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Lens Protocol Handlers#

Lens has a file association with the lens:// protocol. This means that Lens can be opened by external programs by providing a link that has lens as its protocol. Lens provides a routing mechanism that extensions can use to register custom handlers.

Registering A Protocol Handler#

The field protocolHandlers exists both on LensMainExtension and on LensRendererExtension. This field will be iterated through every time a lens:// request gets sent to the application. The pathSchema argument must comply with the path-to-regexp package's compileToRegex function.

Once you have registered a handler it will be called when a user opens a link on their computer. Handlers will be run in both main and renderer in parallel with no synchronization between the two processes. Furthermore, both main and renderer are routed separately. In other words, which handler is selected in either process is independent from the list of possible handlers in the other.

Example of registering a handler:

import { Main, Common } from "@k8slens/extensions";

function rootHandler(params: Common.Types.ProtocolRouteParams) {
  console.log("routed to ExampleExtension", params);
}

export default class ExampleExtensionMain extends Main.LensExtension {
  protocolHandlers = [
    pathSchema: "/",
    handler: rootHandler,
  ]
}

For testing the routing of URIs the open (on macOS) or xdg-open (on most linux) CLI utilities can be used. For the above handler, the following URI would be always routed to it:

open lens://extension/example-extension/

Deregistering A Protocol Handler#

All that is needed to deregister a handler is to remove it from the array of handlers.

Routing Algorithm#

The routing mechanism for extensions is quite straight forward. For example consider an extension example-extension which is published by the @mirantis org. If it were to register a handler with "/display/:type" as its corresponding link then we would match the following URI like this:

Lens Protocol Link Resolution

Once matched, the handler would be called with the following argument (note both "search" and "pathname" will always be defined):

{
  "search": {
    "text": "Hello"
  },
  "pathname": {
    "type": "notification"
  }
}

As the diagram above shows, the search (or query) params are not considered as part of the handler resolution. If the URI had instead been lens://extension/@mirantis/example-extension/display/notification/green then a third (and optional) field will have the rest of the path. The tail field would be filled with "/green". If multiple pathSchema's match a given URI then the most specific handler will be called.

For example consider the following pathSchema's:

  1. "/"
  2. "/display"
  3. "/display/:type"
  4. "/show/:id"

The URI sub-path "/display" would be routed to #2 since it is an exact match. On the other hand, the subpath "/display/notification" would be routed to #3.

The URI is routed to the most specific matching pathSchema. This way the "/" (root) pathSchema acts as a sort of catch all or default route if no other route matches.