On Mon, Aug 2, 2010 at 6:37 AM, Tarek Ziadé <ziade.tarek at gmail.com> wrote: > Hello, > > Here's a proposal to extend PEP 376 to support a basic plugins feature > -- you should read PEP 376 before reading this mail > > It's basically Phillip's entry points, but with an activation flag, > and a per-user config file. > > = adding a PLUGINS file = > > A new file called 'PLUGINS' is added to the dist-info directory at > install time, and contains a list of plugins for the installed > distribution. > > The file is a CSV file like the RECORD file, containing one plugin per > line. (see the RECORD file for details on the syntax) > > A plugin is defined by : > > - an application name : a string containing a name of a group of > plugins. It can be the name of the application that supports plugins, > or any string. The recommended value is the distutils name of the > project, as it appears at PyPI. > max length: 64, chars: [a-z0-9] > > - a plugin type name: a string containing a name of a type of plugins. > It can be combined with the application name to create one class of > plugins > for a given application. 64 chars [a-z0-9] -- default value 'plugin' > > - a name: a string containing a name for the plugin. Combined with the > application name and plugin type, it defines this plugin. 64 chars > [a-z0-9] > > - a description: a string describing the plugin. 256 chars. > > - a state: 1 or 0. 1 means the plugin is activated, 0 means it's not activated > > - a code link: a link to the plugin object (whether its a module, > class, object, etc). This link is the complete import path. For > example, a plugin class called > "Foo" located in the "bar" module, located in the "baz" package, is > noted: "baz.bar.Foo" (the project that uses plugins is responsible > for iteratting, picking and loading plugins) Is dealing with name conflicts left up to the application? Cheers, Nick. -- Nick Coghlan | ncoghlan at gmail.com | Brisbane, Australia
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