fox
The Foxglove Studio Extension Manager
Introduction
Foxglove Studio allows developers to create extensions, or custom code that is loaded and executed inside the Foxglove Studio application. This can be used to add custom panels, and in the future it will support custom file formats or data sources and more. Extensions are authored in TypeScript using the @foxglove/studio
SDK.
Creating Your First Extension
Make sure you have Node.js 14 or newer installed and the yarn package manager (npm install -g yarn
). In a terminal, go into the directory where you keep source code (ex: cd ~/Code
) and run the following command:
npx @foxglove/fox@latest create helloworld
Feel free to choose an extension name other than helloworld. Otherwise, this will create a folder named helloworld containing your extension. Run a one-time initialization step:
cd helloworld
yarn install
This installs all of the dependencies needed to edit and build the extension. You can use any editor to work on this project, although VSCode is the best supported IDE for authoring Foxglove Studio extensions. Look at the files src/index.ts
and src/ExamplePanel.tsx
for a simple example of creating a React element and registering it as a custom panel. To build and install this extension into your local Foxglove Studio extensions folder, run:
yarn local-install
This should create a folder under your home directory such as ~/.foxglove-studio/extensions/unknown.helloworld-0.0.0
containing your compiled extension. Start Foxglove Studio. If everything succeeded, you should be able to add a new panel in Foxglove Studio named "ExamplePanel". Each time you make a change to your extension, you will need to run yarn local-install
again to build it and copy the build output to the Foxglove Studio extensions folder in your home directory. You can either reload Foxglove Studio or close and reopen it to load your latest extension code.
If you just want to confirm your code compiles without installing it locally, run yarn build
.
You can customize the build and install process by editing your ./config.ts
file. The config file should
look something like this:
module.exports = {
webpack: (config) => {
config.module.rules.push({
test: /\.css$/i,
use: ["style-loader", "css-loader"],
});
return config;
},
};
Publishing Your Extension
All of the metadata for your extension is contained in the package.json file. Before publishing, make sure you have set name
, publisher
, version
, and description
. When you are ready to distribute your extension, run:
yarn package
This will produce a .foxe file such as helloworld-0.0.0.foxe
. This is essentially a ZIP archive containing your extension manifest and compiled code that can be opened by the Foxglove Studio application, which will unpack it and install it to the ~/.foxglove-studio/extensions
folder. Stay tuned for future instructions on how to publish Foxglove Studio extensions to a registry so other users can easily search for and install your extension.
Stay in touch
Join our Slack channel to ask questions, share feedback, and stay up to date on what our team is working on.