Leiningen tasks are simply functions named $TASK in a leiningen.$TASK namespace. So writing a Leiningen plugin is just a matter of creating a project that contains such a function.
Using the plugin is a matter of declaring it in the :plugins
entry
of the project map. If a plugin is a matter of user convenience rather
than a requirement for running the project, users should place the
plugin declaration in the :user
profile in ~/.lein/profiles.clj
instead of directly in the project.clj
file.
Start by generating a new project with lein new plugin lein-myplugin
, and edit the myplugin
defn in the
leiningen.myplugin
namespace. You'll notice the project.clj
file
has :eval-in-leiningen true
, which causes all tasks to operate
inside the leiningen process rather than starting a subprocess to
isolate the project's code. Plugins need not declare a dependency on
Clojure itself; in fact
all of Leiningen's own dependencies
will be available. However, it doesn't hurt to be specific since
Leiningen's other dependencies may change in future versions.
See the lein-pprint
directory
in the Leiningen source
for a sample of a very simple plugin.
During plugin development, having to re-run lein install
in your
plugin project and then switch to a test project can be very
cumbersome. Once you've installed the plugin once, you can avoid this
annoyance by creating a .lein-classpath
file in your test project
containing the path to the src
directory of your plugin.
The first argument to your task function should be the current
project. It will be a map which is based on the project.clj
file,
but it also has :name
, :group
, :version
, and :root
keys added
in, among other things. To see what project maps look like, try using
the lein-pprint
plugin; you can invoke the pprint
task to examine
any project.
If you want your task to take parameters from the command-line
invocation, you can make the function take more than one argument. In
order to underscore the fact that tasks are just Clojure functions,
arguments which act as flags are usually accepted as :keywords
rather than traditional --dashed
syntax. Note that all arguments are
passed in as strings; it's up to your function to call read-string
on the arguments if you want keywords, symbols, integers, etc. Keep
this in mind when calling other tasks as functions too.
Most tasks may only be run in the context of another project. If your
task can be run outside a project directory, add ^:no-project-needed
metadata to your task defn to indicate so. Your task should still
accept a project as its first argument, but it will be allowed to be
nil if it's run outside a project directory. If you are inside a
project, Leiningen should change to the root of that project before
launching the JVM, but some other tools using the leiningen-core
library may not behave the same way, so for greatest portability check
the :root
key of the project map and work from there.
The lein help
task uses docstrings. A namespace-level docstring will
be used as the short summary if present; if not then it will take the
first line of your function's docstring. Try to keep the summary under
68 characters for formatting purposes. The full docstring can of
course be much longer but should still be wrapped at 80 columns. The
function's arglists will also be shown, so pick argument names that
are clear and descriptive. If you set :help-arglists
in the
function's metadata, it will be used instead for those cases where
alternate arities exist that aren't intended to be exposed to the
user. Be sure to explain all these arguments in the docstring. Note
that all your arguments will be strings, so it's up to you to call
read-string
on them if you want keywords, numbers, or symbols.
Often more complicated tasks get divided up into subtasks. Placing
:subtasks
metadata on a task defn which contains a vector of subtask
vars will allow lein help $TASK_CONTAINING_SUBTASKS
to list them.
Plugin functions run inside Leiningen's process, so they have access
to all the existing Leiningen functions. The public API of Leiningen
should be considered all public functions inside the
leiningen.core.*
namespaces not labeled with ^:internal
metadata
as well as each individual task functions. Other non-task functions in
task namespaces should be considered internal and may change inside
point releases.
Many tasks need to execute code inside the context of the project
itself. The leiningen.core.eval/eval-in-project
function is used for
this purpose. It accepts a project argument as well as a form to
evaluate, and the final (optional) argument is another form called
init
that is evaluated up-front before the main form. This may be
used to require a namespace earlier in order to avoid the
Gilardi Scenario.
Inside the eval-in-project
call the project's own classpath will be
active and Leiningen's own internals and plugins will not be
available. However, it's easy to update the project map
that's passed to eval-in-project
to add in the dependencies you
need. For example, this is done in the lein-swank
plugin like so:
(defn swank
"Launch swank server for Emacs to connect. Optionally takes PORT and HOST."
([project port host & opts]
(eval-in-project (update-in project [:dependencies]
conj ['swank-clojure "1.4.0"])
(swank-form project port host opts))))
TODO: switch to profiles for this
The code in the swank-clojure
dependency is needed inside the
project, so it's conj
ed into the :dependencies
.
Before eval-in-project
is invoked, Leiningen must "prep" a project,
usually by ensuring that all Java code and all necessary Clojure code
has been AOT compiled to bytecode. This is done by running all the
tasks in the :prep-tasks
key of the project, which defaults to
["javac" "compile"]
. If your plugin requires another kind of
prepping, (for instance, compiling protocol buffers) you can instruct
users to add another entry to :prep-tasks
. Note that this task will
be invoked for every eval-in-project
, so take care that it runs
quickly if nothing has changed since the last run.
You can modify the behaviour of built-in tasks to a degree using hooks. Hook functionality is provided by the Robert Hooke library. This is an implied dependency; as long as Leiningen 1.2 or higher is used it will be available.
Inspired by clojure.test's fixtures functionality, hooks are functions
which wrap other functions (often tasks) and may alter their behaviour
by binding other vars, altering the return value, only running the function
conditionally, etc. The add-hook
function takes a var of the task it's
meant to apply to and a function to perform the wrapping:
(ns lein-integration.plugin
(:require [robert.hooke]
[leiningen.test]))
(defn add-test-var-println [f & args]
`(binding [~'clojure.test/assert-expr
(fn [msg# form#]
(println "Asserting" form#)
((.getRawRoot #'clojure.test/assert-expr) msg# form#))]
~(apply f args)))
;; Place the body of the activate function at the top-level for
;; compatibility with Leiningen 1.x
(defn hooks []
(robert.hooke/add-hook #'leiningen.test/form-for-testing-namespaces
add-test-var-println))
Hooks compose, so be aware that your hook may be running inside another hook. See the documentation for Hooke for more details.
If you want your hooks to be loaded automatically with your plugin,
activate them in a function called plugin-name.plugin/hooks
. So in the
example above the plugin is called lein-integration
, and the function
lein-integration.plugin/hooks
is automatically called to activate hooks
when the lein-integration
plugin is loaded.
Hooks can also be loaded manually by setting the :hooks
key in project.clj to
a seq of vars to call to activate your hooks. For backward compatibility, you
can also specify namespaces instead of vars in :hooks
, and the activate
function in that namespace will be called. Note: automatic hooks are activated
before manually specified hooks.
Project middleware is just a function that is called on a project map returning a new project map. Middleware gives a plugin the power to do almost anything. For example, a plugin could use middleware to reimplement Leiningen's profiles functionality.
The following middleware injects the contents of project map into your project's resources folder so it can be read from the project code:
(ns lein-inject.plugin)
(defn middleware [project]
(update-in project [:injections] concat
`[(spit "resources/project.clj" ~(prn-str project))]))
Like hooks, middleware will be applied automatically for plugins if you put it
in plugin-name.plugin/middleware
. You can also load middleware manually by
setting the :middleware
key in project.clj to a seq of vars to call to
transform your project map. Note that automatic middleware is applied before
manually specified middleware.
Also note that the currently active middleware depends on which profiles are
active. This means we need to reapply the middleware functions to the project
map whenever the active profiles change. We accomplish this by storing the fresh
project map and starting from that whenever we call merge-profiles
,
unmerge-profiles
or set-profiles
.
To use a plugin in your project, just add a :plugins
key to your project.clj
with the same format as :dependencies
. In addition to the options allowed by
:dependencies
, :plugins
also allows you to disable auto-loading of hooks or
middleware.
(defproject foo "0.1.0"
:plugins [[lein-pprint "1.1.1"]
[lein-foo "0.0.1" :hooks false]
[lein-bar "0.0.1" :middleware false]])
Leiningen 2.0.0 uses Clojure 1.4.0. If you need to use a different
version of Clojure from within a Leiningen plugin, you can use
eval-in-project
with a dummy project argument:
(eval-in-project {:dependencies '[[org.clojure/clojure "1.5.0-alpha"]]}
'(println "hello from" *clojure-version*))
In Leiningen 1.x, plugins had access to monolithic Clojure Contrib. This is no longer true in 2.x.
Earlier versions of Leiningen had a few differences in the way plugins worked, but upgrading shouldn't be too difficult.
The biggest difference between 1.x and 2.x is that :dev-dependencies
have been done away with. There are no longer any dependencies that
exist both in Leiningen's process and the project's process; Leiningen
only sees :plugins
and the project only sees :dependencies
, though
both these maps can be affected by the currently-active profiles.
If your project doesn't need to use eval-in-project
at all, it
should be relatively easy to port; it's just a matter of updating any
references to Leiningen functions which may have moved. All
leiningen.utils.*
namespaces have gone away, and leiningen.core
has become leiningen.core.main
. For a more thorough overview see the
published documentation on leiningen-core.
Plugins that do use eval-in-project
should just be aware that the
plugin's own dependencies and source will not be available to the
project. If your plugin currently has code that needs to run in both
contexts it must be split into multiple projects, one for :plugins
and one for :dependencies
. See the example of lein-swank
above to
see how to inject :dependencies
in eval-in-project
calls.
If your plugin may run outside the context of the project entirely,
you should still leave room in the arguments list for a project map;
just expect that it will be nil if there's no project present. Use
^:no-project-needed
metadata to indicate this is acceptable.
In Leiningen 1.x, having a task function return a numeric value was a
way to signal the process's exit code. In Leiningen 2.x, tasks should
call the leiningen.core.main/abort
function when a fatal error is
encountered. If the leiningen.core.main/*exit-process?*
var is bound
to true, then this will trigger an exit, but in some contexts (like
with-profiles
) it will simply trigger an exception and go on to the
next task.
Once you've identified the changes necessary to achieve compatibility
with 2.x, you can decide whether you'd like to support 1.x and 2.x in
the same codebase. In some cases it may be easier to simply keep them
in separate branches, but sometimes it's better to support both.
Luckily the strategy of using :plugins
and adding in :dependencies
just for calls to eval-in-project
works fine in Leiningen 1.7.
If you use functions that moved in 2.x, you can try requiring and
resolving at runtime rather than compile time and falling back to the
1.x versions of the function if it's not found. Again the lein-swank
plugin provides an example of a compatibility shim:
(defn eval-in-project
"Support eval-in-project in both Leiningen 1.x and 2.x."
[project form init]
(let [[eip two?] (or (try (require 'leiningen.core.eval)
[(resolve 'leiningen.core.eval/eval-in-project)
true]
(catch java.io.FileNotFoundException _))
(try (require 'leiningen.compile)
[(resolve 'leiningen.compile/eval-in-project)]
(catch java.io.FileNotFoundException _)))]
(if two?
(eip project form init)
(eip project form nil nil init))))
Of course if the function has changed arities or has disappeared entirely this may not be feasible, but it should suffice in most cases.
Most widely-used functions which have changed in 2.x can be used from the leinjacker project, which provides a compatibility shim supporting both 1.x and 2.x.
Another key change is that :source-path
, :resources-path
,
:java-source-path
, and :test-path
have changed to
:sources-paths
, :resource-paths
, :java-source-paths
, and
:test-paths
, and they should be vectors now instead of single
strings. The old :dev-resources
key is now just another entry to the
:resource-paths
vector that's only present when the :dev
profile
is active.
Allowing the task to run outside a project directory is tricky to do in a backwards-compatible way since 1.x is overly-clever and actually inspects your argument list to figure out if it should pass in a project argument, while 2.x simply always passes it in and just allows it to be nil if it's not present. You can try checking the first argument to see if it's a project map, but if you have more than two arities this can get very tricky; it may just be better to maintain separate branches of your codebase in this situation.
Occasionally, the need arises for a task specific to a project, so
that, for example, lein foo
is available from within that project's
repo without a lein install
or dependency download. To enable this
behavior, place the foo.clj
file defining the new task in
tasks/leiningen/
and add tasks
to your .lein-classpath
:
$ ls
README.md project.clj src tasks test
$ ls -R tasks
leiningen
tasks/leiningen:
foo.clj
$ echo -ne ":tasks" | cat >> .lein-classpath
$ lein foo
Hello, Foo!
Note that in most cases it's better to spin off tasks into their own
plugin projects; using .lein-classpath
is mainly appropriate for
experimentation or cases when there isn't enough time to create a
proper plugin.
You can also publish templates for generating project skeletons that
work with lein new
. See
the documentation for the new task
for details on how to build templates.
Please add your plugin to the list on the wiki once it's ready.
Hopefully the plugin mechanism is simple and flexible enough to let you bend Leiningen to your will.