| name | golem-manage-plugins |
| description | Managing Golem plugins — listing available plugins, installing and configuring plugins via golem.yaml or CLI, and understanding built-in plugins like the OTLP exporter. |
Managing Golem Plugins
Plugins extend component and agent behavior without modifying application code. Currently, the only plugin type is Oplog Processor — a WASM component that receives and processes the operation log entries produced by agents (e.g., exporting traces, logs, or metrics).
Built-in Plugins
Golem ships with the following built-in plugins, automatically registered and available in every environment:
| Plugin Name | Type | Description |
|---|
golem-otlp-exporter | Oplog Processor | Exports agent telemetry (traces, logs, metrics) to any OTLP-compatible collector (Jaeger, Grafana, Datadog, etc.) |
golem-otlp-exporter Parameters
| Parameter | Required | Description |
|---|
endpoint | Yes | OTLP collector endpoint URL (must start with http:// or https://) |
headers | No | Comma-separated key=value pairs sent as HTTP headers (e.g., x-api-key=secret,auth=token) |
signals | No | Comma-separated telemetry types to export: traces, logs, metrics. Default: traces |
service-name-mode | No | How to set the service.name attribute: agent-id (default) uses the worker ID, agent-type uses the component ID |
Installing Plugins via golem.yaml
Add plugins to a component or agent in golem.yaml using the plugins field:
components:
my-app:service:
plugins:
- name: golem-otlp-exporter
version: "1.1.5"
parameters:
endpoint: "http://localhost:4318"
signals: "traces,logs,metrics"
agents:
MyAgent:
plugins:
- name: golem-otlp-exporter
version: "1.1.5"
parameters:
endpoint: "https://otel-collector.example.com:4318"
headers: "x-api-key=my-secret-key"
signals: "traces,logs"
service-name-mode: "agent-type"
Plugin Installation Fields
| Field | Required | Description |
|---|
name | Yes | Plugin name (e.g., golem-otlp-exporter) |
version | Yes | Plugin version string |
account | No | Account that owns the plugin (omit for built-in plugins) |
parameters | No | Key-value map of plugin-specific configuration |
Template Substitution in Plugin Parameters
Plugin parameter values support Jinja-style template substitution using {{ VAR_NAME }}. At deploy time, these are resolved against the host machine's environment variables:
plugins:
- name: golem-otlp-exporter
version: "1.1.5"
parameters:
endpoint: "{{ OTLP_ENDPOINT }}"
headers: "x-api-key={{ OTLP_API_KEY }}"
If a referenced variable is missing, deployment fails with the list of unresolved variables. See the golem-add-env-vars skill for full details on the substitution syntax.
Using Templates
Plugins can be defined in componentTemplates and inherited via the cascade system:
componentTemplates:
observability:
plugins:
- name: golem-otlp-exporter
version: "1.1.5"
parameters:
endpoint: "http://localhost:4318"
signals: "traces,logs,metrics"
components:
my-app:service:
templates: [rust, observability]
Plugin Merge Modes
When plugins are inherited from templates, the pluginsMergeMode field controls how they combine:
| Mode | Behavior |
|---|
append (default) | Add new plugins after inherited ones |
prepend | Add new plugins before inherited ones |
replace | Discard inherited plugins, use only the ones defined here |
components:
my-app:service:
templates: [observability]
pluginsMergeMode: replace
plugins: []
Per-environment Plugin Configuration
Use presets and environments to vary plugin parameters across deployment targets:
CLI outputs mask plugin parameter values by sensitive-looking parameter names. If a plugin parameter contains a secret, use a name containing words such as secret, token, password, or key so commands like component get, component manifest-trace, and deploy mask it by default.
components:
my-app:service:
plugins:
- name: golem-otlp-exporter
version: "1.1.5"
parameters:
endpoint: "http://localhost:4318"
presets:
production:
pluginsMergeMode: replace
plugins:
- name: golem-otlp-exporter
version: "1.1.5"
parameters:
endpoint: "https://otel.prod.example.com:4318"
headers: "x-api-key={{ OTLP_API_KEY }}"
signals: "traces,logs,metrics"
environments:
local:
server: local
componentPresets: debug
production:
server: cloud
componentPresets: production
Managing Plugins via CLI
Listing Available Plugins
golem plugin list # List all registered plugins
Installing a Plugin on a Component (imperative)
golem component plugin install \
--component-name my-app:service \
--plugin-name golem-otlp-exporter \
--plugin-version "1.1.5" \
--priority 0 \
--param endpoint=http://localhost:4318 \
--param signals=traces,logs
Viewing Installed Plugins
golem component plugin get \
--component-name my-app:service
Updating a Plugin
golem component plugin update \
--component-name my-app:service \
--plugin-to-update 0 \
--priority 1 \
--param endpoint=https://new-endpoint:4318
Uninstalling a Plugin
golem component plugin uninstall \
--component-name my-app:service \
--plugin-to-update 0
Declarative vs Imperative
- Declarative (golem.yaml): Preferred for repeatable setups. Plugins are installed/updated on
golem deploy. Configuration lives in version control.
- Imperative (CLI): Useful for quick one-off installations, debugging, or environments where the manifest is not available.
When using golem deploy, the manifest is the source of truth — any plugins defined in golem.yaml are reconciled with the deployed state.
Plugin Priority
When multiple plugins are installed, priority determines their execution order. Plugins with higher priority values are applied first. Priority is set explicitly via the CLI's --priority flag; in golem.yaml, the order in the plugins list determines priority (first entry = highest priority).
Documentation
Related Skills
- For enabling the built-in
golem-otlp-exporter plugin and exporting telemetry from agents, load the language-specific skill: golem-enable-otlp-rust, golem-enable-otlp-ts, golem-enable-otlp-scala, or golem-enable-otlp-moonbit