You can install the plugin system from PyPi with:
pip install PlugyPy
Or locally by cloning the repository:
git clone https://github.com/not-so-cool-anymore/plugypy.git
and then running the setup file in the main directory with:
pip install .
A PlugyPy configuration (or config) file is a JSON file that contains a deserialized representation of a PlugyPy Configuration
object.
The Configuration
object consists of a boolean named will_load_all
and a list named plugins
.
plugins
is a list of PlugyPy Plugin
objects will_load_all
determines whether all of the plugins in the plugins directory will be loaded or only the enabled ones.
An example of a config file is:
{
"will_load_all": true,
"plugins": [
{
"name": "example_plugin_name_0",
"is_enabled": true
},
{
"name": "example_plugin_name_1",
"is_enabled": false
},
{
"name": "example_plugin_name_2",
"is_enabled": true
}
]
}
Where name
is the name of the plugin file without the .py
file extension, and enabled
is the boolean variable that indicates whether a plugin will be loaded (when true
) or not (when false
).
Importing the plugin system:
import plugypy
Deserializing JSON configuration file into a Configuration
object.
configuration_deserializer = ConfigurationDeserializer('/path/to/configuration/file')
configuration = configuration_deserializer.deserialize_config()
Creating a plugin manager object:
plugin_manager = plugypy.PluginManager('/path/to/plugins/directory', configuration)
The plugin manager object has one extra feature - plugin ownership verification. This feature ensures that the plugin that is being executed
belongs to the current user (or if sudo
is used to run the program - the sudo
caller).
This feature can be activated via parsing one extra argument - will_verify_ownership=True
, which is set to False
by default when not passed.
Discovering plugins:
discovered_plugins = plugin_manager.discover_plugins()
discover_plugins
is a list of all the plugins in a given plugins directory.
Importing plugins:
plugins_list = plugin_manager.import_plugins(discovered_plugins)
plugins_list
is a list of map objects that has a name
key and an object
value of the imported executable Python module (plugin executable).
Importing a singe plugin by file name:
single_plugin = plugin_manager.import_plugin('PLUGIN_FILENAME_WITHOUT_PY_EXTENSION')
In this case, the plugin will be imported no matter if a configuration for it exists. This importing method is developed for edge cases in which the imported plugin will be executed only once.
Getting a plugin's information:
plugin_name = plugins_list[n]['name']
plugin_executable_object = plugins_list[n]['object']
n
is an index of a plugin.
Executing a plugin's function with no parameters:
plugin = plugins_list[n]
plugin_result = plugin_manager.execute_plugin_function(plugin, 'function_name')
if plugin_result == None:
print('The plugin returned no result')
else:
print('The plugin returned: {}'.format(result))
n
is an index of a plugin.
Executing a plugin's function with parameters:
plugin = plugins_list[n]
arguments_tuple = ('arg1', 'arg2', 'arg3')
plugin_result = plugin_manager.execute_plugin_function(plugin, 'function_name', args=arguments_tuple)
if plugin_result == None:
print('The plugin returned no result')
else:
print('The plugin returned: {}'.format(result))
n
is an index of a plugin.
args
must be a tuple of argument/s.