Write plugins in Go
Developing Go plugins
Kong Gateway supports the Go language with the Go PDK, a library that provides Go bindings for Kong Gateway.
Overview
To write a Kong Gateway plugin in Go, you need to:
- Define a
structure
type to hold configuration. - Write a
New()
function to create instances of your structure. - Add methods to that structure to handle phases.
- Include the
go-pdk/server
sub-library. - Add a
main()
function that callsserver.StartServer(New, Version, Priority)
. - Compile as an executable with
go build
.
Note: See the Go PDK repository for example plugins.
Configuration
Struct
The plugin you write needs a way to handle incoming configuration data from the data store or the Admin API.
You can use a struct
to create a schema of the incoming data.
type MyConfig struct {
Path string
Reopen bool
}
Because this plugin will be processing configuration data, you are going to want to control encoding using the encoding/json
package.
Go fields that start with a capital letter can be exported, making them accessible outside of the current package, including by the encoding/json
package.
If you want the fields to have a different name in the data store, add tags to the fields in your struct
.
type MyConfig struct {
Path string `json:"my_file_path"`
Reopen bool `json:"reopen"`
}
The New()
constructor
The plugin must define a function called New
.
This function should instantiate the MyConfig
struct and return it as an interface
.
func New() interface{} {
return &MyConfig{}
}
The main()
function
Each plugin is compiled as a standalone executable. Include github.com/Kong/go-pdk
in
the imports list, and add a main()
function:
func main () {
server.StartServer(New, Version, Priority)
}
Executables can be placed somewhere in your path (for example,
/usr/local/bin
). The common -h
flag shows a usage help message:
my-plugin -h
Output:
Usage of my-plugin:
-dump
Dump info about plugins
-help
Show usage info
-kong-prefix string
Kong prefix path (specified by the -p argument commonly used in the Kong CLI) (default "/usr/local/kong")
When you run the plugin without arguments, it creates a socket file within the
kong-prefix
and the executable name, appending .socket
.
For example, if the executable is my-plugin
, the socket file would be
/usr/local/kong/my-plugin.socket
.
Phase handlers
In Kong Gateway Lua plugins, you can implement custom logic to be executed at
various points of the request processing lifecycle. For example, to execute
custom Go code during the access phase, create a function named Access
with the following function signature:
func (conf *MyConfig) Access (kong *pdk.PDK) {
...
}
You can implement custom logic during the following phases using the same function signature:
Certificate
Rewrite
Access
Response
Preread
Log
The presence of the Response
handler automatically enables the buffered proxy mode.
Version and priority
You can define the version number and priority of execution by declaring the following constants within the plugin code:
const Version = "1.0.0"
const Priority = 1
Kong Gateway executes plugins from highest priority to lowest.
Example configuration
To load plugins using the kong.conf
configuration file, you have to map existing Kong Gateway properties to aspects of your plugin.
Here are two examples of loading plugins within kong.conf
:
pluginserver_names = my-plugin,other-one
pluginserver_my_plugin_socket = /usr/local/kong/my-plugin.socket
pluginserver_my_plugin_start_cmd = /usr/local/bin/my-plugin
pluginserver_my_plugin_query_cmd = /usr/local/bin/my-plugin -dump
pluginserver_other_one_socket = /usr/local/kong/other-one.socket
pluginserver_other_one_start_cmd = /usr/local/bin/other-one
pluginserver_other_one_query_cmd = /usr/local/bin/other-one -dump
The socket and start command settings coincide with their defaults and can be omitted:
pluginserver_names = my-plugin,other-one
pluginserver_my_plugin_query_cmd = /usr/local/bin/my-plugin -dump
pluginserver_other_one_query_cmd = /usr/local/bin/other-one -dump