Files
medusa-store/www/apps/book/app/advanced-development/modules/container/page.mdx
Shahed Nasser b62f23ea00 docs: additions and improvements to modules and DML documentation (#7854)
* docs: additions and improvements to modules and DML documentation

* small wording fix
2024-07-01 10:26:40 +03:00

69 lines
1.5 KiB
Plaintext

export const metadata = {
title: `${pageNumber} Module's Container`,
}
# {metadata.title}
In this chapter, you'll learn about the module's container and how to resolve resources in that container.
## Module's Container
Each module has a local container only used by the resources of that module.
So, resources in the module, such as services or loaders, can only resolve other resources registered in the module's container, such as:
- `logger`: A utility to log message in the Medusa application's logs.
---
## Resolve Resources
### Services
A service's constructor accepts as a first parameter an object used to resolve resources registered in the module's container.
For example:
```ts highlights={[["4"], ["10"]]}
import { Logger } from "@medusajs/medusa"
type InjectedDependencies = {
logger: Logger
}
export default class HelloModuleService {
protected logger_: Logger
constructor({ logger }: InjectedDependencies) {
this.logger_ = logger
this.logger_.info("[HelloModuleService]: Hello World!")
}
// ...
}
```
### Loader
A loader function in a module accepts as a parameter an object having the property `container`. Its value is the module's container used to resolve resources.
For example:
```ts highlights={[["9"]]}
import {
LoaderOptions,
} from "@medusajs/modules-sdk"
import { Logger } from "@medusajs/medusa"
export default function helloWorldLoader({
container,
}: LoaderOptions) {
const logger: Logger = container.resolve("logger")
logger.info("[helloWorldLoader]: Hello, World!")
}
```