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I need some resources that talk about how to design your software to be extensible, i.e. so that other people can write add-ons/plug-ins that adds functionality to it.

What do you recommend? Any books out there that discuss the subject?
I would prefer something that's short and to the point; a bit of theory and a bunch of concrete examples.

I'm not targeting a specific language, I want to be able to understand the core idea so that I can implement it in any language.

And for the same reason, I prefer not to do it using a framework that someone else built (unless the framework is not very high-level, i.e. doesn't hide too much), at the moment I only want to educate myself on the subject and experiment with various ways to implement it. Plus, a framework usually assumes user's knowledge about the subject.

UPDATE

I'm not asking about OOP or allowing my classes to be inherited. I'm talking about designing an application that will be deployed on a system, such that it can be extended by third-party add-ons AFTER its been deployed.

For example, Notepad++ has a plug-in architecture where you can place a .dll file in the plugins folder, and it adds functionality to the application that wasn't there, such as color-picking, or snippet insertion, or many other things (a wide range of functionality).

2
  • I think you'll find that most plug-in environments provide base classes for use in writing a plug-in. Your custom 3rd party plug-in would derive from the base class, and extend it's "plug-in standard" functionality.
    – Kieveli
    Nov 27, 2008 at 20:19
  • 3
    You'll find that the extensible nature of software like Firefox and Notepad ++ originates from it's OO design roots. The same principal that makes your classes extensible will help to make your overall software extensible.
    – orokusaki
    Jan 25, 2010 at 21:14

12 Answers 12

25

IF we're talking .NET, try Scripting .NET applications with VBScript over on CodeProject. Lots of concrete examples there.

Below are sites implementing various application extension techniques

3
  • 1
    Spooky, the Plugin Architecture using C# link is to code that looks exactly like a POC I once wrote. Only one thing was missing: A filesystemwatcher to pick up new modules during runtime. Great for demo's: "Put the dll in this directory and... Voila! A new menu choice."
    – Guge
    Dec 14, 2008 at 0:12
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    accepted because of this link codeguru.com/cpp/misc/misc/plug-insadd-ins/article.php/c3879 which I didn't notice at first!
    – hasen
    Jan 6, 2009 at 14:08
  • Thanks. Asante. Shukria. Shukran. Tenkyu tru. Obligad. Merci. Gracias. Arigato. Xie xie. Navazish.
    – bugmagnet
    Jan 6, 2009 at 15:02
15

OSGI is a good practical example of a technical framework allowing to do what you are after.

The theory is here.

The (free!) book is there.

Extensibility and the ability to write plugin must deal with service lifecycle

  • adding / removing service/plugin on the spot
  • managing dependencies between services
  • managing states of services (declared, installed, started, stopped,...)

What is OSGI for ?

One of the main functions of a module is as a unit of deployment… something that we can either build or download and install to extend the functionality of our application.

You will find a good introduction here, on the central notion of service (which is related to your question, and which explain some problems around services, key component for extensibility).

Extract:

Why are services then so important if so many applications can be built without them? Well, services are the best known way to decouple software components from each other.

One of the most important aspects of services is that they significantly minimize class loading problems because they work with instances of objects, not with class names. Instances that are created by the provider, not the consumer. The reduction of the complexity is quite surprising

Not only do services minimize configuration, they also significantly reduce the number of shared packages.

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  • What's osgi? I looked at the website but I don't get how is it related to my question!
    – hasen
    Nov 27, 2008 at 8:51
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  • "adding / removing service/plugin on the spot" really useful only for server type applications that are continuously running; other applications can load the latest version of a plugin when they start.
    – Raedwald
    Mar 3, 2011 at 13:02
6

Implement SOLID principles in your application.

1. Single responsibility principle: A class should have only a single responsibility (i.e. only one potential change in the software's specification should be able to affect the specification of the class

2.Open/closed principle: Software entities … should be open for extension, but closed for modification

3. Liskov substitution principle: Objects in a program should be replaceable with instances of their subtypes without altering the correctness of that program

4. Interface segregation principle: Many client-specific interfaces are better than one general-purpose interface

5. Dependency inversion principle: One should Depend upon Abstractions. Do not depend upon concretions

Stackoverflow questions:

Example of Single Responsibility Principle

Is the Open/Closed Principle a good idea?

What is the Liskov Substitution Principle?

Interface Segregation Principle- Program to an interface

What is the Dependency Inversion Principle and why is it important?

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  • Seems that Bob's ISP (Interface segregation principle) is the opposite thing to plugin architecture. Plugin architecture implies one or more general-purpose interfaces, doesn't it?
    – red0ct
    May 1, 2022 at 20:03
4

You try to reach two competing goals:

  1. The components of your software must expose a lot of themselves, so they can be reused
  2. The components of your software must expose very little of themselves, so they can be reused

Explanation: To encourage code reuse, you should be able to extend existing classes and call their methods. This isn't possible when the methods are declared "private" and the classes are "final" (and can't be extended). So to meet this goal, everything should be public and accessible. No private data or methods.

When you release the second version of your software, you will find that many of the ideas of version 1 were plain wrong. You need to change many interfaces or your code, method names, delete methods, break the API. If you do this, many people will turn away. So in order to be able to evolve your software, the components must not expose anything that is not absolutely necessary - at the cost of code reuse.

Example: I wanted to observe the position of the cursor (caret) in an SWT StyledText. The caret is not meant to be extended. If you do it, you'll find that the code contains checks like "is this class in the package org.eclipse.swt" and a lot of methods are private and final and whatnot. I had to copy about 28 classes out of SWT into my project just to implement this feature because everything is locked down.

SWT is a nice framework to use and hell to extend.

3

Of course there is the famous Open Closed Principle - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open/closed_principle

2

Well it depends on the language.

  • In C/C++ I'm pretty sure there is a loadlibrary function that allows you to open a library at runtime and invoke it's exported functions. This is typically how it's done in C/C++.
  • In .NET, there is Reflection, which is offers similar (but more broad) to loadlibrary. There is also entire libraries built on Reflection like Managed Extension Framework, or Mono.Addins that does most of the heavy lifting for you already.
  • In Java, there is also Reflection. And there is the JPF (Java Plugin Framework) which is used in stuff like Eclipse IIRC.

Depending on what language you use I could recommend some tutorial/books. I hope this was helpful.

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  • "loadlibrary": not in standard C/C++.
    – Raedwald
    Mar 3, 2011 at 13:03
1

Plugin architecture is becoming very popular for its extensibility and thus flexibility.

For c++, Apache httpd server is actually plugin based, but a concept of module is used instead. Most of apache features are implemented as modules, like cache, rewrite, load balancing, and even threading model. It is a very modular software I ever saw.

And for java, Eclipse is definitely plugin based. The core of Eclipse is an OSGI module system which manage bundles, another concept for plugin. Bundle can provide extension points on which we can build modules with less efforts. The most intricate thing in OSGI is its dynamic characteristic, which means bundles can be installed or uninstalled at runtime. No stop-the-world syndrome any more!

1

Since I dont have enough rep points to leave a comment, I am posting this as an answer. SharpDevelop is an IDE for developing applications in C#/VB.NET/Boo. It has a pretty impressive architecture that allows itself to be extended in a number of ways - right from new menu items to development support for whole new languages.

It uses a bit of XML configuration to act as a glue layer between a core of the IDE and the plugin implementation. It handles locating, loading and versioning of plugins out of the box. Deploying new plugins is matter of simply copying in the new xml configuration file and the required assemblies (DLLs) and restarting the application. You can read more on this in the book "Dissecting a csharp application" by the original author(s) - Christian Holm, Mike Krüger, Bernhard Spuida of the application from here. The book doesnt seem to be available on that site, but i found a copy that might still be around here

Also found a related question here

0

Checkout "CAB" - Microsoft's Composition Application Building blocks Framework. I think they've got a "web version" of that too...

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I have just started to develop a smart client application. These are two options I am considering.

Using Microsoft's System.AddIn namespace. Looks very promising, however it may be a little complex for our end solution.

Or the Smart Client - Composite UI Application Block from Microsoft

Recently, i have looked at taking components both the Composite UI Application Block and the System.AddIn namespace to build my own. Since source code is available for the CAB it is easy to extend. I think our end solution will be a light weight version of the CAB, definatly using the Unity Application Block

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If you work with .Net, our research yielded two approaches: scripting and composition.

Scripting

You extend the functionality of what your classes can do by orchestrating them using scripts. That means exposing what is compiled in your favorite .Net language in a dynamic language.

Some options we found worth exploring:

Composition

If you start a project with .Net 4 or above, you must take a good look at the Managed Extensibility Framework (MEF). It allows you to extend the functionality of your apps in a plugin way.

The Managed Extensibility Framework (MEF) is a composition layer for .NET that improves the flexibility, maintainability and testability of large applications. MEF can be used for third-party plugin extensibility, or it can bring the benefits of a loosely-coupled plugin-like architecture to regular applications.

Managed Add-in Framework is also a good read.

-7

Rather than re-inventing the wheel, use the frameworks in hand. Eclipse and Netbeans both support plugin based extensions. You have to work in Java though.

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