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In order to facilitate encapsulate functionality that can be shared between fiery servers fiery implements a plugin interface. Indeed, the reason why fiery is so minimal in functionality is because it is intended as a foundation for separate plugins that can add convenience and power. This approach allows fiery itself to remain unopinionated and flexible.
Plugins are added to a Fire
object using the
attach()
method. Any parameters passed along with the
plugin to the attach()
method will be passed on to the
plugins on_attach()
method (see below).
The fiery plugin specification is rather simple. A plugin is either a
list or environment (e.g. a RefClas
or R6
object) with the following elements:
on_attach(server, ...)
: A function that will get called
when the plugin is attached to the server. It is passed the server
object as the first argument along with any arguments passed to the
attach()
method.name
: A string giving the name of the plugin.require
: Optional A character vector
giving names of other plugins that must be attached for this plugin to
work.Apart from this, the list/environment can contain anything you
desires. For an example of a relatively complex plugin, have a look at
the source code for the routr
package.
When a plugin is attached to a Fire
object, two things
happens. First, the on_attach()
function in the plugin is
called modifying the server in different ways, then the plugin object is
saved internally, so that it can later be retrieved. All plugins are
accessible in the plugins
field under the name of the
plugin. This is useful for plugins that modifies other plugins, or are
dependent on functionality in other plugins. A minimal example of a
plugin using another plugin could be (This will add a route that prints
“Hello” to the console everytime any ressource is requested):
plugin <- list(
on_attach = function(server) {
router <- server$plugins$request_routr
route <- Route$new()
route$add_handler('all', '*', function(request, response, arg_list, ...) {
message('Hello')
TRUE
})
router$add_route(route, 1)
},
name = 'Hello_plugin',
require = 'request_routr'
)
The Hello_plugin
depends on the routr plugin for its
functionality as it modifies the request router to always say hello when
processing requests. If the reques_routr
plugin has not
already been attached it is not possible to use the
Hello_plugin
plugin.
It is also possible to have a soft dependency to another plugin, by
not listing it in require
and instead use the
has_plugin()
method in the server to modify the behaviour
of the plugin. We could rewrite the Hello_plugin
to add the
routr plugin by itself if missing:
plugin <- list(
on_attach = function(server) {
if (!server$has_plugin('request_routr')) {
server$attach(RouteStack$new())
}
router <- server$plugins$request_routr
route <- Route$new()
route$add_handler('all', '*', function(request, response, arg_list, ...) {
message('Hello')
TRUE
})
router$add_route(route, 1)
},
name = 'Hello_plugin2'
)
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.