This template is a starting point for building an app plugin with scenes for Grafana.
App plugins can let you create a custom out-of-the-box monitoring experience by custom pages, nested datasources and panel plugins.
@grafana/scenes is a framework to enable versatile app plugins implementation. It provides an easy way to build apps that resemble Grafana's dashboarding experience, including template variables support, versatile layouts, panels rendering and more.
To learn more about @grafana/scenes usage please refer to the documentation
- An example of a simple scene. See Home scene
- An example of a scene with tabs. See Scene with tabs
- An example of a scene with drill down. See Scene with drill down
-
Install dependencies
npm install
-
Build plugin in development mode and run in watch mode
npm run dev
-
Build plugin in production mode
npm run build
-
Run the tests (using Jest)
# Runs the tests and watches for changes, requires git init first npm run test # Exits after running all the tests npm run test:ci
-
Spin up a Grafana instance and run the plugin inside it (using Docker)
npm run server
-
Run the E2E tests (using Cypress)
# Spins up a Grafana instance first that we tests against npm run server # Starts the tests npm run e2e
-
Run the linter
npm run lint # or npm run lint:fix
When distributing a Grafana plugin either within the community or privately the plugin must be signed so the Grafana application can verify its authenticity. This can be done with the @grafana/sign-plugin
package.
Note: It's not necessary to sign a plugin during development. The docker development environment that is scaffolded with @grafana/create-plugin
caters for running the plugin without a signature.
Before signing a plugin please read the Grafana plugin publishing and signing criteria documentation carefully.
@grafana/create-plugin
has added the necessary commands and workflows to make signing and distributing a plugin via the grafana plugins catalog as straightforward as possible.
Before signing a plugin for the first time please consult the Grafana plugin signature levels documentation to understand the differences between the types of signature level.
- Create a Grafana Cloud account.
- Make sure that the first part of the plugin ID matches the slug of your Grafana Cloud account.
- You can find the plugin ID in the
plugin.json
file inside your plugin directory. For example, if your account slug isacmecorp
, you need to prefix the plugin ID withacmecorp-
.
- You can find the plugin ID in the
- Create a Grafana Cloud API key with the
PluginPublisher
role. - Keep a record of this API key as it will be required for signing a plugin
If the plugin is using the github actions supplied with @grafana/create-plugin
signing a plugin is included out of the box. The release workflow can prepare everything to make submitting your plugin to Grafana as easy as possible. Before being able to sign the plugin however a secret needs adding to the Github repository.
- Please navigate to "settings > secrets > actions" within your repo to create secrets.
- Click "New repository secret"
- Name the secret "GRAFANA_API_KEY"
- Paste your Grafana Cloud API key in the Secret field
- Click "Add secret"
To trigger the workflow we need to push a version tag to github. This can be achieved with the following steps:
- Run
npm version <major|minor|patch>
- Run
git push origin main --follow-tags