Livefyre.js is the core library that should be installed on each Livefyre Customer Website. Amongst other things, it provides Livefyre.require
, which can be used to fetch other Livefyre web components.
Note: The recommended installation path is to include a <script>
tag to a cdn release of Livefyre/Livefyre-scout, which is very tiny and will download the latest version of Livefyre.js for you.
<script src="//cdn.livefyre.com/Livefyre.js"></script>
Livefyre.require is a custom AMD loader based on requirejs. It can be used to load various packages published by Livefyre, and so it presents a convenient and intuitive integration path.
An important feature of Livefyre.require is that its packages are versioned using Semantic Versioning. Packages can be pinned to a version or a range. This gives you, the integrator, flexibility when customizing an integration.
Pinning to a full version guarantees that the Livefyre package code running on the page will not change, while pinning to a major or minor range ensures that you will get new bugfixes and features without having to change the integration code.
package-name#1
- Major version pin to v1. You'll get all new updates that maintain a backward-compatible API.package-name#1.1
- Minor version pin to v1.1. You'll get all bugfixes to this minor version, but no additional functionality or changes to default behavior.package-name#1.1.1
- Patch version pin to v1.1.1. The behavior of this embed will never change, even if there are bugfixes.
An example integration using Livefyre.require could look like this:
<!-- First add Livefyre.js to the page -->
<script src="//cdn.livefyre.com/Livefyre.js"></script>
<!-- Then load up all the desired Livefyre packages and Do Stuff in the callback -->
<script>
Livefyre.require([
'lfawesome#1',
'lfsuperawesome#2.1.2'
], function (LFAwesome, LFSuperAwesome) {
var greatness = new LFAwesome();
// etc..
});
</script>
Livefyre require has some options when loading modules, these are exposed via query params on the current page URL.
lfmin
If there is an unminified main/index file for the modules, fetch it: {0|1}
Caveat, the presence of non-minified files is up to the module author.
{file}.min.js is fetched by default. The non-minified file is expected to be named {file}.js and present in the same directory.
lfcdn
Choose whether to fetch the cached files or use the originating s3 bucket: {0|1}
lfVersion
Supply a dictionary-like of package version overrides e.g. ?lfVersion[herp]=1.0.0&lfVersion[derp]=2.0.0
. These version values will take precedence.
E.g. www.io.xxx?lfcdn=0&lfmin=0&lfenv=qa will fetch the non-cached, non-minified, qa version of the module.
lfbucket
It is possible to deploy to different s3 buckets for testing builds, etc: {dev|qa|uat}
are supported by lfcdn and by this option.
lfjsUrl
It is possible to have scout fetch Livefyre.js from a specified url.
The current LF packages are listed here: packages.html
-
Push a new version of the module to the CDN using lfcdn, this will place the files at a conventional url so that Livefyre.require can find your module. The main/index file for the module should be specified in the lfpackages.json.
-
Build executor.
-
Livefyre.require(module#{version})!
Livefyre.require(['streamhub-input#v0.2'], function (Input) {
console.log('Haz Input module: ' + !!Input);
});
You may see non-prod versions listed amongst the available packages. New features will be deployed to our UAT testing environment before appearing in production integrations.
Get tomorrow's code today by specifying the a prerelease env rather than a semver version. e.g.:
Livefyre.require(['streamhub-input#qa'], cb);
Supported envs are dev
, qa
, and uat
.
The latest version of Livefyre/livefyre-auth.
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