* test(e2e): raise timeouts for two CI-flaky waits Both timeouts repeatedly hit their limit on saturated scheduled runners without indicating a real product regression: - supersync.page.ts:781 — final sync-state icon waitFor went 10s → 30s. The race above it already consumed a 30s budget, so falling back to 10s here is too tight when the runner is hot (e.g. SuperSync 5/6 in run 26514574130, "Client A can migrate multiple times" failure). - repeat-task-day-change #6230 — post-midnight visibility went 30s → 60s. Even with the focus-event fallback added in46ac873570, the 1s tick + debounce + sync chain can still exceed 30s under contention. * fix(android): keep foreground services alive across task removal The focus-mode and tracking foreground services overrode onTaskRemoved to stop themselves when the app was swiped from recents, which defeats the purpose of running them as foreground services. Remove the overrides so the native countdown continues ticking and the notification persists after task removal. Refs #7818, #4513 * fix(theme): stabilize Android keyboard-height tracking Per-event commits during the Android IME open animation sampled partial keyboard amounts from `window.innerHeight - visualViewport.height` (layout-viewport adjustResize and visual-viewport resize fire at slightly different times), parking the global add-task bar mid-page. Debounce the open path 200ms so only the final value lands; commit synchronously when the value falls back to zero so the bar drops the moment the IME is gone. * fix(theme): prevent white flash on Android keyboard resize The Android WebView surface defaulted to white, so adjustResize keyboard animations briefly exposed it before the page repainted at the new size — jarring in dark theme. Paint the surface in the theme background: a values/values-night color resource provides the cold-start default, and a new NavigationBar.setWebViewBackgroundColor push keeps it in sync on live theme switches (the activity is not recreated since uiMode is in configChanges). Also promote the full-viewport gradient backdrop to its own compositor layer as a first-pass mitigation for resize choppiness, pending deeper work. Not yet verified on-device. * docs(android): plan to smooth soft-keyboard resize jank Research + multi-reviewed plan for the remaining keyboard-resize choppiness (the white-flash half is already fixed in80b08f0e96). Root cause: adjustResize resizes the WebView window per frame (WebView is excluded from Chrome 108's visual-viewport fix). Recommends a KISS core — flip only CapacitorMainActivity to adjustNothing + reuse the existing visualViewport/--keyboard-height model and scroll-into-view — gated behind a baseline trace, with VirtualKeyboard API and CSS containment kept as contingencies behind proven need. * perf(theme): dedupe Android keyboard-visibility emissions The native OnGlobalLayoutListener pushes isKeyboardShown$ on every layout pass (every frame of the IME slide), so the subscriber rewrote <body> classes and re-triggered change detection each frame. distinctUntilChanged collapses it to actual show/hide transitions. * docs(android): correct keyboard-resize plan for min-Chrome-107 Implementation review found MIN_CHROMIUM_VERSION=107, but WebView only auto-resizes the visual viewport for the IME at ~Chrome 139. So a static adjustNothing flip would leave Chrome 107-138 with no keyboard-height signal (inputs silently covered). Corrected the plan: VirtualKeyboard API is required (not optional), the switch must be runtime-gated via a native setSoftInputMode method keeping adjustResize as the fallback, and the cheap containment route is now Phase 1 (try first) with the bigger flip as Phase 2. distinctUntilChanged win shipped (f486496b7b). * style(theme): drop no-op keyboard backdrop compositing The will-change/backface-visibility on body::before was added to reduce keyboard-resize choppiness, but review showed it's a no-op: the backdrop resizes every frame so it re-rasterizes regardless of layer promotion, while the hint allocates an always-on compositor layer on every platform. The white-flash fix (WebView background color) is unaffected. --------- Co-authored-by: copilot-swe-agent[bot] <198982749+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>
25 KiB
Super Productivity Plugin Development Guide
This is a comprehensive documentation of the Super Productivity Plugin System. This guide covers everything you need to know about creating plugins for Super Productivity.
These docs might not always be perfectly up to date. You find the latest typescript interfaces here: types.ts
Personally I think the best way to figure out how to write a plugin is to check out the example plugins:
If you want to build a sophisticated UI there is a boilerplate available for solidjs: boilerplate-solid-js
Table of Contents
- Quick Start
- Plugin Manifest
- Plugin Types
- Available API Methods
- Best Practices
- Security Considerations
- Testing Your Plugin
Quick Start
1. Basic Plugin Structure
my-plugin/
├── manifest.json # Plugin metadata (required)
├── plugin.js # Host-side plugin code (optional for iframe-only plugins)
├── index.html # UI interface (required when omitting plugin.js; requires iFrame:true in manifest)
└── icon.svg # Plugin icon (optional)
plugin.js is required for plugins that need host-side setup at plugin load time,
shortcuts, header buttons, background behavior, or host-side API handlers. A UI-only
iframe plugin can ship only manifest.json and index.html when the manifest sets
iFrame: true.
2. Minimal Example
manifest.json:
{
"id": "hello-world",
"name": "Hello World Plugin",
"version": "1.0.0",
"description": "My first Super Productivity plugin",
"manifestVersion": 1,
"minSupVersion": "14.0.0"
}
plugin.js:
console.log('Hello World plugin loaded!');
// Show a notification
PluginAPI.showSnack({
msg: 'Hello from my plugin!',
type: 'SUCCESS',
});
// Demo a simple counter
await PluginAPI.setCounter('hello-count', 0);
PluginAPI.registerHeaderButton({
label: 'Hello (Count: 0)',
icon: 'waving_hand',
onClick: async () => {
const newCount = await PluginAPI.incrementCounter('hello-count');
PluginAPI.showSnack({
msg: `Button clicked! Count: ${newCount}`,
type: 'INFO',
});
},
});
Plugin Manifest
The manifest.json file is required for all plugins and defines the plugin's metadata and configuration.
Manifest Fields
| Field | Type | Required | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
id |
string | ✓ | Unique identifier for your plugin (use kebab-case) |
name |
string | ✓ | Display name shown to users |
version |
string | ✓ | Semantic version (e.g., "1.0.0") |
description |
string | ✓ | Brief description of what your plugin does |
manifestVersion |
number | ✓ | Currently must be 1 |
minSupVersion |
string | ✓ | Minimum Super Productivity version required |
author |
string | Plugin author name | |
homepage |
string | Plugin website or repository URL | |
icon |
string | Path to icon file (SVG recommended) | |
iFrame |
boolean | Whether plugin uses iframe UI (default: false) | |
sidePanel |
boolean | Show plugin in side panel (default: false), requires iFrame:true |
|
permissions |
string[] | The permissions the plugin needs (e.g., ["nodeExecution"]) | |
hooks |
string[] | App events to listen to | |
uiKit |
boolean | Enable UI Kit CSS reset for iframe plugins (default: true). Set to false to disable. |
Complete Manifest Example
{
"id": "my-advanced-plugin",
"name": "My Advanced Plugin",
"version": "2.1.0",
"description": "An advanced plugin with UI and hooks",
"manifestVersion": 1,
"minSupVersion": "14.0.2",
"author": "John Doe",
"homepage": "https://github.com/johndoe/my-plugin",
"icon": "icon.svg",
"iFrame": true,
"sidePanel": false,
"permissions": ["nodeExecution"],
"hooks": ["taskComplete", "taskUpdate", "currentTaskChange"]
}
Plugin Types
1. JavaScript Plugins (plugin.js)
Pure JavaScript plugins that run in a sandboxed environment with full API access.
Use when:
- For setup background stuff that is to be executed even when the plugin ui (iFrame) is not shown
- For registering and handling keyboard shortcuts
- You want to listen to app hooks/events
- You need programmatic interaction with tasks/projects
Example:
// Register multiple UI elements
PluginAPI.registerHeaderButton({
label: 'My Button',
icon: 'star',
onClick: async () => {
const tasks = await PluginAPI.getTasks();
console.log(`You have ${tasks.length} tasks`);
},
});
PluginAPI.registerHook(PluginAPI.Hooks.TASK_COMPLETE, (taskId) => {
console.log(`Task ${taskId} completed!`);
});
2. HTML/Iframe Plugins (index.html)
Plugins that render custom UI in a sandboxed iframe.
Use when:
- You need custom UI/visualizations
- You want to display charts, forms, or complex interfaces
Iframe-only plugins do not need a plugin.js file if all plugin behavior lives inside
index.html. Super Productivity automatically adds the default menu or side-panel entry
from the manifest when the plugin is loaded.
Important: When using iframes, you must inline all CSS and JavaScript directly in the HTML file. External stylesheets and scripts are blocked for security reasons.
Example index.html:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8" />
<title>My Plugin UI</title>
<!-- CSS must be inlined. Theme variables and UI Kit are injected automatically. -->
<style>
body {
padding: var(--s3);
}
.task-list {
background: var(--card-bg);
border-radius: var(--card-border-radius);
padding: var(--s2);
box-shadow: var(--whiteframe-shadow-2dp);
}
.task-item {
padding: var(--s);
border-bottom: 1px solid var(--divider-color);
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<h1>My Plugin</h1>
<div id="content">
<button id="loadTasks">Load Tasks</button>
<div
id="taskList"
class="task-list"
></div>
</div>
<!-- JavaScript must be inlined -->
<script>
document.getElementById('loadTasks').addEventListener('click', async () => {
try {
const tasks = await PluginAPI.getTasks();
const taskList = document.getElementById('taskList');
taskList.innerHTML = '<h3>Your Tasks:</h3>';
tasks.forEach((task) => {
const taskEl = document.createElement('div');
taskEl.className = 'task-item';
taskEl.textContent = task.title;
taskList.appendChild(taskEl);
});
PluginAPI.showSnack({
msg: `Loaded ${tasks.length} tasks`,
type: 'SUCCESS',
});
} catch (error) {
console.error('Error loading tasks:', error);
PluginAPI.showSnack({
msg: 'Failed to load tasks',
type: 'ERROR',
});
}
});
</script>
</body>
</html>
Theme Variables & UI Kit
Iframe plugins automatically receive:
-
CSS variables — All theme variables (colors, spacing, shadows, transitions) are injected as CSS custom properties on
:root. Usevar(--c-primary),var(--bg),var(--text-color), etc. -
UI Kit CSS reset — By default, basic HTML elements (
button,input,select,textarea,table,a,h1–h6,p,code,pre,hr, etc.) are styled to match the app's look. This is injected before your plugin's own styles, so your CSS always wins.To disable the UI Kit, add
"uiKit": falseto your manifest.
Button variants:
- Default
<button>— Neutral card-background button with border <button class="btn-primary">— Filled primary-color button (white text)<button class="btn-outline">— Transparent button with primary-color border and text, fills on hover
Card component:
<div class="card">— Card with background, shadow, rounded corners, and border<div class="card card-clickable">— Adds hover lift effect and primary border highlight
Utility classes:
.text-muted— Muted text color (var(--text-color-muted)).text-primary— Primary theme color (var(--c-primary)).page-fade— Fade-in animation (0.3s ease)
Key CSS variables:
--bg,--bg-darker— Background colors--text-color,--text-color-muted— Text colors--c-primary,--c-accent,--c-warn— Theme colors--card-bg,--card-shadow,--card-border-radius— Card styling--divider-color— Border/divider color--s,--s2,--s3,--s4,--s-half,--s-quarter— Spacing scale--transition-standard— Standard transition--font-primary-stack— App font stack--whiteframe-shadow-1dpthrough--whiteframe-shadow-24dp— Elevation shadows--is-dark-theme—1if dark theme,0if light
Available API Methods
Data Operations
Tasks
getTasks()- Get all active tasksgetArchivedTasks()- Get archived tasksgetCurrentContextTasks()- Get tasks in current contextaddTask(task)- Create a new taskupdateTask(taskId, updates)- Update existing task
Application State
getAppState()- Get the current application state (read-only; returnsPluginAppState). An overview of the data returned is the JSON file exported viaSettings > Sync & Backup > Import/Export > Export data. Example:const state = await PluginAPI.getAppState();
Projects
getAllProjects()- Get all projectsaddProject(project)- Create new projectupdateProject(projectId, updates)- Update project
Tags
getAllTags()- Get all tagsaddTag(tag)- Create new tagupdateTag(tagId, updates)- Update tag
Simple Counters
Simple counters let you track lightweight metrics (e.g., daily clicks or habits) that persist and sync with your data. There are two levels: basic (key-value pairs for today's count) and full model (full CRUD on SimpleCounter entities with date-specific values).
Basic Counters
These treat counters as a simple { [id: string]: number } map for today's values (auto-upserts via NgRx).
| Method | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
getAllCounters() |
Get all counters as { [id: string]: number } |
const counters = await PluginAPI.getAllCounters(); console.log(counters['my-key']); |
getCounter(id) |
Get today's value for a counter (returns null if unset) |
const val = await PluginAPI.getCounter('daily-commits'); |
setCounter(id, value) |
Set today's value (non-negative number; validates id regex /^[A-Za-z0-9_-]+$/) |
await PluginAPI.setCounter('daily-commits', 5); |
incrementCounter(id, incrementBy = 1) |
Increment and return new value (floors at 0) | const newVal = await PluginAPI.incrementCounter('daily-commits', 2); |
decrementCounter(id, decrementBy = 1) |
Decrement and return new value (floors at 0) | const newVal = await PluginAPI.decrementCounter('daily-commits'); |
deleteCounter(id) |
Delete the counter | await PluginAPI.deleteCounter('daily-commits'); |
Example:
// Track daily commits
let commits = (await PluginAPI.getCounter('daily-commits')) ?? 0;
await PluginAPI.incrementCounter('daily-commits');
PluginAPI.showSnack({
msg: `Commits today: ${await PluginAPI.getCounter('daily-commits')}`,
type: 'INFO',
});
Full SimpleCounter Model
For advanced use: Full CRUD on counters with metadata (title, enabled state, date-specific values via countOnDay: { [date: string]: number }).
| Method | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
getAllSimpleCounters() |
Get all as SimpleCounter[] |
const all = await PluginAPI.getAllSimpleCounters(); |
getSimpleCounter(id) |
Get one by id (returns undefined if not found) |
const counter = await PluginAPI.getSimpleCounter('my-id'); |
updateSimpleCounter(id, updates) |
Partial update (e.g., { title: 'New Title', countOnDay: { '2025-11-17': 10 } }) |
await PluginAPI.updateSimpleCounter('my-id', { isEnabled: false }); |
toggleSimpleCounter(id) |
Toggle isOn state (throws if not found) |
await PluginAPI.toggleSimpleCounter('my-id'); |
setSimpleCounterEnabled(id, isEnabled) |
Set enabled state | await PluginAPI.setSimpleCounterEnabled('my-id', true); |
deleteSimpleCounter(id) |
Delete by id | await PluginAPI.deleteSimpleCounter('my-id'); |
setSimpleCounterToday(id, value) |
Set today's value (YYYY-MM-DD) | await PluginAPI.setSimpleCounterToday('my-id', 10); |
setSimpleCounterDate(id, date, value) |
Set value for specific date (validates YYYY-MM-DD) | await PluginAPI.setSimpleCounterDate('my-id', '2025-11-16', 5); |
Example:
// Create/update a habit counter
await PluginAPI.updateSimpleCounter('habit-streak', {
title: 'Daily Streak',
type: 'ClickCounter',
isEnabled: true,
countOnDay: { '2025-11-17': 1 }, // Today's count
});
await PluginAPI.toggleSimpleCounter('habit-streak');
const counter = await PluginAPI.getSimpleCounter('habit-streak');
console.log(`Streak on: ${counter.isOn}`);
UI Operations
Notifications
// Show snackbar notification
PluginAPI.showSnack({
msg: 'Operation completed!',
type: 'SUCCESS', // SUCCESS, ERROR, INFO, WARNING
ico: 'check', // Optional Material icon
actionStr: 'Undo', // Optional action button
actionFn: () => console.log('Undo clicked'),
});
// System notification
PluginAPI.notify({
title: 'Task Complete',
body: 'Great job!',
ico: 'done',
});
Dialogs
// Open a dialog
const result = await PluginAPI.openDialog({
title: 'Confirm Action',
content: 'Are you sure?',
okBtnLabel: 'Yes',
cancelBtnLabel: 'No',
});
Registration Methods (plugin.js only)
Header Button
PluginAPI.registerHeaderButton({
id: 'my-header-btn', // Optional unique ID
label: 'Click Me',
icon: 'star', // Material icon name
onClick: () => {
console.log('Header button clicked');
},
});
Menu Entry
PluginAPI.registerMenuEntry({
label: 'My Plugin Action',
icon: 'extension',
onClick: () => {
console.log('Menu item clicked');
},
});
Side Panel Button
PluginAPI.registerSidePanelButton({
label: 'My Panel',
icon: 'dashboard',
onClick: () => {
PluginAPI.showIndexHtmlAsView();
},
});
Keyboard Shortcut
PluginAPI.registerShortcut({
keys: 'ctrl+shift+p',
label: 'My Plugin Shortcut',
action: () => {
console.log('Shortcut triggered');
},
});
Hooks
// Available hooks
const hooks = {
TASK_COMPLETE: 'taskComplete',
TASK_UPDATE: 'taskUpdate',
TASK_DELETE: 'taskDelete',
CURRENT_TASK_CHANGE: 'currentTaskChange',
FINISH_DAY: 'finishDay',
LANGUAGE_CHANGE: 'languageChange',
PERSISTED_DATA_CHANGED: 'persistedDataChanged',
ACTION: 'action',
};
PERSISTED_DATA_CHANGED fires whenever this plugin's persisted data
changes — local writes, remote sync deliveries, and bulk imports —
after the host has finished its initial boot load. The handler
receives no payload; re-call loadSyncedData(key?) for any key your
plugin tracks to get fresh data. There is no replay-on-register and no
guaranteed ordering across rapid changes, so handlers must be
idempotent. The typical pattern is: call loadSyncedData() once on
plugin init, then subscribe to this hook for subsequent updates.
// Register hook listener
PluginAPI.registerHook(PluginAPI.Hooks.TASK_COMPLETE, (taskId) => {
console.log(`Task ${taskId} completed!`);
});
// Listen to Redux actions
PluginAPI.registerHook(PluginAPI.Hooks.ACTION, (action) => {
if (action.type === 'ADD_TASK_SUCCESS') {
console.log('New task added:', action.payload);
// Bonus: Increment a counter on task add
PluginAPI.incrementCounter('tasks-added-today');
}
});
Data Persistence
You can persist data that will also be synced vai the persistDataSynced and loadSyncedData APIs. For local storage I recommend using localStorage.
// Save plugin data
await PluginAPI.persistDataSynced(JSON.stringify({ count: 42 }));
// Load saved data
const data = await PluginAPI.loadSyncedData();
console.log(data); // '{ count: 42 }'
Best Practices
1. Performance
- Lazy load resources: Don't load everything on plugin initialization
- Be responsive with using resources: Avoid heavy operations and don't save excessive amounts of data.
- Keep it lightweight: Super Productivity is not the only app on the users system and your plugin is not the only plugin.
2. User Experience
- Provide feedback: Show loading states and confirmations
- Be non-intrusive: Don't spam notifications
- Follow the app's design: Use the injected theme variables and try to keep styles minimal.
- Respect user preferences: Check dark mode, and language settings (if possible or stick to english if not)
3. Security
- Request minimal permissions: Only what you need
Node.js Script Execution
Plugins with "permissions": ["nodeExecution"] can run Node.js scripts in the Electron
desktop app.
const result = await plugin.executeNodeScript({
script: `
const os = require('os');
return os.hostname();
`,
timeout: 5000,
});
if (result.success) {
console.log('Hostname:', result.result);
}
Important — use plugin.onReady() for startup calls:
executeNodeScript requires the Electron IPC bridge to be available. On cold boot this
bridge may not be ready when plugin.js first runs. Always put executeNodeScript calls
(and any other startup init code) inside plugin.onReady():
// ❌ May fail on cold boot
const result = await plugin.executeNodeScript({ script: 'return true' });
// ✅ Correct — fires after the bridge is confirmed available
plugin.onReady(async () => {
const result = await plugin.executeNodeScript({ script: 'return true' });
});
plugin.onReady(fn) fires after plugin.js has fully evaluated and the app has
confirmed the Node.js IPC bridge is responding (with automatic retry). If the bridge is
unavailable after retries, an error is shown in the plugin management UI and onReady does
not fire.
You can also use onReady for any other startup work that should run after the plugin
script has finished setting up its hooks and registrations — not just for nodeExecution.
Iframe plugins: plugin.onReady() is also available inside iframe plugins, but it
fires on the next microtask after plugin.js finishes evaluating — without an IPC bridge
ping. This is fine in practice because iframe plugins are rendered on user navigation
(well after host startup, when the bridge is already up). If your iframe plugin needs the
bridge from onReady, it will be available; cold-boot races affect host-side plugin code
only.
4. Don't spam the logs
console.logs should be kept to a minimum.
5. Iframe plugins: inline everything
- Inline everything: CSS and JavaScript must be in the HTML file
<!-- Good: Everything inlined -->
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<style>
/* All styles here */
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div id="app"></div>
<script>
// All JavaScript here
</script>
</body>
</html>
Security Considerations
Sandboxing
- JavaScript plugins run in isolated VM contexts
- Iframe plugins run in sandboxed iframes with restricted permissions
- No access to file system unless through API
API Restrictions
In iframe context, these methods are NOT available:
registerHeaderButton()registerMenuEntry()registerSidePanelButton()registerShortcut()registerHook()execNodeScript()
Content Security Policy
- External scripts/styles are blocked in iframes
- Only same-origin resources are allowed
- Inline scripts must be within the HTML file
Testing Your Plugin
1. Local Development
- Use "Load Plugin from Folder" to test your plugin
- Open DevTools (F12 or Ctrl+Shift+i) to see console logs
- Use the API Test Plugin as reference
2. Debugging Tips
// Add debug logging
const DEBUG = true;
function log(...args) {
if (DEBUG) {
console.log('[MyPlugin]', ...args);
}
}
// Test API methods
async function testAPI() {
log('Testing getTasks...');
const tasks = await PluginAPI.getTasks();
log('Tasks:', tasks);
log('Testing showSnack...');
PluginAPI.showSnack({
msg: 'API test successful!',
type: 'SUCCESS',
});
}
3. Common Issues
Plugin not loading:
- Check manifest.json syntax
- Verify minSupVersion compatibility
- Look for errors in console
API methods failing:
- Check if method is available in current context
- Verify permissions in manifest
- If
executeNodeScriptfails on startup or cold boot, wrap your init code inplugin.onReady(async () => { ... })— this ensures the Node.js bridge is ready before your code runs
Iframe not displaying:
- Check that all resources are inlined
- Verify no external dependencies
- Look for CSP violations in console
Resources
- Plugin API Types: @super-productivity/plugin-api
- Plugin Boilerplate: boilerplate-solid-js
- Example Plugins: plugin-dev
- Community Plugins:
Contributing
If you create a useful plugin, consider:
- Posting on reddit or GitHub discussions about it
- Submitting a PR to add it to the community plugins list (coming soon)
Happy plugin development! 🚀
Bonus: Vibe Coding your Plugins
Tips
- Don't test on your real world data! Use a test instance! (you can use https://test-app.super-productivity.com/ if you don't know how get one)
- Be as specific as possible
- Outline what APIs your plugin should use
- Test for errors (
Ctrl+Shift+iopens the console) and iterate until it works. Don't expect that everything works on your first try. - Read the code! Don't trust it blindly.
Example
Can you you write me a plugin for Super Productivity that plays a beep sound every time i click on a header button (You need to add a header button via PluginAPI.registerHeaderButton).
Here are the docs: https://github.com/super-productivity/super-productivity/blob/master/docs/plugin-development.md
Don't use any PluginAPI methods that are not listed in the guide.
Please give me the output as flat zip file to download.