.. raw:: html .. _`writing-a-plugin`: Writing a plugin ================ Introduction ------------ Converse.js is exposes a plugin architecture which allows developers to modify and extend its functionality. Specifically, plugins enable developers to extend and override existing objects, functions and `Backbone `_ models and views that make up Converse.js, and also give them the ability to write new models and views. Various core features of Converse.js, such as `Message Archive Management `_ and `Group chats `_ are implemented as plugins, thereby showing their power and flexibility. Converse.js uses `pluggable.js `_ as its plugin architecture. To more deeply understand how this plugin architecture works, please read the `pluggable.js documentation `_ and to understand its inner workins, please refer to the `annotated source code `_. .. note:: **Trying out a plugin in JSFiddle** Because Converse.js consists only of JavaScript, HTML and CSS (with no backend code required like PHP, Python or Ruby) it runs fine in JSFiddle. Here's a Fiddle with a Converse.js plugin that calls ``alert`` once it gets initialized and also when a chat message gets rendered: https://jsfiddle.net/4drfaok0/15/ .. note:: **Generating a plugin with Yeoman** The rest of this document explains how to write a plugin for Converse.js and ends with a documented example of a plugin. There is a `Yeoman `_ code generator, called `generator-conversejs `_, which you can use to generate plugin scaffolding/boilerplate, which you can use as a starting point and basis for writing your plugin. Please refer to the `generator-conversejs `_ README for information on how to use it. Registering a plugin -------------------- Plugins need to be registered (and whitelisted) before they can be loaded and initialized. You register a converse.js plugin by calling ``converse.plugins.add``. The plugin itself is a JavaScript object which usually has at least an ``initialize`` method, which gets called at the end of the ``converse.initialize`` method which is the top-level method that gets called by the website to configure and initialize Converse.js itself. Here's an example code snippet: .. code-block:: javascript converse.plugins.add('myplugin', { initialize: function () { // This method gets called once converse.initialize has been called // and the plugin itself has been loaded. // Inside this method, you have access to the closured // _converse object as an attribute on "this". // E.g. this._converse }, }); .. note:: It's important that `converse.plugins.add` is called **before** `converse.initialize` is called. Otherwise the plugin will never get registered and never get called. Whitelisting of plugins ----------------------- As of converse.js 3.0.0 and higher, plugins need to be whitelisted before they can be used. This is because plugins have access to a powerful API. For example, they can read all messages and send messages on the user's behalf. To avoid malicious plugins being registered (i.e. by malware infected advertising networks) we now require whitelisting. To whitelist a plugin simply means to specify :ref:`whitelisted_plugins` when you call ``converse.initialize``. Security and access to the inner workings ----------------------------------------- The globally available ``converse`` object, which exposes the API methods, such as ``initialize`` and ``plugins.add``, is a wrapper that encloses and protects a sensitive inner object, named ``_converse`` (not the underscore prefix). This inner ``_converse`` object contains all the Backbone models and views, as well as various other attributes and functions. Within a plugin, you will have access to this internal `"closured" `_ ``_converse`` object, which is normally not exposed in the global variable scope. The inner ``_converse`` object is made private in order to safely hide and encapsulate sensitive information and methods which should not be exposed to any 3rd-party scripts that might be running in the same page. Loading a plugin module ----------------------- Converse.js uses the UMD (Universal Modules Definition) as its module syntax. This makes modules loadable via `require.js`, `webpack` or other module loaders, but also includable as old-school `