# Plugins BunkerWeb comes with a plugin system to make it possible to easily add new features. Once a plugin is installed, you can manage it using additional settings defined by the plugin. ## Official plugins Here is the list of "official" plugins that we maintain (see the [bunkerweb-plugins](https://github.com/bunkerity/bunkerweb-plugins) repository for more information) : | Name | Version | Description | Link | | :------------: | :-----: | :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: | | **ClamAV** | 0.1 | Automatically scans uploaded files with the ClamAV antivirus engine and denies the request when a file is detected as malicious. | [bunkerweb-plugins/clamav](https://github.com/bunkerity/bunkerweb-plugins/tree/main/clamav) | | **CrowdSec** | 0.1 | CrowdSec bouncer for BunkerWeb. | [bunkerweb-plugins/crowdsec](https://github.com/bunkerity/bunkerweb-plugins/tree/main/crowdsec) | | **Discord** | 0.1 | Send security notifications to a Discord channel using a Webhook. | [bunkerweb-plugins/discord](https://github.com/bunkerity/bunkerweb-plugins/tree/main/discord) | | **Slack** | 0.1 | Send security notifications to a Slack channel using a Webhook. | [bunkerweb-plugins/slack](https://github.com/bunkerity/bunkerweb-plugins/tree/main/slack) | | **VirusTotal** | 0.1 | Automatically scans uploaded files with the VirusTotal API and denies the request when a file is detected as malicious. | [bunkerweb-plugins/virustotal](https://github.com/bunkerity/bunkerweb-plugins/tree/main/virustotal) | ## How to use a plugin ### Automatic If you want to quickly install external plugins, you can use the `EXTERNAL_PLUGIN_URLS` setting. It takes a list of URLs, separated with space, pointing to compressed (zip format) archive containing one or more plugin(s). You can use the following value if you want to automatically install the official plugins : `EXTERNAL_PLUGIN_URLS=https://github.com/bunkerity/bunkerweb-plugins/archive/refs/tags/v0.2.zip` ### Manual The first step is to install the plugin by putting the plugin files inside the corresponding `plugins` data folder, the procedure depends on your integration : === "Docker" When using the [Docker integration](/1.4/integrations/#docker), plugins must be written to the volume mounted on `/data`. The first thing to do is to create the plugins folder : ```shell mkdir -p ./bw-data/plugins ``` Then you can drop the plugins of your choice into that folder : ```shell git clone https://github.com/bunkerity/bunkerweb-plugins && \ cp -rp ./bunkerweb-plugins/* ./bw-data/plugins ``` Because BunkerWeb runs as an unprivileged user with UID and GID 101, you will need to edit the permissions : ```shell chown -R root:101 bw-data && \ chmod -R 770 bw-data ``` When starting the BunkerWeb container, you will need to mount the folder on `/data` : ```shell docker run \ ... -v "${PWD}/bw-data:/data" \ ... bunkerity/bunkerweb:1.4.2 ``` Here is the docker-compose equivalent : ```yaml mybunker: image: bunkerity/bunkerweb:1.4.2 volumes: - ./bw-data:/data ... ``` === "Docker autoconf" When using the [Docker autoconf integration](/1.4/integrations/#docker-autoconf), plugins must be written to the volume mounted on `/data`. The easiest way to do it is by starting the Docker autoconf stack with a folder mounted on `/data` (instead of a named volume). Once the stack is started, you can copy the plugins of your choice to the `plugins` folder from your host : ```shell git clone https://github.com/bunkerity/bunkerweb-plugins && \ cp -rp ./bunkerweb-plugins/* ./bw-data/plugins ``` Because BunkerWeb runs as an unprivileged user with UID and GID 101, you will need to edit the permissions : ```shell chown -R root:101 bw-data && \ chmod -R 770 bw-data ``` === "Swarm" When using the [Swarm integration](/1.4/integrations/#swarm), the easiest way of installing plugins is by using `docker exec` and downloading the plugins from the container. Execute a shell inside the autoconf container (use `docker ps` to get the name) : ```shell docker exec -it myautoconf /bin/bash ``` Once you have a shell inside the container, you can drop the plugins of your choice inside the `/data/plugins` folder : ```shell git clone https://github.com/bunkerity/bunkerweb-plugins && \ cp -rp ./bunkerweb-plugins/* /data/plugins ``` === "Kubernetes" When using the [Kubernetes integration](/1.4/integrations/#kubernetes), the easiest way of installing plugins is by using `kubectl exec` and downloading the plugins from the container. Execute a shell inside the autoconf container (use `kubectl get pods` to get the name) : ```shell kubectl exec -it myautoconf -- /bin/bash ``` Once you have a shell inside the container, you can drop the plugins of your choice inside the `/data/plugins` folder : ```shell git clone https://github.com/bunkerity/bunkerweb-plugins && \ cp -rp ./bunkerweb-plugins/* /data/plugins ``` === "Linux" When using the [Linux integration](/1.4/integrations/#linux), plugins must be written to the `/opt/bunkerweb/plugins` folder : ```shell git clone https://github.com/bunkerity/bunkerweb-plugins && \ cp -rp ./bunkerweb-plugins/* /data/plugins ``` === "Ansible" When using the [Ansible integration](/1.4/integrations/#ansible), you can use the `plugins` variable to set a local folder containing your plugins that will be copied to your BunkerWeb instances. Let's assume that you have plugins inside the `bunkerweb-plugins` folder : ```shell git clone https://github.com/bunkerity/bunkerweb-plugins ``` In your Ansible inventory, you can use the `plugins` variable to set the path of plugins folder : ```ini [mybunkers] 192.168.0.42 ... plugins="{{ playbook_dir }}/bunkerweb-plugins" ``` Or alternatively, in your playbook file : ```yaml - hosts: all become: true vars: - variables_env: "{{ playbook_dir }}/my_variables.env" roles: - bunkerweb ``` Run the playbook : ```shell ansible-playbook -i inventory.yml playbook.yml ``` ## Writing a plugin !!! tip "Existing plugins" If the documentation is not enough you can have a look at the existing source code of [official plugins](https://github.com/bunkerity/bunkerweb-plugins) and the [core plugins](https://github.com/bunkerity/bunkerweb/tree/master/core) (already included in BunkerWeb but they are plugins technically speaking). The first step is to create a folder that will contain the plugin : ```shell mkdir myplugin && \ cd myplugin ``` ### Metadata A file named **plugin.json** and written at the root of the plugin folder must contain metadata about the plugin. Here is an example : ```json { "id": "myplugin", "order": 42, "name": "My Plugin", "description": "Just an example plugin.", "version": "1.0", "settings": { "DUMMY_SETTING": { "context": "multisite", "default": "1234", "help": "Here is the help of the setting.", "id": "dummy-id", "label": "Dummy setting", "regex": "^.*$", "type": "text" } } "jobs": [ { "name": "my-job", "file": "my-job.py", "every": "hour" } ] } ``` Here are the details of the fields : | Field | Mandatory | Type | Description | | :-----------: | :-------: | :----: | :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `id` | yes | string | Internal ID for the plugin : must be unique among other plugins (including "core" ones) and contain only lowercase chars. | | `order` | yes | int | When the plugin should be executed during the access phase : `1` for whitelisting, `2` for blacklisting, `3` for "standard security feature" or `999` if your settings don't use the access phase. | | `name` | yes | string | Name of your plugin. | | `description` | yes | string | Description of your plugin. | | `version` | yes | string | Version of your plugin. | | `settings` | yes | dict | List of the settings of your plugin. | | `jobs` | no | list | List of the jobs of your plugin. | Each setting has the following fields (the key is the ID of the settings used in a configuration) : | Field | Mandatory | Type | Description | | :--------: | :-------: | :----: | :----------------------------------------------------------- | | `context` | yes | string | Context of the setting : `multisite` or `global`. | | `default` | yes | string | The default value of the setting. | | `help` | yes | string | Help text about the plugin (shown in web UI). | | `id` | yes | string | Internal ID used by the web UI for HTML elements. | | `label` | yes | string | Label shown by the web UI. | | `regex` | yes | string | The regex used to validate the value provided by the user. | | `type` | yes | string | The type of the field : `text`, `check` or `select`. | | `multiple` | no | string | Unique ID to group multiple settings with numbers as suffix. | | `select` | no | list | List of possible string values when `type` is `select`. | Each job has the following fields : | Field | Mandatory | Type | Description | | :-----: | :-------: | :----: | :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `name` | yes | string | Name of the job. | | `file` | yes | string | Name of the file inside the jobs folder. | | `every` | yes | string | Job scheduling frequency : `minute`, `hour`, `day`, `week` or `once` (no frequency, only once before (re)generating the configuration). | ### Configurations You can add custom NGINX configurations by adding a folder named **confs** with content similar to the [custom configurations](/1.4/quickstart-guide/#custom-configurations). Each subfolder inside the **confs** will contain [jinja2](https://jinja.palletsprojects.com) templates that will be generated and loaded at the corresponding context (`http`, `server-http` and `default-server-http`). Here is an example for a configuration template file inside the **confs/server-http** folder named **example.conf** : ```conf location /setting { default_type 'text/plain'; content_by_lua_block { ngx.say('{{ DUMMY_SETTING }}') } } ``` `{{ DUMMY_SETTING }}` will be replaced by the value of the `DUMMY_SETTING` chosen by the user of the plugin. ### LUA #### Main script Under the hood, BunkerWeb is using the [NGINX LUA module](https://github.com/openresty/lua-nginx-module) to execute code within NGINX. Plugins that need to execute code must provide a lua file at the root directory of the plugin folder using the `id` value of **plugin.json** as its name. Here is an example named **myplugin.lua** : ```lua local _M = {} _M.__index = _M local utils = require "utils" local datastore = require "datastore" local logger = require "logger" function _M.new() local self = setmetatable({}, _M) self.dummy = "dummy" return self, nil end function _M:init() logger.log(ngx.NOTICE, "MYPLUGIN", "init called") return true, "success" end function _M:access() logger.log(ngx.NOTICE, "MYPLUGIN", "access called") return true, "success", nil, nil end function _M:log() logger.log(ngx.NOTICE, "MYPLUGIN", "log called") return true, "success" end function _M:log_default() logger.log(ngx.NOTICE, "MYPLUGIN", "log_default called") return true, "success" end return _M ``` The declared functions are automatically called during specific contexts. Here are the details of each function : | Function | Context | Description | Return value | | :------: | :--------------------------------------------------------------------------: | :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `init` | [init_by_lua](https://github.com/openresty/lua-nginx-module#init_by_lua) | Called when NGINX just started or received a reload order. the typical use case is to prepare any data that will be used by your plugin. | `ret`, `err` | | `access` | [access_by_lua](https://github.com/openresty/lua-nginx-module#access_by_lua) | Called on each request received by the server. The typical use case is to do the security checks here and deny the request if needed. | `ret`, `err`, `return`, `status` | | `log` | [log_by_lua](https://github.com/openresty/lua-nginx-module#log_by_lua) | Called when a request has finished (and before it gets logged to the access logs). The typical use case is to make stats or compute counters for example. | `ret`, `err` | | `log_default` | [log_by_lua](https://github.com/openresty/lua-nginx-module#log_by_lua) | Same as `log` but only called on the default server. | `ret`, `err` | #### Libraries All directives from [NGINX LUA module](https://github.com/openresty/lua-nginx-module) are available. On top of that, you can use the LUA libraries included within BunkerWeb : see [this script](https://github.com/bunkerity/bunkerweb/blob/master/deps/clone.sh) for the complete list. If you need additional libraries, you can put them in the root folder of the plugin and access them by prefixing them with your plugin ID. Here is an example file named **mylibrary.lua** : ```lua local _M = {} _M.dummy = function () return "dummy" end return _M ``` And here is how you can use it from the **myplugin.lua** file : ```lua local mylibrary = require "myplugin.mylibrary" ... mylibrary.dummy() ... ``` #### Helpers Some helpers modules provide common helpful functions : - **datastore** : access the global shared data (key/value store) - **logger** : generate logs - **utils** : various useful functions To access the functions, you first need to **require** the module : ```lua ... local utils = require "utils" local datastore = require "datastore" local logger = require "logger" ... ``` Retrieve a setting value : ```lua local value, err = utils:get_variable("DUMMY_SETTING") if not value then logger.log(ngx.ERR, "MYPLUGIN", "can't retrieve setting DUMMY_SETTING : " .. err) else logger.log(ngx.NOTICE, "MYPLUGIN", "DUMMY_SETTING = " .. value) end ``` Store something in the cache : ```lua local ok, err = datastore:set("plugin_myplugin_something", "somevalue") if not value then logger.log(ngx.ERR, "MYPLUGIN", "can't save plugin_myplugin_something into datastore : " .. err) else logger.log(ngx.NOTICE, "MYPLUGIN", "successfully saved plugin_myplugin_something into datastore into datastore") end ``` Check if an IP address is global : ```lua local ret, err = utils.ip_is_global(ngx.var.remote_addr) if ret == nil then logger.log(ngx.ERR, "MYPLUGIN", "error while checking if IP " .. ngx.var.remote_addr .. " is global or not : " .. err) elseif not ret then logger.log(ngx.NOTICE, "MYPLUGIN", "IP " .. ngx.var.remote_addr .. " is not global") else logger.log(ngx.NOTICE, "MYPLUGIN", "IP " .. ngx.var.remote_addr .. " is global") end ``` !!! tip "More examples" If you want to see the full list of available functions, you can have a look at the files present in the [lua directory](https://github.com/bunkerity/bunkerweb/tree/master/lua) of the repository. ### Jobs BunkerWeb uses an internal job scheduler for periodic tasks like renewing certificates with certbot, downloading blacklists, downloading MMDB files, ... You can add tasks of your choice by putting them inside a subfolder named **jobs** and listing them in the **plugin.json** metadata file. Don't forget to add the execution permissions for everyone to avoid any problems when a user is cloning and installing your plugin. ### Plugin page Plugin pages are used to display information about your plugin and interact with the user inside the plugins section of the [web UI](/1.4/web-ui). Everything related to the web UI is located inside a subfolder named **ui** at the root directory of your plugin. A template file named **template.html** and located inside the **ui** subfolder contains the client code and logic to display your page. Another file named **actions.py** and also located inside the **ui** subfolder contains code that will be executed when the user is interacting with your page (filling a form for example). !!! info "Jinja 2 template" The **template.html** file is a Jinja2 template, please refer to the [Jinja2 documentation](https://jinja.palletsprojects.com) if needed. A plugin page can have a form that is used to submit data to the plugin. To get the values of the form, you need to put a **actions.py** file in the **ui** folder. Inside the file, **you must define a function that has the same name as the plugin**. This function will be called when the form is submitted. You can then use the **request** object (from the [Flask library](https://flask.palletsprojects.com)) to get the values of the form. The form's action must finish with **/plugins/<*plugin_id*>**. The helper function `url_for` will generate for you the prefix of the URL : `{{ url_for('plugins') }}/plugin_id`. If you want to display variables generated from your **actions.py** in your template file, you can return a dictionary with variables name as keys and variables value as values. Here is dummy example where we return a single variable : ```python def myplugin() : return {"foo": "bar"} ``` And we display it in the **template.html** file : ```html {% if foo %} Content of foo is : {{ foo }}. {% endif %} ``` Please note that every form submission is protected via a CSRF token, you will need to include the follow snippet into your forms : ```html ``` Retrieving user submitted data is pretty simple thanks to the request module provided by Flask : ```python from flask import request def myplugin() : my_form_value = request.form["my_form_input"] ``` !!! info "Python libraries" You can use Python libraries that are already available like : `Flask`, `Flask-Login`, `Flask-WTF`, `beautifulsoup4`, `docker`, `Jinja2`, `python-magic` and `requests`. To see the full list, you can have a look at the Web UI [requirements.txt](https://github.com/bunkerity/bunkerweb/blob/master/ui/requirements.txt). If you need external libraries, you can install them inside the **ui** folder of your plugin and then use the classical **import** directive.