Feb 21, 2024: Announcing Linkerd 2.15 with support for VM workloads, native sidecars, and SPIFFE! Read more »


This is not the latest version of Linkerd!
This documentation is for an older version of Linkerd. You may want the Linkerd 2.15 (current) documentation instead.

Using extensions

Linkerd extensions are components which can be added to a Linkerd installation to enable additional functionality. By default, the following extensions are available:

But other extensions are also possible. Read on for more!

Installing extensions

Before installing any extensions, make sure that you have already installed Linkerd and validated your cluster with linkerd check.

Then, you can install the extension with the extension’s install command. For example, to install the viz extension, you can use:

linkerd viz install | kubectl apply -f -

For built-in extensions, such as viz, jaeger, and multicluster, that’s all you need to do. Of course, these extensions can also be installed by with Helm by installing that extension’s Helm chart.

Once an extension has been installed, it will be included as part of the standard linkerd check command.

Installing third-party extensions

Third-party extensions require one additional step: you must download the extension’s CLI and put it in your path. This will allow you to invoke the extension CLI through the Linkerd CLI. (E.g. any call to linkerd foo will automatically call the linkerd-foo binary, if it is found on your path.)

Listing extensions

Every extension creates a Kubernetes namespace with the linkerd.io/extension label. Thus, you can list all extensions installed on your cluster by running:

kubectl get ns -l linkerd.io/extension

Upgrading extensions

Unless otherwise stated, extensions do not persist any configuration in the cluster. To upgrade an extension, run the install again with a newer version of the extension CLI or with a different set of configuration flags.

Uninstalling extensions

All extensions have an uninstall command that should be used to gracefully clean up all resources owned by an extension. For example, to uninstall the foo extension, run:

linkerd foo uninstall | kubectl delete -f -