plugin_platform_interface
This package provides a base class for platform interfaces of federated flutter plugins.
Platform implementations should extends
their platform interface class rather than implement
s it, as
newly added methods to platform interfaces are not considered breaking changes. Extending a platform
interface ensures that subclasses will get the default implementations from the base class, while
platform implementations that implements
their platform interface will be broken by newly added methods.
This class package provides common functionality for platform interface to enforce that they are extended and not implemented.
Sample usage:
abstract class SamplePluginPlatform extends PlatformInterface {
SamplePluginPlatform() : super(token: _token);
static final Object _token = Object();
// A plugin can have a default implementation, as shown here, or `instance`
// can be nullable, and the default instance can be null.
static SamplePluginPlatform _instance = SamplePluginDefault();
static SamplePluginPlatform get instance => _instance;
/// Platform-specific implementations should set this to their own
/// platform-specific class that extends [SamplePluginPlatform] when they
/// register themselves.
static set instance(SamplePluginPlatform instance) {
PlatformInterface.verify(instance, _token);
_instance = instance;
}
// Methods for the plugin's platform interface would go here, often with
// implementations that throw UnimplementedError.
}
class SamplePluginDefault extends SamplePluginPlatform {
// A default real implementation of the platform interface would go here.
}
This guarantees that UrlLauncherPlatform.instance cannot be set to an object that implements
UrlLauncherPlatform (it can only be set to an object that extends
UrlLauncherPlatform).
Mocking or faking platform interfaces
Test implementations of platform interfaces, such as those using mockito
's
Mock
or test
's Fake
, will fail the verification done by verify
.
This package provides a MockPlatformInterfaceMixin
which can be used in test
code only to disable the extends
enforcement.
For example, a Mockito mock of a platform interface can be created with:
class SamplePluginPlatformMock extends Mock
with MockPlatformInterfaceMixin
implements SamplePluginPlatform {}
A note about base
In Dart 3, the base
keyword
was introduced to the language, which enforces that subclasses use extends
rather than implements
at compile time. The Flutter team is
considering deprecating this package in favor of using
base
for platfom interfaces,
but no decision has been made yet since it removes the ability to do mocking/faking
as shown above.
Plugin authors may want to consider using base
instead of this package when
creating new plugins.