rgb-cln/doc/plugins.md

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# Plugins
Plugins are a simple yet powerful way to extend the functionality
provided by c-lightning. They are subprocesses that are started by the
main `lightningd` daemon and can interact with `lightningd` in a
variety of ways:
- **Command line option passthrough** allows plugins to register their
own command line options that are exposed through `lightningd` so
that only the main process needs to be configured.
- **JSON-RPC command passthrough** adds a way for plugins to add their
own commands to the JSON-RPC interface.
- **Event stream subscriptions** provide plugins with a push-based
notification mechanism about events from the `lightningd`.
- **Hooks** are a primitive that allows plugins to be notified about
internal events in `lightningd` and alter its behavior or inject
custom behaviors.
*Notice: at the time of writing only command line option passthrough
is implemented, the other features are under active development.*
A plugin may be written in any language, and communicates with
`lightningd` through the plugin's `stdin` and `stdout`. JSON-RPCv2 is
used as protocol on top of the two streams, with the plugin acting as
server and `lightningd` acting as client.
## A day in the life of a plugin
During startup of `lightningd` you can use the `--plugin=` option to
register one or more plugins that should be started. `lightningd` will
write JSON-RPC requests to the plugin's `stdin` and will read replies
from its `stdout`. To initialize the plugin two RPC methods are
required:
- `getmanifest` asks the plugin for command line options and JSON-RPC
commands that should be passed through
- `init` is called after the command line options have been
parsed and passes them through with the real values. This is also
the signal that `lightningd`'s JSON-RPC over Unix Socket is now up
and ready to receive incoming requests from the plugin.
Once those two methods were called `lightningd` will start passing
through incoming JSON-RPC commands that were registered and the plugin
may interact with `lightningd` using the JSON-RPC over Unix-Socket
interface.
### The `getmanifest` method
The `getmanifest` method is required for all plugins and will be called on
startup without any params. It MUST return a JSON object similar to
this example:
```json
{
"options": [
{
"name": "greeting",
"type": "string",
"default": "World",
"description": "What name should I call you?"
}
],
"rpcmethods": [
{
"name": "hello",
"description": "Returns a personalized greeting for {greeting} (set via options)."
},
{
"name": "gettime",
"description": "Returns the current time in {timezone}",
"params": ["timezone"]
}
]
}
```
The `options` will be added to the list of command line options that
`lightningd` accepts. The above will add a `--greeting` option with a
default value of `World` and the specified description. *Notice that
currently only string options are supported.*
The `rpcmethods` are methods that will be exposed via `lightningd`'s
JSON-RPC over Unix-Socket interface, just like the builtin
commands. Any parameters given to the JSON-RPC calls will be passed
through verbatim.
### The `init` method
The `init` method is required so that `lightningd` can pass back the
filled command line options and notify the plugin that `lightningd` is
now ready to receive JSON-RPC commands. The `params` of the call are a
simple JSON object containing the options:
```json
{
"objects": {
"greeting": "World"
}
}
```
The plugin must respond to `init` calls, however the response can be
arbitrary and will currently be discarded by `lightningd`. JSON-RPC
commands were chosen over notifications in order not to force plugins
to implement notifications which are not that well supported.
## Event stream subscriptions
*TBD*
## Hooks
*TBD*