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MagicMirror² Module Development Documentation

This document describes the way to develop your own MagicMirror² modules.

Module structure

All modules are loaded in the modules folder. The default modules are grouped together in the modules/default folder. Your module should be placed in a subfolder of modules. Note that any file or folder your create in the modules folder will be ignored by git, allowing you to upgrade the MagicMirror² without the loss of your files.

A module can be placed in one single folder. Or multiple modules can be grouped in a subfolder. Note that name of the module must be unique. Even when a module with a similar name is placed in a different folder, they can't be loaded at the same time.

Files

  • modulename/modulename.js - This is your core module script.
  • modulename/node_helper.js - This is an optional helper that will be loaded by the node script. The node helper and module script can communicate with each other using an intergrated socket system.
  • modulename/public - Any files in this folder can be accesed via the browser on /modulename/filename.ext.
  • modulename/anyfileorfolder Any other file or folder in the module folder can be used by the core module script. For example: modulename/css/modulename.css would be a good path for your additional module styles.

Core module file: modulename.js

This is the script in which the module will be defined. This script is required in order for the module to be used. In it's most simple form, the core module file must contain:

Module.register("modulename",{});

Of course, the above module would not do anything fancy, so it's good to look at one of the simplest modules: helloworld:

//helloworld.js:

Module.register("helloworld",{
	// Default module config.
	defaults: {
		text: "Hello World!"
	},

	// Override dom generator.
	getDom: function() {
		var wrapper = document.createElement("div");
		wrapper.innerHTML = this.config.text;
		return wrapper;
	}
});

As you can see, the Module.register() method takes two arguments: the name of the module and an object with the module properties.

Available module instance properties

After the module is initialized, the module instance has a few available module properties:

this.name

String

The name of the module.

this.identifier

String

This is a unique identifier for the module instance.

this.hidden

Boolean

This represents if the module is currently hidden (faded away).

this.config

Boolean

The configuration of the module instance as set in the user's config.js file. This config will also contain the module's defaults if these properties are not over written by the user config.

this.data

Object

The data object contains additional metadata about the module instance:

  • data.classes - The classes which are added to the module dom wrapper.
  • data.file - The filename of the core module file.
  • data.path - The path of the module folder.
  • data.header - The header added to the module.
  • data.position - The position in which the instance will be shown.

defaults: {}

Any properties defined in the defaults object, will be merged with the module config as defined in the user's config.js file. This is the best place to set your modules's configuration defaults. Any of the module configuration properties can be accessed using this.config.propertyName, but more about that later.

requiresVersion:

Introduced in version: 2.1.0.

A string that defines the minimum version of the MagicMirror framework. If it is set, the system compares the required version with the users version. If the version of the user is out of date, it won't run the module. Make sure to also set this value in the Node helper.

Note: Since this check is introduced in version 2.1.0, this check will not be run in older versions. Keep this in mind if you get issue reports on your module.

Example:

requiresVersion: "2.1.0",

Subclassable module methods

init()

This method is called when a module gets instantiated. In most cases you do not need to subclass this method.

loaded(callback)

Introduced in version: 2.1.1.

This method is called when a module is loaded. Subsequent modules in the config are not yet loaded. The callback function MUST be called when the module is done loading. In most cases you do not need to subclass this method.

Example:

loaded: function(callback) {
	this.finishLoading();
	Log.log(this.name + ' is loaded!');
	callback();
}

start()

This method is called when all modules are loaded an the system is ready to boot up. Keep in mind that the dom object for the module is not yet created. The start method is a perfect place to define any additional module properties:

Example:

start: function() {
	this.mySpecialProperty = "So much wow!";
	Log.log(this.name + ' is started!');
}

getScripts()

Should return: Array

The getScripts method is called to request any additional scripts that need to be loaded. This method should therefore return an array with strings. If you want to return a full path to a file in the module folder, use the this.file('filename.js') method. In all cases the loader will only load a file once. It even checks if the file is available in the default vendor folder.

Example:

getScripts: function() {
	return [
		'script.js', // will try to load it from the vendor folder, otherwise it will load is from the module folder.
		'moment.js', // this file is available in the vendor folder, so it doesn't need to be available in the module folder.
		this.file('anotherfile.js'), // this file will be loaded straight from the module folder.
		'https://code.jquery.com/jquery-2.2.3.min.js',  // this file will be loaded from the jquery servers.
	]
}

Note: If a file can not be loaded, the boot up of the mirror will stall. Therefore it's advised not to use any external urls.

getStyles()

Should return: Array

The getStyles method is called to request any additional stylesheets that need to be loaded. This method should therefore return an array with strings. If you want to return a full path to a file in the module folder, use the this.file('filename.css') method. In all cases the loader will only load a file once. It even checks if the file is available in the default vendor folder.

Example:

getStyles: function() {
	return [
		'script.css', // will try to load it from the vendor folder, otherwise it will load is from the module folder.
		'font-awesome.css', // this file is available in the vendor folder, so it doesn't need to be avialable in the module folder.
		this.file('anotherfile.css'), // this file will be loaded straight from the module folder.
		'https://maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/3.3.6/css/bootstrap.min.css',  // this file will be loaded from the bootstrapcdn servers.
	]
}

Note: If a file can not be loaded, the boot up of the mirror will stall. Therefore it's advised not to use any external urls.

getTranslations()

Should return: Dictionary

The getTranslations method is called to request translation files that need to be loaded. This method should therefore return a dictionary with the files to load, identified by the country's short name.

If the module does not have any module specific translations, the function can just be omitted or return false.

Example:

getTranslations: function() {
	return {
			en: "translations/en.json",
			de: "translations/de.json"
	}
}

getDom()

Should return: Dom Object

Whenever the MagicMirror needs to update the information on screen (because it starts, or because your module asked a refresh using this.updateDom()), the system calls the getDom method. This method should therefore return a dom object.

Example:

getDom: function() {
	var wrapper = document.createElement("div");
	wrapper.innerHTML = 'Hello world!';
	return wrapper;
}

getHeader()

Should return: String

Whenever the MagicMirror needs to update the information on screen (because it starts, or because your module asked a refresh using this.updateDom()), the system calls the getHeader method to retrieve the module's header. This method should therefor return a string. If this method is not subclassed, this function will return the user's configured header.

If you want to use the original user's configured header, reference this.data.header.

NOTE: If the user did not configure a default header, no header will be displayed and thus this method will not be called.

Example:

getHeader: function() {
	return this.data.header + ' Foo Bar';
}

notificationReceived(notification, payload, sender)

That MagicMirror core has the ability to send notifications to modules. Or even better: the modules have the possibility to send notifications to other modules. When this module is called, it has 3 arguments:

  • notification - String - The notification identifier.
  • payload - AnyType - The payload of a notification.
  • sender - Module - The sender of the notification. If this argument is undefined, the sender of the notififiction is the core system.

Example:

notificationReceived: function(notification, payload, sender) {
	if (sender) {
		Log.log(this.name + " received a module notification: " + notification + " from sender: " + sender.name);
	} else {
		Log.log(this.name + " received a system notification: " + notification);
	}
}

Note: the system sends two notifications when starting up. These notifications could come in handy!

  • ALL_MODULES_STARTED - All modules are started. You can now send notifications to other modules.
  • DOM_OBJECTS_CREATED - All dom objects are created. The system is now ready to perform visual changes.

socketNotificationReceived: function(notification, payload)

When using a node_helper, the node helper can send your module notifications. When this module is called, it has 2 arguments:

  • notification - String - The notification identifier.
  • payload - AnyType - The payload of a notification.

Note 1: When a node helper sends a notification, all modules of that module type receive the same notifications.
Note 2: The socket connection is established as soon as the module sends its first message using sendSocketNotification.

Example:

socketNotificationReceived: function(notification, payload) {
	Log.log(this.name + " received a socket notification: " + notification + " - Payload: " + payload);
},

suspend()

When a module is hidden (using the module.hide() method), the suspend() method will be called. By subclassing this method you can perform tasks like halting the update timers.

resume()

When a module is requested to be shown (using the module.show() method), the resume() method will be called. By subclassing this method you can perform tasks restarting the update timers.

Module instance methods

Each module instance has some handy methods which can be helpful building your module.

this.file(filename)

filename String - The name of the file you want to create the path for.
Returns String

If you want to create a path to a file in your module folder, use the file() method. It returns the path to the filename given as the attribute. Is method comes in handy when configuring the getScripts and getStyles methods.

this.updateDom(speed)

speed Number - Optional. Animation speed in milliseconds.

Whenever your module need to be updated, call the updateDom(speed) method. It requests the MagicMirror core to update its dom object. If you define the speed, the content update will be animated, but only if the content will really change.

As an example: the clock modules calls this method every second:

...
start: function() {
	var self = this;
	setInterval(function() {
		self.updateDom(); // no speed defined, so it updates instantly.
	}, 1000); //perform every 1000 milliseconds.
},
...

this.sendNotification(notification, payload)

notification String - The notification identifier.
payload AnyType - Optional. A notification payload.

If you want to send a notification to all other modules, use the sendNotification(notification, payload). All other modules will receive the message via the notificationReceived method. In that case, the sender is automatically set to the instance calling the sendNotification method.

Example:

this.sendNotification('MYMODULE_READY_FOR_ACTION', {foo:bar});

this.sendSocketNotification(notification, payload)

notification String - The notification identifier.
payload AnyType - Optional. A notification payload.

If you want to send a notification to the node_helper, use the sendSocketNotification(notification, payload). Only the node_helper of this module will receive the socket notification.

Example:

this.sendSocketNotification('SET_CONFIG', this.config);

this.hide(speed, callback, options)

speed Number - Optional (Required when setting callback or options), The speed of the hide animation in milliseconds. callback Function - Optional, The callback after the hide animation is finished. options Function - Optional, Object with additional options for the hide action (see below). (Introduced in version: 2.1.0.)

To hide a module, you can call the hide(speed, callback) method. You can call the hide method on the module instance itself using this.hide(), but of course you can also hide another module using anOtherModule.hide().

Possible configurable options:

  • lockString - String - When setting lock string, the module can not be shown without passing the correct lockstring. This way (multiple) modules can prevent a module from showing. It's considered best practice to use your modules identifier as the locksString: this.identifier. See visibility locking below.

Note 1: If the hide animation is canceled, for instance because the show method is called before the hide animation was finished, the callback will not be called.
Note 2: If the hide animation is hijacked (an other method calls hide on the same module), the callback will not be called.
Note 3: If the dom is not yet created, the hide method won't work. Wait for the DOM_OBJECTS_CREATED notification.

this.show(speed, callback, options)

speed Number - Optional (Required when setting callback or options), The speed of the show animation in milliseconds. callback Function - Optional, The callback after the show animation is finished. options Function - Optional, Object with additional options for the show action (see below). (Introduced in version: 2.1.0.)

To show a module, you can call the show(speed, callback) method. You can call the show method on the module instance itself using this.show(), but of course you can also show another module using anOtherModule.show().

Possible configurable options:

  • lockString - String - When setting lock string, the module can not be shown without passing the correct lockstring. This way (multiple) modules can prevent a module from showing. See visibility locking below.
  • force - Boolean - When setting the force tag to true, the locking mechanism will be overwritten. Use this option with caution. It's considered best practice to let the usage of the force option be use- configurable. See visibility locking below.

Note 1: If the show animation is canceled, for instance because the hide method is called before the show animation was finished, the callback will not be called.
Note 2: If the show animation is hijacked (an other method calls show on the same module), the callback will not be called.
Note 3: If the dom is not yet created, the show method won't work. Wait for the DOM_OBJECTS_CREATED notification.

Visibility locking

(Introduced in version: 2.1.0.)

Visiblity locking helps the module system to prevent unwanted hide/show actions. The following scenario explains the concept:

Module B asks module A to hide:

moduleA.hide(0, {lockString: "module_b_identifier"});

Module A is now hidden, and has an lock array with the following strings:

moduleA.lockStrings == ["module_b_identifier"]
moduleA.hidden == true

Module C asks module A to hide:

moduleA.hide(0, {lockString: "module_c_identifier"});

Module A is now hidden, and has an lock array with the following strings:

moduleA.lockStrings == ["module_b_identifier", "module_c_identifier"]
moduleA.hidden == true

Module B asks module A to show:

moduleA.show(0, {lockString: "module_b_identifier"});

The lockString will be removed from moduleA’s locks array, but since there still is an other lock string available, the module remains hidden:

moduleA.lockStrings == ["module_c_identifier"]
moduleA.hidden == true

Module C asks module A to show:

moduleA.show(0, {lockString: "module_c_identifier"});

The lockString will be removed from moduleA’s locks array, and since this will result in an empty lock array, the module will be visible:

moduleA.lockStrings == []
moduleA.hidden == false

Note: The locking mechanism can be overwritten by using the force tag:

moduleA.show(0, {force: true});

This will reset the lockstring array, and will show the module.

moduleA.lockStrings == []
moduleA.hidden == false

Use this force method with caution. See show() method for more information.

this.translate(identifier)

identifier String - Identifier of the string that should be translated.

The Magic Mirror contains a convenience wrapper for l18n. You can use this to automatically serve different translations for your modules based on the user's language configuration.

If no translation is found, a fallback will be used. The fallback sequence is as follows:

    1. Translation as defined in module translation file of the user's preferred language.
    1. Translation as defined in core translation file of the user's preferred language.
    1. Translation as defined in module translation file of the fallback language (the first defined module translation file).
    1. Translation as defined in core translation file of the fallback language (the first defined core translation file).
    1. The key (identifier) of the translation.

When adding translations to your module, it's a good idea to see if an apropriate translation is already available in the core translation files. This way, your module can benefit from the existing translations.

Example:

this.translate("INFO") //Will return a translated string for the identifier INFO

Example json file:

{
  "INFO": "Really important information!"
}

Note: although comments are officially not supported in JSON files, MagicMirror allows it by stripping the comments before parsing the JSON file. Comments in translation files could help other translators.

this.translate(identifier, variables)

identifier String - Identifier of the string that should be translated. variables Object - Object of variables to be used in translation.

This improved and backwards compatible way to handle translations behaves like the normal translation function and follows the rules described above. It's recommended to use this new format for translating everywhere. It allows translator to change the word order in the sentence to be translated.

Example:

var timeUntilEnd = moment(event.endDate, "x").fromNow(true);
this.translate("RUNNING", { "timeUntilEnd": timeUntilEnd) }); // Will return a translated string for the identifier RUNNING, replacing `{timeUntilEnd}` with the contents of the variable `timeUntilEnd` in the order that translator intended.

Example English .json file:

{
	"RUNNING": "Ends in {timeUntilEnd}",
}

Example Finnish .json file:

{
	"RUNNING": "Päättyy {timeUntilEnd} päästä",
}

Note: The variables Object has an special case called fallback. It's used to support old translations in translation files that do not have the variables in them. If you are upgrading an old module that had translations that did not support the word order, it is recommended to have the fallback layout.

Example:

var timeUntilEnd = moment(event.endDate, "x").fromNow(true);
this.translate("RUNNING", {
	"fallback": this.translate("RUNNING") + " {timeUntilEnd}"
	"timeUntilEnd": timeUntilEnd
)}); // Will return a translated string for the identifier RUNNING, replacing `{timeUntilEnd}` with the contents of the variable `timeUntilEnd` in the order that translator intended. (has a fallback)

Example swedish .json file that does not have the variable in it:

{
	"RUNNING": "Slutar",
}

In this case the translate-function will not find any variables in the translation, will look for fallback variable and use that if possible to create the translation.

The Node Helper: node_helper.js

The node helper is a Node.js script that is able to do some backend task to support your module. For every module type, only one node helper instance will be created. For example: if your MagicMirror uses two calendar modules, there will be only one calendar node helper instantiated.

Note: Because there is only one node helper per module type, there is no default config available within your module. It's your task to send the desired config from your module to your node helper.

In it's most simple form, the node_helper.js file must contain:

var NodeHelper = require("node_helper");
module.exports = NodeHelper.create({});

Of course, the above helper would not do anything useful. So with the information above, you should be able to make it a bit more sophisticated.

Available module instance properties

this.name

String

The name of the module

this.path

String

The path of the module

this.expressApp

Express App Instance

This is a link to the express instance. It will allow you to define extra routes.

Example:

start: function() {
	this.expressApp.get('/foobar', function (req, res) {
		res.send('GET request to /foobar');
	});
}

Note: By default, a public path to your module's public folder will be created:

this.expressApp.use("/" + this.name, express.static(this.path + "/public"));

this.io

Socket IO Instance

This is a link to the IO instance. It will allow you to do some Socket.IO magic. In most cases you won't need this, since the Node Helper has a few convenience methods to make this simple.

requiresVersion:

Introduced in version: 2.1.0.

A string that defines the minimum version of the MagicMirror framework. If it is set, the system compares the required version with the users version. If the version of the user is out of date, it won't run the module.

Note: Since this check is introduced in version 2.1.0, this check will not be run in older versions. Keep this in mind if you get issue reports on your module.

Example:

requiresVersion: "2.1.0",

Subclassable module methods

init()

This method is called when a node helper gets instantiated. In most cases you do not need to subclass this method.

start()

This method is called when all node helpers are loaded and the system is ready to boot up. The start method is a perfect place to define any additional module properties:

Example:

start: function() {
	this.mySpecialProperty = "So much wow!";
	Log.log(this.name + ' is started!');
}

socketNotificationReceived: function(notification, payload)

With this method, your node helper can receive notifications from your modules. When this method is called, it has 2 arguments:

  • notification - String - The notification identifier.
  • payload - AnyType - The payload of a notification.

Note: The socket connection is established as soon as the module sends its first message using sendSocketNotification.

Example:

socketNotificationReceived: function(notification, payload) {
	Log.log(this.name + " received a socket notification: " + notification + " - Payload: " + payload);
},

Module instance methods

Each node helper has some handy methods which can be helpful building your module.

this.sendSocketNotification(notification, payload)

notification String - The notification identifier.
payload AnyType - Optional. A notification payload.

If you want to send a notification to all your modules, use the sendSocketNotification(notification, payload). Only the module of your module type will receive the socket notification.

Note: Since all instances of your module will receive the notifications, it's your task to make sure the right module responds to your messages.

Example:

this.sendSocketNotification('SET_CONFIG', this.config);

MagicMirror Helper Methods

The core Magic Mirror object: MM has some handy method that will help you in controlling your and other modules. Most of the MM methods are available via convenience methods on the Module instance.

Module selection

The only additional method available for your module, is the feature to retrieve references to other modules. This can be used to hide and show other modules.

MM.getModules()

Returns Array - An array with module instances.

To make a selection of all currently loaded module instances, run the MM.getModules() method. It will return an array with all currently loaded module instances. The returned array has a lot of filtering methods. See below for more info.

Note: This method returns an empty array if not all modules are started yet. Wait for the ALL_MODULES_STARTED notification.

.withClass(classnames)

classnames String or Array - The class names on which you want to filter. Returns Array - An array with module instances.

If you want to make a selection based on one or more class names, use the withClass method on a result of the MM.getModules() method. The argument of the withClass(classname) method can be an array, or space separated string.

Examples:

var modules = MM.getModules().withClass('classname');
var modules = MM.getModules().withClass('classname1 classname2');
var modules = MM.getModules().withClass(['classname1','classname2']);
.exceptWithClass(classnames)

classnames String or Array - The class names of the modules you want to remove from the results. Returns Array - An array with module instances.

If you to remove some modules from a selection based on a classname, use the exceptWithClass method on a result of the MM.getModules() method. The argument of the exceptWithClass(classname) method can be an array, or space separated string.

Examples:

var modules = MM.getModules().exceptWithClass('classname');
var modules = MM.getModules().exceptWithClass('classname1 classname2');
var modules = MM.getModules().exceptWithClass(['classname1','classname2']);
.exceptModule(module)

module Module Object - The reference to a module you want to remove from the results. Returns Array - An array with module instances.

If you to remove a specific module instance from a selection based on a classname, use the exceptWithClass method on a result of the MM.getModules() method. This can be helpful if you want to select all module instances except the instance of your module.

Examples:

var modules = MM.getModules().exceptModule(this);

Of course, you can combine all of the above filters:

Example:

var modules = MM.getModules().withClass('classname1').exceptwithClass('classname2').exceptModule(aModule);
.enumerate(callback)

callback Function(module) - The callback run on every instance.

If you want to perform an action on all selected modules, you can use the enumerate function:

MM.getModules().enumerate(function(module) {
    Log.log(module.name);
});

Example: To hide all modules except the your module instance, you could write something like:

Module.register("modulename",{
	//...
	notificationReceived: function(notification, payload, sender) {
		if (notification === 'DOM_OBJECTS_CREATED') {
			MM.getModules().exceptModule(this).enumerate(function(module) {
				module.hide(1000, function() {
					//Module hidden.
				});
			});
		}
	},
	//...
});

MagicMirror Logger

The Magic Mirror contains a convenience wrapper for logging. Currently, this logger is a simple proxy to the original console.log methods. But it might get additional features in the future. The Loggers is currently only available in the core module file (not in the node_helper).

Examples:

Log.info('error');
Log.log('log');
Log.error('info');