Installing and viewing plugins in Red Hat Developer Hub
Abstract
1. Installing dynamic plugins in Red Hat Developer Hub
The dynamic plugin support is based on the backend plugin manager package, which is a service that scans a configured root directory (dynamicPlugins.rootDirectory
in the app-config.yaml
file) for dynamic plugin packages and loads them dynamically.
You can use the dynamic plugins that come preinstalled with Red Hat Developer Hub or install external dynamic plugins from a public NPM registry.
1.1. Installing dynamic plugins with the Red Hat Developer Hub Operator
You can store the configuration for dynamic plugins in a ConfigMap
object that your Backstage
custom resource (CR) can reference.
If the pluginConfig
field references environment variables, you must define the variables in your my-rhdh-secrets
secret.
Procedure
- From the OpenShift Container Platform web console, select the ConfigMaps tab.
- Click Create ConfigMap.
From the Create ConfigMap page, select the YAML view option in Configure via and edit the file, if needed.
Example
ConfigMap
object using the GitHub dynamic pluginkind: ConfigMap apiVersion: v1 metadata: name: dynamic-plugins-rhdh data: dynamic-plugins.yaml: | includes: - dynamic-plugins.default.yaml plugins: - package: './dynamic-plugins/dist/backstage-plugin-catalog-backend-module-github-dynamic' disabled: false pluginConfig: catalog: providers: github: organization: "${GITHUB_ORG}" schedule: frequency: { minutes: 1 } timeout: { minutes: 1 } initialDelay: { seconds: 100 }
- Click Create.
- Go to the Topology view.
Click on the overflow menu for the Red Hat Developer Hub instance that you want to use and select Edit Backstage to load the YAML view of the Red Hat Developer Hub instance.
Add the
dynamicPluginsConfigMapName
field to yourBackstage
CR. For example:apiVersion: rhdh.redhat.com/v1alpha3 kind: Backstage metadata: name: my-rhdh spec: application: # ... dynamicPluginsConfigMapName: dynamic-plugins-rhdh # ...
- Click Save.
- Navigate back to the Topology view and wait for the Red Hat Developer Hub pod to start.
- Click the Open URL icon to start using the Red Hat Developer Hub platform with the new configuration changes.
Verification
Ensure that the dynamic plugins configuration has been loaded, by appending
/api/dynamic-plugins-info/loaded-plugins
to your Red Hat Developer Hub root URL and checking the list of plugins:Example list of plugins
[ { "name": "backstage-plugin-catalog-backend-module-github-dynamic", "version": "0.5.2", "platform": "node", "role": "backend-plugin-module" }, { "name": "backstage-plugin-techdocs", "version": "1.10.0", "role": "frontend-plugin", "platform": "web" }, { "name": "backstage-plugin-techdocs-backend-dynamic", "version": "1.9.5", "platform": "node", "role": "backend-plugin" }, ]
1.2. Installing dynamic plugins using the Helm chart
You can deploy a Developer Hub instance using a Helm chart, which is a flexible installation method. With the Helm chart, you can sideload dynamic plugins into your Developer Hub instance without having to recompile your code or rebuild the container.
To install dynamic plugins in Developer Hub using Helm, add the following global.dynamic
parameters in your Helm chart:
plugins
: the dynamic plugins list intended for installation. By default, the list is empty. You can populate the plugins list with the following fields:-
package
: a package specification for the dynamic plugin package that you want to install. You can use a package for either a local or an external dynamic plugin installation. For a local installation, use a path to the local folder containing the dynamic plugin. For an external installation, use a package specification from a public NPM repository. -
integrity
(required for external packages): an integrity checksum in the form of<alg>-<digest>
specific to the package. Supported algorithms includesha256
,sha384
andsha512
. -
pluginConfig
: an optional plugin-specificapp-config
YAML fragment. See plugin configuration for more information. -
disabled
: disables the dynamic plugin if set totrue
. Default:false
.
-
-
includes
: a list of YAML files utilizing the same syntax.
The plugins
list in the includes
file is merged with the plugins
list in the main Helm values. If a plugin package is mentioned in both plugins
lists, the plugins
fields in the main Helm values override the plugins
fields in the includes
file. The default configuration includes the dynamic-plugins.default.yaml
file, which contains all of the dynamic plugins preinstalled in Developer Hub, whether enabled or disabled by default.
1.2.1. Example Helm chart configurations for dynamic plugin installations
The following examples demonstrate how to configure the Helm chart for specific types of dynamic plugin installations.
Configuring a local plugin and an external plugin when the external plugin requires a specific app-config
global: dynamic: plugins: - package: <alocal package-spec used by npm pack> - package: <external package-spec used by npm pack> integrity: sha512-<some hash> pluginConfig: ...
Disabling a plugin from an included file
global: dynamic: includes: - dynamic-plugins.default.yaml plugins: - package: <some imported plugins listed in dynamic-plugins.default.yaml> disabled: true
Enabling a plugin from an included file
global: dynamic: includes: - dynamic-plugins.default.yaml plugins: - package: <some imported plugins listed in dynamic-plugins.custom.yaml> disabled: false
Enabling a plugin that is disabled in an included file
global: dynamic: includes: - dynamic-plugins.default.yaml plugins: - package: <some imported plugins listed in dynamic-plugins.custom.yaml> disabled: false
1.3. Installing dynamic plugins in an air-gapped environment
You can install external plugins in an air-gapped environment by setting up a custom NPM registry.
You can configure the NPM registry URL and authentication information for dynamic plugin packages using a Helm chart. For dynamic plugin packages obtained through npm pack
, you can use a .npmrc
file.
Using the Helm chart, add the .npmrc
file to the NPM registry by creating a secret named dynamic-plugins-npmrc
with the following content:
apiVersion: v1 kind: Secret metadata: name: dynamic-plugins-npmrc type: Opaque stringData: .npmrc: | registry=<registry-url> //<registry-url>:_authToken=<auth-token> ...
2. Third-party plugins in Red Hat Developer Hub
You can integrate third-party dynamic plugins into Red Hat Developer Hub to enhance its functionality without modifying its source code or rebuilding it. To add these plugins, export them as derived packages.
While exporting the plugin package, you must ensure that dependencies are correctly bundled or marked as shared, depending on their relationship to the Developer Hub environment.
To integrate a third-party plugin into Developer Hub:
- First, obtain the plugin’s source code.
- Export the plugin as a dynamic plugin package. See Section 2.1, “Exporting third-party plugins in Red Hat Developer Hub”.
- Package and publish the dynamic plugin. See Section 2.2, “Packaging and publishing third-party plugins as dynamic plugins”.
- Install the plugin in the Developer Hub environment. See Section 2.3, “Installing third-party plugins in Red Hat Developer Hub”.
2.1. Exporting third-party plugins in Red Hat Developer Hub
To use plugins in Red Hat Developer Hub, you can export plugins as derived dynamic plugin packages. These packages contain the plugin code and dependencies, ready for dynamic plugin integration into Developer Hub.
Prerequisites
-
The
@janus-idp/cli
package is installed. Use the latest version (@latest
tag) for compatibility with the most recent features and fixes. - Node.js and NPM is installed and configured.
- The third-party plugin is compatible with your Red Hat Developer Hub version. For more information, see Version compatibility matrix.
The third-party plugin must have a valid
package.json
file in its root directory, containing all required metadata and dependencies.- Backend plugins
To ensure compatibility with the dynamic plugin support and enable their use as dynamic plugins, existing backend plugins must be compatible with the new Backstage backend system. Additionally, these plugins must be rebuilt using a dedicated CLI command.
The new Backstage backend system entry point (created using
createBackendPlugin()
orcreateBackendModule()
) must be exported as the default export from either the main package or analpha
package (if the plugin instance support is still provided usingalpha
APIs). This doesn’t add any additional requirement on top of the standard plugin development guidelines of the plugin instance.The dynamic export mechanism identifies private dependencies and sets the
bundleDependencies
field in thepackage.json
file. This export mechanism ensures that the dynamic plugin package is published as a self-contained package, with its private dependencies bundled in a privatenode_modules
folder.Certain plugin dependencies require specific handling in the derived packages, such as:
Shared dependencies are provided by the RHDH application and listed as
peerDependencies
inpackage.json
file, not bundled in the dynamic plugin package. For example, by default, all@backstage
scoped packages are shared.You can use the
--shared-package
flag to specify shared dependencies, that are expected to be provided by Red Hat Developer Hub application and not bundled in the dynamic plugin package.To treat a
@backstage
package as private, use the negation prefix (!
). For example, when a plugin depends on the package in@backstage
that is not provided by the Red Hat Developer Hub application.Embedded dependencies are bundled into the dynamic plugin package with their dependencies hoisted to the top level. By default, packages with
-node
or-common
suffixes are embedded.You can use the
--embed-package
flag to specify additional embedded packages. For example, packages from the same workspace that do not follow the default naming convention.The following is an example of exporting a dynamic plugin with shared and embedded packages:
Example dynamic plugin export with shared and embedded packages
npx @janus-idp/cli@latest export-dynamic-plugin --shared-package '!/@backstage/plugin-notifications/' --embed-package @backstage/plugin-notifications-backend
In the previous example:
-
@backstage/plugin-notifications
package is treated as a private dependency and is bundled in the dynamic plugin package, despite being in the@backstage
scope. -
@backstage/plugin-notifications-backend
package is marked as an embedded dependency and is bundled in the dynamic plugin package.
- Front-end plugins
Front-end plugins can use
scalprum
for configuration, which the CLI can generate automatically during the export process. The generated default configuration is logged when running the following command:Example command to log the default configuration
npx @janus-idp/cli@latest export-dynamic
The following is an example of default
scalprum
configuration:Default
scalprum
configuration"scalprum": { "name": "<package_name>", // The Webpack container name matches the NPM package name, with "@" replaced by "." and "/" removed. "exposedModules": { "PluginRoot": "./src/index.ts" // The default module name is "PluginRoot" and doesn't need explicit specification in the app-config.yaml file. } }
You can add a
scalprum
section to thepackage.json
file. For example:Example
scalprum
customization"scalprum": { "name": "custom-package-name", "exposedModules": { "FooModuleName": "./src/foo.ts", "BarModuleName": "./src/bar.ts" // Define multiple modules here, with each exposed as a separate entry point in the Webpack container. } }
Dynamic plugins might need adjustments for Developer Hub needs, such as static JSX for mountpoints or dynamic routes. These changes are optional but might be incompatible with static plugins.
To include static JSX, define an additional export and use it as the dynamic plugin’s
importName
. For example:Example static and dynamic plugin export
// For a static plugin export const EntityTechdocsContent = () => {...} // For a dynamic plugin export const DynamicEntityTechdocsContent = { element: EntityTechdocsContent, staticJSXContent: ( <TechDocsAddons> <ReportIssue /> </TechDocsAddons> ), };
Procedure
Use the
package export-dynamic-plugin
command from the@janus-idp/cli
package to export the plugin:Example command to export a third-party plugin
npx @janus-idp/cli@latest package export-dynamic-plugin
Ensure that you execute the previous command in the root directory of the plugin’s JavaScript package (containing
package.json
file).The resulting derived package will be located in the
dist-dynamic
subfolder. The exported package name consists of the original plugin name with-dynamic
appended.WarningThe derived dynamic plugin JavaScript packages must not be published to the public NPM registry. For more appropriate packaging options, see Section 2.2, “Packaging and publishing third-party plugins as dynamic plugins”. If you must publish to the NPM registry, use a private registry.
2.2. Packaging and publishing third-party plugins as dynamic plugins
After exporting a third-party plugin, you can package the derived package into one of the following supported formats:
- Open Container Initiative (OCI) image (recommended)
- TGZ file
JavaScript package
ImportantExported dynamic plugin packages must only be published to private NPM registries.
2.2.1. Creating an OCI image with dynamic packages
Prerequisites
-
You have installed
podman
ordocker
. - You have exported a third-party dynamic plugin package. For more information, see Section 2.1, “Exporting third-party plugins in Red Hat Developer Hub”.
Procedure
-
Navigate to the plugin’s root directory (not the
dist-dynamic
directory). Run the following command to package the plugin into an OCI image:
Example command to package an exported third-party plugin
npx @janus-idp/cli@latest package package-dynamic-plugins --tag quay.io/example/image:v0.0.1
In the previous command, the
--tag
argument specifies the image name and tag.Run one of the following commands to push the image to a registry:
Example command to push an image to a registry using podman
podman push quay.io/example/image:v0.0.1
Example command to push an image to a registry using docker
docker push quay.io/example/image:v0.0.1
The output of the
package-dynamic-plugins
command provides the plugin’s path for use in thedynamic-plugin-config.yaml
file.
2.2.2. Creating a TGZ file with dynamic packages
Prerequisites
- You have exported a third-party dynamic plugin package. For more information, see Section 2.1, “Exporting third-party plugins in Red Hat Developer Hub”.
Procedure
-
Navigate to the
dist-dynamic
directory. Run the following command to create a
tgz
archive:Example command to create a
tgz
archivenpm pack
You can obtain the integrity hash from the output of the
npm pack
command by using the--json
flag as follows:Example command to obtain the integrity hash of a
tgz
archivenpm pack --json | head -n 10
Host the archive on a web server accessible to your RHDH instance, and reference its URL in the
dynamic-plugin-config.yaml
file as follows:Example
dynamic-plugin-config.yaml
fileplugins: - package: https://example.com/backstage-plugin-myplugin-1.0.0.tgz integrity: sha512-<hash>
Run the following command to package the plugins:
Example command to package a dynamic plugin
npm pack --pack-destination ~/test/dynamic-plugins-root/
TipTo create a plugin registry using HTTP server on OpenShift Container Platform, run the following commands:
Example commands to build and deploy an HTTP server in OpenShift Container Platform
oc project rhdh oc new-build httpd --name=plugin-registry --binary oc start-build plugin-registry --from-dir=dynamic-plugins-root --wait oc new-app --image-stream=plugin-registry
Configure your RHDH to use plugins from the HTTP server by editing the
dynamic-plugin-config.yaml
file:Example configuration to use packaged plugins in RHDH
plugins: - package: http://plugin-registry:8080/backstage-plugin-myplugin-1.9.6.tgz
2.2.3. Creating a JavaScript package with dynamic packages
The derived dynamic plugin JavaScript packages must not be published to the public NPM registry. If you must publish to the NPM registry, use a private registry.
Prerequisites
- You have exported a third-party dynamic plugin package. For more information, see Section 2.1, “Exporting third-party plugins in Red Hat Developer Hub”.
Procedure
-
Navigate to the
dist-dynamic
directory. Run the following command to publish the package to your private NPM registry:
Example command to publish a plugin package to an NPM registry
npm publish --registry <npm_registry_url>
TipYou can add the following to your
package.json
file before running theexport
command:Example
package.json
file{ "publishConfig": { "registry": "<npm_registry_url>" } }
If you modify
publishConfig
after exporting the dynamic plugin, re-run theexport-dynamic-plugin
command to ensure the correct configuration is included.
2.3. Installing third-party plugins in Red Hat Developer Hub
You can install a third-party plugins in Red Hat Developer Hub without rebuilding the RHDH application.
The location of the dynamic-plugin-config.yaml
file depends on the deployment method. For more details, refer to Installing dynamic plugins with the Red Hat Developer Hub Operator and Installing dynamic plugins using the Helm chart.
Plugins are defined in the plugins
array within the dynamic-plugin-config.yaml
file. Each plugin is represented as an object with the following properties:
-
package
: The plugin’s package definition, which can be an OCI image, a TGZ file, a JavaScript package, or a directory path. -
disabled
: A boolean value indicating whether the plugin is enabled or disabled. -
integrity
: The integrity hash of the package, required for TGZ file and JavaScript packages. -
pluginConfig
: The plugin’s configuration. For backend plugins, this is optional; for frontend plugins, it is required. ThepluginConfig
is a fragment of theapp-config.yaml
file, and any added properties are merged with the RHDHapp-config.yaml
file.
You can also load dynamic plugins from another directory, though this is intended for development or testing purposes and is not recommended for production, except for plugins included in the RHDH container image.
2.3.1. Loading a plugin packaged as an OCI image
Prerequisites
The third-party plugin is packaged as a dynamic plugin in an OCI image.
For more information about packaging a third-party plugin, see Section 2.2, “Packaging and publishing third-party plugins as dynamic plugins”.
Procedure
Define the plugin with the
oci://
prefix in the following format indynamic-plugins.yaml
file:oci://<image-name>:<tag>!<plugin-name>
Example configuration in
dynamic-plugins.yaml
fileplugins: - disabled: false package: oci://quay.io/example/image:v0.0.1!backstage-plugin-myplugin
-
Configure authentication for private registries by setting the
REGISTRY_AUTH_FILE
environment variable to the path of the registry configuration file. For example,~/.config/containers/auth.json
or~/.docker/config.json
. To perform an integrity check, use the image digest in place of the tag in the
dynamic-plugins.yaml
file as follows:Example configuration in
dynamic-plugins.yaml
fileplugins: - disabled: false package: oci://quay.io/example/image@sha256:28036abec4dffc714394e4ee433f16a59493db8017795049c831be41c02eb5dc!backstage-plugin-myplugin
- To apply the changes, restart the RHDH application.
2.3.2. Loading a plugin packaged as a TGZ file
Prerequisites
The third-party plugin is packaged as a dynamic plugin in a TGZ file.
For more information about packaging a third-party plugin, see Section 2.2, “Packaging and publishing third-party plugins as dynamic plugins”.
Procedure
Specify the archive URL and its integrity hash in the
dynamic-plugins.yaml
file using the following example:Example configuration in
dynamic-plugins.yaml
fileplugins: - disabled: false package: https://example.com/backstage-plugin-myplugin-1.0.0.tgz integrity: sha512-9WlbgEdadJNeQxdn1973r5E4kNFvnT9GjLD627GWgrhCaxjCmxqdNW08cj+Bf47mwAtZMt1Ttyo+ZhDRDj9PoA==
- To apply the changes, restart the RHDH application.
2.3.3. Loading a plugin packaged as a JavaScript package
Prerequisites
The third-party plugin is packaged as a dynamic plugin in a JavaScript package.
For more information about packaging a third-party plugin, see Section 2.2, “Packaging and publishing third-party plugins as dynamic plugins”.
Procedure
Run the following command to obtain the integrity hash from the NPM registry:
npm view --registry <registry-url> <npm package>@<version> dist.integrity
Specify the package name, version, and its integrity hash in the
dynamic-plugins.yaml
file as follows:Example configuration in
dynamic-plugins.yaml
fileplugins: - disabled: false package: @example/backstage-plugin-myplugin@1.0.0 integrity: sha512-9WlbgEdadJNeQxdn1973r5E4kNFvnT9GjLD627GWgrhCaxjCmxqdNW08cj+Bf47mwAtZMt1Ttyo+ZhDRDj9PoA==
If you are using a custom NPM registry, create a
.npmrc
file with the registry URL and authentication details:Example code for
.npmrc
fileregistry=<registry-url> //<registry-url>:_authToken=<auth-token>
When using OpenShift Container Platform or Kubernetes:
Create a secret with the
.npmrc
content as follows:Example secret configuration
apiVersion: v1 kind: Secret metadata: name: dynamic-plugins-npmrc type: Opaque stringData: .npmrc: | registry=<registry-url> //<registry-url>:_authToken=<auth-token>
For RHDH Helm chart, name the secret using the following format for automatic mounting:
<release-name>-dynamic-plugins-npmrc
- To apply the changes, restart the RHDH application.
2.3.4. Example of installing a third-party plugin in Red Hat Developer Hub
This section describes the process for integrating the Todo plugin into your Developer Hub.
Obtain the third-party plugin source code: Clone the plugins repository and navigate to the Todo plugin directory:
Obtain the third-party plugin source code
$ git clone https://github.com/backstage/community-plugins $ cd community-plugins/workspaces/todo $ yarn install
Export backend and front-end plugins: Run the following commands to build the backend plugin, adjust package dependencies for dynamic loading, and generate self-contained configuration schema:
Export the backend plugin
$ cd todo-backend $ npx @janus-idp/cli@latest package export-dynamic-plugin
Output of exporting the backend plugin commands
Building main package executing yarn build ✔ Packing main package to dist-dynamic/package.json Customizing main package in dist-dynamic/package.json for dynamic loading moving @backstage/backend-common to peerDependencies moving @backstage/backend-openapi-utils to peerDependencies moving @backstage/backend-plugin-api to peerDependencies moving @backstage/catalog-client to peerDependencies moving @backstage/catalog-model to peerDependencies moving @backstage/config to peerDependencies moving @backstage/errors to peerDependencies moving @backstage/integration to peerDependencies moving @backstage/plugin-catalog-node to peerDependencies Installing private dependencies of the main package executing yarn install --no-immutable ✔ Validating private dependencies Validating plugin entry points Saving self-contained config schema in /Users/user/Code/community-plugins/workspaces/todo/plugins/todo-backend/dist-dynamic/dist/configSchema.json
You can run the following commands to set default dynamic UI configurations, create front-end plugin assets, and to generate a configuration schema for a front-end plugin:
Export the front-end plugin
$ cd ../todo $ npx @janus-idp/cli@latest package export-dynamic-plugin
Output of exporting the front-end plugin commands
No scalprum config. Using default dynamic UI configuration: { "name": "backstage-community.plugin-todo", "exposedModules": { "PluginRoot": "./src/index.ts" } } If you wish to change the defaults, add "scalprum" configuration to plugin "package.json" file, or use the '--scalprum-config' option to specify an external config. Packing main package to dist-dynamic/package.json Customizing main package in dist-dynamic/package.json for dynamic loading Generating dynamic frontend plugin assets in /Users/user/Code/community-plugins/workspaces/todo/plugins/todo/dist-dynamic/dist-scalprum 263.46 kB dist-scalprum/static/1417.d5271413.chunk.js ... ... ... 250 B dist-scalprum/static/react-syntax-highlighter_languages_highlight_plaintext.0b7d6592.chunk.js Saving self-contained config schema in /Users/user/Code/community-plugins/workspaces/todo/plugins/todo/dist-dynamic/dist-scalprum/configSchema.json
Package and publish a third-party plugin: Run the following commands to navigate to the workspace directory and package the dynamic plugin to build the OCI image:
Build an OCI image
$ cd ../.. $ npx @janus-idp/cli@latest package package-dynamic-plugins --tag quay.io/user/backstage-community-plugin-todo:v0.1.1
Output of building an OCI image commands
executing podman --version ✔ Using existing 'dist-dynamic' directory at plugins/todo Using existing 'dist-dynamic' directory at plugins/todo-backend Copying 'plugins/todo/dist-dynamic' to '/var/folders/5c/67drc33d0018j6qgtzqpcsbw0000gn/T/package-dynamic-pluginsmcP4mU/backstage-community-plugin-todo No plugin configuration found at undefined create this file as needed if this plugin requires configuration Copying 'plugins/todo-backend/dist-dynamic' to '/var/folders/5c/67drc33d0018j6qgtzqpcsbw0000gn/T/package-dynamic-pluginsmcP4mU/backstage-community-plugin-todo-backend-dynamic No plugin configuration found at undefined create this file as needed if this plugin requires configuration Writing plugin registry metadata to '/var/folders/5c/67drc33d0018j6qgtzqpcsbw0000gn/T/package-dynamic-pluginsmcP4mU/index.json' Creating image using podman executing echo "from scratch COPY . . " | podman build --annotation com.redhat.rhdh.plugins='[{"backstage-community-plugin-todo":{"name":"@backstage-community/plugin-todo","version":"0.2.40","description":"A Backstage plugin that lets you browse TODO comments in your source code","backstage":{"role":"frontend-plugin","pluginId":"todo","pluginPackages":["@backstage-community/plugin-todo","@backstage-community/plugin-todo-backend"]},"homepage":"https://backstage.io","repository":{"type":"git","url":"https://github.com/backstage/community-plugins","directory":"workspaces/todo/plugins/todo"},"license":"Apache-2.0"}},{"backstage-community-plugin-todo-backend-dynamic":{"name":"@backstage-community/plugin-todo-backend","version":"0.3.19","description":"A Backstage backend plugin that lets you browse TODO comments in your source code","backstage":{"role":"backend-plugin","pluginId":"todo","pluginPackages":["@backstage-community/plugin-todo","@backstage-community/plugin-todo-backend"]},"homepage":"https://backstage.io","repository":{"type":"git","url":"https://github.com/backstage/community-plugins","directory":"workspaces/todo/plugins/todo-backend"},"license":"Apache-2.0"}}]' -t 'quay.io/user/backstage-community-plugin-todo:v0.1.1' -f - . ✔ Successfully built image quay.io/user/backstage-community-plugin-todo:v0.1.1 with following plugins: backstage-community-plugin-todo backstage-community-plugin-todo-backend-dynamic Here is an example dynamic-plugins.yaml for these plugins: plugins: - package: oci://quay.io/user/backstage-community-plugin-todo:v0.1.1!backstage-community-plugin-todo disabled: false - package: oci://quay.io/user/backstage-community-plugin-todo:v0.1.1!backstage-community-plugin-todo-backend-dynamic disabled: false
Push the OCI image to a container registry:
$ podman push quay.io/user/backstage-community-plugin-todo:v0.1.1
Output of pushing the OCI image command
Getting image source signatures Copying blob sha256:86a372c456ae6a7a305cd464d194aaf03660932efd53691998ab3403f87cacb5 Copying config sha256:3b7f074856ecfbba95a77fa87cfad341e8a30c7069447de8144aea0edfcb603e Writing manifest to image destination
Install and configure the third-party plugin: Add the following plugin definitions to your
dynamic-plugins.yaml
file:Plugin definitions in
dynamic-plugins.yaml
filepackages: - package: oci://quay.io/user/backstage-community-plugin-todo:v0.1.1!backstage-community-plugin-todo pluginConfig: dynamicPlugins: frontend: backstage-community.plugin-todo: mountPoints: - mountPoint: entity.page.todo/cards importName: EntityTodoContent entityTabs: - path: /todo title: Todo mountPoint: entity.page.todo - package: oci://quay.io/user/backstage-community-plugin-todo:v0.1.1!backstage-community-plugin-todo-backend-dynamic disabled: false
3. Viewing installed plugins
Using the Dynamic Plugins Info front-end plugin, you can view plugins that are currently installed in your Red Hat Developer Hub application. This plugin is enabled by default.
Procedure
- Open your Developer Hub application and click Administration.
- Go to the Plugins tab to view a list of installed plugins and related information.