Fix getNamespaces() to skip cluster-scoped resources (Namespace: "") that caused Router.createRouteURL to throw TypeError on the Namespaces page. Add Playwright E2E smoke tests with Authentik OIDC auth for CI and K8s token fallback for local dev. Add Gitea Actions E2E workflow, vitest unit test infrastructure, and test-utils fixtures. Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
headlamp-polaris-plugin
A Headlamp plugin that surfaces Fairwinds Polaris audit results directly in the Headlamp UI.
What It Does
Adds a Polaris top-level sidebar section to Headlamp with the following views:
- Overview -- cluster score as a percentage (color-coded green/amber/red), check summary (pass/warning/danger/skipped counts), and cluster info (nodes, pods, namespaces, controllers)
- Namespaces -- table of all namespaces with per-namespace score, pass/warning/danger/skipped counts; click a namespace to drill down
- Namespace detail -- per-namespace score, check counts, and a resource table showing pass/warning/danger per workload
- External link -- quick jump to the native Polaris dashboard via the Kubernetes service proxy (from namespace detail view)
Data is fetched from the Polaris dashboard API through the Kubernetes service proxy (/api/v1/namespaces/polaris/services/polaris-dashboard:80/proxy/results.json). The plugin is read-only -- it never writes to the cluster.
Results are refreshed on a user-configurable interval (1 / 5 / 10 / 30 minutes, default 5). The setting is available in Settings > Plugins > Polaris and persists in the browser's localStorage.
Error states are handled explicitly: RBAC denied (403), Polaris not installed (404/503), malformed JSON, and loading.
Prerequisites
| Requirement | Minimum version |
|---|---|
| Headlamp | v0.26+ |
| Polaris (with dashboard enabled) | Any recent release |
| Kubernetes | v1.24+ |
Polaris must be deployed in the polaris namespace with the dashboard component enabled (dashboard.enabled: true in the Helm chart, which is the default). The plugin reads from the polaris-dashboard ClusterIP service on port 80.
Installing
Option 1: Artifact Hub + Headlamp plugin manager (recommended)
The plugin is published on Artifact Hub. Configure Headlamp's pluginsManager in your Helm values to install it automatically:
pluginsManager:
sources:
- url: https://artifacthub.io/packages/headlamp/polaris/headlamp-polaris-plugin
Headlamp will fetch and install the plugin on startup.
Option 2: Docker init container
The plugin ships as a container image at git.farh.net/farhoodliquor/headlamp-polaris-plugin.
Add it as an init container in your Headlamp Helm values:
initContainers:
- name: polaris-plugin
image: git.farh.net/farhoodliquor/headlamp-polaris-plugin:latest
command: ["sh", "-c", "cp -r /plugins/* /headlamp/plugins/"]
volumeMounts:
- name: plugins
mountPath: /headlamp/plugins
volumes:
- name: plugins
emptyDir: {}
volumeMounts:
- name: plugins
mountPath: /headlamp/plugins
Option 3: Manual tarball install
Download the .tar.gz from the GitHub releases page or the Gitea releases page, then extract into Headlamp's plugin directory:
tar xzf headlamp-polaris-plugin-<version>.tar.gz -C /headlamp/plugins/
Option 4: Build from source
npm install
npm run build
npx @kinvolk/headlamp-plugin extract . /headlamp/plugins
RBAC / Security Setup
The plugin fetches audit data through the Kubernetes API server's service proxy sub-resource. The identity making the request (Headlamp's service account, or the user's own token in token-auth mode) must be granted:
| Verb | API Group | Resource | Resource Name | Namespace |
|---|---|---|---|---|
get |
"" (core) |
services/proxy |
polaris-dashboard |
polaris |
Minimal RBAC manifests
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: Role
metadata:
name: polaris-proxy-reader
namespace: polaris
rules:
- apiGroups: [""]
resources: ["services/proxy"]
resourceNames: ["polaris-dashboard"]
verbs: ["get"]
---
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: RoleBinding
metadata:
name: headlamp-polaris-proxy
namespace: polaris
subjects:
- kind: ServiceAccount
name: headlamp # adjust to match your Headlamp service account
namespace: kube-system # adjust to match the namespace Headlamp runs in
roleRef:
kind: Role
name: polaris-proxy-reader
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
Apply with kubectl apply -f polaris-rbac.yaml.
Token-auth mode
When Headlamp is configured for user-supplied tokens (rather than a fixed service account), each user must have the RoleBinding above attached to their own identity. A 403 error in the plugin means the currently logged-in user lacks this binding.
NetworkPolicy
If the polaris namespace enforces network policies, ensure ingress is allowed from the Kubernetes API server (which performs the proxy hop) to polaris-dashboard on port 80.
Read-only access
The plugin only performs GET requests through the service proxy. No create, update, delete, or patch verbs are required. Do not grant broader access than get on services/proxy.
Audit logging
Every proxied request is recorded in Kubernetes API audit logs as a get on services/proxy in the polaris namespace. If the auto-refresh interval generates more audit volume than desired, increase the refresh interval in the plugin settings or adjust your audit policy.
Troubleshooting
| Symptom | Likely cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| 403 Access Denied | Missing RBAC binding for services/proxy |
Apply the Role + RoleBinding from the RBAC section above |
| 404 or 503 | Polaris not installed, or dashboard disabled | Install Polaris with dashboard.enabled: true in the polaris namespace |
| No data | Polaris running but no workloads scanned yet | Wait for the next Polaris audit cycle or restart the Polaris pod |
| Stale data | Refresh interval too long | Lower the interval in Settings > Plugins > Polaris |
Development
Setup
git clone https://github.com/cpfarhood/headlamp-polaris-plugin.git
cd headlamp-polaris-plugin
npm install
Run locally (hot reload)
npm start
This starts the Headlamp plugin dev server. Point a running Headlamp instance at the dev server to see changes live.
Build for production
npm run build # outputs dist/main.js
npm run package # creates headlamp-polaris-plugin-<version>.tar.gz
Type-check, lint, format, and test
npm run tsc # type-check without emitting
npm run lint # eslint
npm run format:check # prettier check
npm test # vitest unit tests
Project Structure
src/
index.tsx -- Entry point. Registers sidebar entries and routes.
api/
polaris.ts -- TypeScript types (AuditData schema), usePolarisData hook,
countResults utilities, refresh interval settings.
polaris.test.ts -- Unit tests for utility functions (vitest).
PolarisDataContext.tsx -- React context provider; shared data fetch across views.
components/
DashboardView.tsx -- Overview page (score, check summary with skipped, cluster info).
NamespacesListView.tsx -- Namespace list with scores and links to detail views.
NamespaceDetailView.tsx -- Per-namespace drill-down with resource table.
PolarisSettings.tsx -- Plugin settings page (refresh interval selector).
vitest.config.mts -- Vitest configuration (jsdom environment).
Data Source
The plugin fetches live audit results from the Polaris dashboard HTTP API via the Kubernetes service proxy:
GET /api/v1/namespaces/polaris/services/polaris-dashboard:80/proxy/results.json
This endpoint is served by the polaris-dashboard ClusterIP service, which is created by the Polaris Helm chart when dashboard.enabled: true. The JSON response matches Polaris's AuditData schema (pkg/validator/output.go):
AuditData
ClusterInfo -- nodes, pods, namespaces, controllers
Results[] -- per-workload results
Results{} -- top-level check results (ResultSet)
PodResult
Results{} -- pod-level check results
ContainerResults[]
Results{} -- container-level check results
Each check in a ResultSet has Success (bool) and Severity ("warning", "danger", or "ignore"). Checks with Severity: "ignore" and Success: false are counted as skipped. The cluster score is computed client-side as pass / total * 100.
Releasing
Releases are automated via CI. To cut a release:
# Bump version in package.json and artifacthub-pkg.yml (version + archive-url), then:
git add package.json artifacthub-pkg.yml
git commit -m "chore: bump version to X.Y.Z"
git tag vX.Y.Z
git push origin main vX.Y.Z
This triggers the Gitea Actions release workflow (.gitea/workflows/release.yaml):
- Build the plugin in a
node:20container - Package a
.tar.gztarball - Build and push a Docker image to
git.farh.net/farhoodliquor/headlamp-polaris-plugin:{tag}and:latest - Create a Gitea release with the tarball attached
- Create a GitHub release with the same tarball (for Artifact Hub)
- Update
artifacthub-pkg.ymlchecksum on main and force-move the tag to match
A guard step prevents infinite loops: if the release tarball checksum already matches the metadata, the build is skipped.
CI secrets
| Secret | Where | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
REGISTRY_TOKEN |
Gitea | Personal access token with package:write scope for Docker image push |
GH_PAT |
Gitea | GitHub personal access token for creating GitHub releases |
The Gitea release uses the built-in github.token. The archive-checksum in artifacthub-pkg.yml is updated automatically by the release workflow.
Links
License
MIT