register-plugin

0.5.4 • Public • Published

register-plugin

DEPRECATION NOTICE! this module is not maintained anymore. Use remi instead.

A plugin registrator inspired by hapi's plugins.

Plugins allow you to very easily break your application up into isolated pieces of business logic, and reusable utilities.

Dependency Status Build Status npm version

Installation

npm install --save register-plugin

Creating a plugin

Plugins are very simple to write. At their core they are an object with a register function that has the signature function (server, options, next). That register function then has an attributes object attached to it to provide some additional information about the plugin, such as name and version.

A very simple plugin looks like:

var myPlugin = {
  register: function(app, options, next) {
    next();
  }
};
 
myPlugin.register.attributes = {
  name: 'myPlugin',
  version: '1.0.0'
};

Or when written as an external module:

module.exports = function(app, options, next) {
  next();
};
 
module.exports.attributes = {
  pkg: require('./package.json')
};

Note that in the first example, we set the name and version attributes specifically, however in the second we set a pkg parameter with the contents of package.json as its value. Either method is acceptable.

The register method

As we've seen above, the register method accepts three parameters, app, options, and next.

The options parameter is simply whatever options the user passes to your plugin. No changes are made and the object is passed directly to your register method.

next is a method to be called when your plugin has completed whatever steps are necessary for it to be registered. This method accepts only one parameter, err, that should only be defined if an error occurred while registering your plugin.

The app object is a reference to the app your plugin is being loaded in.

Loading a plugin

Plugins can be loaded one at a time, or as a group in an array, by the registerPlugin() method, for example:

var registerPlugin = require('register-plugin');
 
// load one plugin
registerPlugin(app, require('myplugin'), function(err) {
  if (err) {
    console.error('Failed to load plugin:', err);
  }
});
 
// load multiple plugins
registerPlugin(app, [require('myplugin'), require('yourplugin')], function(err) {
  if (err) {
    console.error('Failed to load a plugin:', err);
  }
});

To pass options to your plugin, we instead create an object with register and options keys, such as:

registerPlugin(app, {
  register: require('myplugin'),
  options: {
    message: 'hello'
  }
}, function(err) {
});

These objects can also be passed in an array:

registerPlugin(app, [{
  register: require('plugin1'),
  options: {}
}, {
  register: require('plugin2'),
  options: {}
}], function(err) {
});

Decorating the API

The .decorate method can be used to extend the app's API.

function plugin(app, opts, next) {
  /* The app can be decorated by one property at once */
  app.decorate('foo', function() {
    console.log('foo');
  });
 
  /* or by several properties at once */
  app.decorate({
    bar: 23,
    qax: 54
  });
 
  next();
}

app.expose(key, value)

Used within a plugin to expose a property via app.plugins[name] where:

  • key - the key assigned (server.plugins[name][key]).
  • value - the value assigned.
exports.register = function(app, opts, next) {
  app.expose('util', function() { console.log('something'); });
  return next();
};

server.expose(obj)

Merges a shallow copy of an object into to the existing content of server.plugins[name] where:

  • obj - the object merged into the exposed properties container.
exports.register = function(app, opts, next) {
  app.expose({ util: function() { console.log('something'); } });
  return next();
};

Options can be shared

You can pass a third optional shared options parameter. The shared options are merge with the plugin's options and passed to the register method.

function plugin(app, opts, next) {
  /* opts will equal {bar: 'bar', foo: 'foo'} */
 
  next();
}
 
plugin.attributes = {
  name: 'plugin',
  version: '1.0.0'
};
 
registerPlugin(app, [{
  register: plugin,
  options: {
    bar: 'bar'
  }
}], {
  foo: 'foo'
}, function (err) {
});

Main plugin

You can specify the plugin that should be registered first by passing its name through the main option of the shared options. The main plugin can't have any dependencies.

function barPlugin(app, opts, next) {
  console.log('Hello world!');
 
  next();
}
 
barPlugin.attributes = {
  name: 'bar-plugin',
  version: '1.0.0'
};
 
registerPlugin(app, [fooPlugin, barPlugin, qazPlugin], {
  main: 'bar-plugin' /* the bar-plugin will be registered first */
}, function (err) {
});

Example

You can find a working example in the example folder.

And on RequireBin.

view on requirebin

License

The MIT License (MIT)

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Install

npm i register-plugin

Weekly Downloads

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Version

0.5.4

License

MIT

Last publish

Collaborators

  • zkochan