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silverbullet/website/🔌 Plugs.md

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Silver Bullet at its core is bare bones in terms of functionality, most of its power it gains from plugs.

Plugs are an extension mechanism (implemented using a library called plugos that runs plug code on the server in a sandboxed v8 node.js process, and in the browser using web workers). Plugs can hook into SB in various ways: plugs can extend the Markdown parser and its syntax, define new commands and keybindings, respond to various events triggered either on the server or client side, as well as run recurring and background tasks. Plugs can even define their own extension mechanisms through custom events. Each plug runs in its own sandboxed environment and communicates with SB via syscalls that expose a vast range of functionality. Plugs can be loaded, unloaded and updated without having to restart SB itself.

Directory

How to develop your own plug

At this stage, to get started, its probably easiest to fork one of the existing plugs found in the SilverBullet github org, for instance the github one.

Generally, every plug consists of a YAML manifest file named yourplugname.plug.yml. Its convenient to have a package.json file in your repo to add any dependencies. One dev dependency you will definitely need is @plugos/plugos which will supply you with the plugos-bundle command, which is used to “compile” your plug YAML file into its bundled .plug.json form, which Silver Bullet will be able to load and execute.

Generally, the way to invoke plugos-bundle is as follows:

plugos-bundle yourplugname.plug.yaml

This will write out a yourplugname.plug.json file into the same folder. For development its convenient to add a -w flag to automatically recompile when changes to the YAML or source files are detected.

In order to keep bundles somewhat small, a few dependencies come prebundled with SB. A the time of this writing:

  • yaml (a YAML reader and stringifier library)
  • @lezer/lr (a parser library)
  • handlebars

If you use any of these, you can add e.g. --exclude handlebars to not have them be included in the bundle (they will be loaded from SB itself).

Once you have a compiled .plug.json file you can load it into SB in a few ways by listing it in your spaces PLUGS page.

For development its easiest to use the file: prefix for this, by adding this in the yaml block section there to your existing list of plugs:

- file:/home/me/git/yourplugname/yourplugname.plug.json

Reload your list of plugs via the Plugs: Update command (Cmd-Shift-p on Mac, Ctrl-Shift-p on Linux and Windows) to load the list of plugs from the various sources on the server and your browser client. No need to reload the page, your plugs are now active.

Once youre happy with your plug, you can distribute it in various ways:

  • You can put it on github by simply committing the resulting .plug.json file there and instructing users to point to by adding - github:yourgithubuser/yourrepo/yourplugname.plug.json to their PLUGS file
  • Add a release in your github repo and instruct users to add the release as - ghr:yourgithubuser/yourrepo or if they need a spcecific release - ghr:yourgithubuser/yourrepo/release-name
  • You can put it on any other web server, and tell people to load it via https, e.g. - https://mydomain.com/mypugname.plug.json.

I develop plugs as follows: in one terminal I have plugos-bundle -w running at all times, constantly recompiling my code as I change it.

I also have SB open with a file: based link in my PLUGS file.

Whenever I want to test a change, I switch to SB, hit Cmd-Shift-p and test if stuff works.

Often I also have the Debug: Show Logs command running to monitor both server and client logs for any errors and debug information.