Migrate docs from AsciiDoc to Markdown. The preview can be built after #212557 is merged. @florent-leborgne please tag reviewers, add the appropriate label(s), and take this out of draft when you're ready. Note: More files are deleted than added here because the content from some files was moved to [elastic/docs-content](https://github.com/elastic/docs-content). **What has moved to [elastic/docs-content](https://github.com/elastic/docs-content)?** Public-facing narrative and conceptual docs have moved. Most can now be found under the following directories in the new docs: - explore-analyze: Discover, Dashboards, Visualizations, Reporting, Alerting, dev tools... - deploy-manage: Stack management (Spaces, user management, remote clusters...) - troubleshooting: .... troubleshooting pages **What is staying in the Kibana repo?** - Reference content (= anything that is or could be auto-generated): Settings, syntax references - Release notes - Developer guide --------- Co-authored-by: Florent Le Borgne <florent.leborgne@elastic.co>
6.7 KiB
Configuration service [configuration-service]
{{kib}} provides ConfigService
for plugin developers that want to support adjustable runtime behavior for their plugins. Plugins can only read their own configuration values, it is not possible to access the configuration values from {{kib}} Core or other plugins directly.
::::{note} The Configuration service is only available server side. ::::
// in Legacy platform
const basePath = config.get('server.basePath');
// in Kibana Platform 'basePath' belongs to the http service
const basePath = core.http.basePath.get(request);
To have access to your plugin config, you should:
- Declare plugin-specific
configPath
(will fallback to pluginid
if not specified) in your plugin definition. - Export schema validation for the config from plugin’s main file. Schema is mandatory. If a plugin reads from the config without schema declaration,
ConfigService
will throw an error.
my_plugin/server/index.ts
import { schema, TypeOf } from '@kbn/config-schema';
export const plugin = …
export const config = {
schema: schema.object(…),
};
export type MyPluginConfigType = TypeOf<typeof config.schema>;
- Read config value exposed via
PluginInitializerContext
:
my_plugin/server/plugin.ts
import type { PluginInitializerContext } from '@kbn/core/server';
export class MyPlugin {
constructor(initializerContext: PluginInitializerContext) {
this.config$ = initializerContext.config.create<MyPluginConfigType>();
// or if config is optional:
this.config$ = initializerContext.config.createIfExists<MyPluginConfigType>();
}
...
}
If your plugin also has a client-side part, you can also expose configuration properties to it using the configuration exposeToBrowser
allow-list property.
my_plugin/server/index.ts
import { schema, TypeOf } from '@kbn/config-schema';
import type { PluginConfigDescriptor } from '@kbn/core/server';
const configSchema = schema.object({
secret: schema.string({ defaultValue: 'Only on server' }),
uiProp: schema.string({ defaultValue: 'Accessible from client' }),
});
type ConfigType = TypeOf<typeof configSchema>;
export const config: PluginConfigDescriptor<ConfigType> = {
exposeToBrowser: {
uiProp: true,
},
schema: configSchema,
};
Configuration containing only the exposed properties will be then available on the client-side using the plugin’s initializerContext
:
my_plugin/public/index.ts
interface ClientConfigType {
uiProp: string;
}
export class MyPlugin implements Plugin<PluginSetup, PluginStart> {
constructor(private readonly initializerContext: PluginInitializerContext) {}
public async setup(core: CoreSetup, deps: {}) {
const config = this.initializerContext.config.get<ClientConfigType>();
}
All plugins are considered enabled by default. If you want to disable your plugin, you could declare the enabled
flag in the plugin config. This is a special {{kib}} Platform key. {{kib}} reads its value and won’t create a plugin instance if enabled: false
.
export const config = {
schema: schema.object({ enabled: schema.boolean({ defaultValue: false }) }),
};
Handle plugin configuration deprecations [handle-plugin-configuration-deprecations]
If your plugin has deprecated configuration keys, you can describe them using the deprecations
config descriptor field. Deprecations are managed on a per-plugin basis, meaning you don’t need to specify the whole property path, but use the relative path from your plugin’s configuration root.
my_plugin/server/index.ts
import { schema, TypeOf } from '@kbn/config-schema';
import type { PluginConfigDescriptor } from '@kbn/core/server';
const configSchema = schema.object({
newProperty: schema.string({ defaultValue: 'Some string' }),
});
type ConfigType = TypeOf<typeof configSchema>;
export const config: PluginConfigDescriptor<ConfigType> = {
schema: configSchema,
deprecations: ({ rename, unused }) => [
rename('oldProperty', 'newProperty'),
unused('someUnusedProperty'),
],
};
In some cases, accessing the whole configuration for deprecations is necessary. For these edge cases, renameFromRoot
and unusedFromRoot
are also accessible when declaring deprecations.
my_plugin/server/index.ts
export const config: PluginConfigDescriptor<ConfigType> = {
schema: configSchema,
deprecations: ({ renameFromRoot, unusedFromRoot }) => [
renameFromRoot('oldplugin.property', 'myplugin.property'),
unusedFromRoot('oldplugin.deprecated'),
],
};
Validating your configuration based on context references [validating-your-configuration-based-on-context-references]
Some features require special configuration when running in different modes (dev/prod/dist, or even serverless). For purpose, core injects the following references in the validation’s context:
Context Reference | Potential values | Description |
---|---|---|
dev |
true |false |
Is Kibana running in Dev mode? |
prod |
true |false |
Is Kibana running in Production mode (running from binary)? |
dist |
true |false |
Is Kibana running from a distributable build (not running from source)? |
serverless |
true |false |
Is Kibana running in Serverless offering? |
version |
8.9.0 |
The current version of Kibana |
buildNum |
12345 |
The build number |
branch |
main |
The current branch running |
buildSha |
12345 |
The build SHA (typically refers to the last commit’s SHA) |
buildDate |
2023-05-15T23:12:09+0000 |
The ISO 8601 date of the build |
To use any of the references listed above in a config validation schema, they can be accessed via schema.contextRef('{{CONTEXT_REFERENCE}}')
:
export const config = {
schema: schema.object({
// Enabled by default in Dev mode
enabled: schema.boolean({ defaultValue: schema.contextRef('dev') }),
// Setting only allowed in the Serverless offering
plansForWorldPeace: schema.conditional(
schema.contextRef('serverless'),
true,
schema.string({ defaultValue: 'Free hugs' }),
schema.never()
),
}),
};
For Serverless vs. Traditional configuration, you are encouraged to use the offeringBasedSchema
helper:
import { schema, offeringBasedSchema } from '@kbn/config-schema'
export const config = {
schema: schema.object({
// Enabled by default in Dev mode
enabled: schema.boolean({ defaultValue: schema.contextRef('dev') }),
// Setting only allowed in the Serverless offering
plansForWorldPeace: offeringBasedSchema({
serverless: schema.string({ defaultValue: 'Free hugs' }),
}),
}),
};