DevelopersBuild a pluginSign a plugin

Sign a plugin

Signing a plugin allows Grafana to verify the authenticity of the plugin with signature verification. This gives users a way to make sure plugins haven’t been tampered with. All Grafana Labs-authored backend plugins, including Enterprise plugins, are signed.

Important: Future versions of Grafana will require all plugins to be signed.

Before you can sign your plugin, you need to decide whether you want to sign it as a public or a private plugin.

If you want to make your plugin publicly available outside of your organization, you need to sign your plugin under a community or commercial signature level. Public plugins are available from

For more information on how to install public plugin, refer to Install Grafana plugins.

If you intend to only use the plugin within your organization, you can to sign it under a private signature level.

Generate an API key

To verify ownership of your plugin, you need to generate an API key that you’ll use every time you need to sign a new version of your plugin.

  1. .

  2. Make sure that the first part of the plugin ID matches the slug of your Grafana Cloud account.

    You can find the plugin ID in the plugin.json file inside your plugin directory. For example, if your account slug is acmecorp, you need to prefix the plugin ID with acmecorp-.

Sign a public plugin

Public plugins need to be reviewed by the Grafana team before you can sign them.

  1. Submit your plugin for review by creating a pull request in the grafana-plugin-repository.

  2. When your plugin is approved, you’re granted a plugin signature level. Without a plugin signature level, you won’t be able to sign your plugin.

  3. In your plugin directory, sign the plugin with the API key you just created. Grafana Toolkit creates a MANIFEST.txt file in the dist directory of your plugin.

    export GRAFANA_API_KEY=<YOUR_API_KEY>
    npx @grafana/toolkit plugin:sign
    

Sign a private plugin

  1. In your plugin directory, sign the plugin with the API key you just created. Grafana Toolkit creates a MANIFEST.txt file in the dist directory of your plugin.

    The rootUrls flag accepts a comma-separated list of URLs to the Grafana instances where you intend to install the plugin.

    export GRAFANA_API_KEY=<YOUR_API_KEY>
    npx @grafana/toolkit plugin:sign --rootUrls https://example.com/grafana
    

Plugin signature levels

To sign a plugin, you need to decide the signature level you want to sign it under. The signature level of your plugin determines how you can distribute it.

You can sign your plugin under three different signature levels.

Plugin Level Paid Subscription Required? Description
Private No;
Free of charge

You can create and sign a Private Plugin for any technology at no charge.

Private Plugins are for use on your own Grafana. They may not be distributed to the Grafana community, and are not published in the Grafana catalog.

Community No;
Free of charge

You can create, sign and distribute plugins at no charge, provided that all dependent technologies are open source and not for profit.

Community Plugins are published in the official Grafana catalog, and are available to the Grafana community.

Commercial Yes;
Commercial Plugin Subscription required

You can create, sign and distribute plugins with dependent technologies that are closed source or commercially backed, by entering into a Commercial Plugin Subscription with Grafana Labs.

Commercial Plugins are published on the official Grafana catalog, and are available to the Grafana community.

For instructions on how to sign a plugin under the Community and Commercial signature level, refer to Sign a public plugin.

For instructions on how to sign a plugin under the Private signature level, refer to Sign a private plugin.

Plugin manifest

For Grafana to verify the digital signature of a plugin, the plugin must include a signed manifest file, MANIFEST.txt. The signed manifest file contains two sections:

  • Signed message - The signed message contains plugin metadata and plugin files with their respective checksums (SHA256).
  • Digital signature - The digital signature is created by encrypting the signed message using a private key. Grafana has a public key built-in that can be used to verify that the digital signature have been encrypted using expected private key.

Example manifest file:

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA512

{
  "manifestVersion": "2.0.0",
  "signatureType": "community",
  "signedByOrg": "myorgid",
  "signedByOrgName": "My Org",
  "plugin": "myorgid-simple-panel",
  "version": "1.0.0",
  "time": 1602753404133,
  "keyId": "7e4d0c6a708866e7",
  "files": {
    "LICENSE": "12ab7a0961275f5ce7a428e662279cf49bab887d12b2ff7bfde738346178c28c",
    "module.js.LICENSE.txt": "0d8f66cd4afb566cb5b7e1540c68f43b939d3eba12ace290f18abc4f4cb53ed0",
    "module.js.map": "8a4ede5b5847dec1c6c30008d07bef8a049408d2b1e862841e30357f82e0fa19",
    "plugin.json": "13be5f2fd55bee787c5413b5ba6a1fae2dfe8d2df6c867dadc4657b98f821f90",
    "README.md": "2d90145b28f22348d4f50a81695e888c68ebd4f8baec731fdf2d79c8b187a27f",
    "module.js": "b4b6945bbf3332b08e5e1cb214a5b85c82557b292577eb58c8eb1703bc8e4577"
  }
}
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: OpenPGP.js v4.10.1
Comment: https://openpgpjs.org

wqEEARMKAAYFAl+IE3wACgkQfk0ManCIZudpdwIHTCqjVzfm7DechTa7BTbd
+dNIQtwh8Tv2Q9HksgN6c6M9nbQTP0xNHwxSxHOI8EL3euz/OagzWoiIWulG
7AQo7FYCCQGucaLPPK3tsWaeFqVKy+JtQhrJJui23DAZLSYQYZlKQ+nFqc9x
T6scfmuhWC/TOcm83EVoCzIV3R5dOTKHqkjIUg==
=GdNq
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----

Troubleshooting issues while signing your plugin

Why am I getting a “Modified signature” in Grafana?

Due to an issue when signing the plugin on Windows, grafana-toolkit generates an invalid MANIFEST.txt. You can fix this by replacing all double backslashes, \\, with a forward slash, / in the MANIFEST.txt file. You need to do this every time you sign your plugin.

Error signing manifest: Field is required: rootUrls

If you’re trying to sign a public plugin, this means that your plugin doesn’t have a plugin signature level assigned to it yet. A Grafana team member will assign a signature level to your plugin once it has been reviewed and approved. For more information, refer to Sign a public plugin.

If you’re trying to sign a private plugin, this means that you need to add a rootUrls flag to the plugin:sign command. The rootUrls must match the root_url configuration. For more information, refer to Sign a private plugin.

If you still get this error, make sure that the API key was generated by a Grafana Cloud account that matches the first part of the plugin ID.