What Are NativeScript Plugins
A NativeScript plugin is any npm package, published or not, that exposes a native API via JavaScript and consists of the following elements.
-
A
package.json
file which contains the following metadata: name, version, supported runtime versions, dependencies and others. For more information, see thepackage.json
Specification section. - One or more CommonJS modules that expose a native API via a unified JavaScript API. For more information about Common JS modules, see the CommonJS Wiki.
-
(Optional) Descriptions of permissions, features or other
configurations required or used by your plugin inside a
pre-compiled Android native library containing an
AndroidManifest.xml
or anInfo.plist
file for Android and iOS, respectively. For more information about Android native libraries, see the Android permissions and resources section. -
(Optional) Native Android libraries and the native Android
include.gradle
configuration file which describes the native dependencies. For more information, see theinclude.gradle
Specification section. -
(Optional) Native iOS libraries and the native
build.xcconfig
configuration file which describes the native dependencies. For more information, see thebuild.xcconfig
Specification section.
The plugin must have the directory structure, described in the Directory Structure section.
Create a Plugin
If the NativeScript framework does not expose a native API that you need, you can develop a plugin which exposes the required functionality. When you develop a NativeScript plugin, keep in mind the following requirements.
- The plugin must be a valid npm package.
- The plugin must expose a built-in native API or a native API available via custom native libraries.
- The plugin must be written in JavaScript and must comply with the CommonJS specification. If you are using a transpiler (e.g. from TypeScript), make sure to include the transpiled JavaScript files in your plugin.
- The plugin directory structure must comply with the specification described below.
-
The plugin must contain a valid
package.json
which complies with the specification described below. -
If the plugin requires any permissions, features or other
configuration specifics, it must contain an
Info.plist
for iOS or a compiled library with anAndroidManifest.xml
file for Android which describe them. For more information about Android native libraries, see the Android permissions and resources section. -
If the plugin depends on other native libraries, it must
contain a valid
include.gradle
orbuild.xcconfig
file, which describes the dependencies.
Directory Structure
NativeScript plugins which consist of one CommonJS module might have the following directory structure.
nativescript-my-plugin/
└── src
├── index.js
├── package.json
└── platforms/
├── android/
│ └── nativescript-my-plugin.aar (containing custom resources or permissions)
└── ios/
└── Info.plist
NativeScript plugins which consist of multiple CommonJS modules might have the following directory structure.
nativescript-my-plugin/
└── src
├── index.js
├── package.json
├── MyModule1/
│ ├── index1.js
│ └── package.json
├── MyModule2/
│ ├── index2.js
│ └── package.json
└── platforms/
├── android/
│ └── nativescript-my-plugin.aar (containing custom resources or permissions)
└── ios/
└── Info.plist
-
src
: Putting your source in sub-folder is required for local LiveSync debugging. Older plugins should be updated to move their source code in to a subfolder. -
index.js
: This file is the CommonJS module which exposes the native API. You can use platform-specific*.[platform].js
files. For example:index.ios.js
andindex.android.js
. During the plugin installation, the NativeScript CLI will copy the platform resources to thetns_modules
subdirectory in the correct platform destination in theplatforms
directory of your project.
Alternatively, you can give any name to this CommonJS module. In this case, however, you need to point to this file by setting themain
key in thepackage.json
for the plugin. For more information, see Folders as Modules. -
package.json
: This file contains the metadata for your plugin. It sets the supported runtimes, the plugin name and version and any dependencies. Thepackage.json
specification is described in detail below. -
platforms/android/native-library.aar
Compiled native libraries (*.aar
files) contain resources, code and any specific configuration changes, like permissions, required for your plugin to work. For more information about Android native libraries, see the Android permissions and resources section. -
platforms\ios\Info.plist
: This file describes any specific configuration changes required for your plugin to work. For example, required permissions. To your convenience, all configurations that are applicable via XCode Info tab and are saved in application's Info.plist file can also be applied manually for plugins directly in the Info.plist. For more information about the format ofInfo.plist
, see About Information Property List Files.
During the plugin installation, the NativeScript CLI will merge the pluginInfo.plist
with theInfo.plist
for your project. The NativeScript CLI will not resolve any contradicting or duplicate entries during the merge. After the plugin is installed, you need to manually resolve such issues.
NativeScript plugins which contain both native Android and iOS libraries might have the following directory structure.
nativescript-my-plugin/
└── src
├── ...
└── platforms/
├── android/
│ ├── MyLibraryOne.jar
│ ├── MyLibraryTwo.aar
│ ├── include.gradle
└── ios/
├── MyiOSFramework.framework
├── build.xcconfig
├── Podfile
├── Info.plist
├── MyStaticiOSLibrary.a
└── include/
└── MyStaticiOSLibrary/
└── ...
-
platforms\android
: This directory contains any native Android libraries packaged as*.jar
and*.aar
packages. These native libraries can reside in the root of this directory or in a user-created sub-directory. During the plugin installation, the NativeScript CLI will configure the Android project inplatforms\android
to work with the plugin. -
platforms\android\include.gradle
: This file modifies the native Android configuration of your NativeScript project such as native dependencies, build types and configurations. For more information about the format ofinclude.gradle
, seeinclude.gradle
file. -
platforms\ios
: This directory contains native dynamic iOS Cocoa Touch Frameworks (.framework
) and Cocoa Touch Static Libraries (.a
). During the plugin installation, the NativeScript CLI will copy these files tolib\iOS
in your project and will configure the iOS project inplatforms\ios
to work with the libraries. If the library is written in Swift, only APIs exposed to Objective-C are exposed to NativeScript. In case the plugin contains a Cocoa Touch Static Library (.a
), you must place all public headers (.h
) underinclude\<Static Library Name>\
. Make sure that the static libraries are built at least for the following processor architectures - armv7, arm64, i386. -
platforms\ios\build.xcconfig
: This file modifies the native iOS configuration of your NativeScript project such as native dependencies and configurations. For more information about the format ofbuild.xcconfig
, seebuild.xcconfig
file. -
platforms\ios\Podfile
: This file describes the dependency to the library that you want to use. For more information, see the CocoaPods article.
Package.json Specification
Every NativeScript plugin should contain a valid
package.json
file in its root. This
package.json
file must meet the following
requirements.
-
It must comply with the
npm specification.
Thepackage.json
must contain at leastname
andversion
pairs. You will later use the plugin in your code by requiring it by itsname
. -
It must contain a
nativescript
section which describes the supported NativeScript runtimes and their versions. This section can be empty. If you want to define supported platforms and runtimes, you can nest aplatforms
section. In thisplatforms
section, you can nestios
andandroid
key-value pairs. The values in these pairs must be valid runtime versions or ranges of values specified by a valid semver(7) syntax. -
If the plugin depends on other npm modules, it must contain a
dependencies
section as described here.
The NativeScript CLI will resolve the dependencies during the plugin installation.
The following is an example of a package.json
file
for a NativeScript plugin which supports the 1.0.0 version or
above of the iOS runtime and the 1.1.0 version or above of the
Android runtime.
{
"name": "nativescript-my-plugin",
"version": "0.0.1",
"nativescript": {
"platforms": {
"ios": "4.0.0",
"android": "4.1.0"
}
}
}
The above configuration states that the plugin requires iOS runtime version 4.0.0 and up or Android runtime version 4.1.0 and up.
Note In case your plugin supports only iOS or Android, make sure to remove the platform which is not supported.
Include.gradle Specification
Every NativeScript plugin, which contains native Android
dependencies, should also contain a valid
include.gradle
file in the root of its
platforms\android
directory. This
include.gradle
file must meet the following
requirements.
- It must contain its own configuration.
- It might contain native dependencies required to build the plugin properly.
- Any native dependencies should be available in jcenter or from the Android SDK installed on your machine.
IMPORTANT: If you don't have an
include.gradle
file, at build time, gradle will create a default one containing all default elements.
Include.gradle Example
//default elements
android {
productFlavors {
"nativescript-my-plugin" {
dimension "nativescript-my-plugin"
}
}
}
//optional elements
dependencies {
implementation "groupName:pluginName:ver"
}
Android permissions and resources
There are two ways to add permissions and resources for your plugin.
Using a native Android project
If you want your plugin to use special permissions, have custom
resources or just want to write some native Java code to be
accessed later from the JavaScript/Typescript implementation,
you should create a native Android project for your plugin,
compile it to an .aar
file and put it in the
src/platforms/android
directory of the plugin
package. The easiest way to do this is using Android Studio. The
project can contain the following files:
-
project/src/main/
AndroidManifest.xml
: This file describes any specific configuration changes required for your plugin to work. For example: required permissions. For more information about the format ofAndroidManifest.xml
, see App Manifest. -
project/src/main/
res
: (Optional) This directory contains resources declared by theAndroidManifest.xml
file. You can look at its structure here. -
project/src/main/
java
: (Optional) This directory contains Java code sources.
For a more complete Android library project overview visit the Android Documentation.
Using the NativeScript CLI plugin complier
In previous versions of the the NativeScript CLI it was possible
to add permissions and resources for Android without a separate
native library (.aar
file). If you have an older
plugin and your AndroidManifest.xml
file and
res
directory are located in
platforms/android
, then you can compile them with a
CLI command. Open a terminal, go to the
src
directory of the plugin and execute:
tns plugin build
This will create an .aar
file in the
platforms/android
directory, which will contain the
compiled manifest and resources and should be included in the
plugin package instead of them. If you keep
AndroidManifest.xml
and res
resources
in your package, the NativeScript will internally run the
tns plugin build
command when it builds the native
application, which will slow down the process for all users of
your plugin. This is why the recommended approach is to have an
.aar
library in the
platforms/android
directory of the plugin package
instead of plain manifest xml and resource files.
Build.xcconfig Specification
Every NativeScript plugin, which contains native iOS
dependencies, can also contain a
valid
build.xcconfig
file in the root of its
platforms\ios
directory. This
build.xcconfig
file might contain native
dependencies required to build the plugin properly.
Build.xcconfig Example
OTHER_LDFLAGS = $(inherited) -framework "QuartzCore" -l"sqlite3"
Metadata filtering usage specifications
Application author can opt-in for native metadata filtering.
Plugins should supply their metadata filtering rules in
platforms/android/native-api-usage.json
and
platforms/ios/native-api-usage.json
files
respectively. For more detailed description of this feature read
this article
Install a Plugin
To install a plugin for your project, inside your project, run the following command.
tns plugin add <Plugin>
Valid Plugin Sources
You can specify a plugin by name in the npm registry, local path
or URL. The following are valid values for the
<Plugin>
attribute.
-
A
<Name>
or<Name>@<Version>
for plugins published in the npm registry. -
A
<Local Path>
to the directory which contains the plugin source files and itspackage.json
file. -
A
<Local Path>
to a.tar.gz
archive containing a directory with the plugin and itspackage.json
file. -
A
<URL>
which resolves to a.tar.gz
archive containing a directory with the plugin and itspackage.json
file. -
A
<git Remote URL>
which resolves to a.tar.gz
archive containing a directory with the plugin and itspackage.json
file.
Installation Specifics
The installation of a NativeScript plugin mimics the installation of an npm module.
The NativeScript CLI takes the plugin and installs it to the
node_modules
directory in the root of your project.
During this process, the NativeScript CLI resolves any
dependencies described in the plugin
package.json
file and adds the plugin to the
project package.json
file in the project root.
If the NativeScript CLI detects any native iOS libraries in the
plugin, it copies the library files to the
lib\ios
folder in your project and configures the
iOS-specific projects in platforms\ios
to work with
the library.
Next, the NativeScript CLI runs a partial
prepare
operation for the plugin for all platforms
configured for the project. During this operation, the CLI
copies only the plugin to the
tns_modules
subdirectories in the
platforms\android
and
platforms\ios
directories in your project. If your
plugin contains platform-specific JS
files, the CLI
copies them to the respective platform subdirectory and renames
them by removing the platform modifier.
TIP: If you have not configured any platforms, when you run
$ tns platform add
, the NativeScript CLI will automatically prepare all installed plugins for the newly added platform.
Finally, the CLI merges the plugin Info.plist
file
with platforms\ios\Info.plist
in your project. The
plugin AndroidManifest.xml
will be merged with
platforms\android\AndroidManifest.xml
later, at
build time.
IMPORTANT: Currently, the merging of the platform configuration files does not resolve any contradicting or duplicate entries.
Use a Plugin
To use a plugin inside your project, you need to add a
require
in your app.
var myPlugin = require("nativescript-my-plugin");
This will look for a nativescript-my-plugin
module
with a valid package.json
file in the
tns_modules
directory. Note that you must require
the plugin with the value for the name
key in the
plugin package.json
file.
Remove a Plugin
To remove a plugin from your project, inside your project, run the following command.
tns plugin remove <Plugin>
You must specify the plugin by the value for the
name
key in the plugin
package.json
file.
Removal Specifics
The removal of a NativeScript plugin mimics the removal of an npm module.
The NativeScript CLI removes any plugin files from the
node_modules
directory in the root of your project.
During this process, the NativeScript CLI removes any
dependencies described in the plugin
package.json
file and removes the plugin from the
project package.json
file in the project root.
IMPORTANT: For iOS, this operation does not remove files from the
platforms\ios
directories and native iOS libraries, and does not unmerge theInfo.plist
file. For Android, this operation takes care of removing any plugin files located inplatforms\android
.
Manual Steps After Removal
After the plugin removal is complete, make sure to remove any
leftover native iOS library files from the
lib\ios
directory in the root of the project.
Update the iOS-specific projects in
platforms\ios
to remove any dependencies on the
removed native libraries.
Next, you need to run the following command.
tns prepare <Platform>
Make sure to run the command for all platforms configured for
the project. During this operation, the NativeScript CLI will
remove any leftover plugin files from your
platforms\ios
directory.
TIP: Instead of
$ tns prepare
you can run$ tns build
,$ tns run
,$ tns deploy
or$ tns emulate
. All these commands run$ tns prepare
.
Next, open your platforms\ios\Info.plist
file and
remove any leftover entries from the plugin
Info.plist
file.
Finally, make sure to update your code not to use the uninstalled plugin.