dynamically manage these metadata through the admin api
. Example:
local metadata_schema = {
type = "object",
properties = {
ikey = {type = "number", minimum = 0},
skey = {type = "string"},
},
required = {"ikey", "skey"},
}
local plugin_name = "example-plugin"
local _M = {
version = 0.1,
priority = 0, -- TODO: add a type field, may be a good idea
name = plugin_name,
schema = schema,
metadata_schema = metadata_schema,
}
You might have noticed the key-auth plugin has type = 'auth'
in its definition.
When we set the type of plugin to auth
, it means that this plugin is an authentication plugin.
An authentication plugin needs to choose a consumer after execution. For example, in key-auth plugin, it calls the consumer.attach_consumer
to attach a consumer, which is chosen via the apikey
header.
To interact with the consumer
resource, this type of plugin needs to provide a consumer_schema
to check the plugins
configuration in the consumer
.
Here is the consumer configuration for key-auth plugin:
{
"username": "Joe",
"plugins": {
"key-auth": {
"key": "Joe's key"
}
}
}
It will be used when you try to create a Consumer
To validate the configuration, the plugin uses a schema like this:
local consumer_schema = {
type = "object",
properties = {
key = {type = "string"},
},
required = {"key"},
}
Note the difference between key-auth's check_schema(conf) method to example-plugin's:
-- key-auth
function _M.check_schema(conf, schema_type)
if schema_type == core.schema.TYPE_CONSUMER then
return core.schema.check(consumer_schema, conf)
else
return core.schema.check(schema, conf)
end
end
-- example-plugin
function _M.check_schema(conf, schema_type)
return core.schema.check(schema, conf)
end
#
choose phase to runDetermine which phase to run, generally access or rewrite. If you don't know the OpenResty lifecycle, it's recommended to know it in advance. For example key-auth is an authentication plugin, thus the authentication should be completed before forwarding the request to any upstream service. Therefore, the plugin must be executed in the rewrite phases. In APISIX, only the authentication logic can be run in the rewrite phase. Other logic needs to run before proxy should be in access phase.
The following code snippet shows how to implement any logic relevant to the plugin in the OpenResty log phase.
function _M.log(conf, ctx)
-- Implement logic here
end
Note : we can't invoke ngx.exit
, ngx.redirect
or core.respond.exit
in rewrite phase and access phase. if need to exit, just return the status and body, the plugin engine will make the exit happen with the returned status and body. example
#
extra phaseBesides OpenResty's phases, we also provide extra phases to satisfy specific purpose:
delayed_body_filter
function _M.delayed_body_filter(conf, ctx)
-- delayed_body_filter is called after body_filter
-- it is used by the tracing plugins to end the span right after body_filter
end
#
implement the logicWrite the logic of the plugin in the corresponding phase. There are two parameters conf
and ctx
in the phase method, take the limit-conn
plugin configuration as an example.
curl http://127.0.0.1:9080/apisix/admin/routes/1 -H 'X-API-KEY: edd1c9f034335f136f87ad84b625c8f1' -X PUT -d '
{
"methods": ["GET"],
"uri": "/index.html",
"id": 1,
"plugins": {
"limit-conn": {
"conn": 1,
"burst": 0,
"default_conn_delay": 0.1,
"rejected_code": 503,
"key": "remote_addr"
}
},
"upstream": {
"type": "roundrobin",
"nodes": {
"127.0.0.1:1980": 1
}
}
}'
#
conf parameterThe conf
parameter is the relevant configuration information of the plugin, you can use core.log.warn(core.json.encode(conf))
to output it to error.log
for viewing, as shown below:
function _M.access(conf, ctx)
core.log.warn(core.json.encode(conf))
......
end
conf:
{
"rejected_code": 503,
"burst": 0,
"default_conn_delay": 0.1,
"conn": 1,
"key": "remote_addr"
}
#
ctx parameterThe ctx
parameter caches data information related to the request. You can use core.log.warn(core.json.encode(ctx, true))
to output it to error.log
for viewing, as shown below :
function _M.access(conf, ctx)
core.log.warn(core.json.encode(ctx, true))
......
end
#
register public APIA plugin can register API which exposes to the public. Take jwt-auth plugin as an example, this plugin registers GET /apisix/plugin/jwt/sign
to allow client to sign its key:
local function gen_token()
--...
end
function _M.api()
return {
{
methods = {"GET"},
uri = "/apisix/plugin/jwt/sign",
handler = gen_token,
}
}
end
Note that the public API will not be exposed by default, you will need to use the public-api plugin to expose it.
#
register control APIIf you only want to expose the API to the localhost or intranet, you can expose it via Control API.
Take a look at example-plugin plugin:
local function hello()
local args = ngx.req.get_uri_args()
if args["json"] then
return 200, {msg = "world"}
else
return 200, "world\n"
end
end
function _M.control_api()
return {
{
methods = {"GET"},
uris = {"/v1/plugin/example-plugin/hello"},
handler = hello,
}
}
end
If you don't change the default control API configuration, the plugin will be expose GET /v1/plugin/example-plugin/hello
which can only be accessed via 127.0.0.1
. Test with the following command:
curl -i -X GET "http://127.0.0.1:9090/v1/plugin/example-plugin/hello"
Read more about control API introduction
#
register custom variableWe can use variables in many places of APISIX. For example, customizing log format in http-logger, using it as the key of limit-*
plugins. In some situations, the builtin variables are not enough. Therefore, APISIX allows developers to register their variables globally, and use them as normal builtin variables.
For instance, let's register a variable called a6_labels_zone
to fetch the value of the zone
label in a route:
local core = require "apisix.core"
core.ctx.register_var("a6_labels_zone", function(ctx)
local route = ctx.matched_route and ctx.matched_route.value
if route and route.labels then
return route.labels.zone
end
return nil
end)
After that, any get operation to $a6_labels_zone
will call the registered getter to fetch the value.
Note that the custom variables can't be used in features that depend on the Nginx directive, like access_log_format
.
#
write test caseFor functions, write and improve the test cases of various dimensions, do a comprehensive test for your plugin! The test cases of plugins are all in the "t/plugin" directory. You can go ahead to find out. APISIX uses **test-nginx** as the test framework. A test case (.t file) is usually divided into prologue and data parts by __data__. Here we will briefly introduce the data part, that is, the part of the real test case. For example, the key-auth plugin:
=== TEST 1: sanity
--- config
location /t {
content_by_lua_block {
local plugin = require("apisix.plugins.key-auth")
local ok, err = plugin.check_schema({key = 'test-key'}, core.schema.TYPE_CONSUMER)
if not ok then
ngx.say(err)
end
ngx.say("done")
}
}
--- request
GET /t
--- response_body
done
--- no_error_log
[error]
A test case consists of three parts :
- Program code : configuration content of Nginx location
- Input : http request information
- Output check : status, header, body, error log check
When we request /t, which config in the configuration file, the Nginx will call "content_by_lua_block" instruction to complete the Lua script, and finally return. The assertion of the use case is response_body return "done", "no_error_log" means to check the "error.log" of Nginx. There must be no ERROR level record. The log files for the unit test are located in the following folder: 't/servroot/logs'.
The above test case represents a simple scenario. Most scenarios will require multiple steps to validate. To do this, create multiple tests === TEST 1
, === TEST 2
, and so on. These tests will be executed sequentially, allowing you to break down scenarios into a sequence of atomic steps.
Additionally, there are some convenience testing endpoints which can be found here. For example, see proxy-rewrite. In test 42, the upstream uri
is made to redirect /test?new_uri=hello
to /hello
(which always returns hello world
). In test 43, the response body is confirmed to equal hello world
, meaning the proxy-rewrite configuration added with test 42 worked correctly.
Refer the following document to setup the testing framework.
#
attach the test-nginx execution process:According to the path we configured in the makefile and some configuration items at the front of each .t file, the framework will assemble into a complete nginx.conf file. "t/servroot" is the working directory of Nginx and start the Nginx instance. according to the information provided by the test case, initiate the http request and check that the return items of HTTP include HTTP status, HTTP response header, HTTP response body and so on.