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Version: Next

Plugin

If you want to extend Platformatic DB features, it is possible to register a plugin, which will be in the form of a standard Fastify plugin.

The config file will specify where the plugin file is located as the example below:

{
...
"plugins": {
"paths": ["./plugin/index.js"]
}
}

The paths are relative to the config file path.

Once the config file is set up, you can write your plugin to extend Platformatic DB API or write your custom business logic.

You should export an async function which receives a parameters:

  • app (FastifyInstance) the main Fastify instance running Platformatic DB.
  • opts all the options specified in the config file after path.

You can always access Platformatic data mapper through app.platformatic property.

Context Integration in Plugin Operations

To ensure robust authorization and data management, it's important to pass the context object to the entity mapper. This context includes user-specific data, permissions, and other parameters that influence how data operations are executed.

Here's how you can integrate context into your plugin:

app.post('/', async (req, reply) => {
const ctx = req.platformaticContext

await app.platformatic.entities.movies.find({
where: { /*...*/ },
ctx
})
})

Check some examples.

Hot Reload

Plugin files are monitored by the fs.watch function.

You don't need to reload Platformatic DB server while working on your plugin. Every time you save, the watcher will trigger a reload event and the server will auto-restart and load your updated code.

tip

At this time, on Linux, file watch in subdirectories is not supported due to a Node.js limitation (documented here).

Directories

The path can also be a directory. In that case, the directory will be loaded with @fastify/autoload.

Consider the following directory structure:

├── routes
│ ├── foo
│ │ ├── something.js
│ │ └── bar
│ │ └── baz.js
│ ├── single-plugin
│ │ └── utils.js
│ └── another-plugin.js
└── platformatic.service.json

By default, the folder will be added as a prefix to all the routes defined within them. See the autoload documentation for all the options to customize this behavior.

Multiple plugins

Multiple plugins can be loaded in parallel by specifying an array:

{
...
"plugins": {
"paths": [{
"path": "./plugin/index.js"
}, {
"path": "./routes/"
}]
}
}

TypeScript and autocompletion

If you want to access any of the types provided by Platformatic DB, generate them using the platformatic db types command. This will create a global.d.ts file that you can now import everywhere, like so:

/// <references <types="./global.d.ts" />

Remember to adjust the path to global.d.ts.

Plugin definition with TypeScript

Here is an example of writing a plugin in TypeScript:

/// <reference types="./global.d.ts" />
import { FastifyInstance, FastifyPluginOptions } from 'fastify'

export default async function (fastify: FastifyInstance, opts: FastifyPluginOptions) {
}

Note that you need to add the "plugins": { "typescript": true } configuration to your platformatic.json.

Issues

If you run into a bug or have a suggestion for improvement, please raise an issue on GitHub or join our Discord feedback channel.