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Services are the framework that RustyConnector is based off of. Every process in RustyConnector is a Service. Sometimes Services might contain sub-services.

Let's look at the Service interface quickly.

java
public interface Service {
    /**
     * Kill the service.
     * Every service is solely responsible for killing its own processes.
     */
    void kill();
}

Services all have a single common denominator, they can be stopped via the .kill() method. When .kill() is called on a Service, it is expected that not only the Service itself stops, but also all sub-processes of that service. With this setup, we can simply call .kill() on the main plugin Service and the entire plugin will shut down!

Accessing RustyConnector Services โ€‹

The root RustyConnector Service is the Flame, which you access via Tinder. From there you can access the main Services associated with the Flame.

java
VelocityTinder tinder = RustyConnector.Toolkit.proxy().orElseThrow();

tinder.onStart(flame -> {
    flame.services();
});

tinder.onStop(() -> {
});

Notice how we have to access Flame from within an .onStart() method? Flame itself is a Service, which means that it isn't guaranteed to be active. When we call .onStart() we know that we'll be able to access Flame once it's active. Alternatively .onStop() will run when .kill() is used on Flame.

INFO

While building your RustyConnector Module; it's a good practice to write as much logic outside of .onStart() as you possibly can.

You should only need .onStart() for RustyConnector specific functions such as registering Event Listeners.

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