Curated collection of community A-Frame components.
The Registry collects components from the community. We curate them to make sure they work for the versions of A-Frame they say they work. We also try to improve the components as they come in with code review and API suggestions. Versioning is handled so you don't have to look for which version of the component works with your version of A-Frame. As a component repository, the Registry is similar to the Unity Asset Store or npm.
You can install or try out components from the Registry in one of several ways.
angle is a command-line interface (CLI)
for A-Frame. You can install components through this CLI straight into your
HTML file. angle will inject the appropriate <script>
tag pointing to a CDN
depending on your version of A-Frame:
npm install -g angle && angle install aframe-physics-system
If you browse the Registry's website, you'll see
download links for components. The Registry will currently show builds for the
latest versions of A-Frame for now. You can either download the file locally,
or copy and paste the URLs and reference from a <script>
tag in your HTML.
If you open any A-Frame scene using the visual
Inspector with <ctrl> + <alt> + i
, you'll find components from the Registry in the Inspector's dropdowns when
adding a component to an entity. Straight from the Inspector, you can do things
such as select animations, physics, or mountains from the dropdown straight
from the Registry.
A single registry file is maintained at registry.yml
. The format of a
component looks like:
<npm package name>:
names: [<component names (as used from HTML) included>]
versions:
<aframe major version series>:
version: <npm package version>
path: <relative path to component JS file from package root>
All other metadata will be fetched from npm, and the component build will be
served via unpkg.com
, a CDN for npm.
This registry will then be processed and output to JSON files, one for each major version of A-Frame. These JSON files will be consumed by tools, libraries, and websites such as the A-Frame Inspector.
Once A-Frame updates, all existing components will still work but are marked with a compatibility warning until either the component's entry in the registry is updated and compatibility confirmed. Here's how component compatibility is determined in relation to A-Frame:
- If there is a component version explicitly listed for an A-Frame version, use that.
- If there is no component version listed for an A-Frame version, use the version registered for the previous A-Frame version if possible. Then set a flag in order to raise compatibility warnings.
- If a component version for an A-Frame version is explicitly set to
null
, exclude it.
Components may be more optimal to use straight from code instead of from visual
tools such as the Inspector. In such cases, specify inspector: false
:
aframe-codey-component:
names: codey
inspector: false
versions:
0.4.0:
version: 1.2.3
path: dist/aframe-codey-component.min.js
To submit a component, make a pull request adding your component to the registry file in the format explained above.
We recommend using angle's component template to get started on a component:
npm install -g angle
angle initcomponent
- Must be published to npm.
- Must be published to GitHub.
- Must self-register themselves with
AFRAME.registerComponent
. - Must contain documentation on component properties and sample usage in the README.
- Must contain at least one example published to GitHub Pages.
- A link to the examples must be added as the GitHub repository's Website next to the GitHub repository's Description.
- Must make sense in the context of a WebVR application. This can change later, but the initial components of the Registry will be under strict curation.
- Should include an attractive preview image or GIF in your README for display.
- Should follow semver in your component versioning scheme, mirroring A-Frame's latest stable version.
- Use angle, an A-Frame command-line tool, to bootstrap a component template for publishing.
- Add A-Frame Registry maintainer Kevin Ngo as
a collaborator to your GitHub repository and as an owner to your npm package
(
npm owner add ngokevin
) if you want help maintaining your component.
Add or update your module in the registry.yml
file (not the files in
build/
). Then make a pull request!
To build the output registry JSON files that correspond to each A-Frame version:
npm install
npm run config # Local config. You will need to add your GitHub API token.
npm run build
If you want to see the registry in a more readable format:
npm run print
Try to keep the registry in alphabetical order.
If updating the build scripts, make sure you have npm install
ed. Then you can
modify scripts and run npm run test
to unit test or npm run build
to do a
full run.
If updating the website, run npm run site
to re-generate the templates. This
doesn't need to be done if just working on CSS.
Once deployed to master, the Registry's GitHub Pages will update.