Signed-off-by: Ryan Davis <zenspider@chef.io>
26 KiB
Developing Chef InSpec Plugins for the v2 plugin API
Introduction
Inspiration
The software design of the Chef InSpec Plugin v2 API is deeply inspired by the Vagrant plugin v2 system. While the Chef InSpec Plugin v2 system is an independent implementation, acknowledgements are due to the Hashicorp team for such a well-thought-out design.
Note About versions
"v2" refers to the second major version of the Plugin API. It doesn't refer to the Chef InSpec release number.
Design Goals
- Load-on-demand. Improve
inspec
startup time by making plugins load heavy libraries only if they are being used. - Independent velocity. Enable passionate community members to contribute at their own pace by shifting core development into plugin development.
- Increase dogfooding. Convert internal components into plugins to reduce core complexity and allow testing in isolation.
Design Anti-goals
- Don't implement resources in plugins; use resource packs for that.
How Plugins are Located and Loaded
Plugins are usually gems
The normal distribution and installation method is via gems, handled by the inspec plugin
command.
inspec plugin install inspec-myplugin
will fetch inspec-myplugin
from rubygems.org, and install it and its gemspec dependencies under the user's .inspec
directory. You may also provide a local gemfile. For local development, however, path-to-source is usually most convenient.
For more on the plugin
CLI command, run inspec plugin help
.
Plugins may also be found by path to a source tree
For local development or site-specific installations, you can also 'install' a plugin by path using inspec plugin
, or edit ~/.inspec/plugins.json
directly to add a plugin.
The plugins.json file
Chef InSpec stores its list of known plugins in a file, ~/.inspec/plugins.json
. The purpose of this file is avoid having to do a gem path filesystem scan to locate plugins. When you install, update, or uninstall a plugin using inspec plugin
, Chef InSpec updates this file.
You can tell Chef InSpec to use a different config directory using the INSPEC_CONFIG_DIR environment variable.
Top-level entries in the JSON file:
plugins_config_version
- must have the value "1.0.0". Reserved for future format changes.plugins
- an Array of Hashes, each containing information about plugins that are expected to be installed
Each plugin entry may have the following keys:
name
- Required. String name of the plugin. Internal machine name of the plugin. Must matchplugin_name
DSL call (see Plugin class below).installation_type
- Optional, default "gem". Selects a loading mechanism, may be either "path" or "gem"installation_path
- Required if installation_type is "path". Arequire
will be attempted against this path. It may be absolute or relative; Chef InSpec adds both the process current working directory as well as the Chef InSpec installation root to the load path.
TODO: keys for gem installations
Putting this all together, here is a plugins.json file from the Chef InSpec test suite:
{
"plugins_config_version" : "1.0.0",
"plugins": [
{
"name": "inspec-meaning-of-life",
"installation_type": "path",
"installation_path": "test/fixtures/plugins/meaning_of_life_path_mode/inspec-meaning-of-life"
}
]
}
Plugin Runtime Configuration
You can read runtime configuration data from your user using Inspec::Config.cached.fetch_plugin_config("your-plugin-name")
, which will return a hash with indifferent access representing the user's config file plugins
section pertaining to your plugin. See the config file for more information.
Do not store or read configuration information from plugins.json.
Plugin Parts
A Typical Plugin File Layout
inspec-my-plugin.gemspec
lib/
inspec-my-plugin.rb # Entry point
inspec-my-plugin/
cli.rb # An implementation file
plugin.rb # Plugin definition file
heavyweight.rb # A support file
Generally, except for the entry point, you may name these files anything you like; however, the above example is the typical convention.
Gemspec and Plugin Dependencies
This is a normal Gem specification file. When you release your plugin as a gem, you can declare dependencies here, and Chef InSpec will automatically install them along with your plugin.
If you are using a path-based install, Chef InSpec will not manage your dependencies.
Entry Point
The entry point is the file that will be require
d at load time (not activation time; see Plugin Lifecycle, below). You should load the bare minimum here - only the plugin definition file. Do not load any plugin dependencies in this file.
# lib/inspec-my-plugin.rb
require_relative 'inspec-my-plugin/plugin'
Plugin Definition File
The plugin definition file uses the plugin DSL to declare a small amount of metadata, followed by as many activation hooks as your plugin needs.
While you may use any valid Ruby module name, we encourage you to namespace your plugin under InspecPlugins::YOUR_PLUGIN
.
# lib/inspec-my-plugin/plugin.rb
module InspecPlugins
module MyPlugin
# Class name doesn't matter, but this is a reasonable default name
class Plugin < Inspec.plugin(2)
# Metadata
# Must match entry in plugins.json
plugin_name :'inspec-my-plugin'
# Activation hooks (CliCommand as an example)
cli_command :'my-command' do
require_relative 'cli'
InspecPlugins::MyPlugin::CliCommand
end
end
end
end
Note that the block passed to cli_command
is not executed when the plugin definition is loaded. It will only be executed if inspec decides it needs to activate that plugin component.
Every activation hook is expected to return a Class
which will be used in post-activation or execution phases. The behavior, duck typing, and superclass of that Class vary depending on the plugin type; see below for details.
Implementation Files
Inside the implementation files, you should be sure to do three things:
- Load any heavyweight libraries your plugin needs
- Create a class (which you will return from the activator hook)
- Within the class, implement your functionality, as dictated by the plugin type API
# lib/inspec-my-plugin/cli.rb
# Load enormous dependencies
require_relative 'heavyweight'
module InspecPlugin::MyPlugin
# Class name doesn't matter, but this is a reasonable default name
class CliCommand < Inspec.plugin(2, :cli_command) # Note two-arg form
# Implement API or use DSL as dictated by cli_command plugin type
# ...
end
end
Plugin Lifecycle
All queries regarding plugin state should be directed to Inspec::Plugin::V2::Registry.instance
, a singleton object.
registry = Inspec::Plugin::V2::Registry.instance
plugin_status = registry[:'inspec-meaning-of-life']
Discovery (Known Plugins)
If a plugin is mentioned in plugins.json
or is a plugin distributed with Chef InSpec itself, it is known. You can get its status, a Inspec::Plugin::V2::Status
object.
Reading the plugins.json file is handled by the Loader when Loader.new is called; at that point the registry should know about plugins.
Loading
Next, we load plugins. Loading means that we require
the entry point determined from the plugins.json. Your plugin definition file will thus execute.
If things go right, the Status now has a bunch of Activators, each with a block that has not yet executed.
If things go wrong, have a look at status.load_exception
.
Activation and Execution
Depending on the plugin type, activation may be triggered by a number of different events. For example, CliCommand plugin types are activated when their activation name is mentioned in the command line arguments.
After activation, code for that aspect of the plugin is loaded and ready to execute. Execution may be triggered by a number of different events. For example, the CliCommand plugin types are implicitly executed by Thor when Inspec::CLI
calls start()
.
Refer to the sections below for details about activation and execution timing.
Implementing a CLI Command Plugin
The CliCommand plugin_type allows you to extend the Chef InSpec command line interface by adding a namespace of new commands. Chef InSpec is based on Thor (docs), and the plugin system exposes Thor directly.
CliCommand can do things like:
# A namespaced custom command with options
you@machine$ inspec sweeten add --kind sugar --teaspoons 2
# A namespaced custom command with short options
you@machine$ inspec sweeten add -k agave
# Mix global and namespace options
you@machine$ inspec --debug sweeten add -k aspartame
# Namespace included in help
you@machine$ inspec help
Commands:
inspec archive PATH # archive a profile to tar.gz (default) or zip
inspec sweeten ... # Add spoonfuls til the medicine goes down
# Detailed help
[cwolfe@lodi inspec-plugins]$ inspec help sweeten
Commands:
inspec sweeten add [opts] # Adds sweetener to your beverage
inspec sweeten count # Reports on teaspoons in your beverage, always bad news
Currently, it cannot create a direct (non-namespaced) command, such as inspec mycommand
with no subcommands.
Declare your plugin activators
In your plugin.rb
, include one or more cli_command
activation blocks. The activation block name will be matched against the command line arguments; if the name is present, your activator will fire (in which case it should load any needed libraries) and should return your implementation class.
CliCommand Activator Example
# In plugin.rb
module InspecPlugins::Sweeten
class Plugin < Inspec.plugin(2)
# ... other plugin stuff
cli_command :sweeten do
require_relative 'cli.rb'
InspecPlugins::Sweeten::CliCommand
end
end
end
Like any activator, the block above will only be called if needed. For CliCommand plugins, the plugin system naively scans through ARGV, looking for the activation name as a whole element. Multiple CliCommand activations may occur if several different names match, though each activation will only occur once.
you@machine $ inspec sweeten ... # Your CliCommand implementation is activated and executed
you@machine $ inspec exec ... # Your CliCommand implementation is not activated
Execution occurs implicitly via Thor.start()
, which is handled by bin/inspec
. Keep reading.
You should also be aware of one other activation event: if the CLI is invoked as inspec help
, all CliCommand plugins will activate (but will not be executed). This is so that each plugin's help information can be registered with Thor.
Implementation class for CLI Commands
In your cli.rb
, you should begin by requesting the superclass from Inspec.plugin
:
module InspecPlugins::Sweeten
class CliCommand < Inspec.plugin(2, :cli_command)
# ...
end
end
The Chef InSpec plugin v2 system promises the following:
- The superclass will be an (indirect) subclass of Thor
- The plugin system will handle registering the subcommand with Thor for you
- The plugin system will handle setup of the subcommand help message for you
Implementing your command
Within your cli.rb
, you need to do two things:
- Inform Chef InSpec of your subcommand's usage and description, so the
help
commands will work properly - Implement your subcommands and options using the Thor DSL
See also: Thor homepage and Thor docs.
Call subcommand_desc
Within your implementation, make a call like this:
# Class declaration as above
subcommand_desc 'sweeten ...', 'Add spoonfuls til the medicine goes down'
The first argument is the usage message; it will be displayed whenever you execute inspec help
, or when Thor tries to parse a malformed inspec sweeten ...
command.
The second is the command groups description, and is displayed with inspec help
.
Both arguments are free-form Strings intended for humans; the usage message should begin with your subcommand name to prevent user confusion.
If you neglect to call this DSL method, Thor will not register your command.
Adding Subcommands
The minimum needed for a command is a call to desc
to set the help message, and a method definition named after the command.
desc 'Reports on teaspoons in your beverage, always bad news'
def count
# Someone has executed `inspec sweeten count` - do whatever that entails
case beverage_type
when :soda
puts 12
when :tea_two_lumps
puts 2
end
end
There is a great deal more you can do with Thor, especially concerning handling options. Refer to the Thor docs for more examples and details.
Using no_command
One common surprise seen with Thor is that every public instance method of your CliCommand implementation class is expected to be a CLI command definition. Thor will issue a warning if it encounters a public method definition without a desc
call preceding it. Two ways around this include:
- Make your helper methods private
- Enclose your non-command methods in a no_command block (a feature of Thor just for this circumstance)
no_command do
def beverage_type
@bevvy
end
end
Implementing Input Plugins
Input plugins provide values for Chef InSpec Inputs - the parameters you can place within profile control code.
For example, you might implement an Input plugin to fetch vales from a key-value store, such as etcd
.
Input plugins have a simple API which is intended to be easy to adapt to a number of input backend implementations.
Declare your input plugin activators
Generally speaking, an input plugin will only need to have one activator.
In your plugin.rb
, include one or more input
activation blocks. The activation block will fire when the InputRegistry is initialized, at which time case it should load any needed libraries and should return your implementation class.
The Input subsystem always activates all activators.
Input Activator Example
# In plugin.rb
module InspecPlugins::Sweeten
class Plugin < Inspec.plugin(2)
# ... other plugin stuff
input :coffee_fixins_bar do
require_relative 'input.rb'
InspecPlugins::Sweeten::Input
end
end
end
The Input subsystem always activates all activators when InputRegistry is initialized. Future work may enable us to dynamically load plugins; but we need to poll plugins when any input value is used.
Implementation class for Input plugins
In your input.rb
, you should begin by requesting the superclass from Inspec.plugin
:
module InspecPlugins::Sweeten
class Input < Inspec.plugin(2, :input)
# ...
end
end
Implementing your Input plugin
Within your implementation, you need to implement 2 mandatory methods and two optional methods.
default_priority
Optional, returns an integer 0-100, default 60. This value determines precedence when multiple input providers supply a value; higher values lend more precedence.
list_inputs(profile_name)
Mandatory. Given a String profile name, return an Array of String input names that may be fetched from this plugin. This may be used to optimize calls to fetch().
fetch(profile_name, input_name)
Mandatory. Given a String profile_name and String input_name, return the input value (whatever that means for your plugin).
Using a constructor to get config values
Optional. Implement initialize()
to perform any startup tasks such as authorization. You can get to the InSpec config settings via Inspec::Config.cached[some_key]
.
Implementation example
module InspecPlugins::Sweeten
class Input < Inspec.plugin(2, :input)
def default_priority
99 # Extremely opinionated
end
def fetch(profile_name, input_name)
return nil unless profile_name = 'coffee_shop'
case input_name
when 'sugar'
'delicious raw sugar in an eclectic brown packet'
when "sweet'n'low"
'how can you even do that to yourself'
end
end
def list_input_names
['sugar',"sweet'n'low"]
end
end
end
Implementing DSL Plugins
A DSL is a domain specific language, or a set of keywords you can use to write Chef InSpec profiles and resources more fluently.
Chef InSpec offers several DSLs:
- The Profile DSL, which is the set of keywords you use when writing profiles. The Profile DSL is internally divided into:
- The Outer Profile DSL: those keywords which may appear in a Profile
controls/my-controls.rb
outside of acontrol
ordescribe
block - The Control DSL: those keywords which may appear in
control
block - The Describe DSL: those keywords which may appear within a
describe
block - The Test DSL: those keywords available within an
it
/its
block
- The Outer Profile DSL: those keywords which may appear in a Profile
- The Resource DSL: those keywords which may be used when authoring a resource
Correspondingly, there are 4 plugin types in play here: outer_profile_dsl
, control_dsl
, describe_dsl
, test_dsl
, and resource_dsl
.
DSL plugins let you alter the Chef InSpec profile authoring experience in a fundamental way. For example, if you wish Chef InSpec had a way of expressing that some minimum of a set of tests must pass, but you don't care which, you could implement a control_dsl
plugin named threshold
:
# in a hypothetical control file
# This control will pass if at least 2
# out of the describe blocks pass
control 'Like Meatloaf Sings' do
threshold(2) do
describe 'I want you' do
it { should be_true }
end
describe 'I need you' do
it { should be_true }
end
describe 'I love you' do
it { should be_true }
end
end
end
Activation Discipline For DSL Plugins
As DSL keywords are actually method calls, the activation system for the four DSL types is handled by method_missing
. For example, if you have registered a control_dsl
activation hook named threshold
, when Chef InSpec evaluates the code above and encounters the unknown method threshold
, Chef InSpec will check for a control_dsl
hook with that name, and if found, activate the hook, and then include the resulting module into that and all future controls. Once the module is loaded and included, future calls bypass the activation and loading mechanism entirely (because the threshold
method is now defined, we never hit the method_missing
that watches for activations).
The Outer Profile DSL, Control DSL, Describe DSL, Test DSL, and Resource DSL plugin types all have the same basic mechanism; only the scope of their activation varies.
Defining DSL Plugin Activation Hooks
In your plugin.rb
, include one or more outer_profile_dsl
, control_dsl
, describe_dsl
, or resource_dsl
activation blocks. A DSL activation block must do two things (though it may do more):
- Return a Module that will be used as a mixin to the file, control, describe block, or resource
- Require any files needed to support returning the implementation module. It's important to require any support files in the activation block, not in the plugin definition; this allows Chef InSpec to only load files as they are needed.
Continuing the above example, one would declare the threshold
Control DSL activation hook as follows:
# in plugin.rb
module InspecPlugins::ThresholdDSL
class Plugin < Inspec.plugin(2)
plugin_name :'inspec-dsl-threshold'
control_dsl :threshold do
require 'inspec-dsl-threshold/control_dsl'
# most plugins expect you to return a class name;
# but DSL plugins must return a Module, because it
# will be used as a mixin.
InspecPlugins::ThresholdDSL::ThresholdControlDSL
end
end
end
Implementing DSL Methods
Because each DSL plugin type is loaded into a specific context, each method defined in the mixin module you provide will have a specific parent class and state.
Note: these areas are deep within the internals of Chef InSpec and RSpec. Documentation and stability of these interfaces will vary.
It is recommended to pin your dependency on inspec
rather tightly, so you can test for compatibility issues prior to your users.
The Chef InSpec project does not consider the internal interfaces exposed to the DSL plugins to be part of the public interface, and thus may introduce breaking changes at anytime. In other words, SemVer doesn't apply here, and you should likely use an exact pin.
Outer Profile DSL Context
When your mixin method is called, self
will be an instance of an anonymous class representing the profile context being executed; each profile context gets its own anonymous class. No inheritance tree is provided; all meaningful functionality arrives through other DSL methods included.
One useful thing you can do is create macros for generating controls: the control
DSL keyword is available to you, so you can call it as you see fit to create new controls.
Control DSL Context
When your mixin method is called, self
will be an instance of an anonymous class representing the control being executed; each control gets its own anonymous class. The parent class of the anonymous class will be Inspec::Rule, which is the internal name of a Control. Please refer to the source for details on methods and instance variables.
Describe DSL Context
Describe DSL mixin methods will be attached as class methods to RSpec::Core::ExampleGroup. Internally, 'describe' blocks are subclasses of the ExampleGroup class. Please see the source of ExampleGroup for details about how describe blocks are evaluated.
Within your mixin method, you have access the methods RSpec uses to manage an ExampleGroup. For example, examples
returns an array of tests (it
/its
blocks) that have been encountered in the describe block prior to the invocation of your method; and metadata
returns a hash of information about the describe block, including description and source code location.
Test DSL Context
Test DSL mixin methods will be attached as instance methods to RSpec::Core::ExampleGroup. Internally, it
/its
blocks are evaluated in the context of an instance which is a subclass of the ExampleGroup class. Please see the source of ExampleGroup for further details.
These blocks are called Examples in RSpec terminology. Chef InSpec treats Examples as tests, and sends tests and controls to the reporter engine; note that describe block are effectively ignored.
Within your mixin method, you have access the methods RSpec uses to manage an Example. You have access to the testing predicates (such as should
), but also all Chef InSpec resources are available by name. Some useful class methods include self.class.example_group
, which returns the example group are a member of; and self.class.metadata
returns a hash of information about the test block, including description and source code location.
Resource DSL
Within a Resource DSL method, self
will be the Class of a Resource that is currently being defined. Your superclass will be whatever was returned by Inspec.resource(API_VERSION), which will typically be Inspec::Resource.
Resource DSL methods are especially useful for defining macros: adding properties and matchers to a resource.
Implementation Module Layout Notes
Implementing multiple DSL methods of the same type in one Module
You may implement as many DSL methods as you see fit. You may choose to be fine-grained, and load each individually from separate modules contained in separate files.
If you believe that using one of your suite of DSL methods implies that the user would be likely to use all of your suite, you may choose to implement them all in one mixin. This saves on loading and activations.
That might look like:
# in plugin.rb
module InspecPlugins::ColorDSL
class Plugin < Inspec.plugin(2)
plugin_name :'inspec-dsl-colors'
control_dsl :red do
require 'inspec-dsl-threshold/roygbiv'
InspecPlugins::ColorDSL::RoyGBiv
end
control_dsl :orange do
require 'inspec-dsl-threshold/roygbiv'
InspecPlugins::ColorDSL::RoyGBiv
end
# etc... ... and yes, you could do that in a loop
end
end
Now, when a user says red
or orange
, the entire suite of DSL methods will be loaded and included.
Implementing multiple DSL methods of the different types in one Module
For the brave, one may also choose to use the same implementation mixin with different types of activation hook. This has serious implications for the code inside your DSL methods; depending on which context you are in, your class hierarchy (and thus instance methods and variables) may change dramatically.
For DSL plugins that are fairly simple - perhaps adding annotations or having a simple runtime side-effect - this may be a wise choice to avoid duplicating code. However, DSL methods that are very interested in the state of their context will be obliged to rely on a fair bit of conditionals and introspection.
That might look like:
# in plugin.rb
module InspecPlugins::ColorDSL
class Plugin < Inspec.plugin(2)
plugin_name :'inspec-dsl-colors'
# Install the `red` DSL method at every available place within profiles
# (with the same implementation!)
outer_profile_dsl :red do
require 'inspec-dsl-threshold/red'
InspecPlugins::ColorDSL::Red
end
control_dsl :red do
require 'inspec-dsl-threshold/red'
InspecPlugins::ColorDSL::Red
end
describe_dsl :red do
require 'inspec-dsl-threshold/red'
InspecPlugins::ColorDSL::Red
end
test_dsl :red do
require 'inspec-dsl-threshold/red'
InspecPlugins::ColorDSL::Red
end
end
end
This approach may make sense among the four Profile DSLs; however the Resource DSL is quite different, and is unlikely to respond well to such an approach.