etherpad-lite/doc/api/hooks_overview.md

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Hooks

A hook function is registered with a hook via the plugin's ep.json file. See the Plugins section for details. A hook may have many registered functions from different plugins.

Some hooks call their registered functions one at a time until one of them returns a value. Others always call all of their registered functions and combine the results (if applicable).

Registered hook functions

Note: The documentation in this section applies to every hook unless the hook-specific documentation says otherwise.

Arguments

Hook functions are called with three arguments:

  1. hookName - The name of the hook being invoked.
  2. context - An object with some relevant information about the context of the call. See the hook-specific documentation for details.
  3. cb - For asynchronous operations this callback can be called to signal completion and optionally provide a return value. The callback takes a single argument, the meaning of which depends on the hook (see the "Return values" section for general information that applies to most hooks). This callback always returns undefined.

Expected behavior

The presence of a callback parameter suggests that every hook function can run asynchronously. While that is the eventual goal, there are some legacy hooks that expect their hook functions to provide a value synchronously. For such hooks, the hook functions must do one of the following:

  • Call the callback with a non-Promise value (undefined is acceptable) and return undefined, in that order.
  • Return a non-Promise value other than undefined (null is acceptable) and never call the callback. Note that async functions always return a Promise, so they must never be used for synchronous hooks.
  • Only have two parameters (hookName and context) and return any non-Promise value (undefined is acceptable).

For hooks that permit asynchronous behavior, the hook functions must do one or more of the following:

  • Return undefined and call the callback, in either order.
  • Return something other than undefined (null is acceptable) and never call the callback. Note that async functions always return a Promise, so they must never call the callback.
  • Only have two parameters (hookName and context).

Note that the acceptable behaviors for asynchronous hook functions is a superset of the acceptable behaviors for synchronous hook functions.

WARNING: The number of parameters is determined by examining Function.length, which does not count default parameters or "rest" parameters. To avoid problems, do not use default or rest parameters when defining hook functions.

Return values

A hook function can provide a value to Etherpad in one of the following ways:

  • Pass the desired value as the first argument to the callback.
  • Return the desired value directly. The value must not be undefined unless the hook function only has two parameters. (Hook functions with three parameters that want to provide undefined should instead use the callback.)
  • For hooks that permit asynchronous behavior, return a Promise that resolves to the desired value.
  • For hooks that permit asynchronous behavior, pass a Promise that resolves to the desired value as the first argument to the callback.

Examples:

exports.exampleOne = (hookName, context, callback) => {
  return 'valueOne';
};

exports.exampleTwo = (hookName, context, callback) => {
  callback('valueTwo');
  return;
};

// ONLY FOR HOOKS THAT PERMIT ASYNCHRONOUS BEHAVIOR
exports.exampleThree = (hookName, context, callback) => {
  return new Promise('valueThree');
};

// ONLY FOR HOOKS THAT PERMIT ASYNCHRONOUS BEHAVIOR
exports.exampleFour = (hookName, context, callback) => {
  callback(new Promise('valueFour'));
  return;
};

// ONLY FOR HOOKS THAT PERMIT ASYNCHRONOUS BEHAVIOR
exports.exampleFive = async (hookName, context) => {
  // Note that this function is async, so it actually returns a Promise that
  // is resolved to 'valueFive'.
  return 'valueFive';
};

Etherpad collects the values provided by the hook functions into an array, filters out all undefined values, then flattens the array one level. Flattening one level makes it possible for a hook function to behave as if it were multiple separate hook functions.

For example: Suppose a hook has eight registered functions that return the following values: 1, [2], ['3a', '3b'] [[4]], undefined, [undefined], [], and null. The value returned to the caller of the hook is [1, 2, '3a', '3b', [4], undefined, null].