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guide-plugin-write-non-go.md

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Writing Plugins Without Go

This guide explains how to write a go-plugin compatible plugin using a programming language other than Go. go-plugin supports plugins using gRPC. This makes it relatively simple to write plugins using other languages!

Minimal knowledge about gRPC is assumed. We recommend reading the gRPC Go Tutorial. This alone is enough gRPC knowledge to continue.

This guide will implement the kv example in Python. Full source code for the examples present in this guide is available in the examples/grpc folder.

1. Implement the Service

The first step is to implement the gRPC server for the protocol buffers service that your plugin defines. This is a standard gRPC server. For the KV service, the service looks like this:

service KV {
    rpc Get(GetRequest) returns (GetResponse);
    rpc Put(PutRequest) returns (Empty);
}

We can implement that using Python as easily as:

class KVServicer(kv_pb2_grpc.KVServicer):
    """Implementation of KV service."""

    def Get(self, request, context):
        filename = "kv_"+request.key
        with open(filename, 'r') as f:
            result = kv_pb2.GetResponse()
            result.value = f.read()
            return result

    def Put(self, request, context):
        filename = "kv_"+request.key
        value = "{0}\n\nWritten from plugin-python".format(request.value)
        with open(filename, 'w') as f:
            f.write(value)

        return kv_pb2.Empty()

Great! With that, we have a fully functioning implementation of the service. You can test this using standard gRPC testing mechanisms.

2. Serve the Service

Next, we need to create a gRPC server and serve the service we just made.

In Python:

# Make the server
server = grpc.server(futures.ThreadPoolExecutor(max_workers=10))

# Add our service
kv_pb2_grpc.add_KVServicer_to_server(KVServicer(), server)

# Listen on a port
server.add_insecure_port(':1234')

# Start
server.start()

You can listen on any TCP address or Unix domain socket. go-plugin does assume that connections are reliable (local), so you should not serve your plugin across the network.

3. Add the gRPC Health Checking Service

go-plugin requires the gRPC Health Checking Service to be registered on your server. You must register the status of "plugin" to be SERVING.

The health checking service is used by go-plugin to determine if everything is healthy with the connection. If you don't implement this service, your process may be abruptly restarted and your plugins are likely to be unreliable.

health = HealthServicer()
health.set("plugin", health_pb2.HealthCheckResponse.ServingStatus.Value('SERVING'))
health_pb2_grpc.add_HealthServicer_to_server(health, server)

4. Output Handshake Information

The final step is to output the handshake information to stdout. go-plugin reads a single line from stdout to determine how to connect to your plugin, what protocol it is using, etc.

The structure is:

CORE-PROTOCOL-VERSION | APP-PROTOCOL-VERSION | NETWORK-TYPE | NETWORK-ADDR | PROTOCOL

Where:

  • CORE-PROTOCOL-VERSION is the protocol version for go-plugin itself. The current value is 1. Please use this value. Any other value will cause your plugin to not load.

  • APP-PROTOCOL-VERSION is the protocol version for the application data. This is determined by the application. You must reference the documentation for your application to determine the desired value.

  • NETWORK-TYPE and NETWORK-ADDR are the networking information for connecting to this plugin. The type must be "unix" or "tcp". The address is a path to the Unix socket for "unix" and an IP address for "tcp".

  • PROTOCOL is the named protocol that the connection will use. If this is omitted (older versions), this is "netrpc" for Go net/rpc. This can also be "grpc". This is the protocol that the plugin wants to speak to the host process with.

For our example that is:

1|1|tcp|127.0.0.1:1234|grpc

The only element you'll have to be careful about is the second one (the APP-PROTOCOL-VERISON). This will depend on the application you're building a plugin for. Please reference their documentation for more information.

5. Done!

And we're done!

Configure the host application (the application you're writing a plugin for) to execute your Python application. Configuring plugins is specific to the host application.

For our example, we used an environmental variable, and it looks like this:

$ export KV_PLUGIN="python plugin.py"