@oclif/plugin-plugins

plugins plugin for oclif

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import oclifPluginPlugins from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/@oclif/plugin-plugins';
</script>

README

@oclif/plugin-plugins

plugins plugin for oclif

Version CircleCI Appveyor CI Known Vulnerabilities Downloads/week License

What is this?

This plugin is used to allow users to install plugins into your oclif CLI at runtime. For example, in the Heroku CLI this is used to allow people to install plugins such as the Heroku Kafka plugin:

$ heroku plugins:install heroku-kafka
$ heroku kafka

This is useful to allow users to create their own plugins to work in your CLI or to allow you to build functionality that users can optionally install.

One particular way this is useful is for building functionality you aren't ready to include in a public repository. Build your plugin separately as a plugin, then include it as a core plugin later into your CLI.

Usage

First add the plugin to your project with yarn add @oclif/plugin-plugins, then add it to the package.json of the oclif CLI:

{
  "name": "mycli",
  "version": "0.0.0",
  // ...
  "oclif": {
    "plugins": ["@oclif/plugin-help", "@oclif/plugin-plugins"]
  }
}

Now the user can run any of the commands below to manage plugins at runtime.

Friendly names

To make it simpler for users to install plugins, we have "friendly name" functionality. With this, you can run mycli plugins:install myplugin and it will first check if @mynpmorg/plugin-myplugin exists on npm before trying to install myplugin. This is useful if you want to use a generic name that's already taken in npm.

To set this up, simply set the oclif.scope to the name of your npm org. In the example above, this would be mynpmorg.

Aliases

Over time in the Heroku CLI we've changed plugin names, brought plugins into the core of the CLI, or sunset old plugins that no longer function. There is support in this plugin for dealing with these situations.

For renaming plugins, add an alias section to oclif.aliases in package.json:

"aliases": {
  "old-name-plugin": "new-name-plugin"
}

If a user had old-name-plugin installed, the next time the CLI is updated it will remove old-name-plugin and install new-name-plugin. If a user types mycli plugins:install old-name-plugin it will actually install new-name-plugin instead.

For removing plugins that are no longer needed (either because they're sunset or because they've been moved into core), set the alias to null:

"aliases": {
  "old-name-plugin": null
}

old-name-plugin will be autoremoved on the next update and will not be able to be installed with mycli plugins:install old-name-plugin.

Commands

mycli plugins

List installed plugins.

USAGE
  $ mycli plugins [--core]

FLAGS
  --core  Show core plugins.

DESCRIPTION
  List installed plugins.

EXAMPLES
  $ mycli plugins

See code: src/commands/plugins/index.ts

mycli plugins:inspect PLUGIN...

Displays installation properties of a plugin.

USAGE
  $ mycli plugins:inspect PLUGIN...

ARGUMENTS
  PLUGIN  [default: .] Plugin to inspect.

FLAGS
  -h, --help     Show CLI help.
  -v, --verbose

DESCRIPTION
  Displays installation properties of a plugin.

EXAMPLES
  $ mycli plugins:inspect myplugin

See code: src/commands/plugins/inspect.ts

mycli plugins:install PLUGIN...

Installs a plugin into the CLI.

USAGE
  $ mycli plugins:install PLUGIN...

ARGUMENTS
  PLUGIN  Plugin to install.

FLAGS
  -f, --force    Run yarn install with force flag.
  -h, --help     Show CLI help.
  -v, --verbose

DESCRIPTION
  Installs a plugin into the CLI.

  Can be installed from npm or a git url.

  Installation of a user-installed plugin will override a core plugin.

  e.g. If you have a core plugin that has a 'hello' command, installing a user-installed plugin with a 'hello' command
  will override the core plugin implementation. This is useful if a user needs to update core plugin functionality in
  the CLI without the need to patch and update the whole CLI.

ALIASES
  $ mycli plugins:add

EXAMPLES
  $ mycli plugins:install myplugin 

  $ mycli plugins:install https://github.com/someuser/someplugin

  $ mycli plugins:install someuser/someplugin

See code: src/commands/plugins/install.ts

mycli plugins:link PLUGIN

Links a plugin into the CLI for development.

USAGE
  $ mycli plugins:link PLUGIN

ARGUMENTS
  PATH  [default: .] path to plugin

FLAGS
  -h, --help     Show CLI help.
  -v, --verbose

DESCRIPTION
  Links a plugin into the CLI for development.

  Installation of a linked plugin will override a user-installed or core plugin.

  e.g. If you have a user-installed or core plugin that has a 'hello' command, installing a linked plugin with a 'hello'
  command will override the user-installed or core plugin implementation. This is useful for development work.

EXAMPLES
  $ mycli plugins:link myplugin

See code: src/commands/plugins/link.ts

mycli plugins:uninstall PLUGIN...

Removes a plugin from the CLI.

USAGE
  $ mycli plugins:uninstall PLUGIN...

ARGUMENTS
  PLUGIN  plugin to uninstall

FLAGS
  -h, --help     Show CLI help.
  -v, --verbose

DESCRIPTION
  Removes a plugin from the CLI.

ALIASES
  $ mycli plugins:unlink
  $ mycli plugins:remove

See code: src/commands/plugins/uninstall.ts

mycli plugins:update

Update installed plugins.

USAGE
  $ mycli plugins:update [-h] [-v]

FLAGS
  -h, --help     Show CLI help.
  -v, --verbose

DESCRIPTION
  Update installed plugins.

See code: src/commands/plugins/update.ts