Summary: Documentation for background plugin Reviewed By: passy Differential Revision: D10378898 fbshipit-source-id: 42f23b9464c41ee2f329301233c1e01d0ae05e95
3.8 KiB
id, title, sidebar_label
| id | title | sidebar_label |
|---|---|---|
| create-plugin | Mobile Setup | Mobile Setup |
Implement FlipperPlugin
Create a class implementing FlipperPlugin.
Android
public class MyFlipperPlugin implements FlipperPlugin {
private FlipperConnection mConnection;
@Override
public String getId() {
return "MyFlipperPlugin";
}
@Override
public void onConnect(FlipperConnection connection) throws Exception {
mConnection = connection;
}
@Override
public void onDisconnect() throws Exception {
mConnection = null;
}
@Override
public boolean runInBackground() {
return false;
}
}
iOS
@interface MyFlipperPlugin : NSObject<FlipperPlugin>
@end
@implementation MyFlipperPlugin
- (NSString*)identifier { return @"MyFlipperPlugin"; }
- (void)didConnect:(FlipperConnection*)connection {}
- (void)didDisonnect {}
- (BOOL)runInBackground {}
@end
C++
class MyFlipperPlugin : public FlipperPlugin {
public:
std::string identifier() const override { return "MyFlipperPlugin"; }
void didConnect(std::shared_ptr<FlipperConnection> conn) override;
void didDisconnect() override;
bool runInBackground() override;
};
Using FlipperConnection
Using the FlipperConnection object you can register a receiver of a desktop method call and respond with data.
Android
connection.receive("getData", new FlipperReceiver() {
@Override
public void onReceive(FlipperObject params, FlipperResponder responder) throws Exception {
responder.success(
new FlipperObject.Builder()
.put("data", MyData.get())
.build());
}
});
iOS
@interface MyFlipperPlugin : NSObject<FlipperPlugin>
@end
@implementation MyFlipperPlugin
- (NSString*)identifier { return @"MyFlipperPlugin"; }
- (void)didConnect:(FlipperConnection*)connection
{
[connection receive:@"getData" withBlock:^(NSDictionary *params, FlipperResponder *responder) {
[responder success:@{
@"data":[MyData get],
}];
}];
}
- (void)didDisonnect {}
@end
C++
void MyFlipperPlugin::didConnect(std::shared_ptr<FlipperConnection> conn) {
conn->receive("getData", [](const folly::dynamic ¶ms,
std::unique_ptr<FlipperResponder> responder) {
dynamic response = folly::dynamic::object("data", getMyData());
responder->success(response);
});
}
Push data to the desktop
You don't have to wait for the desktop to request data though, you can also push data directly to the desktop.
Android
connection.send("MyMessage",
new FlipperObject.Builder()
.put("message", "Hello")
.build()
iOS
[connection send:@"getData" withParams:@{@"message":@"hello"}];
C++
void MyFlipperPlugin::didConnect(std::shared_ptr<FlipperConnection> conn) {
dynamic message = folly::dynamic::object("message", "hello");
conn->send("getData", message);
}
Background Plugins
If the plugin returns false in runInBackground(), then the Flipper app will only accept messages from the client side when the plugin is active (i.e. when user is using the plugin in the Flipper app). Whereas with the plugin marked as runInBackground, it can send messages even when the plugin is not in active use. The benefit is that the data can be processed in the background and notifications can be fired. It also reduces the number of rerenders and time taken to display the data when the plugin becomes active. As the data comes in the background, it is processed and a state is updated in the Redux store. When the plugin becomes active, the initial render will contain all the data. Currently, the network plugin is run in background. To setup the plugin in background, follow the above steps and for the JavaScript side follow the steps given here.