Documentation

You are viewing the documentation for the 2.6.0-M4 development release. The latest stable release series is 3.0.x.

§Writing Play Modules

Note: This page covers the new module system to add functionality to Play.

The deprecated play.api.Plugin system is removed as of 2.5.x.

A module can be written using any dependency injection framework. However, when you want to extend Play, you need to avoid dependencies on a specific framework so that your extension can work independently of the dependency injection. Play previously used the play.api.Plugin system for this purpose, but in 2.5.x, Plugins have been replaced with Play modules.

A Play module is a class that extends play.api.inject.Module and can be registered with Play without relying explicitly on a particular dependency injection framework. This allows everyone to use Play modules.

A list of Play modules are available in the module directory.

In addition, because Play uses Play modules for built-in functionality, a Play module must be used to replace or augment built-in functionality.

§Creating and migrating Play modules

Creating a Play module is simple:

class MyCode {
  // add functionality here
}

class MyModule extends play.api.inject.Module {
  def bindings(environment: Environment, configuration: Configuration) = {
    Seq(bind[MyCode].toInstance(new MyCode))
  }
}

For more information, see the “Create a Module class” section of Plugins to Modules.

§Module Registration

By default, Play will load any class called Module that is defined in the root package (the “app” directory) or
you can define them explicitly inside the reference.conf or the application.conf:

play.modules.enabled += "modules.MyModule"

Please see migration page and the dependency injection documentation for more details.

§Application Lifecycle

A module can detect when Play shutdown occurs by injecting the [play.api.inject.ApplicationLifecycle]((api/scala/play/api/inject/ApplicationLifecycle.html) trait into the singleton instance and adding a shutdown hook.

Please see the `ApplicationLifecycle` example and ApplicationLifecycle reference for more details.

§Testing Play Modules

Modules can be tested using Play’s built in test functionality, using the GuiceApplicationBuilder and adding a binding to the module.

val application = new GuiceApplicationBuilder()
  .bindings(new MyModule)
  .build()
val myCode = application.injector.instanceOf(classOf[MyCode])
myCode must beAnInstanceOf[MyCode]

Please see Testing with Guice for more details.

§Listing Existing Play Modules

The Modules.locate(env, conf) method will display a list of all available Play modules in an application.

§Overriding Built-In Modules

There are some cases where Play provides a built-in module that must be overridden.

For example, Messages functionality is implemented by the MessagesApi trait and backed by DefaultMessagesApi. If you write a replacement class MyMessagesApi that extends MessagesApi, you can bind it with:

class MyI18nModule extends play.api.inject.Module {
  def bindings(environment: Environment, configuration: Configuration) = {
    Seq(
      bind[Langs].toProvider[DefaultLangsProvider],
      bind[MessagesApi].toProvider[MyMessagesApiProvider]
    )
  }
}

§Testing Overrides

Testing the application should be done using the overrides method to replace the existing implementation:

val application = new GuiceApplicationBuilder()
  .overrides(new MyI18nModule)
  .build()

§Registration Overrides

Because the I18nModule is loaded automatically in reference.conf, you must first disable the default module before adding the replacement module:

play.modules.disabled += "play.api.i18n.I18nModule"
play.modules.enabled += "modules.MyI18nModule"

You should not disable existing modules in reference.conf when publishing a Play module, as it may have unexpected consequences. Please see the migration page for details.

Next: Migrating from Plugins API