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Version: v3.0.x LTS

Developing for Zowe CLI

Developing for Zowe CLI

Extend Zowe™ 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-insContribution guidelines
Conventions and best practices for creating packages and plug-ins for Zowe CLIPackage and plug-in guidelines
Guidelines for running tests on Zowe CLITesting guidelines
Guidelines for running tests on the plug-ins that you buildPlug-in testing guidelines
Versioning conventions for Zowe CLI and plug-insVersioning 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:

  1. Programmatic API: Node.js programmatic APIs to be called by your handler or other Node.js applications.
  2. Command definition: The syntax definition for your command.
  3. 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