====
POP
Pop is used to express the Plugin Oriented Programming Paradigm. The Plugin
Oriented Programming Paradigm has been designed to make pluggable software
easy to write and easy to extend.
Plugin Oriented Programming presents a new way to scale development teams
and deliver complex software. This is done by making the applications entirely
out of plugins, and also making the applications themselves natively pluggable
with each other.
Using Plugin Oriented Programming it then becomes easy to have the best of both
worlds, software can be built in small pieces, making development easier to
maintain. The small pieces can then be merged and deployed in a single
binary, making code deployment easy as well.
All this using Python, one of the world's most popular and powerful programming
languages.
Getting Started
A more complete Getting Started Guide is available inside of the documentation
for pop
. The best place to start is in the doc's Getting Started Guide found
here:
https://pop.readthedocs.io
First off, install pop
from pypi:
.. code-block:: bash
pip3 install pop
Now all it takes to create a pluggable application is a few lines of code.
This is the root of every pop project.
We create a hub, we add dynamic subsystems, and then we call them through the hub's namespace.
.. code-block:: python
import pop.hub
hub = pop.hub.Hub()
# Dynamic subsystems can now be added to the hub
hub.pop.sub.add(dyne_name="my_dynamic_sub")
# This hub now exists on the namespace and mirrors the file tree of that sub
# the sub "my_dynamic_sub" had a plugin called "init" with a function called "cli" we could do this:
hub.my_dynamic_sub.init.cli()
Writing your first pop application can be very simple, there is a tool called pop-create
that automates
much of the groundwork needed to get started with an advanced application.
.. code-block:: bash
pip3 install pop-create
Now that you have pop-create
, use the tool to bootstrap your project!
This will make your Python project boiler plate for you!
.. code-block:: bash
mkdir poppy
cd poppy
pop-create seed -n poppy
Now you have a setup.py
that file will detect changes to you project and "Just Work".
Feel free to open it up and fill in some of the blank places, like author name,
description, etc. The pop-create
program also made your first directories, your
run.py
startup script, everything you need to install your project and the pop
conf.py
file used to load in configuration. Running pop-create
also made a few
other files, but nothing to worry about now.
Look at pop-create <https://gitlab.com/saltstack/pop/pop-create>
__'s documentation
for more details of what it can do.
Congratulations! You have a pop
project! Now you can run the project:
.. code-block:: bash
python3 run.py
With a project up and running you can now add more plugins, more code and more
plugin subsystems!
What Happened?
Take a look at the poppy/poppy/init.py
file, your little run.py
script
created the hub
, loaded your first plugin subsystem, poppy
and called
the run function therein. This is the starting point for your app.
Next dive into the pop documentation <https://pop.readthedocs.io>
__, we will take you through how to
think in Plugin Oriented Programming, helping you see a new way to write
code that is more flexible and dynamic than anything you have seen before!
Single Binary
In the first few sentences of this document I promised you a single binary!
This is easy to do! Just pip install tiamat
:
.. code-block:: bash
pip3 install tiamat
tiamat --log-level=debug build -n poppy -r requirements/base.txt
This built a single binary of your program! Now you can run it.
.. code-block:: bash
./dist/poppy
Documentation
Check out the docs for more information:
https://pop.readthedocs.io
There is a much more in depth tutorial here, followed by documents on how to
think in Plugin Oriented Programming. Take your time to read it, it is not long
and can change how you look at writing software!