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EXTENSIONS.md

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Linkerd Extensions

Linkerd has an extension model which allows 3rd parties to add functionality. Each extension consists of a binary CLI named linkerd-name (where name is the name of the extension) as well as a set of Kubernetes resources. To invoke an extension, users can run linkerd name which will search the current PATH for an executable named linkerd-name and execute it.

Installing Extensions

To install an extension, first download the extension executable and put it in your PATH. The extension can then be installed into your Kubernetes cluster by running linkerd <extension name> install | kubectl apply -f -. Similarly, it can be uninstalled by running linkerd <extension name> uninstall | kubectl delete -f -.

A full list of installed extensions can be printed by running linkerd check.

Developing Extensions

The extension must be an executable file named linkerd-name where name is the name of the extension. The name must not be any of the built-in Linkerd commands (e.g. check) or extensions (e.g. viz).

The extension must accept the following flags and respect them any time that it communicates with the Kubernetes API. All of these flags must be accepted but may be ignored if they are not applicable.

  • --api-addr: Override kubeconfig and communicate directly with the control plane at host:port (mostly for testing)
  • --context: Name of the kubeconfig context to use
  • --as: Username to impersonate for Kubernetes operations
  • --as-group: Group to impersonate for Kubernetes operations
  • --help/-h: Print help message
  • --kubeconfig: Path to the kubeconfig file to use for CLI requests
  • --linkerd-namespace/-L: Namespace in which Linkerd is installed [$LINKERD_NAMESPACE]
  • --verbose: Turn on debug logging

The extension must implement these commands:

linkerd-name install

This command must print the Kubernetes manifests for the extension as yaml which is suitable to be passed to kubectl apply -f. These manifests must include a Namespace resource with the label linkerd.io/extension=name where name is the name of the extension. This allows Linkerd to detect installed extensions.

linkerd-name uninstall

This command must print manifests for all cluster-scoped Kubernetes resources belonging to this extension (including the extension Namespace) as yaml which is suitable to be passed to kubectl delete -f.

linkerd-name check

This command must perform any appropriate health checks for the extension including but not limited to checking that the extension resources exist and are in a healthy state. This command must exit with a status code of 0 if the checks pass or with a nonzero status code if they do not pass. For consistency, it is recommended that this command follows the same output formatting as linkerd check, e.g.

linkerd-version
---------------
√ can determine the latest version
√ cli is up-to-date

Status check results are √

The final line of output should be either Status check results are √ or Status check results are ×.

In addition to the flags described above, linkerd-name check must accept the following flags:

  • --namespace/-n: Namespace to use for –proxy checks (default: all namespaces)
  • --output/-o: Output format. One of: table, json, short
  • --pre: Only run pre-installation checks, to determine if the extension can be installed
  • --proxy: Only run data-plane checks, to determine if the data plane is healthy
  • --wait: Maximum allowed time for all tests to pass

If the output format is set to json then output must be in json format instead of the output format described above. E.g.

{
  "success": false,
  "categories": [
    {
      "categoryName": "kubernetes-api",
      "checks": [
        {
          "description": "can initialize the client",
          "result": "success"
        },
        {
          "description": "can query the Kubernetes API",
          "result": "success"
        },
        {
          "description": "linkerd-viz Namespace exists",
          "hint": "https://linkerd.io/2/checks/#l5d-viz-ns-exists",
          "error": "could not find the linkerd-viz extension",
          "result": "error"
        }
      ]
    }
  ]
}

In particular, the linkerd check command will invoke the check command for each extension installed in the cluster and will request json output. linkerd check may optinally invoke your extension if not installed in the cluster (see linkerd-name _extension-metadata below to opt-in). To preserve forwards compatibility, it is recommended that the check command should ignore any unknown flags.

linkerd-name _extension-metadata

This subcommand is optional, and enables an extension to opt-in to being executed as part of linkerd check, even when there is no corresponding extension on the cluster. To opt-in, the output of linkerd-name _extension-metadata should be json of the form:

{
  "name": "linkerd-name",
  "checks": "always",
}

Note that for linkerd check to validate which extensions are opting-in, it runs linkerd-* _extension-metadata against every executable in the PATH.

The extension may also implement further commands in addition to the ones defined here.