9.8 KiB
What's in a Plugin
A plugin is a git repo, with a couple executable scripts, to support versioning another language or tool. These scripts are run when list-all
, install
or uninstall
commands are run. You can set or unset env vars and do anything required to setup the environment for the tool.
Required Scripts
bin/list-all
- lists all installable versionsbin/install
- installs the specified version
All scripts except bin/list-all
will have access to the following env vars to act upon:
ASDF_INSTALL_TYPE
-version
orref
ASDF_INSTALL_VERSION
- ifASDF_INSTALL_TYPE
isversion
then this will be the version number. Else it will be the git ref that is passed. Might point to a tag/commit/branch on the repo.ASDF_INSTALL_PATH
- the dir where the it has been installed (or should be installed in case of thebin/install
script)
These additional environment variables the bin/install
script will also have accesss to:
ASDF_CONCURRENCY
- the number of cores to use when compiling the source code. Useful for settingmake -j
.
bin/list-all
Must print a string with a space-separated list of versions. Example output would be the following:
1.0.1 1.0.2 1.3.0 1.4
Note that the newest version should be listed last so it appears closer to the user's prompt. This is helpful since the list-all
command prints each version on it's own line. If there are many versions it's possible the early versions will be off screen.
If versions are being pulled from releases page on a website it's recommended to not sort the versions if at all possible. Often the versions are already in the correct order or, in reverse order, in which case something like tac
should suffice. If you must sort versions manually you cannot rely on sort -V
since it is not supported on OSX. An alternate sort function like this is a better choice.
bin/install
This script should install the version, in the path mentioned in ASDF_INSTALL_PATH
.
The install script should exit with a status of 0
when the installation is successful. If the installation fails the script should exit with any non-zero exit status.
If possible the script should only place files in the ASDF_INSTALL_PATH
directory once the build and installation of the tool is deemed successful by the install script. asdf checks for the existence of the ASDF_INSTALL_PATH
directory in order to determine if that version of the tool is installed. If the ASDF_INSTALL_PATH
directory is populated at the beginning of the installation process other asdf commands run in other terminals during the installation may consider that version of the tool installed, even when it is not fully installed.
Optional Scripts
bin/list-bin-paths
List executables for the specified version of the tool. Must print a string with a space-separated list of dir paths that contain executables. The paths must be relative to the install path passed. Example output would be:
bin tools veggies
This will instruct asdf to create shims for the files in <install-path>/bin
, <install-path>/tools
and <install-path>/veggies
If this script is not specified, asdf will look for the bin
dir in an installation and create shims for those.
bin/exec-env
Setup the env to run the binaries in the package.
bin/exec-path
Get the executable path for the specified version of the tool. Must print a string with the relative executable path. This allows the plugin to conditionally override the shim's specified executable path, otherwise return the default path specified by the shim.
Usage:
plugin/bin/exec-path <install-path> <command> <executable-path>
Example Call:
~/.asdf/plugins/foo/bin/exec-path "~/.asdf/installs/foo/1.0" "foo" "bin/foo"
Output:
bin/foox
bin/uninstall
Uninstalls a specific version of a tool.
bin/list-legacy-filenames
Register additional setter files for this plugin. Must print a string with a space-separated list of filenames.
.ruby-version .rvmrc
Note: This will only apply for users who have enabled the legacy_version_file
option in their ~/.asdfrc
.
bin/parse-legacy-file
This can be used to further parse the legacy file found by asdf. If parse-legacy-file
isn't implemented, asdf will simply cat the file to determine the version. The script will be passed the file path as its first argument.
Extension commands for asdf CLI.
It's possible for plugins to define new asdf commands by providing bin/command*
scripts or executables that will
be callable using the asdf command line interface by using the plugin name as a subcommand.
For example, suppose a foo
plugin has:
foo/
bin/
command
command-bat
command-bat-man
command-help
Users can now execute
$ asdf foo # same as running `$ASDF_DATA_DIR/plugins/foo/bin/command`
$ asdf foo bar # same as running `$ASDF_DATA_DIR/plugins/foo/bin/command bar`
$ asdf foo help # same as running `$ASDF_DATA_DIR/plugins/foo/bin/command-help`
$ asdf foo bat man # same as running `$ASDF_DATA_DIR/plugins/foo/bin/command-bat-man`
$ asdf foo bat baz # same as running `$ASDF_DATA_DIR/plugins/foo/bin/command-bat baz`
Plugin authors can use this feature to provide utilities related to their tools, or even create plugins that are just new command extensions for asdf itself.
When command*
files exists but have no executable bit set, they are considered to be
bash scripts and will be sourced having all the functions from $ASDF_DIR/lib/utils.sh
available. Also, the $ASDF_CMD_FILE
resolves to the full path of the file being sourced.
If the executable bit is set, they are just executed and replace the asdf execution.
A good example of this feature is for plugins like nodejs
, where people must import the release team keyring before
installing a nodejs version. Authors can provide a handy extension command for this without users
having to know where exactly is the plugin was installed.
If your plugin provides an asdf extension command, be sure to mention about it on your plugin's README.
Custom shim templates
PLEASE use this feature only if absolutely required
asdf allows custom shim templates. For an executable called foo
, if there's a shims/foo
file in the plugin, then asdf will copy that file instead of using it's standard shim template.
This must be used wisely. For now AFAIK, it's only being used in the Elixir plugin, because an executable is also read as an Elixir file apart from just being an executable. Which makes it not possible to use the standard bash shim.
Testing plugins
asdf
contains the plugin-test
command to test your plugin. You can use it as follows
asdf plugin test <plugin-name> <plugin-url> [--asdf-tool-version <version>] [--asdf-plugin-gitref <git-ref>] [test-command*]
Only the two first arguments are required.
If _version is specified, the tool will be installed with that specific version. Defaults to whatever returns asdf latest <plugin-name>
.
If git-ref is specified, the plugin itself is checked out at that commit/branch/tag, useful for testing a pull-request on your plugin's CI.
Rest arguments are considered the command to execute to ensure the installed tool works correctly.
Normally it would be something that takes --version
or --help
.
For example, to test the NodeJS plugin, we could run
asdf plugin test nodejs https://github.com/asdf-vm/asdf-nodejs.git node --version
We strongly recommend you test your plugin on a CI environment and make sure it works on both Linux and OSX.
Example Github Action
The asdf-vm/actions repo provides a GitHub Action for testing your plugins hosted on github.
steps:
- name: asdf_plugin_test
uses: asdf-vm/actions/plugin-test@v1.0.0
with:
command: "my_tool --version"
env:
GITHUB_API_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }} # automatically provided
Example TravisCI config
Here is a sample .travis.yml
file, customize it to your needs
language: c
script: asdf plugin test nodejs $TRAVIS_BUILD_DIR 'node --version'
before_script:
- git clone https://github.com/asdf-vm/asdf.git asdf
- . asdf/asdf.sh
os:
- linux
- osx
Note: When using another CI, you will need to check what variable maps to the repo path.
You also have the option to pass a relative path to plugin-test
.
For example, if the test script is ran in the repo directory: asdf plugin test nodejs . 'node --version'
.
GitHub API Rate Limiting
If your plugin's list-all
depends on accessing the GitHub API, make sure you provide an Authorization token when accessing it, otherwise your tests might fail due to rate limiting.
To do so, create a new personal token with only public_repo
access.
Then on your travis.ci build settings add a secure environment variable for it named something like GITHUB_API_TOKEN
. And DO NOT EVER publish your token in your code.
Finally, add something like the following to bin/list-all
cmd="curl -s"
if [ -n "$GITHUB_API_TOKEN" ]; then
cmd="$cmd -H 'Authorization: token $GITHUB_API_TOKEN'"
fi
cmd="$cmd $releases_path"
Submitting plugins to the official plugins repository
asdf
can easily install plugins by specifying the plugin repository url, e.g. plugin-add my-plugin https://github.com/user/asdf-my-plugin.git
.
To make it easier on your users, you can add your plugin to the official plugins repository to have your plugin listed and easily installable using a shorter command, e.g. asdf plugin-add my-plugin
.
Follow the instruction at the plugins repository: asdf-vm/asdf-plugins.