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Runtime for Experience Cloud apps to implement extension points for App Builder extensions

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UI Extensibility toolkit for Experience Cloud Apps

With these libraries you can:

  • Make any app into a UI Extensibility Host
  • Connect any app to a Host as a UI Extension, or Guest

Host applications define areas that can be extended, enhanced or modified by guest applications. They define these areas in the UI code itself, simply by expressing what interfaces an extension needs to have, and then calling them.

Guest applications expect to run in an "off-thread environment" in the user's browser. Most typically this is an iframe, though it may expand in the future to include other runtimes.

The host and guest cannot share live objects or closures; they communicate with messages. The UIX SDK abstracts this into an RPC interface, enabling the host and guest to call asynchronous methods on each other directly.

Installation

Requirements

The SDK runs in modern browsers of the last several versions. It is not extensively tested in Internet Explorer. The SDKs use relatively recent native browser features, including EventTarget, fetch, for...of loops, Proxy, Reflect, WeakMap, and others. Using the SDK in browsers that don't support these features requires transpiling it with tools like Webpack and Parcel; most projects do this by default.

As of v0.5.0, The SDK has no peer dependencies. It has only one direct dependency, on the Penpal iframe management library. It shouldn't add much weight to your bundles.

When using the host-side React bindings at @adobe/uix-host-react, there is an implicit React peer dependency.

Host Application

Host applications built in React should use the React bindings library: npm install @adobe/uix-host-react / yarn add @adobe/uix-host-react

Host apps not built in React can use the underlying host library objects: npm install @adobe/uix-host / yarn add @adobe/uix-host (and consider contributing higher-level bindings for your app's framework!)

Guest Application

Guest applications built in any framework should use the guest objects library: npm install @adobe/uix-guest / yarn add @adobe/uix-guest

Preview builds

Nightly

Nightly builds are released to NPM under the nightly tag. The version string will be different each day because it includes a datestamp, but you can always install the latest nightly using the tag:

npm install @adobe/uix-host-react@nightly
npm install @adobe/uix-guest@nightly

Usage

Usage - React App Hosts

Make a React app extensible with UI Extensions by wrapping all or part of the app UI component tree in the Extensible provider. <Extensible> provides a singleton UIX Host object for the part of the React app it contains. Any descendent component may use the useExtensions() hook.

App.jsx with hardcoded extensions

import { Extensible } from '@adobe/uix-host-react'

function ExtensibleApp() {
  return (
    <Extensible
      extensions={{
        "cc1": "https://creative-cloud-ext.adobeio-static.net",
        "exc1": "https://experience-cloud-ext.adobeio-static.net",
      }}>
      <App/>
    </Extensible>
  )
}

In a real app, hardcoded extensions are unlikely; instead, extensions can be supplied in the form of a function which returns a Promise for the list. The React bindings provide convenience methods for creating these functions.

App.jsx using ExtensionProvider and a preinitialized shared context

import {
  Extensible,
  createExtensionRegistryProvider
} from '@adobe/uix-host-react'

function ExtensibleApp({ params, auth, shell, service, version, env }) {
  return (
    <Extensible
      extensions={createExtensionRegistryProvider({
        baseUrl: env === "prod" ? "appregistry.adobe.io" : params.registry,
        apiKey: shell.imsClientId,
        auth: {
          schema: auth.authScheme || "Bearer",
          imsToken: auth.imsToken,
        },
        service: "aem",
        extensionPoint: service,
        version: version || "1",
        imsOrg: auth.imsOrg
      })}
      sharedContext={{
        locale: shell.locale,
        theme: COLOR_SCHEME,
        auth,
      }}>
      <App/>
    </Extensible>
  )
}

Components inside the Extensible provider can use the useExtensions hook.

Component.jsx

import React, { useEffect, useState } from 'react';
import { useExtensions } from '@adobe/uix-host-react'
function App() {

  const { extensions } = useExtensions(() => ({
    // Only re-render when all extensions have loaded
    updateOn: "all",
    // Get only the extensions that implement these methods
    requires: {
      someNamespace: ["getSomeData", "getOtherData"]
    },
    // Extensions can remotely call these methods
    provides: {
      annoy: {
        // First argument is always the extension description
        cheerily(source, greeting) {
          console.log(`Extension ${source.id} says ${greeting}`);
        },
      },
    }
  }));
  
  const [data, setData] = useState([]);
  useEffect(() => {
    Promise.all(
      // Call extensions; all remote methods return Promises
      extensions.map(({ apis }) => apis.someNamespace.getSomeData("query")))
    .then(setData);
  }, extensions);
  return (
    <ul>
      {data.map(item => <li>{item}</li>)}
    </ul>
  );
}

Extension Boundaries

Inside <Extensible> component tree, extension boundaries can be used to specify what extensionPoints are applicable to all child components in this subtree. In other words, this component subtree will only show extensions that has extensionPoint specified in it's surrounding boundary, filtering out all other extensions.

This feature is optional and can be safely omitted if not required. If not enclosed within any boundary, components will show or enable all applicable extensions.

import type { ExtensionRegistryEndpointRegistration } from "@adobe/uix-host";
import { ExtensibleComponentBoundary } from "@adobe/uix-host-react";

const extensionPoints: ExtensionRegistryEndpointRegistration[] = [
  { extensionPoint: "cf-editor", service: "aem", version: "1" },
];

function App() {
  return <ExtensibleComponentBoundary extensionPoints={extensionPoints}>
      /* Components that use extensions by utilizing useExtensions() hook */
  </ExtensibleComponentBoundary>
}

Usage - Guests

An extension has its own runtime inside a Host app. It starts with one hidden iframe, called the "bootstrap" frame or the "GuestServer", which runs first and registers the extension's capabilities. This can be considered the "entry point" of the guest, which can control other iframes (see below). It runs in the background and should not have visible UI.

Create your GuestServer with register().

creative-cloud-ext/web-src/main.js

import { register } from "@adobe/uix-guest";
import { externalDataSource } from "./guest-functionality";

async function start() {

  const guestServer = await register({
    metadata: {
      //metadata here
    }
    methods: {
      someNamespace: {
        getSomeData(query) {
          return externalDataSource.get(query);
        },
        async getOtherData() {
          const res = await fetch(externalDataSource.meta);
          return res.json();
        }
      },
    },
    id: "creative-cloud-ext"
  });

  // The returned guest object has access to any methods provided by the host in
  // the 'useExtensions({ provide })` parameter.
  setInterval(() => guestServer.host.annoy.cheerily('Hi!'), 5000);
}

Extensions can control host UI if the host exposes methods that let them do so, entirely from within the GuestServer. But in many cases, the host may want to display UI rendered by the extension. Because the GuestServer is a background process, it can't display this UI itself; instead, the host app can spawn additional iframes that point to other URLs on the extension host; extensions can attach these "UI frames" to the host via attach().

import { attach } from "@adobe/uix-guest";

async function start() {

  const guestUI = await attach({
    id: 'creative-cloud-ext'
  });
  // when guest UI returns, we are already connected. it's time to render!
  document.body.innerHTML = "This is a bad way to render, though."
  //call methods host exposed
  await guestUI.host.renderDone();
  // subscribe to shared context changes
  guestUI.addEventListener("contextchange", (event) => {
    document.body.innerHTML += "A very bad way to render. Updated context:"
    document.body.innerHTML ++ JSON.stringify(event.detail.context);
  })
}

Development

Quick Start

Dev Mode

  1. Clone this repo and run npm install from root.
  2. Run npm run build for an initial dev build.
  3. Run npm run dev to start the dev server.
  4. Open the project in your IDE. Saving any changes in packages or examples should cause an incremental refresh on the dev server.

To link your in-development SDKs to another project, see [Publish Local Script][publish-local-script] below.

Production and Release

  1. Run npm run format && npm run build:production to produce a clean build.
  2. Run npm run demo to open the minified, production version of the dev server.
  3. Navigate through the demo servers and test functionality.
  4. Commit any changes and repeat from step 1.
  5. Run:
    node scripts/release.mjs <major|minor|patch|prerelease>

To customize the behavior of the release script, see Release Script below.

Requirements

  • Node >= LTS Gallium (16)
  • NPM >= 7

Repository Layout

:info: This repository uses npm and not yarn, but yarn should work if necessary.

There are two sets of workspaces:

  • packages/: Source code for the SDKs themselves
  • examples/: Small example projects demonstrating use of the SDK in different contexts, use cases, and frontend frameworks

Additional repo contents:

  • configs/: Common config files for various tools in use by packages
  • scripts/: Build, development, release and CI scripts
  • tsconfig.json: Root TypeScript configuration, inherited and shared by all SDK packages.
  • tsconfig-debug.json: Verbose-logging version of tsconfig, used by npm scripts.
  • .*: Configuration files for tooling, including IDEs, ESLint, NPM, Prettier, NVM, asdf

Package Scripts

All scripts should be called from package root. If you need to run an individual script in a single workspace, use the -w flag.

The defined NPM scripts are:

  • build: Alias to build:development
  • build:development: Bundle all SDKs in development mode, with extra logging, no minification, and source maps
  • build:production: Bundle all SDKs in production mode, with minification
  • clean: Remove all artifacts and node_modules in the repo root, and run clean scripts in all packages
  • demo: Run the [demo server][demo-server]
  • dev: Run the [dev server][dev-server]
  • format: Fix code formatting and usage errors. Warning: Will edit files directly.
  • lint: Find formatting and usage problems.
  • report: Run a production build, then print a report of how many bytes each SDK would add to a JS bundle. Good for performance budgeting.
  • test: Run test scripts in all packages.
  • watch: Alias to dev
  • any: Alias to --workspaces --if-present

Custom Scripts

The scripts in /scripts can be run directly with node scripts/<script>.mjs. Some of them, such as bundler and multi-server, are called from NPM scripts and don't need to be run manually.

Bundler Script

node scripts/bundler.mjs <development|production|report>

Called by npm run build. No need to call directly.

Builds all SDK packages in packages/ in dependency order, by executing the build script defined in each package. If report is specified instead of development or production, the script will build, print a bundle size report, and then delete the built artifacts.

Multi Server Script

node scripts/multi-server-mjs <development|production>

Called by npm run dev and npm run demo. No need to call directly.

When mode is development, will start live development environment for the SDKs, including:

  • Incremental compilation of SDK packages
  • Live, hot-reloading example servers
  • A mock registry that example servers use to connect to each other

When mode is production, will compile the SDKs in production mode and then run the example servers and mock registry in production mode.

Publish Local Script

node scripts/publish-local-to.mjs <../path/to/other-project-root>

Export your local dev versions of SDK packages to another local project. Uses yalc to package and copy build artifacts to other projects, instead of the more bug-prone npm link.

You'll need to re-run this script every time you make a new build; it doesn't refresh the exported packages on change like the dev server does, due to Node limitations with symlinks.

Use the --dry-run option to see what commands would be run first; the script will show the commands but not execute them.

Release Script

node scripts/release.mjs <major|minor|patch|prerelease> [--no-version] [--no-git] [--no-publish] [--registry=https://example.com]

Prepare and release all SDKs. By default, this is what it does:

  1. Validates that the branch is main and there are no changes in the Git index.
  2. Validates that the root repo and all SDKs have the same version string. It may sometimes be necessary for the SDKs to have individual releases that don't match each other. This release script won't function under those circumstances.
  3. Increments the root package version, and all the SDK package versions, to the new version string.
  4. Modifies all interdependencies between SDK packages to use the new common version string.
  5. Reinstalls dependencies, so package.lock picks up the new version strings.
  6. Commits these version string changes.
  7. Tags the git commit like NPM does, with a version string.
  8. Pushes the main branch and new tag to the origin repo.
  9. Publishes each SDK to the default NPM repositories, Adobe npm-adobe-release and npm-platform-adobe-release artifactories.

Adjust this functionality with command line arguments:

  • --no-version to skip updating version strings
  • --no-git to skip Git commit, tag, and push
  • --no-publish to skip NPM publish
  • --registry=<registry url> to override the default NPM repositories. Multiple --registry= arguments will publish to multiple repositories.
  • --dry-run to see what commands would be run first; the script will show the commands but not execute them.

:information: Warning: Must be working in an office or on the VPN for the Git push and NPM publish to work.

SDKs

Structure

The UIX SDK is split into several small packages:

  • @adobe/uix-core is for internal functionality and common types
  • @adobe/uix-guest is the library that extension developers use to connect to the host
  • @adobe/uix-host is the library that app developers use to make a UI extensible and integrate extensions
  • @adobe/uix-host-react is a suite of React bindings for @adobe/uix-host, enabling easy access to extension functionality within the React component lifecycle.

Architecture

TBD (TODO: diagrams)

Examples

The repo contains several example projects in examples/. They also serve as user-acceptance-testing tools. Each one exposes a web server for dev and demo mode. Running npm run dev will launch all examples simultaneously.