Developing for Zowe CLI
Developing for Zowe CLI
Extend Zoweâ„¢ CLI by developing plug-ins and contributing code to Zowe CLI core or existing plug-ins.
How to contribute​
Contribute to Zowe CLI in the following ways:
- Add new commands, options, or other improvements to the core CLI.
- Develop a Zowe CLI plug-in.
You might want to contribute to Zowe CLI to accomplish the following objectives:
- Provide new scriptable functionality for yourself, your organization, or to a broader community.
- Make use of Zowe CLI infrastructure (such as profiles and programmatic APIs).
- Participate in the Zowe CLI community space.
Getting started​
If you want to start working with the code immediately, review the Readme file in the Zowe CLI core repository and the Zowe contribution guidelines. To review a sample plug-in that adheres to the guidelines for contributing to Zowe CLI projects, see the zowe-cli-sample-plugin GitHub repository.
Contribution guidelines​
The Zowe CLI contribution guidelines contain standards and conventions for developing Zowe CLI plug-ins.
The guidelines contain critical information about working with the code, running/writing/maintaining automated tests, developing consistent syntax in your plug-in, and ensuring that your plug-in integrates with Zowe CLI properly.
| For more information about ... | See: |
|---|---|
| General guidelines that apply to contributing to Zowe CLI and plug-ins | Contribution guidelines |
| Conventions and best practices for creating packages and plug-ins for Zowe CLI | Package and plug-in guidelines |
| Guidelines for running tests on Zowe CLI | Testing guidelines |
| Guidelines for running tests on the plug-ins that you build | Plug-in testing guidelines |
| Versioning conventions for Zowe CLI and plug-ins | Versioning guidelines |
Plug-in development overview​
At a high level, a plug-in must have imperative-framework configuration (see a sample here). This configuration is discovered by imperative-framework through the package.json imperative key.
A Zowe CLI plug-in minimally contains the following:
- Programmatic API: Node.js programmatic APIs to be called by your handler or other Node.js applications.
- Command definition: The syntax definition for your command.
- Handler implementation: To invoke your programmatic API to display information in the format that you defined in the definition.
Imperative CLI Framework documentation​
Imperative CLI Framework documentation is a key source of information to learn about the features of Imperative CLI Framework, the code framework that you use to build plug-ins for Zowe CLI. Refer to these supplementary documents during development to learn about specific features such as:
- Auto-generated help
- JSON responses
- User profiles
- Logging, progress bars, experimental commands, and more
- Authentication mechanisms