320 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
320 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
<?php
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/**
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* @file
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* Outlines how a module can use the Batch API.
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*/
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/**
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* @defgroup batch_example Example: Batch API
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* @ingroup examples
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* @{
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* Outlines how a module can use the Batch API.
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*
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* Batches allow heavy processing to be spread out over several page
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* requests, ensuring that the processing does not get interrupted
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* because of a PHP timeout, while allowing the user to receive feedback
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* on the progress of the ongoing operations. It also can prevent out of memory
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* situations.
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*
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* The @link batch_example.install .install file @endlink also shows how the
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* Batch API can be used to handle long-running hook_update_N() functions.
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*
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* Two harmless batches are defined:
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* - batch 1: Load the node with the lowest nid 100 times.
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* - batch 2: Load all nodes, 20 times and uses a progressive op, loading nodes
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* by groups of 5.
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* @see batch
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*/
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/**
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* Implements hook_menu().
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*/
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function batch_example_menu() {
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$items = array();
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$items['examples/batch_example'] = array(
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'title' => 'Batch example',
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'description' => 'Example of Drupal batch processing',
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'page callback' => 'drupal_get_form',
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'page arguments' => array('batch_example_simple_form'),
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'access callback' => TRUE,
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);
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return $items;
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}
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/**
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* Form builder function to allow choice of which batch to run.
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*/
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function batch_example_simple_form() {
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$form['description'] = array(
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'#type' => 'markup',
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'#markup' => t('This example offers two different batches. The first does 1000 identical operations, each completed in on run; the second does 20 operations, but each takes more than one run to operate if there are more than 5 nodes.'),
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);
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$form['batch'] = array(
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'#type' => 'select',
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'#title' => 'Choose batch',
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'#options' => array(
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'batch_1' => t('batch 1 - 1000 operations, each loading the same node'),
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'batch_2' => t('batch 2 - 20 operations. each one loads all nodes 5 at a time'),
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),
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);
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$form['submit'] = array(
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'#type' => 'submit',
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'#value' => 'Go',
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);
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// If no nodes, prevent submission.
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// Find out if we have a node to work with. Otherwise it won't work.
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$nid = batch_example_lowest_nid();
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if (empty($nid)) {
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drupal_set_message(t("You don't currently have any nodes, and this example requires a node to work with. As a result, this form is disabled."));
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$form['submit']['#disabled'] = TRUE;
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}
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return $form;
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}
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/**
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* Submit handler.
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*
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* @param array $form
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* Form API form.
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* @param array $form_state
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* Form API form.
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*/
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function batch_example_simple_form_submit($form, &$form_state) {
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$function = 'batch_example_' . $form_state['values']['batch'];
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// Reset counter for debug information.
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$_SESSION['http_request_count'] = 0;
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// Execute the function named batch_example_batch_1() or
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// batch_example_batch_2().
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$batch = $function();
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batch_set($batch);
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}
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/**
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* Batch 1 definition: Load the node with the lowest nid 1000 times.
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*
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* This creates an operations array defining what batch 1 should do, including
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* what it should do when it's finished. In this case, each operation is the
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* same and by chance even has the same $nid to operate on, but we could have
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* a mix of different types of operations in the operations array.
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*/
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function batch_example_batch_1() {
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$nid = batch_example_lowest_nid();
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$num_operations = 1000;
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drupal_set_message(t('Creating an array of @num operations', array('@num' => $num_operations)));
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$operations = array();
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// Set up an operations array with 1000 elements, each doing function
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// batch_example_op_1.
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// Each operation in the operations array means at least one new HTTP request,
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// running Drupal from scratch to accomplish the operation. If the operation
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// returns with $context['finished'] != TRUE, then it will be called again.
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// In this example, $context['finished'] is always TRUE.
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for ($i = 0; $i < $num_operations; $i++) {
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// Each operation is an array consisting of
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// - The function to call.
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// - An array of arguments to that function.
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$operations[] = array(
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'batch_example_op_1',
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array(
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$nid,
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t('(Operation @operation)', array('@operation' => $i)),
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),
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);
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}
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$batch = array(
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'operations' => $operations,
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'finished' => 'batch_example_finished',
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);
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return $batch;
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}
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/**
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* Batch operation for batch 1: load a node.
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*
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* This is the function that is called on each operation in batch 1.
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*/
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function batch_example_op_1($nid, $operation_details, &$context) {
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$node = node_load($nid, NULL, TRUE);
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// Store some results for post-processing in the 'finished' callback.
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// The contents of 'results' will be available as $results in the
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// 'finished' function (in this example, batch_example_finished()).
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$context['results'][] = $node->nid . ' : ' . check_plain($node->title);
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// Optional message displayed under the progressbar.
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$context['message'] = t('Loading node "@title"', array('@title' => $node->title)) . ' ' . $operation_details;
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_batch_example_update_http_requests();
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}
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/**
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* Batch 2 : Prepare a batch definition that will load all nodes 20 times.
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*/
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function batch_example_batch_2() {
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$num_operations = 20;
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// Give helpful information about how many nodes are being operated on.
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$node_count = db_query('SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT nid) FROM {node}')->fetchField();
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drupal_set_message(
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t('There are @node_count nodes so each of the @num operations will require @count HTTP requests.',
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array(
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'@node_count' => $node_count,
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'@num' => $num_operations,
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'@count' => ceil($node_count / 5),
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)
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)
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);
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$operations = array();
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// 20 operations, each one loads all nodes.
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for ($i = 0; $i < $num_operations; $i++) {
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$operations[] = array(
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'batch_example_op_2',
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array(t('(Operation @operation)', array('@operation' => $i))),
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);
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}
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$batch = array(
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'operations' => $operations,
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'finished' => 'batch_example_finished',
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// Message displayed while processing the batch. Available placeholders are:
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// @current, @remaining, @total, @percentage, @estimate and @elapsed.
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// These placeholders are replaced with actual values in _batch_process(),
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// using strtr() instead of t(). The values are determined based on the
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// number of operations in the 'operations' array (above), NOT by the number
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// of nodes that will be processed. In this example, there are 20
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// operations, so @total will always be 20, even though there are multiple
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// nodes per operation.
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// Defaults to t('Completed @current of @total.').
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'title' => t('Processing batch 2'),
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'init_message' => t('Batch 2 is starting.'),
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'progress_message' => t('Processed @current out of @total.'),
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'error_message' => t('Batch 2 has encountered an error.'),
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);
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return $batch;
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}
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/**
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* Batch operation for batch 2 : load all nodes, 5 by five.
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*
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* After each group of 5 control is returned to the batch API for later
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* continuation.
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*/
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function batch_example_op_2($operation_details, &$context) {
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// Use the $context['sandbox'] at your convenience to store the
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// information needed to track progression between successive calls.
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if (empty($context['sandbox'])) {
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$context['sandbox'] = array();
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$context['sandbox']['progress'] = 0;
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$context['sandbox']['current_node'] = 0;
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// Save node count for the termination message.
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$context['sandbox']['max'] = db_query('SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT nid) FROM {node}')->fetchField();
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}
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// Process nodes by groups of 5 (arbitrary value).
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// When a group of five is processed, the batch update engine determines
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// whether it should continue processing in the same request or provide
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// progress feedback to the user and wait for the next request.
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// That way even though we're already processing at the operation level
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// the operation itself is interruptible.
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$limit = 5;
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// Retrieve the next group of nids.
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$result = db_select('node', 'n')
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->fields('n', array('nid'))
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->orderBy('n.nid', 'ASC')
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->where('n.nid > :nid', array(':nid' => $context['sandbox']['current_node']))
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->extend('PagerDefault')
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->limit($limit)
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->execute();
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foreach ($result as $row) {
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// Here we actually perform our dummy 'processing' on the current node.
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$node = node_load($row->nid, NULL, TRUE);
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// Store some results for post-processing in the 'finished' callback.
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// The contents of 'results' will be available as $results in the
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// 'finished' function (in this example, batch_example_finished()).
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$context['results'][] = $node->nid . ' : ' . check_plain($node->title) . ' ' . $operation_details;
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// Update our progress information.
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$context['sandbox']['progress']++;
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$context['sandbox']['current_node'] = $node->nid;
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$context['message'] = check_plain($node->title);
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}
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// Inform the batch engine that we are not finished,
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// and provide an estimation of the completion level we reached.
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if ($context['sandbox']['progress'] != $context['sandbox']['max']) {
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$context['finished'] = ($context['sandbox']['progress'] >= $context['sandbox']['max']);
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}
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_batch_example_update_http_requests();
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}
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/**
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* Batch 'finished' callback used by both batch 1 and batch 2.
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*/
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function batch_example_finished($success, $results, $operations) {
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if ($success) {
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// Here we could do something meaningful with the results.
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// We just display the number of nodes we processed...
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drupal_set_message(t('@count results processed in @requests HTTP requests.', array('@count' => count($results), '@requests' => _batch_example_get_http_requests())));
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drupal_set_message(t('The final result was "%final"', array('%final' => end($results))));
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}
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else {
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// An error occurred.
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// $operations contains the operations that remained unprocessed.
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$error_operation = reset($operations);
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drupal_set_message(
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t('An error occurred while processing @operation with arguments : @args',
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array(
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'@operation' => $error_operation[0],
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'@args' => print_r($error_operation[0], TRUE),
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)
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),
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'error'
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);
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}
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}
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/**
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* Utility function - simply queries and loads the lowest nid.
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*
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* @return int|NULL
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* A nid or NULL if there are no nodes.
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*/
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function batch_example_lowest_nid() {
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$select = db_select('node', 'n')
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->fields('n', array('nid'))
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->orderBy('n.nid', 'ASC')
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->extend('PagerDefault')
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->limit(1);
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$nid = $select->execute()->fetchField();
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return $nid;
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}
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/**
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* Utility function to increment HTTP requests in a session variable.
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*/
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function _batch_example_update_http_requests() {
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$_SESSION['http_request_count']++;
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}
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/**
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* Utility function to count the HTTP requests in a session variable.
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*
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* @return int
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* Number of requests.
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*/
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function _batch_example_get_http_requests() {
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return !empty($_SESSION['http_request_count']) ? $_SESSION['http_request_count'] : 0;
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}
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/**
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* @} End of "defgroup batch_example".
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*/
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