Automatically Loading Extensions
In previous examples, the extensions were registered manually. However, AsciidoctorJ provides another way to register extensions. If any implementation of the SPI interface is present on the classpath, it will be executed.
To create an autoloadable extension you should do the next steps:
Create a class that implements org.asciidoctor.jruby.extension.spi.ExtensionRegistry
.
import org.asciidoctor.jruby.extension.spi.ExtensionRegistry;
public class TerminalCommandExtension implements ExtensionRegistry { (1)
@Override
public void register(Asciidoctor asciidoctor) { (2)
JavaExtensionRegistry javaExtensionRegistry = asciidoctor.javaExtensionRegistry();
javaExtensionRegistry.treeprocessor(TerminalCommandTreeprocessor.class); (3)
}
}
1 | To autoload extensions you need to implement ExtensionRegistry . |
2 | AsciidoctorJ will automatically run the register method. The method is responsible for registering all extensions. |
3 | All required Java extensions are registered. |
Next, you need to create a file called org.asciidoctor.jruby.extension.spi.ExtensionRegistry
inside META-INF/services
with the implementation’s full qualified name.
org.asciidoctor.integrationguide.extension.TerminalCommandExtension
And that’s all.
Now when a .jar
file containing the previous structure is dropped into the classpath of AsciidoctorJ, the register
method will be executed automatically and the extensions will be registered.
If you have installed AsciidoctorJ as recommended, the asciidoctorj command will be on the path, and you can use: asciidoctorj -cp=lib/myextension.jar test.adoc If you have downloaded the distribution jars only, use a command like: java -cp lib/jruby-complete-{jruby-version}.jar;lib/asciidoctor-api-{artifact-version}.jar;lib/asciidoctor-core-{artifact-version}.jar;lib/jcommander-{jcommander-version}.jar;lib/myextension.jar org.asciidoctor.jruby.cli.AsciidoctorInvoker test.adoc |