Awesome
plug
Plug is a drop in extension for using remote dynamic libraries in deno. It automatically handles caching and loading with minimal overhead. It can automatically create the URL for your cross-operating-system, cross-architecture libraries if you so wish using a simple configuration which deviates from the standard URL/string path input.
Installation
Plug is published to jsr.io and deno.land. The recommended way to use it is to use JSR:
deno add @denosaurs/plug
or without the CLI:
import * as plug from "jsr:@denosaurs/plug";
Example using plug as an almost drop in replacement for Deno.dlopen
import { dlopen } from "@denosaurs/plug";
// Drop-in replacement for `Deno.dlopen` which fetches the following depending
// on operating system:
// * darwin: "https://example.com/some/path/libexample.dylib"
// * windows: "https://example.com/some/path/example.dll"
// * linux: "https://example.com/some/path/libexample.so"
const library = await dlopen("https://example.com/some/path/", {
noop: { parameters: [], result: "void" },
});
library.symbols.noop();
Example using automatic binary name guessing
import { dlopen, FetchOptions } from "@denosaurs/plug";
// If you want plug to guess your binary names
const options: FetchOptions = {
name: "example",
url: "https://example.com/some/path/",
// Becomes:
// darwin: "https://example.com/some/path/libexample.dylib"
// windows: "https://example.com/some/path/example.dll"
// linux: "https://example.com/some/path/libexample.so"
};
const library = await dlopen(options, {
noop: { parameters: [], result: "void" },
});
library.symbols.noop();
Example using nested cross-platform options
import { dlopen, FetchOptions } from "@denosaurs/plug";
// Also you can specify the path for certain architecture
const options: FetchOptions = {
name: "example",
url: {
darwin: {
aarch64: `https://example.com/some/path/libexample.aarch64.dylib`,
x86_64: `https://example.com/some/path/libexample.x86_64.dylib`,
},
windows: `https://example.com/some/path/example.dll`,
linux: `https://example.com/some/path/libexample.so`,
freebsd: "https://example.com/some/path/libexample_freebsd.so",
netbsd: "https://example.com/some/path/libexample_netbsd.so",
aix: "https://example.com/some/path/libexample_aix.so",
solaris: "https://example.com/some/path/libexample_solaris.so",
illumos: "https://example.com/some/path/libexample_illumos.so",
},
};
await dlopen(options, {});
Example using nested cross-platform options and automatic binary name guessing
import { dlopen, FetchOptions } from "@denosaurs/plug";
// Or even configure plug to automatically guess the binary names for you,
// even when there are special rules for naming on specific architectures
const options: FetchOptions = {
name: "test",
url: "https://example.com/some/path/",
suffixes: {
darwin: {
aarch64: ".aarch64",
x86_64: ".x86_64",
},
},
// Becomes:
// darwin-aarch64: "https://example.com/some/path/libexample.aarch64.dylib"
// darwin-x86_64: "https://example.com/some/path/libexample.x86_64.dylib"
};
await dlopen(options, {});
Testing
To run the plug tests, you can use the following command:
deno test --import-map test_import_map.json -A --doc
The test_import_map.json
file is used to map the @denosaurs/plug
import to
the local mod.ts
file instead of the remote one for the documentation tests.
Other
Related
- deno_plugin_prepare - A library for managing deno native plugin dependencies
- cache - Deno cache library
Contribution
Pull request, issues and feedback are very welcome. Code style is formatted with
deno fmt
and commit messages are done following Conventional Commits spec.
Licence
Copyright 2020-2024, the denosaurs team. All rights reserved. MIT license.