Plugin structure
When creating a plugin with Plugin SDK, Strapi generates the following boilerplate structure for you in the /src/plugins/my-plugin folder:
- TypeScript-based plugins
- JavaScript-based plugins
. # root of the plugin folder (e.g., /src/plugins/my-plugin)
├── admin # Admin panel part of your plugin.
│   ├── src
│   │   ├── components # Contains your front-end components
│   │   │   ├── Initializer.tsx # Plugin initializer
│   │   │   └── PluginIcon.tsx # Contains the icon of your plugin in the main navigation
│   │   ├── pages # Contains the pages of your plugin
│   │   │   ├── App.tsx # Skeleton around the actual pages
│   │   │   └── HomePage.tsx # Homepage of your plugin
│   │   ├── translations # Translations files to make your plugin i18n-friendly
│   │   │   ├── en.json
│   │   ├── utils
│   │   │   └── getTranslations.ts # getTranslations function to return the corresponding plugin translations
│   │   ├── index.ts # Main setup of your plugin, used to register elements in the admin panel
│   │   └── pluginId.ts # pluginId variable computed from package.tsxon name
│   ├── custom.d.ts # Generated types
│   ├── tsconfig.build.json 
│   └── tsconfig.json # TypeScript compiler options for the admin panel part
├── dist # Build of the plugin (front end and back end)
├── node_modules
├── server # Back-end part of your plugin
│   ├── src
│   │   ├── config
│   │   │   └── index.ts # Contains the default server configuration
│   │   ├── content-types # Content-types specific to your plugin
│   │   │   └── index.ts # Loads all the plugin's content-types
│   │   ├── controllers # Controllers specific to your plugin
│   │   │   ├── index.ts # Loads all the plugin's controllers
│   │   │   └── controller.ts # Custom controller example. You can rename it or delete it.
│   │   ├── middlewares # Middlewares specific to your plugin
│   │   │   └── index.ts # Loads all the plugin's middlewares
│   │   ├── policies # Policies specific to your plugin
│   │   │   └── index.ts # Loads all the plugin's policies
│   │   ├── routes # Routes specific to your plugin
│   │   │   └── index.ts # Contains an example route for the my-controller custom controller example
│   │   ├── services # Services specific to your plugin 
│   │   │   ├── index.ts # Loads all the plugin's services
│   │   │   └── service.ts # Custom service example. You can rename it or delete it.
│   │   ├── bootstrap.ts # Function that is called right after the plugin has registered
│   │   ├── destroy.ts # Function that is called to clean up the plugin after Strapi instance is destroyed
│   │   ├── index.ts # Entrypoint for the server (back end) 
│   │   └── register.ts # Function that is called to load the plugin, before bootstrap.
│   ├── tsconfig.build.json 
│   └── tsconfig.json # TypeScript compiler options for the server part
├── .editorconfig
├── .eslintignore
├── .gitignore
├── .prettierignore
├── .prettierrc
├── package-lock.json
├── package.json
└── README.md
. # root of the plugin folder (e.g., /src/plugins/my-plugin)
├── admin # Admin panel part of your plugin.
│   ├── src
│   │   ├── components # Contains your front-end components
│   │   │   ├── Initializer.jsx # Plugin initializer
│   │   │   └── PluginIcon.jsx # Contains the icon of your plugin in the main navigation
│   │   ├── pages # Contains the pages of your plugin
│   │   │   ├── App.jsx # Skeleton around the actual pages
│   │   │   └── HomePage.jsx # Homepage of your plugin
│   │   ├── translations # Translations files to make your plugin i18n-friendly
│   │   │   ├── en.json
│   │   ├── utils
│   │   │   └── getTranslations.js # getTranslations function to return the corresponding plugin translations
│   │   ├── index.js # Main setup of your plugin, used to register elements in the admin panel
│   │   └── pluginId.js # pluginId variable computed from package.json name
│   └── jsconfig.json
├── dist # Build of the plugin (front end and back end)
├── node_modules
├── server # Back-end part of your plugin
│   ├── src
│   │   ├── config
│   │   │   └── index.js # Contains the default server configuration
│   │   ├── content-types # Content-types specific to your plugin
│   │   │   └── index.js # Loads all the plugin's content-types
│   │   ├── controllers # Controllers specific to your plugin
│   │   │   ├── index.js # Loads all the plugin's controllers
│   │   │   └── controller.js # Custom controller example. You can rename it or delete it.
│   │   ├── middlewares # Middlewares specific to your plugin
│   │   │   └── index.js # Loads all the plugin's middlewares
│   │   ├── policies # Policies specific to your plugin
│   │   │   └── index.js # Loads all the plugin's policies
│   │   ├── routes # Routes specific to your plugin
│   │   │   └── index.js # Contains an example route for the my-controller custom controller example
│   │   ├── services # Services specific to your plugin 
│   │   │   ├── index.js # Loads all the plugin's services
│   │   │   └── service.js # Custom service example. You can rename it or delete it.
│   │   ├── bootstrap.js # Function that is called right after the plugin has registered
│   │   ├── destroy.js # Function that is called to clean up the plugin after Strapi instance is destroyed
│   │   ├── index.js # Entrypoint for the server (back end) 
│   │   └── register.js # Function that is called to load the plugin, before bootstrap.
├── .editorconfig
├── .eslintignore
├── .gitignore
├── .prettierignore
├── .prettierrc
├── package-lock.json
├── package.json
└── README.md
A Strapi plugin is divided into 2 parts, each living in a different folder and offering a different API:
| Plugin part | Description | Folder | API | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Admin panel | Includes what will be visible in the admin panel (components, navigation, settings, etc.) | admin/ | Admin Panel API | 
| Backend server | Includes what relates to the backend server (content-types, controllers, middlewares, etc.) | server/ | Server API | 
- Server-only plugin: You can create a plugin that will just use the server part to enhance the API of your application. For instance, this plugin could have its own visible or invisible content-types, controller actions, and routes that are useful for a specific use case. In such a scenario, you don't need your plugin to have an interface in the admin panel. 
- Admin panel plugin vs. application-specific customization: You can create a plugin to inject some components into the admin panel. However, you can also achieve this by creating a - /src/admin/index.jsfile and invoking the- bootstraplifecycle function to inject your components. In this case, deciding whether to create a plugin depends on whether you plan to reuse and distribute the code or if it's only useful for a unique Strapi application.
The next steps of your Strapi plugin development journey will require you to use any of the Strapi plugins APIs.
2 different types of resources help you understand how to use the plugin APIs:
- The reference documentation for the Admin Panel API and Server API give an overview of what is possible to do with a Strapi plugin.
- Guides cover some specific, use-case based examples.