This is the Go SDK for the Bufplugin framework.
bufplugin-go
currently provides the check,
checkutil, and
checktest packages to make it simple to
author and test custom lint and breaking change plugins. It wraps the bufplugin
API with
pluginrpc-go in easy-to-use interfaces and concepts
that organize around the standard
protoreflect API that
powers most of the Go Protobuf ecosystem. bufplugin-go
is also the framework that the Buf team
uses to author all of the builtin lint and breaking change rules within the
Buf CLI - we've made sure that bufplugin-go
is powerful enough
to represent the most complex lint and breaking change rules while keeping it as simple as possible
for you to use. If you want to author a lint or breaking change plugin today, you should use
bufplugin-go
.
A plugin is just a binary on your system that implements the
Bufplugin API. Once you've installed a plugin, simply add a
reference to it and its rules within your buf.yaml
. For example, if you've installed the
buf-plugin-timestamp-suffix example plugin
on your $PATH
:
version: v2
lint:
use:
- TIMESTAMP_SUFFIX
plugins:
- plugin: buf-plugin-timestamp-suffix
options:
timestamp_suffix: _time # set to the suffix you'd like to enforce
All configuration works as you'd expect: you can
continue to configure use
, except
, ignore
, ignore_only
and use // buf:lint:ignore
comment
ignores, just as you would for the builtin rules.
Plugins can be named whatever you'd like them to be, however we'd recommend following the convention
of prefixing your binary names with buf-plugin-
for clarity.
Given the following file:
# foo.proto
syntax = "proto3";
package foo;
import "google/protobuf/timestamp.proto";
message Foo {
google.protobuf.Timestamp start = 1;
google.protobuf.Timestamp end_time = 2;
}
The following error will be returned from buf lint
:
foo.proto:8:3:Fields of type google.protobuf.Timestamp must end in "_time" but field name was "start". (buf-plugin-timestamp-suffix)
In this case, examples are worth a thousand words, and we recommend you read the examples in check/internal/example/cmd to get started:
- buf-plugin-timestamp-suffix: A simple
plugin that implements a single lint rule,
TIMESTAMP_SUFFIX
, that checks that allgoogle.protobuf.Timestamp
fields have a consistent suffix for their field name. This suffix is configurable via plugin options. - buf-plugin-field-lower-snake-case:
A simple plugin that implements a single lint rule,
PLUGIN_FIELD_LOWER_SNAKE_CASE
, that checks that all field names arelower_snake_case
. - buf-plugin-field-option-safe-for-ml:
Likely the most interesting of the examples. A plugin that implements a lint rule
FIELD_OPTION_SAFE_FOR_ML_SET
and a breaking change ruleFIELD_OPTION_SAFE_FOR_ML_STAYS_TRUE
, both belonging to theFIELD_OPTION_SAFE_FOR_ML
category. This enforces properties around an example custom optionacme.option.v1.safe_for_ml
, meant to denote whether or not a field is safe to use in ML models. An organization may want to say that all fields must be explicitly marked as safe or unsafe across all of their schemas, and no field changes from safe to unsafe. This plugin would enforce this organization-side. The example shows off implementing multiple rules, categorizing them, and taking custom option values into account. - buf-plugin-syntax-specified: A simple
plugin that implements a single lint rule,
PLUGIN_SYNTAX_SPECIFIED
, that checks that all files have an explicitsyntax
declaration. This demonstrates using additional metadata present in thebufplugin
API beyond what aFileDescriptorProto
provides.
All of these examples have a main.go
plugin implementation, and a main_test.go
test file that
uses the checktest
package to test the plugin behavior. The checktest
package uses
protocompile to compile test .proto
files on the fly,
run them against your rules, and compare the resulting annotations against an expectation.
Here's a short example of a plugin implementation - this is all it takes:
package main
import (
"context"
"buf.build/go/bufplugin/check"
"buf.build/go/bufplugin/check/checkutil"
"google.golang.org/protobuf/reflect/protoreflect"
)
func main() {
check.Main(
&check.Spec{
Rules: []*check.RuleSpec{
{
ID: "PLUGIN_FIELD_LOWER_SNAKE_CASE",
Default: true,
Purpose: "Checks that all field names are lower_snake_case.",
Type: check.RuleTypeLint,
Handler: checkutil.NewFieldRuleHandler(checkFieldLowerSnakeCase, checkutil.WithoutImports()),
},
},
},
)
}
func checkFieldLowerSnakeCase(
_ context.Context,
responseWriter check.ResponseWriter,
_ check.Request,
fieldDescriptor protoreflect.FieldDescriptor,
) error {
fieldName := string(fieldDescriptor.Name())
fieldNameToLowerSnakeCase := toLowerSnakeCase(fieldName)
if fieldName != fieldNameToLowerSnakeCase {
responseWriter.AddAnnotation(
check.WithMessagef(
"Field name %q should be lower_snake_case, such as %q.",
fieldName,
fieldNameToLowerSnakeCase,
),
check.WithDescriptor(fieldDescriptor),
)
}
return nil
}
func toLowerSnakeCase(fieldName string) string {
// The actual logic for toLowerSnakeCase would go here.
return "TODO"
}
Bufplugin is currently in beta, and may change as we work with early adopters. We're intending to ship a stable v1.0 by the end of 2024. However, we believe the API is near its final shape.
Offered under the Apache 2 license.