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elastic-package

elastic-package is a command line tool, written in Go, used for developing Elastic packages. It can help you lint, format, test, build, and promote your packages. Learn about each of these and other features in Commands below.

Currently, elastic-package only supports packages of type Elastic Integrations.

Getting started

Download and build the latest master of elastic-package binary:

git clone https://github.com/elastic/elastic-package.git
make build

Alternatively, you may use go get but you will not be able to use the elastic-package version command.

go get github.com/elastic/elastic-package

Change directory to the package under development. Note: an integration is a specific type of a package.

cd integrations
cd package/my-package

Run the help command and see available commands:

elastic-package help

Commands

elastic-package currently offers the commands listed below.

Some commands have a global context, meaning that they can be executed from anywhere and they will have the same result. Other commands have a package context; these must be executed from somewhere under a package's root folder and they will operate on the contents of that package.

For more details on a specific command, run elastic-package help <command>.

elastic-package help

Context: global

Use this command to get a listing of all commands available under elastic-package and a brief description of what each command does.

elastic-package build

Context: package

Use this command to build a package. Built packages are stored in the build/ folder located at the root folder of the local Git repository checkout that contains your package folder.

Built packages are served up by the Elastic Package Registry running locally (see elastic-package stack). If you want a local package to be served up by the local Elastic Package Registry, make sure to build that package first using elastic-package build.

Built packages can also be published to the package-storage repository.

elastic-package check

Context: package

Use this command to run the format, lint, and build commands all at once, in that order.

elastic-package format

Context: package

Use this command to format the contents of a package.

elastic-package lint

Context: package

Use this command to validate the contents of a package using the package specification.

elastic-package export

Context: package

Use this command to export assets relevant for the package, e.g. Kibana dashboards.

elastic-package promote

Context: global

Use this command to promote packages from one stage of the Package Registry to another.

⚠️ This command is intended primarily for use by administrators.

GitHub authorization

The promote command requires access to the GitHub API to open pull requests or check authorized account data. The tool uses the GitHub token to authorize user's call to API. The token can be stored in the ~/.elastic/github.token file or passed via the GITHUB_TOKEN environment variable.

Here are the instructions on how to create your own personal access token (PAT): https://docs.github.com/en/github/authenticating-to-github/creating-a-personal-access-token

Make sure you have enabled the following scopes:

  • public_repo — to open pull requests on GitHub repositories.
  • read:user and user:email — to read your user profile information from GitHub in order to populate pull requests appropriately.

elastic-package stack

Context: global

Use this command to spin up a Docker-based Elastic Stack consisting of Elasticsearch, Kibana, and the Package Registry. By default the latest released version of the stack is spun up but it is possible to specify a different version, including SNAPSHOT versions.

elastic-package test

Context: package

Use this command to run tests on a package. Currently, there are two types of tests available.

Pipeline Tests

These tests allow you to exercise any Ingest Node Pipelines defined by your packages.

For details on how to configure pipeline test for a package, see the HOWTO guide.

System Tests

These tests allow you to test a package's ability to ingest data end-to-end.

For details on how to configure amd run system tests, see the HOWTO guide.

elastic-package version

Context: global

Use this command to print the version of elastic-package that you have installed. This is especially useful when reporting bugs.

Development

Even though the project is "go-gettable", there is the Makefile present, which can be used to build, format or vendor source code:

make build - build the tool source

make format - format the Go code

make vendor - vendor code of dependencies

make check - one-liner, used by CI to verify if source code is ready to be pushed to the repository

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