12 KiB
Plugins & Themes
Concepts
Themes are exactly the same as plugins, except that:
- Their name starts with
peertube-theme-
instead ofpeertube-plugin-
- They cannot declare server code (so they cannot register server hooks or settings)
- CSS files are loaded by client only if the theme is chosen by the administrator or the user
Hooks
A plugin registers functions in JavaScript to execute when PeerTube (server and client) fires events. There are 3 types of hooks:
filter
: used to filter functions parameters or return values. For example to replace words in video comments, or change the videos list behaviouraction
: used to do something after a certain trigger. For example to send a hook every time a video is publishedstatic
: same thanaction
but PeerTube waits their execution
On server side, these hooks are registered by the library
file defined in package.json
.
{
...,
"library": "./main.js",
...,
}
And main.js
defines a register
function:
Example:
async function register ({
registerHook,
registerSetting,
settingsManager,
storageManager,
videoCategoryManager,
videoLicenceManager,
videoLanguageManager
}) {
registerHook({
target: 'action:application.listening',
handler: () => displayHelloWorld()
})
}
On client side, these hooks are registered by the clientScripts
files defined in package.json
.
All client scripts have scopes so PeerTube client only loads scripts it needs:
{
...,
"clientScripts": [
{
"script": "client/common-client-plugin.js",
"scopes": [ "common" ]
},
{
"script": "client/video-watch-client-plugin.js",
"scopes": [ "video-watch" ]
}
],
...
}
And these scripts also define a register
function:
function register ({ registerHook, peertubeHelpers }) {
registerHook({
target: 'action:application.init',
handler: () => onApplicationInit(peertubeHelpers)
})
}
Static files
Plugins can declare static directories that PeerTube will serve (images for example)
from /plugins/{plugin-name}/{plugin-version}/static/
or /themes/{theme-name}/{theme-version}/static/
routes.
CSS
Plugins can declare CSS files that PeerTube will automatically inject in the client.
If you need to override existing style, you can use the #custom-css
selector:
body#custom-css {
color: red;
}
#custom-css .header {
background-color: red;
}
Server helpers (only for plugins)
Settings
Plugins can register settings, that PeerTube will inject in the administration interface.
Example:
registerSetting({
name: 'admin-name',
label: 'Admin name',
type: 'input',
default: 'my super name'
})
const adminName = await settingsManager.getSetting('admin-name')
Storage
Plugins can store/load JSON data, that PeerTube will store in its database (so don't put files in there).
Example:
const value = await storageManager.getData('mykey')
await storageManager.storeData('mykey', { subkey: 'value' })
Update video constants
You can add/delete video categories, licences or languages using the appropriate managers:
videoLanguageManager.addLanguage('al_bhed', 'Al Bhed')
videoLanguageManager.deleteLanguage('fr')
videoCategoryManager.addCategory(42, 'Best category')
videoCategoryManager.deleteCategory(1) // Music
videoLicenceManager.addLicence(42, 'Best licence')
videoLicenceManager.deleteLicence(7) // Public domain
Client helpers (themes & plugins)
Plugin static route
To get your plugin static route:
const baseStaticUrl = peertubeHelpers.getBaseStaticRoute()
const imageUrl = baseStaticUrl + '/images/chocobo.png'
Translate
You can translate some strings of your plugin (PeerTube will use your translations
object of your package.json
file):
peertubeHelpers.translate('User name')
.then(translation => console.log('Translated User name by ' + translation))
Get public settings
To get your public plugin settings:
peertubeHelpers.getSettings()
.then(s => {
if (!s || !s['site-id'] || !s['url']) {
console.error('Matomo settings are not set.')
return
}
// ...
})
Publishing
PeerTube plugins and themes should be published on NPM so that PeerTube indexes take into account your plugin (after ~ 1 day). An official PeerTube index is available on https://packages.joinpeertube.org/ (it's just a REST API, so don't expect a beautiful website).
Write a plugin/theme
Steps:
- Find a name for your plugin or your theme (must not have spaces, it can only contain lowercase letters and
-
) - Add the appropriate prefix:
- If you develop a plugin, add
peertube-plugin-
prefix to your plugin name (for example:peertube-plugin-mysupername
) - If you develop a theme, add
peertube-theme-
prefix to your theme name (for example:peertube-theme-mysupertheme
)
- If you develop a plugin, add
- Clone the quickstart repository
- Configure your repository
- Update
README.md
- Update
package.json
- Register hooks, add CSS and static files
- Test your plugin/theme with a local PeerTube installation
- Publish your plugin/theme on NPM
Clone the quickstart repository
If you develop a plugin, clone the peertube-plugin-quickstart
repository:
$ git clone https://framagit.org/framasoft/peertube/peertube-plugin-quickstart.git peertube-plugin-mysupername
If you develop a theme, clone the peertube-theme-quickstart
repository:
$ git clone https://framagit.org/framasoft/peertube/peertube-theme-quickstart.git peertube-theme-mysupername
Configure your repository
Set your repository URL:
$ cd peertube-plugin-mysupername # or cd peertube-theme-mysupername
$ git remote set-url origin https://your-git-repo
Update README
Update README.md
file:
$ $EDITOR README.md
Update package.json
Update the package.json
fields:
name
(should start withpeertube-plugin-
orpeertube-theme-
)description
homepage
author
bugs
engine.peertube
(the PeerTube version compatibility, must be>=x.y.z
and nothing else)
Caution: Don't update or remove other keys, or PeerTube will not be able to index/install your plugin.
If you don't need static directories, use an empty object
:
{
...,
"staticDirs": {},
...
}
And if you don't need CSS or client script files, use an empty array
:
{
...,
"css": [],
"clientScripts": [],
...
}
Write code
Now you can register hooks or settings, write CSS and add static directories to your plugin or your theme :)
Caution: It's up to you to check the code you write will be compatible with the PeerTube NodeJS version, and will be supported by web browsers. If you want to write modern JavaScript, please use a transpiler like Babel.
Add translations
If you want to translate strings of your plugin (like labels of your registered settings), create a file and add it to package.json
:
{
...,
"translations": {
"fr-FR": "./languages/fr.json",
"pt-BR": "./languages/pt-BR.json"
},
...
}
The key should be one of the locales defined in i18n.ts.
You must use the complete locales (fr-FR
instead of fr
).
Translation files are just objects, with the english sentence as the key and the translation as the value.
fr.json
could contain for example:
{
"Hello world": "Hello le monde"
}
Test your plugin/theme
You'll need to have a local PeerTube instance:
- Follow the dev prerequisites (to clone the repository, install dependencies and prepare the database)
- Build PeerTube (
--light
to only build the english language):
$ npm run build -- --light
- Build the CLI:
$ npm run setup:cli
- Run PeerTube (you can access to your instance on http://localhost:9000):
$ NODE_ENV=test npm start
- Register the instance via the CLI:
$ node ./dist/server/tools/peertube.js auth add -u 'http://localhost:9000' -U 'root' --password 'test'
Then, you can install or reinstall your local plugin/theme by running:
$ node ./dist/server/tools/peertube.js plugins install --path /your/absolute/plugin-or-theme/path
Publish
Go in your plugin/theme directory, and run:
$ npm publish
Every time you want to publish another version of your plugin/theme, just update the version
key from the package.json
and republish it on NPM. Remember that the PeerTube index will take into account your new plugin/theme version after ~24 hours.
Plugin & Theme hooks/helpers API
See the dedicated documentation: https://docs.joinpeertube.org/#/api-plugins
Tips
Compatibility with PeerTube
Unfortunately, we don't have enough resources to provide hook compatibility between minor releases of PeerTube (for example between 1.2.x
and 1.3.x
).
So please:
- Don't make assumptions and check every parameter you want to use. For example:
registerHook({
target: 'filter:api.video.get.result',
handler: video => {
// We check the parameter exists and the name field exists too, to avoid exceptions
if (video && video.name) video.name += ' <3'
return video
}
})
- Don't try to require parent PeerTube modules, only use
peertubeHelpers
. If you need another helper or a specific hook, please create an issue - Don't use PeerTube dependencies. Use your own :)
If your plugin is broken with a new PeerTube release, update your code and the peertubeEngine
field of your package.json
field.
This way, older PeerTube versions will still use your old plugin, and new PeerTube versions will use your updated plugin.
Spam/moderation plugin
If you want to create an antispam/moderation plugin, you could use the following hooks:
filter:api.video.upload.accept.result
: to accept or not local uploadsfilter:api.video-thread.create.accept.result
: to accept or not local threadfilter:api.video-comment-reply.create.accept.result
: to accept or not local repliesfilter:api.video-threads.list.result
: to change/hide the text of threadsfilter:api.video-thread-comments.list.result
: to change/hide the text of repliesfilter:video.auto-blacklist.result
: to automatically blacklist local or remote videos
Other plugin examples
You can take a look to "official" PeerTube plugins if you want to take inspiration from them: https://framagit.org/framasoft/peertube/official-plugins