Blueprint Developer Manual / Version 2310
Table Of Contents
New CoreMedia Studio Client packages can be added to the project using the
Blueprint extensions mechanism or by adding them as direct dependencies of the
@coremedia-blueprint/studio-client.main.base-app
or @coremedia-blueprint/studio-client.main.app
package.
Using the extension mechanism is the preferred way. But as it is based on the same steps of adding a package directly,
this is firstly covered and the additional required steps for adding Studio
Client packages as extensions are described at the end of the section.
pnpm Configuration
Create a jangaroo project in apps/studio-client/apps/main/extensions
in a directory named after
your extension, e.g. for the extension "sample", by triggering the starter kit and following the steps:
pnpm create @jangaroo/project apps/studio-client/apps/main/extensions/sample
The starter kit will also offer to add the newly created package to the studio-client workspace. Confirm this option.
Make sure to also run pnpm install
from the workspace root after the package has been added.
Source Files and Folders
A Studio plugin package contains at least two files: the plugin descriptor file located in the
package's root folder (jangaroo.config.js
) and the initializing plugin class
(src/SampleStudioPlugin.ts
).
The plugin class only implements the init
method of the
EditorPlugin
interface:
import EditorPlugin from "@coremedia/studio-client.main.editor-components/sdk/EditorPlugin"; import IEditorContext from "@coremedia/studio-client.main.editor-components/sdk/IEditorContext"; class SampleStudioPlugin implements EditorPlugin { init(editorContext: IEditorContext): void { // ... } } export default SampleStudioPlugin; }
Example 4.31. src/SampleStudioPlugin.ts
Now it's time to add the plugin descriptor to the jangaroo.config.js
file. The plugin descriptor
specified therein is read after a user logs in to the Studio web app. It contains a reference
to your plugin class and a user-friendly name of the Studio plugin.
module.exports = jangarooConfig({ // ... sencha: { // ... namespace: "com.coremedia.blueprint.studio.sample", studioPlugins: [ { name: "Sample Plug-in", mainClass: "com.coremedia.blueprint.studio.sample.SampleStudioPlugin" } ] } }
Example 4.32. jangaroo.config.js
Each JSON object in the studioPlugins
array may use the attributes defined by the
class EditorPluginDescriptor
, especially name
and
mainClass
as shown above. In addition, the name of a group may be specified using
the attribute requiredGroup
, resulting in the plugin only being loaded if a user
logs in who is a member of that group.
Additional CSS files or other resources required for the plugin can be declared in the
sencha
configuration of the jangaroo.config.js
.
When set up correctly, your project structure should build successfully using
pnpm -r run build
Note
Additional steps would be adding resource bundles and plugin rules to your plugin. For more details about this and developing Studio plugins and property editors have a look at the Studio Developer Manual.
Adding Studio Client Packages as Blueprint extensions
How to work with Blueprint extensions is described in detail in Section 4.1.5, “Project Extensions”. For Studio client packages there are three extension points:
studio-client.main
studio-client.main-static
studio-client.workflow
The Studio client packages are packaged into apps. CoreMedia distinguishes between so-called (base) apps and app overlays. An app is a Sencha Ext JS app and includes the Ext JS framework, Studio core packages and generally all packages that participate in theming. Packages of an app are included in the Sencha Cmd build of the Sencha Ext JS app and are thus statically linked into the app. An app overlay in contrast references an app and adds further packages to this app. These packages are not included in the Sencha Cmd build of the Sencha Ext JS app and instead can be loaded at runtime into the app. Consequently, they are dynamically linked into the app.
The CoreMedia Blueprint features one
Studio app, namely the @coremedia-blueprint/studio-client.main.base-app
package with
Jangaroo type app
. In addition, there is one app overlay, namely
the @coremedia-blueprint/studio-client.main.app
package with Jangaroo type app-overlay
.
It references the studio-client.main.base-app
. If something is wrong with the overall
Studio app, it is typically sufficient to just re-compile
studio-client.main.base-app
.
Both apps come with their own extension points. Use the extension point studio-client.main-static
(for
the studio-client.main.base-app
) for new packages that do theming and the extension point
studio-client.main
(for the studio-client.main.app
) for packages that come without
theming. Also, note that there must never be a dependency of a studio-client.main-static
extension package to a studio-client.main
extension package.
Adding Studio Server Packages as Blueprint extensions
Additional packages for the Studio REST Service (Java / Maven) use the
studio-server
extension point.