rabbitmq-plugins - Man Page

command line tool for managing RabbitMQ plugins

Synopsis

rabbitmq-plugins[-q] [-s] [-l] [-n node] [-t timeout] command [command_options]

Description

rabbitmq-plugins is a command line tool for managing RabbitMQ plugins. See the RabbitMQ Plugins guide for an overview of RabbitMQ plugins and how they are used.

rabbitmq-plugins allows the operator to enable, disable and inspect plugins. It must be run by a user with write permissions to the RabbitMQ configuration directory.

Plugins can depend on other plugins. rabbitmq-plugins resolves the dependencies and enables or disables all dependencies so that the user doesn't have to manage them explicitly. Plugins listed on the rabbitmq-plugins command line are marked as explicitly enabled; dependent plugins are marked as implicitly enabled. Implicitly enabled plugins are automatically disabled again when they are no longer required.

The enable, disable, and set commands will update the plugins file and then attempt to connect to the broker and ensure it is running all enabled plugins. By default if it is not possible to connect to and authenticate with the target node (for example if it is stopped), the operation will fail. If rabbitmq-plugins is used on the same host as the target node, --offline can be specified to make rabbitmq-plugins resolve and update plugin state directly (without contacting the node). Such changes will only have an effect on next node start. To learn more, see the RabbitMQ Plugins guide

Options

-n node

Default node is "rabbit@target-hostname", where target-hostname is the local host. On a host named "myserver.example.com", the node name will usually be "rabbit@myserver" (unless RABBITMQ_NODENAME has been overridden). The output of "hostname -s" is usually the correct suffix to use after the "@" sign. See rabbitmq-server(8) for details of configuring a RabbitMQ node.

-q, --quiet

Quiet output mode is selected. Informational messages are reduced when quiet mode is in effect.

-s, --silent

Silent output mode is selected. Informational messages are reduced and table headers are suppressed when silent mode is in effect.

-t timeout, --timeout timeout

Operation timeout in seconds. Not all commands support timeouts. Default is infinity.

-l, --longnames

Must be specified when the cluster is configured to use long (FQDN) node names. To learn more, see the RabbitMQ Clustering guide

--erlang-cookie cookie

Shared secret to use to authenticate to the target node. Prefer using a local file or the RABBITMQ_ERLANG_COOKIE environment variable instead of specifying this option on the command line. To learn more, see the RabbitMQ CLI Tools guide

Commands

list [-Eemv] [pattern]
-E

Show only explicitly enabled plugins.

-e

Show only explicitly or implicitly enabled plugins.

-m

Show only plugin names (minimal).

-v

Show all plugin details (verbose).

pattern

Pattern to filter the plugin names by.

Lists all plugins, their versions, dependencies and descriptions. Each plugin is prefixed with two status indicator characters inside [ ]. The first indicator can be:

<space>

to indicate that the plugin is not enabled

E

to indicate that it is explicitly enabled

e

to indicate that it is implicitly enabled

to indicate that it is enabled but missing and thus not operational

The second indicator can be:

<space>

to show that the plugin is not running

*

to show that it is

If the optional pattern is given, only plugins whose name matches pattern are shown.

For example, this command lists all plugins, on one line each

rabbitmq-plugins list

This command lists all plugins:

rabbitmq-plugins list -v

This command lists all plugins whose name contains "management".

rabbitmq-plugins list -v management

This command lists all implicitly or explicitly enabled RabbitMQ plugins.

rabbitmq-plugins list -e rabbit

enable [--offline] [--online] plugin ...
--offline

Modify node's enabled plugin state directly without contacting the node.

--online

Treat a failure to connect to the running broker as fatal.

plugin

One or more plugins to enable.

Enables the specified plugins and all their dependencies.

For example, this command enables the "shovel" and "management" plugins and all their dependencies:

rabbitmq-plugins enable rabbitmq_shovel rabbitmq_management

disable [--offline] [--online] plugin ...
--offline

Modify node's enabled plugin state directly without contacting the node.

--online

Treat a failure to connect to the running broker as fatal.

plugin

One or more plugins to disable.

Disables the specified plugins and all their dependencies.

For example, this command disables "rabbitmq_management" and all plugins that depend on it:

rabbitmq-plugins disable rabbitmq_management

set [--offline] [--online] [plugin ...]
--offline

Modify node's enabled plugin state directly without contacting the node.

--online

Treat a failure to connect to the running broker as fatal.

plugin

Zero or more plugins to disable.

Enables the specified plugins and all their dependencies. Unlike enable, this command ignores and overwrites any existing enabled plugins. set with no plugin arguments is a legal command meaning "disable all plugins".

For example, this command enables the "management" plugin and its dependencies and disables everything else:

rabbitmq-plugins set rabbitmq_management

See Also

rabbitmqctl(8), rabbitmq-diagnostics(8), rabbitmq-server(8), rabbitmq-queues(8), rabbitmq-streams(8), rabbitmq-upgrade(8), rabbitmq-service(8), rabbitmq-env.conf(5), rabbitmq-echopid(8)

Author

The RabbitMQ Team <rabbitmq-core@groups.vmware.com>

Referenced By

rabbitmqctl(8), rabbitmq-echopid(8), rabbitmq-env.conf(5), rabbitmq-server(8), rabbitmq-service(8).

June 22, 2023