New built-in Plugin Admin (Plugin Manager) is ready
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In order to be compatible with the most of existent packages, here’s new package folder structure rule:
The plugin (DLL) should be under the root of zip file (and only).There will be no old plugin manager’s copy instructions. I try to KISS in new design of PA.
All the binaries are updated:
https://notepad-plus-plus.org/pluginListTestTools/Please use them (both notepad++.exe & GUP.exe) to test with your plugin package, and let me know if any problem.
Thank you for your pertinent suggestions.
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@donho said:
The plugin (DLL) should be under the root of zip file (and only).
After testing the new binaries I want to precise this statement according to my experience.
- The plugin DLL file should be placed at the root level of the ZIP file. It has to be the only DLL file on this level.
- The root level of the ZIP file can also contain additional files and folders which will be copied to the users harddisk as well.
- Everything what gets copied from the ZIP file will be stored under
<Npp-installation-folder>\plugins\<plugin-name>
.
Presumption: Additional DLL files needed by the plugin have to be placed in an arbitrary subfolder because the destination folder
<plugin-name>
gets named after the DLL file placed on the ZIP root level.
@oleg-shilo81 said:
- From plugin-admin.html: The json file will be built into the a binary (nppPluginList.dll), which will be signed (for thes sake of security) and be included in the official distribution.
Does this mean that any plugin updates users will need to wait until Notepad++ is updated?
@donho already answered this question here:
The release of nppPluginList will be independent from the release of Notepad++, and in the future, Notepad++ will be notified once there’s a new release of nppPluginList and download it.
As well, nppPluginList will be maintained and released by people of community, since I’ll have not much vacant time for it.
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Hi, @don-ho, @chcg, @dinkumoil, @dail, @oleg-shilo81 and All
Just a neophyte question, because I’m quite far from creating my own plugin: ;-))
After reading all your posts and in order to summarize, if I understand you, correctly, for a plugin named, say,
abcde.dll
:-
It should be placed in the folder
..\Plugins\abcde
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All other files and folders, necessary for the plugin, which were, initially located under
..\Plugins\Config\abcde
( or elsewhere ! ), will, now, be located under..\Plugins\abcde
And so, in the long run, the
config
directory should disappear, shouldn’t it ?Personally, I think that, if this new organization were implemented, it would be better because everything, regarding, for instance, the
abcde.dll
plugin, would be included in its own folder..\Plugins\abcde
:-))Cheers,
guy038
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@guy038 said:
a plugin named, say,
abcde.dll
:- It should b placed in the folder
..\Plugins\abcde
That is correct.
- All other files and folders, necessary for the plugin, which were, initially located under
..\Plugins\Config\abcde
( or elsewhere ! ), will, now, be located under..\Plugins\abcde
No, files in the
config
folder stay there. Nothing changes.And so, in the long run, the
config
directory should disappear, shouldn’t it ?Personally, I think that, if this new organization were implemented, it would be better because everything, regarding, for instance, the
abcde.dll
plugin, would be included in its own folder..\Plugins\abcde
:-))This would be a bad idea. At least for local installations of Npp the plugins own folder is stored in a proteced location (usually
C:\Program Files\Notepad++\plugins\abcde
). Thus the plugin wouldn’t be able to write to its own config file(s) because admin rights would be required to do that. - It should b placed in the folder
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Hi @dail,
Thanks, for all your clarifications :-)
Regarding my last statement, I’m so used to have, on my laptop, several versions of N++, at a time, all located in a user-defined folder, not related with any system-protected area that I had just forgotten the particular case you were talking about !
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@dinkumoil said:
After testing the new binaries I want to precise this statement according to my experience.
The plugin DLL file should be placed at the root level of the ZIP file. It has to be the only DLL file on this level.
The root level of the ZIP file can also contain additional files and folders which will be copied to the users harddisk as well.
Everything what gets copied from the ZIP file will be stored under <Npp-installation-folder>\plugins<plugin-name>.
Presumption: Additional DLL files needed by the plugin have to be placed in an arbitrary subfolder because the destination folder <plugin-name> gets named after the DLL file placed on the ZIP root level.Very accurate description you made. It will be included in the PA guide line if I’m allowed to use it.
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@donho said:
It will be included in the PA guide line if I’m allowed to use it.
Of course, feel free to do that.
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Are you sure you did your last changes to both versions of GUP and Android++?
For me seems that x64 works with new scheme, but x86 works with old -
@Hsilgos said:
For me seems that x64 works with new scheme, but x86 works with old
I’ve tested both 32 bit and 64 bit Notepad++ and both worked with the new scheme.
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Are you sure you did your last changes to both versions of GUP and Android++?
For me seems that x64 works with new scheme, but x86 works with oldBecause you use Android++ instead of Notepad++.
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@donho Yes, Notepad++ for sure =D
The rest of message should be correct -
@dinkumoil Sorry, I didn’t read your description attentively. The correct info about packaging is following:
- The plugin DLL file should be placed at the root level of the ZIP file.
- The root level of the ZIP file can also contain additional files (DLL files or data files needed by the plugin) and folders which will be copied to the users harddisk as well.
- Everything what gets copied from the ZIP file will be stored under <Npp-installation-folder>\plugins<plugin-name>.
The other DLLs can be at the root level with plugins DLL because Notepad++ will load only the dll has the same name as its containing folder. The other DLLs are just ignored.
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Having a hash of the main plugin dll might be still of interest, if you want to provide a “safe” mode with just starting plugin dlls with correct sha-256 hash.
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@donho ,
I just noticed that when testing the NppGTags x86 plugin installation it was put in C:\Users\me\AppData\Local\Notepad++\plugins\NppGTags instead of C:\Program Files (x86)\Notepad++\plugins\NppGTags. It is working fine but I didn’t get the impression that it would be installed there.
Is that the intended behavior? -
@pnedev said:
it was put in C:\Users\me\AppData\Local\Notepad++\plugins\NppGTags instead of C:\Program Files (x86)\Notepad++\plugins\NppGTags
I did my previous test with portable installations of NPP, with a local installation I can confirm this behaviour. My plugins partially fail to work correctly, they don’t find their own DLL (required for extracting version information for the About box) and their documentation file anymore.
The current behaviour is caused by the fact that it was intentional to provide a method of plugin installation which requires no restart of Npp. Thus the plugin installer can’t copy the plugin files to the installation folder of Npp because usually this is a protected location and would require admin rights to do so.
Since we already discovered that there is a high risc that a restart-free plugin installation will cause problems with certain plugins (NppFTP seems to be one of these) @donho stated here that this behaviour will be changed. Thus in the future the installation folder should be
<Npp-installation folder>\plugins\<plugin-name>
again. -
Is that the intended behavior?
Yes, I confirm it.
From now on all plugins will be placed in its folder which has the same name, so that any data or dll that plugin needs can be placed arbitrarily in this folder.I invite you to check the guide for being included in plugins list, it’ll be updated as soon as there’s any change of specs.
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@donho stated here that this behaviour will be changed. Thus in the future the installation folder should be <Npp-installation folder>\plugins<plugin-name> again.
Not sure about the point you’re talking about. Could you elaborate it?
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@donho said:
@dinkumoil
Not sure about the point you’re talking about. Could you elaborate it?In this comment I stated:
2.After plugin installation Notepad++ is not restarted. That seems to be nice at first glance but causes serious problems.
Your answer in this comment was:
The 2nd point you mentioned is a bug, will be fixed in the future.
I interpreted this in that sense that in the future after plugin installation Npp will be restarted again to avoid problems with plugins which need this behaviour. We have seen that sending a NPPM_READY message to plugins after installation is not sufficient because @chcg reported in this comment that NppFTP still isn’t initialized correctly:
@chcg said
For NppFTP the NPPN_READY doesn’t solve it completely. Now the docking and the message window are constructed/ visible, but the content is still not there. Maybe there is another difference to the start of n++ itself.
The thing @pnedev and I wanted to point out is that with a local installation (performed by installer exe) the plugins currently are not installed under
C:\Program Files\Notepad++\plugins
but underC:\Users\<user-name>\AppData\Local\Notepad++\plugins
. This difference causes problems since it is only possible to query the installation folder of Npp but not the storage location of the plugin itself.My current algorithm to get the storage location of my plugin DLL file and its documentation file is as follows (if this algorithm is wrong please point me to the correct method to do that):
- Send
NPPM_GETNPPDIRECTORY
to Npp to query the installation folder of Npp. - Append
plugins
. - Append the plugin name.
This would result in e.g.
C:\Program Files\Notepad++\plugins\AutoCodepage
. But currently there is no folder of this path since the plugin gets installed underC:\Users\<user-name>\AppData\Local\Notepad++\plugins\AutoCodepage
. - Send
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The thing @pnedev and I wanted to point out is that with a local installation (performed by installer exe) the plugins currently are not installed under C:\Program Files\Notepad++\plugins but under C:\Users<user-name>\AppData\Local\Notepad++\plugins.
Damn! I miss again!
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/ChxfvQVVEAEQvXH.jpgI interpreted this in that sense that in the future after plugin installation Npp will be restarted again to avoid problems with plugins which need this behaviour.
No, it’s not what I wanna do. I have added
NPPN_READY
, obviously it’s not enough, there is (are) other notification(s) missing we just need to add it (them). -
@donho said:
No, it’s not what I wanna do. I have added
NPPN_READY
, obviously it’s not enough, there is (are) other notification(s) missing we just need to add it (them).Why do you want to make life difficult for you (and plugin developers which have to assist you to find the required notifications)? When plugins get updated or uninstalled a restart of Npp happens (currently) anyway.
Revert the installation path for portable and local Npp installations to the same location and restart Npp to perform actual plugin installation in admin mode - you (and we plugin authors) would be ready. That’s also KISS.