From: Decebal Suiu Date: Tue, 15 Apr 2014 13:50:22 +0000 (+0300) Subject: Update README.md X-Git-Tag: release-0.9.0~14 X-Git-Url: https://source.dussan.org/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=bb4c68def5ce636894590c68af19809a08323f96;p=pf4j.git Update README.md --- diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 58ba4b7..9ac353b 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -161,37 +161,35 @@ Plugin lifecycle -------------------------- Each plugin passes through a pre-defined set of states. [PluginState](https://github.com/decebals/pf4j/blob/master/pf4j/src/main/java/ro/fortsoft/pf4j/PluginState.java) defines all possible states. The primary plugin states are: -- CREATED -- DISABLED -- STARTED -- STOPPED +* CREATED +* DISABLED +* STARTED +* STOPPED The DefaultPluginManager contains the following logic: - -1. all plugins are resolved & loaded -2. *DISABLED* plugins are NOT automatically *STARTED* by pf4j in `startPlugins()` BUT you may manually start (and therefore enable) a *DISABLED* plugin by calling `startPlugin(pluginId)` instead of `enablePlugin(pluginId)` + `startPlugin(pluginId)` -3. only *STARTED* plugins may contribute extensions. Any other state should not be considered ready to contribute an extension to the running system. +* all plugins are resolved & loaded +* *DISABLED* plugins are NOT automatically *STARTED* by pf4j in `startPlugins()` BUT you may manually start (and therefore enable) a *DISABLED* plugin by calling `startPlugin(pluginId)` instead of `enablePlugin(pluginId)` + `startPlugin(pluginId)` +* only *STARTED* plugins may contribute extensions. Any other state should not be considered ready to contribute an extension to the running system. The differences between a DISABLED plugin and a STARTED plugin are: -1. a STARTED plugin has executed Plugin.start(), a DISABLED plugin has not -2. a STARTED plugin may contribute extension instances, a DISABLED plugin may not +* a STARTED plugin has executed Plugin.start(), a DISABLED plugin has not +* a STARTED plugin may contribute extension instances, a DISABLED plugin may not DISABLED plugins still have valid class loaders and their classes can be manually loaded and explored, but the resource loading - which is important for inspection - has been handicapped by the DISABLED check. As integrators of pf4j evolve their extension APIs it will become -a requirement to specify a minimum system version for loading plugins. +a requirement to specify a minimum system version for loading plugins. Loading & starting a newer plugin on an older system could result in runtime failures due to method signature changes or other class differences. For this reason was added a manifest attribute (in PluginDescriptor) to specify a 'requires' version which is a minimum system version. Also DefaultPluginManager contains a method to specify the system version of the plugin manager and the logic to disable -plugins on load if the system version is too old (if you want total control, please override isPluginValid() method). This works for both -loadPlugins() and loadPlugin(). +plugins on load if the system version is too old (if you want total control, please override `isPluginValid()`). This works for both `loadPlugins()` and `loadPlugin()`. -__PluginStateListener__ defines the interface for an object that listens to plugin state changes. You can use ```addPluginStateListener(PluginStateListener listener)``` and ```removePluginStateListener(PluginStateListener listener)``` from PluginManager if you want to add or remove a plugin state listener. +__PluginStateListener__ defines the interface for an object that listens to plugin state changes. You can use `addPluginStateListener()` and `removePluginStateListener()` from PluginManager if you want to add or remove a plugin state listener. Your application, as a PF4J consumer, has full control over each plugin (state). So, you can load, unload, enable, disable, start, stop and delete a certain plugin using PluginManager (programmatically).