It's also possible to use complex settings like this:
```yaml
steps:
- name: plugin
image: foo/plugin
settings:
complex:
abc: 2
list:
- 2
- 3
```
Values like this are converted to JSON and then passed to your plugin. In the example above, the environment variable `PLUGIN_COMPLEX` would contain `{"abc": "2", "list": [ "2", "3" ]}`.
### Secrets
Secrets should be passed as settings too. Therefore, users should use [`from_secret`](../40-secrets.md#use-secrets-in-settings-and-environment).
## Plugin library
For Go, we provide a plugin library you can use to get easy access to internal env vars and your settings. See <https://codeberg.org/woodpecker-plugins/go-plugin>.
This provides a brief tutorial for creating a Woodpecker webhook plugin, using simple shell scripting, to make HTTP requests during the build pipeline.
### What end users will see
The below example demonstrates how we might configure a webhook plugin in the YAML file:
```yaml
steps:
- name: webhook
image: foo/webhook
settings:
url: https://example.com
method: post
body: |
hello world
```
### Write the logic
Create a simple shell script that invokes curl using the YAML configuration parameters, which are passed to the script as environment variables in uppercase and prefixed with `PLUGIN_`.
```bash
#!/bin/sh
curl \
-X ${PLUGIN_METHOD} \
-d ${PLUGIN_BODY} \
${PLUGIN_URL}
```
### Package it
Create a Dockerfile that adds your shell script to the image, and configures the image to execute your shell script as the main entrypoint.
```dockerfile
# please pin the version, e.g. alpine:3.19
FROM alpine
ADD script.sh /bin/
RUN chmod +x /bin/script.sh
RUN apk -Uuv add curl ca-certificates
ENTRYPOINT /bin/script.sh
```
Build and publish your plugin to the Docker registry. Once published, your plugin can be shared with the broader Woodpecker community.
```shell
docker build -t foo/webhook .
docker push foo/webhook
```
Execute your plugin locally from the command line to verify it is working:
```shell
docker run --rm \
-e PLUGIN_METHOD=post \
-e PLUGIN_URL=https://example.com \
-e PLUGIN_BODY="hello world" \
foo/webhook
```
## Best practices
- Build your plugin for different architectures to allow many users to use them.
At least, you should support `amd64` and `arm64`.
- Provide binaries for users using the `local` backend.
These should also be built for different OS/architectures.
- Use [built-in env vars](../50-environment.md#built-in-environment-variables) where possible.
- Do not use any configuration except settings (and internal env vars). This means: Don't require using [`environment`](../50-environment.md) and don't require specific secret names.
- Add a `docs.md` file, listing all your settings and plugin metadata ([example](https://github.com/woodpecker-ci/plugin-git/blob/main/docs.md)).
- Add your plugin to the [plugin index](/plugins) using your `docs.md` ([the example above in the index](https://woodpecker-ci.org/plugins/Git%20Clone)).