Crates.io | inventory |
lib.rs | inventory |
version | 0.3.15 |
source | src |
created_at | 2015-07-22 19:31:19.081684 |
updated_at | 2024-01-26 10:02:08.664106 |
description | Typed distributed plugin registration |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/dtolnay/inventory |
max_upload_size | |
id | 2655 |
size | 42,503 |
This crate provides a way to set up a plugin registry into which plugins can be registered from any source file linked into your application. There does not need to be a central list of all the plugins.
[dependencies]
inventory = "0.3"
Supports rustc 1.62+
Suppose we are writing a command line flags library and want to allow any source file in the application to register command line flags that are relevant to it.
This is the flag registration style used by gflags and is better suited for large scale development than maintaining a single central list of flags, as the central list would become an endless source of merge conflicts in an application developed simultaneously by thousands of developers.
Let's use a struct Flag
as the plugin type, which will contain the short name
of the flag like -v
, the full name like --verbose
, and maybe other
information like argument type and help text. We instantiate a plugin registry
with an invocation of inventory::collect!
.
pub struct Flag {
short: char,
name: &'static str,
/* ... */
}
impl Flag {
pub const fn new(short: char, name: &'static str) -> Self {
Flag { short, name }
}
}
inventory::collect!(Flag);
This collect!
call must be in the same crate that defines the plugin type.
This macro does not "run" anything so place it outside of any function body.
Now any crate with access to the Flag
type can register flags as a plugin.
Plugins can be registered by the same crate that declares the plugin type, or by
any downstream crate.
inventory::submit! {
Flag::new('v', "verbose")
}
The submit!
macro does not "run" anything so place it outside of any function
body. In particular, note that all submit!
invocations across all source files
linked into your application all take effect simultaneously. A submit!
invocation is not a statement that needs to be called from main
in order to
execute.
The value inventory::iter::<T>
is an iterator with element type &'static T
that iterates over all plugins registered of type T
.
for flag in inventory::iter::<Flag> {
println!("-{}, --{}", flag.short, flag.name);
}
There is no guarantee about the order that plugins of the same type are visited by the iterator. They may be visited in any order.
Inventory is built on runtime initialization functions similar to
__attribute__((constructor))
in C, and similar to the ctor
crate. Each
call to inventory::submit!
produces a shim that evaluates the given
expression and registers it into a registry of its corresponding type. This
registration happens dynamically as part of life-before-main for statically
linked elements. Elements brought in by a dynamically loaded library are
registered at the time that dlopen occurs.
Platform support includes Linux, macOS, iOS, FreeBSD, Android, Windows, and a few others. Beyond this, other platforms will simply find that no plugins have been registered.
For a different approach to plugin registration that does not involve
life-before-main, see the linkme
crate.