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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. The plugin file needs to be executable (e.g. use chmod a+x plugin_name)

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. In case you wish to start several plugins you have to use the --plugin= argument once for each plugin. An example call might look like:

lightningd --plugin=/path/to/plugin1 --plugin=path/to/plugin2

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:

{
	"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}",
			"long_description": "Returns the current time in the timezone that is given as the only parameter.\nThis description may be quite long and is allowed to span multiple lines."
		}
	]
}

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. Notice that the name and the description fields are mandatory, while the long_description can be omitted (it'll be set to description if it was not provided).

Plugins are free to register any name for their rpcmethod as long as the name was not previously registered. This includes both built-in methods, such as help and getinfo, as well as methods registered by other plugins. If there is a conflict then lightningd will report an error and exit.

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:

{
	"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