1.3.3 • Published 3 years ago

aki-plugin-manager v1.3.3

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
3 years ago

aki-plugin-manager

npm GitHub Workflow Status

Aki is a fast, lightweight plugin manager for Node.js applications. It supports finding, downloading, and loading packages dynamically at runtime.

Aki currently only retrieves packages from npm, although alternative sources may be added in the future.

Usage

Install a package

install = (
  name: string,    // package name on npm
  version: string, // package version, e.g. "1.2.3" or "latest"
  baseDir: string, // directory to save plugins
  callback: (error?: Error) => void // called after installation
): Promise<void>
import aki from "aki-plugin-manager";

const dir = path.join(process.env.XDG_CONFIG_HOME, "myapp", "plugins");
aki.install("is-number", "latest", dir, () => console.log("installed!"));

List installed packages

list = (
  baseDir: string     // directory where plugins are saved
): [string, string][] // installed packages as [name, version]
import aki from "aki-plugin-manager";

const dir = path.join(process.env.XDG_CONFIG_HOME, "myapp", "plugins");
aki.list(dir); // [["is-number", "7.0.0"]]

Load installed package

load = (
  baseDir: string,    // directory where plugins are saved
  name: string,       // name of package to load
  requireFn = require // (optional) specify a require function
): any
import aki from "aki-plugin-manager";

const dir = path.join(process.env.XDG_CONFIG_HOME, "myapp", "plugins");
const mymod = aki.load(dir, "mypackage");
mymod.sayHi();

Note: Specifying a require function may be necessary if you are using webpack, or if you want to load a plugin in Electron's renderer thread. See the Webpack Usage and Electron Usage sections.

Searching for packages

search = (
  text: string = "",  // (optional) query text
  scope: string = "", // (optional) package scope on the registry
  limit: number = 100 // (optional) max number of results
): Promise<RegistrySearchResults>
import aki from "aki-plugin-manager";

aki.search({ text: "foo" }).then((results: RegistrySearchResults) => {
  if (results.total > 0) {
    console.log(results.objects[0].package.name);
  }
});

Unload package

unload = (
  baseDir: string,    // directory where plugins are saved
  name: string,       // name of loaded package
  requireFn = require // (optional) specify a require function
): void
import aki from "aki-plugin-manager";

const dir = path.join(process.env.XDG_CONFIG_HOME, "myapp", "plugins");

const mymod = aki.load(dir, "mypackage");
mymod.sayHi();
aki.unload(dir, "mypackage");

Uninstall package

uninstall = (
  name: string,    // name of installed package
  baseDir: string, // directory where plugins are saved
  callback: () => void // called after uninstallation
): void
import aki from "aki-plugin-manager";

const dir = path.join(process.env.XDG_CONFIG_HOME, "myapp", "plugins");
aki.uninstall("is-number", dir, () => console.log("uninstalled!"));

With Other Tools

Webpack Usage

Webpack attempts to rewrite require statements at compile time, which means that if you try to load a plugin with a name or directory set at runtime, you will likely get a "module not found" error even if it is referencing the correct path.

To get around this, we need to keep webpack from attempting to rewrite the require function. The easiest way, although not best-practice, is with exec:

aki.load(dir, "mypackage", exec("require"));

Alternatively, depending on your module system, you may be able to use:

aki.load(dir, "mypackage", module[`require`].bind(module));

You may also be able to update your webpack config. Add IgnorePlugin to specify a regex pattern for which webpack won't rewrite the require call.

Electron Usage

The recommended way to use Aki with Electron is by performing all actions in the main thread and communicating input/output through ipc. You can create ipcMain handlers in the main thread to accomplish this.

You might also be able to pass remote.require as the requireFn for aki.load. This is very discouraged, particularly because remote is deprecated and you will likely have issues resolving plugin functions.

Building

npm install
npm run build

Testing

npm run test

License

MIT License

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