2.7 KiB
Implement a Custom Module Resolver
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For many applications in which Rhai is embedded, it is necessary to customize the way that modules are resolved. For instance, modules may need to be loaded from script texts stored in a database, not in the file system.
A module resolver must implement the trait [rhai::ModuleResolver
][traits],
which contains only one function: resolve
.
When Rhai prepares to load a module, ModuleResolver::resolve
is called with the name
of the module path (i.e. the path specified in the [import
] statement).
-
Upon success, it should return an [
Rc<Module>
][module] (or [Arc<Module>
][module] under [sync
]).The module should call
Module::build_index
on the target module before returning. This method flattens the entire module tree and indexes it for fast function name resolution. If the module is already indexed, calling this method has no effect. -
If the path does not resolve to a valid module, return
EvalAltResult::ErrorModuleNotFound
. -
If the module failed to load, return
EvalAltResult::ErrorInModule
.
Example
use rhai::{ModuleResolver, Module, Engine, EvalAltResult};
// Define a custom module resolver.
struct MyModuleResolver {}
// Implement the 'ModuleResolver' trait.
impl ModuleResolver for MyModuleResolver {
// Only required function.
fn resolve(
&self,
engine: &Engine, // reference to the current 'Engine'
path: &str, // the module path
pos: Position, // position of the 'import' statement
) -> Result<Rc<Module>, Box<EvalAltResult>> {
// Check module path.
if is_valid_module_path(path) {
let mut my_module =
load_secret_module(path) // load the custom module
.map_err(|err|
// Return EvalAltResult::ErrorInModule upon loading error
EvalAltResult::ErrorInModule(path.into(), Box::new(err), pos).into()
)?;
my_module.build_index(); // index it
Rc::new(my_module) // make it shared
} else {
// Return EvalAltResult::ErrorModuleNotFound if the path is invalid
Err(EvalAltResult::ErrorModuleNotFound(path.into(), pos).into())
}
}
}
let mut engine = Engine::new();
// Set the custom module resolver into the 'Engine'.
engine.set_module_resolver(MyModuleResolver {});
engine.consume(r#"
import "hello" as foo; // this 'import' statement will call
// 'MyModuleResolver::resolve' with "hello" as 'path'
foo:bar();
"#)?;