get('system.cron_last');
* // Set the cron run time to the current request time.
* $state->set('system.cron_last', REQUEST_TIME);
* @endcode
*
* For more on the State API, see https://www.drupal.org/developing/api/8/state
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup config_api Configuration API
* @{
* Information about the Configuration API.
*
* The Configuration API is one of several methods in Drupal for storing
* information. See the @link info_types Information types topic @endlink for
* an overview of the different types of information. The sections below have
* more information about the configuration API; see
* https://www.drupal.org/developing/api/8/configuration for more details.
*
* @section sec_storage Configuration storage
* In Drupal, there is a concept of the "active" configuration, which is the
* configuration that is currently in use for a site. The storage used for the
* active configuration is configurable: it could be in the database, in files
* in a particular directory, or in other storage backends; the default storage
* is in the database. Module developers must use the configuration API to
* access the active configuration, rather than being concerned about the
* details of where and how it is stored.
*
* Configuration is divided into individual objects, each of which has a
* unique name or key. Some modules will have only one configuration object,
* typically called 'mymodule.settings'; some modules will have many. Within
* a configuration object, configuration settings have data types (integer,
* string, Boolean, etc.) and settings can also exist in a nested hierarchy,
* known as a "mapping".
*
* Configuration can also be overridden on a global, per-language, or
* per-module basis. See https://www.drupal.org/node/1928898 for more
* information.
*
* @section sec_yaml Configuration YAML files
* Whether or not configuration files are being used for the active
* configuration storage on a particular site, configuration files are always
* used for:
* - Defining the default configuration for an extension (module, theme, or
* profile), which is imported to the active storage when the extension is
* enabled. These configuration items are located in the config/install
* sub-directory of the extension. Note that changes to this configuration
* after a module or theme is already enabled have no effect; to make a
* configuration change after a module or theme is enabled, you would need to
* uninstall/reinstall or use a hook_update_N() function.
* - Defining optional configuration for a module or theme. Optional
* configuration items are located in the config/optional sub-directory of the
* extension. These configuration items have dependencies that are not
* explicit dependencies of the extension, so they are only installed if all
* dependencies are met. For example, in the scenario that module A defines a
* dependency which requires module B, but module A is installed first and
* module B some time later, then module A's config/optional directory will be
* scanned at that time for newly met dependencies, and the configuration will
* be installed then. If module B is never installed, the configuration item
* will not be installed either.
* - Exporting and importing configuration.
*
* The file storage format for configuration information in Drupal is
* @link http://wikipedia.org/wiki/YAML YAML files. @endlink Configuration is
* divided into files, each containing one configuration object. The file name
* for a configuration object is equal to the unique name of the configuration,
* with a '.yml' extension. The default configuration files for each module are
* placed in the config/install directory under the top-level module directory,
* so look there in most Core modules for examples.
*
* @section sec_schema Configuration schema and translation
* Each configuration file has a specific structure, which is expressed as a
* YAML-based configuration schema. The configuration schema details the
* structure of the configuration, its data types, and which of its values need
* to be translatable. Each module needs to define its configuration schema in
* files in the config/schema directory under the top-level module directory, so
* look there in most Core modules for examples.
*
* Configuration can be internationalized; see the
* @link i18n Internationalization topic @endlink for more information. Data
* types label, text, and date_format in configuration schema are translatable;
* string is non-translatable text (the 'translatable' property on a schema
* data type definition indicates that it is translatable).
*
* @section sec_simple Simple configuration
* The simple configuration API should be used for information that will always
* have exactly one copy or version. For instance, if your module has a
* setting that is either on or off, then this is only defined once, and it
* would be a Boolean-valued simple configuration setting.
*
* The first task in using the simple configuration API is to define the
* configuration file structure, file name, and schema of your settings (see
* @ref sec_yaml above). Once you have done that, you can retrieve the active
* configuration object that corresponds to configuration file mymodule.foo.yml
* with a call to:
* @code
* $config = \Drupal::config('mymodule.foo');
* @endcode
*
* This will be an object of class \Drupal\Core\Config\Config, which has methods
* for getting configuration information. For instance, if your YAML file
* structure looks like this:
* @code
* enabled: '0'
* bar:
* baz: 'string1'
* boo: 34
* @endcode
* you can make calls such as:
* @code
* // Get a single value.
* $enabled = $config->get('enabled');
* // Get an associative array.
* $bar = $config->get('bar');
* // Get one element of the array.
* $bar_baz = $config->get('bar.baz');
* @endcode
*
* The Config object that was obtained and used in the previous examples does
* not allow you to change configuration. If you want to change configuration,
* you will instead need to get the Config object by making a call to
* getEditable() on the config factory:
* @code
* $config =\Drupal::service('config.factory')->getEditable('mymodule.foo');
* @endcode
*
* Individual configuration values can be changed or added using the set()
* method and saved using the save() method:
* @code
* // Set a scalar value.
* $config->set('enabled', 1);
* // Save the configuration.
* $config->save();
* @endcode
*
* Configuration values can also be unset using the clear() method, which is
* also chainable:
* @code
* $config->clear('bar.boo')->save();
* $config_data = $config->get('bar');
* @endcode
* In this example $config_data would return an array with one key - 'baz' -
* because 'boo' was unset.
*
* @section sec_entity Configuration entities
* In contrast to the simple configuration settings described in the previous
* section, if your module allows users to create zero or more items (where
* "items" are things like content type definitions, view definitions, and the
* like), then you need to define a configuration entity type to store your
* configuration. Creating an entity type, loading entities, and querying them
* are outlined in the @link entity_api Entity API topic. @endlink Here are a
* few additional steps and notes specific to configuration entities:
* - For examples, look for classes that implement
* \Drupal\Core\Config\Entity\ConfigEntityInterface -- one good example is
* the \Drupal\user\Entity\Role entity type.
* - In the entity type annotation, you will need to define a 'config_prefix'
* string. When Drupal stores a configuration item, it will be given a name
* composed of your module name, your chosen config prefix, and the ID of
* the individual item, separated by '.'. For example, in the Role entity,
* the config prefix is 'role', so one configuration item might be named
* user.role.anonymous, with configuration file user.role.anonymous.yml.
* - You will need to define the schema for your configuration in your
* modulename.schema.yml file, with an entry for 'modulename.config_prefix.*'.
* For example, for the Role entity, the file user.schema.yml has an entry
* user.role.*; see @ref sec_yaml above for more information.
* - Your module can provide default/optional configuration entities in YAML
* files; see @ref sec_yaml above for more information.
* - Some configuration entities have dependencies on other configuration
* entities, and module developers need to consider this so that configuration
* can be imported, uninstalled, and synchronized in the right order. For
* example, a field display configuration entity would need to depend on
* field configuration, which depends on field and bundle configuration.
* Configuration entity classes expose dependencies by overriding the
* \Drupal\Core\Config\Entity\ConfigEntityInterface::calculateDependencies()
* method.
* - On routes for paths starting with '/admin' or otherwise designated as
* administration paths (such as node editing when it is set as an admin
* operation), if they have configuration entity placeholders, configuration
* entities are normally loaded in their original language, without
* translations or other overrides. This is usually desirable, because most
* admin paths are for editing configuration, and you need that to be in the
* source language and to lack possibly dynamic overrides. If for some reason
* you need to have your configuration entity loaded in the currently-selected
* language on an admin path (for instance, if you go to
* example.com/es/admin/your_path and you need the entity to be in Spanish),
* then you can add a 'with_config_overrides' parameter option to your route.
* The same applies if you need to load the entity with overrides (or
* translated) on an admin path like '/node/add/article' (when configured to
* be an admin path). Here's an example using the configurable_language config
* entity:
* @code
* mymodule.myroute:
* path: '/admin/mypath/{configurable_language}'
* defaults:
* _controller: '\Drupal\mymodule\MyController::myMethod'
* options:
* parameters:
* configurable_language:
* type: entity:configurable_language
* with_config_overrides: TRUE
* @endcode
* With the route defined this way, the $configurable_language parameter to
* your controller method will come in translated to the current language.
* Without the parameter options section, it would be in the original
* language, untranslated.
*
* @see i18n
*
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup cache Cache API
* @{
* Information about the Drupal Cache API
*
* @section basics Basics
*
* Note: If not specified, all of the methods mentioned here belong to
* \Drupal\Core\Cache\CacheBackendInterface.
*
* The Cache API is used to store data that takes a long time to compute.
* Caching can either be permanent or valid only for a certain timespan, and
* the cache can contain any type of data.
*
* To use the Cache API:
* - Request a cache object through \Drupal::cache() or by injecting a cache
* service.
* - Define a Cache ID (cid) value for your data. A cid is a string, which must
* contain enough information to uniquely identify the data. For example, if
* your data contains translated strings, then your cid value must include the
* interface text language selected for page.
* - Call the get() method to attempt a cache read, to see if the cache already
* contains your data.
* - If your data is not already in the cache, compute it and add it to the
* cache using the set() method. The third argument of set() can be used to
* control the lifetime of your cache item.
*
* Example:
* @code
* $cid = 'mymodule_example:' . \Drupal::languageManager()->getCurrentLanguage()->getId();
*
* $data = NULL;
* if ($cache = \Drupal::cache()->get($cid)) {
* $data = $cache->data;
* }
* else {
* $data = my_module_complicated_calculation();
* \Drupal::cache()->set($cid, $data);
* }
* @endcode
*
* Note the use of $data and $cache->data in the above example. Calls to
* \Drupal::cache()->get() return a record that contains the information stored
* by \Drupal::cache()->set() in the data property as well as additional meta
* information about the cached data. In order to make use of the cached data
* you can access it via $cache->data.
*
* @section bins Cache bins
*
* Cache storage is separated into "bins", each containing various cache items.
* Each bin can be configured separately; see @ref configuration.
*
* When you request a cache object, you can specify the bin name in your call to
* \Drupal::cache(). Alternatively, you can request a bin by getting service
* "cache.nameofbin" from the container. The default bin is called "default", with
* service name "cache.default", it is used to store common and frequently used
* caches.
*
* Other common cache bins are the following:
* - bootstrap: Data needed from the beginning to the end of most requests,
* that has a very strict limit on variations and is invalidated rarely.
* - render: Contains cached HTML strings like cached pages and blocks, can
* grow to large size.
* - data: Contains data that can vary by path or similar context.
* - discovery: Contains cached discovery data for things such as plugins,
* views_data, or YAML discovered data such as library info.
*
* A module can define a cache bin by defining a service in its
* modulename.services.yml file as follows (substituting the desired name for
* "nameofbin"):
* @code
* cache.nameofbin:
* class: Drupal\Core\Cache\CacheBackendInterface
* tags:
* - { name: cache.bin }
* factory: cache_factory:get
* arguments: [nameofbin]
* @endcode
* See the @link container Services topic @endlink for more on defining
* services.
*
* @section delete Deletion
*
* There are two ways to remove an item from the cache:
* - Deletion (using delete(), deleteMultiple() or deleteAll()) permanently
* removes the item from the cache.
* - Invalidation (using invalidate(), invalidateMultiple() or invalidateAll())
* is a "soft" delete that only marks items as "invalid", meaning "not fresh"
* or "not fresh enough". Invalid items are not usually returned from the
* cache, so in most ways they behave as if they have been deleted. However,
* it is possible to retrieve invalid items, if they have not yet been
* permanently removed by the garbage collector, by passing TRUE as the second
* argument for get($cid, $allow_invalid).
*
* Use deletion if a cache item is no longer useful; for instance, if the item
* contains references to data that has been deleted. Use invalidation if the
* cached item may still be useful to some callers until it has been updated
* with fresh data. The fact that it was fresh a short while ago may often be
* sufficient.
*
* Invalidation is particularly useful to protect against stampedes. Rather than
* having multiple concurrent requests updating the same cache item when it
* expires or is deleted, there can be one request updating the cache, while the
* other requests can proceed using the stale value. As soon as the cache item
* has been updated, all future requests will use the updated value.
*
* @section tags Cache Tags
*
* The fourth argument of the set() method can be used to specify cache tags,
* which are used to identify which data is included in each cache item. A cache
* item can have multiple cache tags (an array of cache tags), and each cache
* tag is a string. The convention is to generate cache tags of the form
* [prefix]:[suffix]. Usually, you'll want to associate the cache tags of
* entities, or entity listings. You won't have to manually construct cache tags
* for them — just get their cache tags via
* \Drupal\Core\Cache\CacheableDependencyInterface::getCacheTags() and
* \Drupal\Core\Entity\EntityTypeInterface::getListCacheTags().
* Data that has been tagged can be invalidated as a group: no matter the Cache
* ID (cid) of the cache item, no matter in which cache bin a cache item lives;
* as long as it is tagged with a certain cache tag, it will be invalidated.
*
* Because of that, cache tags are a solution to the cache invalidation problem:
* - For caching to be effective, each cache item must only be invalidated when
* absolutely necessary. (i.e. maximizing the cache hit ratio.)
* - For caching to be correct, each cache item that depends on a certain thing
* must be invalidated whenever that certain thing is modified.
*
* A typical scenario: a user has modified a node that appears in two views,
* three blocks and on twelve pages. Without cache tags, we couldn't possibly
* know which cache items to invalidate, so we'd have to invalidate everything:
* we had to sacrifice effectiveness to achieve correctness. With cache tags, we
* can have both.
*
* Example:
* @code
* // A cache item with nodes, users, and some custom module data.
* $tags = array(
* 'my_custom_tag',
* 'node:1',
* 'node:3',
* 'user:7',
* );
* \Drupal::cache()->set($cid, $data, CacheBackendInterface::CACHE_PERMANENT, $tags);
*
* // Invalidate all cache items with certain tags.
* \Drupal\Core\Cache\Cache::invalidateTags(array('user:1'));
* @endcode
*
* Drupal is a content management system, so naturally you want changes to your
* content to be reflected everywhere, immediately. That's why we made sure that
* every entity type in Drupal 8 automatically has support for cache tags: when
* you save an entity, you can be sure that the cache items that have the
* corresponding cache tags will be invalidated.
* This also is the case when you define your own entity types: you'll get the
* exact same cache tag invalidation as any of the built-in entity types, with
* the ability to override any of the default behavior if needed.
* See \Drupal\Core\Cache\CacheableDepenencyInterface::getCacheTags(),
* \Drupal\Core\Entity\EntityTypeInterface::getListCacheTags(),
* \Drupal\Core\Entity\Entity::invalidateTagsOnSave() and
* \Drupal\Core\Entity\Entity::invalidateTagsOnDelete().
*
* @section context Cache contexts
*
* Some computed data depends on contextual data, such as the user roles of the
* logged-in user who is viewing a page, the language the page is being rendered
* in, the theme being used, etc. When caching the output of such a calculation,
* you must cache each variation separately, along with information about which
* variation of the contextual data was used in the calculatation. The next time
* the computed data is needed, if the context matches that for an existing
* cached data set, the cached data can be reused; if no context matches, a new
* data set can be calculated and cached for later use.
*
* Cache contexts are services tagged with 'cache.context', whose classes
* implement \Drupal\Core\Cache\Context\CacheContextInterface. See
* https://www.drupal.org/developing/api/8/cache/contexts for more information
* on cache contexts, including a list of the contexts that exist in Drupal
* core, and information on how to define your own contexts. See the
* @link container Services and the Dependency Injection Container @endlink
* topic for more information about services.
*
* Typically, the cache context is specified as part of the #cache property
* of a render array; see the Caching section of the
* @link theme_render Render API overview topic @endlink for details.
*
* @section configuration Configuration
*
* By default cached data is stored in the database. This can be configured
* though so that all cached data, or that of an individual cache bin, uses a
* different cache backend, such as APCu or Memcache, for storage.
*
* In a settings.php file, you can override the service used for a particular
* cache bin. For example, if your service implementation of
* \Drupal\Core\Cache\CacheBackendInterface was called cache.custom, the
* following line would make Drupal use it for the 'cache_render' bin:
* @code
* $settings['cache']['bins']['render'] = 'cache.custom';
* @endcode
*
* Additionally, you can register your cache implementation to be used by
* default for all cache bins with:
* @code
* $settings['cache']['default'] = 'cache.custom';
* @endcode
*
* For cache bins that are stored in the database, the number of rows is limited
* to 5000 by default. This can be changed for all database cache bins. For
* example, to instead limit the number of rows to 50000:
* @code
* $settings['database_cache_max_rows']['default'] = 50000;
* @endcode
*
* Or per bin (in this example we allow infinite entries):
* @code
* $settings['database_cache_max_rows']['bins']['dynamic_page_cache'] = -1;
* @endcode
*
* For monitoring reasons it might be useful to figure out the amount of data
* stored in tables. The following SQL snippet can be used for that:
* @code
* SELECT table_name AS `Table`, table_rows AS 'Num. of Rows',
* ROUND(((data_length + index_length) / 1024 / 1024), 2) `Size in MB` FROM
* information_schema.TABLES WHERE table_schema = '***DATABASE_NAME***' AND
* table_name LIKE 'cache_%' ORDER BY (data_length + index_length) DESC
* LIMIT 10;
* @endcode
*
* @see \Drupal\Core\Cache\DatabaseBackend
*
* Finally, you can chain multiple cache backends together, see
* \Drupal\Core\Cache\ChainedFastBackend and \Drupal\Core\Cache\BackendChain.
*
* @see https://www.drupal.org/node/1884796
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup user_api User accounts, permissions, and roles
* @{
* API for user accounts, access checking, roles, and permissions.
*
* @section sec_overview Overview and terminology
* Drupal's permission system is based on the concepts of accounts, roles,
* and permissions.
*
* Users (site visitors) have accounts, which include a user name, an email
* address, a password (or some other means of authentication), and possibly
* other fields (if defined on the site). Anonymous users have an implicit
* account that does not have a real user name or any account information.
*
* Each user account is assigned one or more roles. The anonymous user account
* automatically has the anonymous user role; real user accounts
* automatically have the authenticated user role, plus any roles defined on
* the site that they have been assigned.
*
* Each role, including the special anonymous and authenticated user roles, is
* granted one or more named permissions, which allow them to perform certain
* tasks or view certain content on the site. It is possible to designate a
* role to be the "administrator" role; if this is set up, this role is
* automatically granted all available permissions whenever a module is
* enabled that defines permissions.
*
* All code in Drupal that allows users to perform tasks or view content must
* check that the current user has the correct permission before allowing the
* action. In the standard case, access checking consists of answering the
* question "Does the current user have permission 'foo'?", and allowing or
* denying access based on the answer. Note that access checking should nearly
* always be done at the permission level, not by checking for a particular role
* or user ID, so that site administrators can set up user accounts and roles
* appropriately for their particular sites.
*
* @section sec_define Defining permissions
* Modules define permissions via a $module.permissions.yml file. See
* \Drupal\user\PermissionHandler for documentation of permissions.yml files.
*
* @section sec_access Access permission checking
* Depending on the situation, there are several methods for ensuring that
* access checks are done properly in Drupal:
* - Routes: When you register a route, include a 'requirements' section that
* either gives the machine name of the permission that is needed to visit the
* URL of the route, or tells Drupal to use an access check method or service
* to check access. See the @link menu Routing topic @endlink for more
* information.
* - Entities: Access for various entity operations is designated either with
* simple permissions or access control handler classes in the entity
* annotation. See the @link entity_api Entity API topic @endlink for more
* information.
* - Other code: There is a 'current_user' service, which can be injected into
* classes to provide access to the current user account (see the
* @link container Services and Dependency Injection topic @endlink for more
* information on dependency injection). In code that cannot use dependency
* injection, you can access this service and retrieve the current user
* account object by calling \Drupal::currentUser(). Once you have a user
* object for the current user (implementing \Drupal\user\UserInterface), you
* can call inherited method
* \Drupal\Core\Session\AccountInterface::hasPermission() to check
* permissions, or pass this object into other functions/methods.
* - Forms: Each element of a form array can have a Boolean '#access' property,
* which determines whether that element is visible and/or usable. This is a
* common need in forms, so the current user service (described above) is
* injected into the form base class as method
* \Drupal\Core\Form\FormBase::currentUser().
*
* @section sec_entities User and role objects
* User objects in Drupal are entity items, implementing
* \Drupal\user\UserInterface. Role objects in Drupal are also entity items,
* implementing \Drupal\user\RoleInterface. See the
* @link entity_api Entity API topic @endlink for more information about
* entities in general (including how to load, create, modify, and query them).
*
* Roles often need to be manipulated in automated test code, such as to add
* permissions to them. Here's an example:
* @code
* $role = \Drupal\user\Entity\Role::load('authenticated');
* $role->grantPermission('access comments');
* $role->save();
* @endcode
*
* Other important interfaces:
* - \Drupal\Core\Session\AccountInterface: The part of UserInterface that
* deals with access checking. In writing code that checks access, your
* method parameters should use this interface, not UserInterface.
* - \Drupal\Core\Session\AccountProxyInterface: The interface for the
* current_user service (described above).
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup container Services and Dependency Injection Container
* @{
* Overview of the Dependency Injection Container and Services.
*
* @section sec_overview Overview of container, injection, and services
* The Services and Dependency Injection Container concepts have been adopted by
* Drupal from the @link http://symfony.com/ Symfony framework. @endlink A
* "service" (such as accessing the database, sending email, or translating user
* interface text) is defined (given a name and an interface or at least a
* class that defines the methods that may be called), and a default class is
* designated to provide the service. These two steps must be done together, and
* can be done by Drupal Core or a module. Other modules can then define
* alternative classes to provide the same services, overriding the default
* classes. Classes and functions that need to use the service should always
* instantiate the class via the dependency injection container (also known
* simply as the "container"), rather than instantiating a particular service
* provider class directly, so that they get the correct class (default or
* overridden).
*
* See https://www.drupal.org/node/2133171 for more detailed information on
* services and the dependency injection container.
*
* @section sec_discover Discovering existing services
* Drupal core defines many core services in the core.services.yml file (in the
* top-level core directory). Some Drupal Core modules and contributed modules
* also define services in modulename.services.yml files. API reference sites
* (such as https://api.drupal.org) generate lists of all existing services from
* these files. Look for the Services link in the API Navigation block.
* Alternatively you can look through the individual files manually.
*
* A typical service definition in a *.services.yml file looks like this:
* @code
* path.alias_manager:
* class: Drupal\Core\Path\AliasManager
* arguments: ['@path.crud', '@path.alias_whitelist', '@language_manager']
* @endcode
* Some services use other services as factories; a typical service definition
* is:
* @code
* cache.entity:
* class: Drupal\Core\Cache\CacheBackendInterface
* tags:
* - { name: cache.bin }
* factory: cache_factory:get
* arguments: [entity]
* @endcode
*
* The first line of a service definition gives the unique machine name of the
* service. This is often prefixed by the module name if provided by a module;
* however, by convention some service names are prefixed by a group name
* instead, such as cache.* for cache bins and plugin.manager.* for plugin
* managers.
*
* The class line either gives the default class that provides the service, or
* if the service uses a factory class, the interface for the service. If the
* class depends on other services, the arguments line lists the machine
* names of the dependencies (preceded by '@'); objects for each of these
* services are instantiated from the container and passed to the class
* constructor when the service class is instantiated. Other arguments can also
* be passed in; see the section at https://www.drupal.org/node/2133171 for more
* detailed information.
*
* Services using factories can be defined as shown in the above example, if the
* factory is itself a service. The factory can also be a class; details of how
* to use service factories can be found in the section at
* https://www.drupal.org/node/2133171.
*
* @section sec_container Accessing a service through the container
* As noted above, if you need to use a service in your code, you should always
* instantiate the service class via a call to the container, using the machine
* name of the service, so that the default class can be overridden. There are
* several ways to make sure this happens:
* - For service-providing classes, see other sections of this documentation
* describing how to pass services as arguments to the constructor.
* - Plugin classes, controllers, and similar classes have create() or
* createInstance() methods that are used to create an instance of the class.
* These methods come from different interfaces, and have different
* arguments, but they all include an argument $container of type
* \Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\ContainerInterface.
* If you are defining one of these classes, in the create() or
* createInstance() method, call $container->get('myservice.name') to
* instantiate a service. The results of these calls are generally passed to
* the class constructor and saved as member variables in the class.
* - For functions and class methods that do not have access to either of
* the above methods of dependency injection, you can use service location to
* access services, via a call to the global \Drupal class. This class has
* special methods for accessing commonly-used services, or you can call a
* generic method to access any service. Examples:
* @code
* // Retrieve the entity.manager service object (special method exists).
* $manager = \Drupal::entityManager();
* // Retrieve the service object for machine name 'foo.bar'.
* $foobar = \Drupal::service('foo.bar');
* @endcode
*
* As a note, you should always use dependency injection (via service arguments
* or create()/createInstance() methods) if possible to instantiate services,
* rather than service location (via the \Drupal class), because:
* - Dependency injection facilitates writing unit tests, since the container
* argument can be mocked and the create() method can be bypassed by using
* the class constructor. If you use the \Drupal class, unit tests are much
* harder to write and your code has more dependencies.
* - Having the service interfaces on the class constructor and member variables
* is useful for IDE auto-complete and self-documentation.
*
* @section sec_define Defining a service
* If your module needs to define a new service, here are the steps:
* - Choose a unique machine name for your service. Typically, this should
* start with your module name. Example: mymodule.myservice.
* - Create a PHP interface to define what your service does.
* - Create a default class implementing your interface that provides your
* service. If your class needs to use existing services (such as database
* access), be sure to make these services arguments to your class
* constructor, and save them in member variables. Also, if the needed
* services are provided by other modules and not Drupal Core, you'll want
* these modules to be dependencies of your module.
* - Add an entry to a modulename.services.yml file for the service. See
* @ref sec_discover above, or existing *.services.yml files in Core, for the
* syntax; it will start with your machine name, refer to your default class,
* and list the services that need to be passed into your constructor.
*
* Services can also be defined dynamically, as in the
* \Drupal\Core\CoreServiceProvider class, but this is less common for modules.
*
* @section sec_tags Service tags
* Some services have tags, which are defined in the service definition. See
* @link service_tag Service Tags @endlink for usage.
*
* @section sec_injection Overriding the default service class
* Modules can override the default classes used for services. Here are the
* steps:
* - Define a class in the top-level namespace for your module
* (Drupal\my_module), whose name is the camel-case version of your module's
* machine name followed by "ServiceProvider" (for example, if your module
* machine name is my_module, the class must be named
* MyModuleServiceProvider).
* - The class needs to implement
* \Drupal\Core\DependencyInjection\ServiceModifierInterface, which is
* typically done by extending
* \Drupal\Core\DependencyInjection\ServiceProviderBase.
* - The class needs to contain one method: alter(). This method does the
* actual work of telling Drupal to use your class instead of the default.
* Here's an example:
* @code
* public function alter(ContainerBuilder $container) {
* // Override the language_manager class with a new class.
* $definition = $container->getDefinition('language_manager');
* $definition->setClass('Drupal\my_module\MyLanguageManager');
* }
* @endcode
* Note that $container here is an instance of
* \Drupal\Core\DependencyInjection\ContainerBuilder.
*
* @see https://www.drupal.org/node/2133171
* @see core.services.yml
* @see \Drupal
* @see \Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\ContainerInterface
* @see plugin_api
* @see menu
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup listing_page_service Page header for Services page
* @{
* Introduction to services
*
* A "service" (such as accessing the database, sending email, or translating
* user interface text) can be defined by a module or Drupal core. Defining a
* service means giving it a name and designating a default class to provide the
* service; ideally, there should also be an interface that defines the methods
* that may be called. Services are collected into the Dependency Injection
* Container, and can be overridden to use different classes or different
* instantiation by modules. See the
* @link container Services and Dependency Injection Container topic @endlink
* for details.
*
* Some services have tags, which are defined in the service definition. Tags
* are used to define a group of related services, or to specify some aspect of
* how the service behaves. See the
* @link service_tag Service Tags topic @endlink for more information.
*
* @see container
* @see service_tag
*
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup typed_data Typed Data API
* @{
* API for describing data based on a set of available data types.
*
* PHP has data types, such as int, string, float, array, etc., and it is an
* object-oriented language that lets you define classes and interfaces.
* However, in some cases, it is useful to be able to define an abstract
* type (as in an interface, free of implementation details), that still has
* properties (which an interface cannot) as well as meta-data. The Typed Data
* API provides this abstraction.
*
* @section sec_overview Overview
* Each data type in the Typed Data API is a plugin class (annotation class
* example: \Drupal\Core\TypedData\Annotation\DataType); these plugins are
* managed by the typed_data_manager service (by default
* \Drupal\Core\TypedData\TypedDataManager). Each data object encapsulates a
* single piece of data, provides access to the metadata, and provides
* validation capability. Also, the typed data plugins have a shorthand
* for easily accessing data values, described in @ref sec_tree.
*
* The metadata of a data object is defined by an object based on a class called
* the definition class (see \Drupal\Core\TypedData\DataDefinitionInterface).
* The class used can vary by data type and can be specified in the data type's
* plugin definition, while the default is set in the $definition_class property
* of the annotation class. The default class is
* \Drupal\Core\TypedData\DataDefinition. For data types provided by a plugin
* deriver, the plugin deriver can set the definition_class property too.
* The metadata object provides information about the data, such as the data
* type, whether it is translatable, the names of its properties (for complex
* types), and who can access it.
*
* See https://www.drupal.org/node/1794140 for more information about the Typed
* Data API.
*
* @section sec_varieties Varieties of typed data
* There are three kinds of typed data: primitive, complex, and list.
*
* @subsection sub_primitive Primitive data types
* Primitive data types wrap PHP data types and also serve as building blocks
* for complex and list typed data. Each primitive data type has an interface
* that extends \Drupal\Core\TypedData\PrimitiveInterface, with getValue()
* and setValue() methods for accessing the data value, and a default plugin
* implementation. Here's a list:
* - \Drupal\Core\TypedData\Type\IntegerInterface: Plugin ID integer,
* corresponds to PHP type int.
* - \Drupal\Core\TypedData\Type\StringInterface: Plugin ID string,
* corresponds to PHP type string.
* - \Drupal\Core\TypedData\Type\FloatInterface: Plugin ID float,
* corresponds to PHP type float.
* - \Drupal\Core\TypedData\Type\BooleanInterface: Plugin ID bool,
* corresponds to PHP type bool.
* - \Drupal\Core\TypedData\Type\BinaryInterface: Plugin ID binary,
* corresponds to a PHP file resource.
* - \Drupal\Core\TypedData\Type\UriInterface: Plugin ID uri.
*
* @subsection sec_complex Complex data
* Complex data types, with interface
* \Drupal\Core\TypedData\ComplexDataInterface, represent data with named
* properties; the properties can be accessed with get() and set() methods.
* The value of each property is itself a typed data object, which can be
* primitive, complex, or list data.
*
* The base type for most complex data is the
* \Drupal\Core\TypedData\Plugin\DataType\Map class, which represents an
* associative array. Map provides its own definition class in the annotation,
* \Drupal\Core\TypedData\MapDataDefinition, and most complex data classes
* extend this class. The getValue() and setValue() methods on the Map class
* enforce the data definition and its property structure.
*
* The Drupal Field API uses complex typed data for its field items, with
* definition class \Drupal\Core\Field\TypedData\FieldItemDataDefinition.
*
* @section sec_list Lists
* List data types, with interface \Drupal\Core\TypedData\ListInterface,
* represent data that is an ordered list of typed data, all of the same type.
* More precisely, the plugins in the list must have the same base plugin ID;
* however, some types (for example field items and entities) are provided by
* plugin derivatives and the sub IDs can be different.
*
* @section sec_tree Tree handling
* Typed data allows you to use shorthand to get data values nested in the
* implicit tree structure of the data. For example, to get the value from
* an entity field item, the Entity Field API allows you to call:
* @code
* $value = $entity->fieldName->propertyName;
* @endcode
* This is really shorthand for:
* @code
* $field_item_list = $entity->get('fieldName');
* $field_item = $field_item_list->get(0);
* $property = $field_item->get('propertyName');
* $value = $property->getValue();
* @endcode
* Some notes:
* - $property, $field_item, and $field_item_list are all typed data objects,
* while $value is a raw PHP value.
* - You can call $property->getParent() to get $field_item,
* $field_item->getParent() to get $field_item_list, or
* $field_item_list->getParent() to get $typed_entity ($entity wrapped in a
* typed data object). $typed_entity->getParent() is NULL.
* - For all of these ->getRoot() returns $typed_entity.
* - The langcode property is on $field_item_list, but you can access it
* on $property as well, so that all items will report the same langcode.
* - When the value of $property is changed by calling $property->setValue(),
* $property->onChange() will fire, which in turn calls the parent object's
* onChange() method and so on. This allows parent objects to react upon
* changes of contained properties or list items.
*
* @section sec_defining Defining data types
* To define a new data type:
* - Create a class that implements one of the Typed Data interfaces.
* Typically, you will want to extend one of the classes listed in the
* sections above as a starting point.
* - Make your class into a DataType plugin. To do that, put it in namespace
* \Drupal\yourmodule\Plugin\DataType (where "yourmodule" is your module's
* short name), and add annotation of type
* \Drupal\Core\TypedData\Annotation\DataType to the documentation header.
* See the @link plugin_api Plugin API topic @endlink and the
* @link annotation Annotations topic @endlink for more information.
*
* @section sec_using Using data types
* The data types of the Typed Data API can be used in several ways, once they
* have been defined:
* - In the Field API, data types can be used as the class in the property
* definition of the field. See the @link field Field API topic @endlink for
* more information.
* - In configuration schema files, you can use the unique ID ('id' annotation)
* from any DataType plugin class as the 'type' value for an entry. See the
* @link config_api Confuration API topic @endlink for more information.
* - If you need to create a typed data object in code, first get the
* typed_data_manager service from the container or by calling
* \Drupal::typedDataManager(). Then pass the plugin ID to
* $manager::createDataDefinition() to create an appropriate data definition
* object. Then pass the data definition object and the value of the data to
* $manager::create() to create a typed data object.
*
* @see plugin_api
* @see container
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup testing Automated tests
* @{
* Overview of PHPUnit tests and Simpletest tests.
*
* The Drupal project has embraced a philosophy of using automated tests,
* consisting of both unit tests (which test the functionality of classes at a
* low level) and functional tests (which test the functionality of Drupal
* systems at a higher level, usually involving web output). The goal is to
* have test coverage for all or most of the components and features, and to
* run the automated tests before any code is changed or added, to make sure
* it doesn't break any existing functionality (regression testing).
*
* In order to implement this philosophy, developers need to do the following:
* - When making a patch to fix a bug, make sure that the bug fix patch includes
* a test that fails without the code change and passes with the code change.
* This helps reviewers understand what the bug is, demonstrates that the code
* actually fixes the bug, and ensures the bug will not reappear due to later
* code changes.
* - When making a patch to implement a new feature, include new unit and/or
* functional tests in the patch. This serves to both demonstrate that the
* code actually works, and ensure that later changes do not break the new
* functionality.
*
* @section write_unit Writing PHPUnit tests for classes
* PHPUnit tests for classes are written using the industry-standard PHPUnit
* framework. Use a PHPUnit test to test functionality of a class if the Drupal
* environment (database, settings, etc.) and web browser are not needed for the
* test, or if the Drupal environment can be replaced by a "mock" object. To
* write a PHPUnit test:
* - Define a class that extends \Drupal\Tests\UnitTestCase.
* - The class name needs to end in the word Test.
* - The namespace must be a subspace/subdirectory of \Drupal\yourmodule\Tests,
* where yourmodule is your module's machine name.
* - The test class file must be named and placed under the
* yourmodule/tests/src/Unit directory, according to the PSR-4 standard.
* - Your test class needs a phpDoc comment block with a description and
* a @group annotation, which gives information about the test.
* - Add test cases by adding method names that start with 'test' and have no
* arguments, for example testYourTestCase(). Each one should test a logical
* subset of the functionality.
* For more details, see:
* - https://www.drupal.org/phpunit for full documentation on how to write
* PHPUnit tests for Drupal.
* - http://phpunit.de for general information on the PHPUnit framework.
* - @link oo_conventions Object-oriented programming topic @endlink for more
* on PSR-4, namespaces, and where to place classes.
*
* @section write_functional Writing functional tests
* Functional tests are written using a Drupal-specific framework that is, for
* historical reasons, known as "Simpletest". Use a Simpletest test to test the
* functionality of sub-system of Drupal, if the functionality depends on the
* Drupal database and settings, or to test the web output of Drupal. To
* write a Simpletest test:
* - For functional tests of the web output of Drupal, define a class that
* extends \Drupal\simpletest\WebTestBase, which contains an internal web
* browser and defines many helpful test assertion methods that you can use
* in your tests. You can specify modules to be enabled by defining a
* $modules member variable -- keep in mind that by default, WebTestBase uses
* a "testing" install profile, with a minimal set of modules enabled.
* - For functional tests that do not test web output, define a class that
* extends \Drupal\KernelTests\KernelTestBase. This class is much faster
* than WebTestBase, because instead of making a full install of Drupal, it
* uses an in-memory pseudo-installation (similar to what the installer and
* update scripts use). To use this test class, you will need to create the
* database tables you need and install needed modules manually.
* - The namespace must be a subspace/subdirectory of \Drupal\yourmodule\Tests,
* where yourmodule is your module's machine name.
* - The test class file must be named and placed under the yourmodule/src/Tests
* directory, according to the PSR-4 standard.
* - Your test class needs a phpDoc comment block with a description and
* a @group annotation, which gives information about the test.
* - You may also override the default setUp() method, which can set be used to
* set up content types and similar procedures.
* - In some cases, you may need to write a test module to support your test;
* put such modules under the yourmodule/tests/modules directory.
* - Add test cases by adding method names that start with 'test' and have no
* arguments, for example testYourTestCase(). Each one should test a logical
* subset of the functionality. Each method runs in a new, isolated test
* environment, so it can only rely on the setUp() method, not what has
* been set up by other test methods.
* For more details, see:
* - https://www.drupal.org/simpletest for full documentation on how to write
* functional tests for Drupal.
* - @link oo_conventions Object-oriented programming topic @endlink for more
* on PSR-4, namespaces, and where to place classes.
*
* @section write_functional_phpunit Write functional PHP tests (phpunit)
* Functional tests extend the BrowserTestBase base class, and use PHPUnit as
* their underlying framework. They use a simulated browser, in which the test
* can click links, visit URLs, post to forms, etc. To write a functional test:
* - Extend \Drupal\Tests\BrowserTestBase.
* - Place the test in the yourmodule/tests/src/Functional/ directory and use
* the \Drupal\Tests\yourmodule\Functional namespace.
* - Add a @group annotation. For example, if the test is for a Drupal 6
* migration process, the group core uses is migrate_drupal_6. Use yourmodule
* as the group name if the test does not belong to another larger group.
* - You may also override the default setUp() method, which can be used to set
* up content types and similar procedures. Don't forget to call the parent
* method.
* - In some cases, you may need to write a test module to support your test;
* put such modules under the yourmodule/tests/modules directory.
* - Add test cases by adding method names that start with 'test' and have no
* arguments, for example testYourTestCase(). Each one should test a logical
* subset of the functionality. Each method runs in a new, isolated test
* environment, so it can only rely on the setUp() method, not what has
* been set up by other test methods.
* For more details, see:
* - https://www.drupal.org/docs/8/phpunit/phpunit-browser-test-tutorial for
* a full tutorial on how to write functional PHPUnit tests for Drupal.
* - https://www.drupal.org/phpunit for the full documentation on how to write
* PHPUnit tests for Drupal.
*
* @section write_jsfunctional_phpunit Write functional JavaScript tests (phpunit)
* To write a functional test that relies on JavaScript:
* - Extend \Drupal\FunctionalJavaScriptTests\JavascriptTestBase.
* - Place the test into the yourmodule/tests/src/FunctionalJavascript/
* directory and use the \Drupal\Tests\yourmodule\FunctionalJavascript
* namespace.
* - Add a @group annotation. Use yourmodule as the group name if the test does
* not belong to another larger group.
* - Set up PhantomJS; see http://phantomjs.org/download.html.
* - To run tests, see core/tests/README.md.
* - When clicking a link/button with Ajax behavior attached, keep in mind that
* the underlying browser might take time to deliver changes to the HTML. Use
* $this->assertSession()->assertWaitOnAjaxRequest() to wait for the Ajax
* request to finish.
* For more details, see:
* - https://www.drupal.org/docs/8/phpunit/phpunit-javascript-testing-tutorial
* for a full tutorial on how to write PHPUnit JavaScript tests for Drupal.
* - https://www.drupal.org/phpunit for the full documentation on how to write
* PHPUnit tests for Drupal.
*
* @section running Running tests
* You can run both Simpletest and PHPUnit tests by enabling the core Testing
* module (core/modules/simpletest). Once that module is enabled, tests can be
* run using the core/scripts/run-tests.sh script, using
* @link https://www.drupal.org/project/drush Drush @endlink, or from the
* Testing module user interface.
*
* PHPUnit tests can also be run from the command line, using the PHPUnit
* framework. See https://www.drupal.org/node/2116263 for more information.
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup php_assert PHP Runtime Assert Statements
* @{
* Use of the assert() statement in Drupal.
*
* Unit tests also use the term "assertion" to refer to test conditions, so to
* avoid confusion the term "runtime assertion" will be used for the assert()
* statement throughout the documentation.
*
* A runtime assertion is a statement that is expected to always be true at
* the point in the code it appears at. They are tested using PHP's internal
* @link http://php.net/assert assert() @endlink statement. If an
* assertion is ever FALSE it indicates an error in the code or in module or
* theme configuration files. User-provided configuration files should be
* verified with standard control structures at all times, not just checked in
* development environments with assert() statements on.
*
* When runtime assertions fail in PHP 7 an \AssertionError is thrown.
* Drupal uses an assertion callback to do the same in PHP 5.x so that unit
* tests involving runtime assertions will work uniformly across both versions.
*
* The Drupal project primarily uses runtime assertions to enforce the
* expectations of the API by failing when incorrect calls are made by code
* under development. While PHP type hinting does this for objects and arrays,
* runtime assertions do this for scalars (strings, integers, floats, etc.) and
* complex data structures such as cache and render arrays. They ensure that
* methods' return values are the documented datatypes. They also verify that
* objects have been properly configured and set up by the service container.
* Runtime assertions are checked throughout development. They supplement unit
* tests by checking scenarios that do not have unit tests written for them,
* and by testing the API calls made by all the code in the system.
*
* When using assert() keep the following in mind:
* - Runtime assertions are disabled by default in production and enabled in
* development, so they can't be used as control structures. Use exceptions
* for errors that can occur in production no matter how unlikely they are.
* - Assert() functions in a buggy manner prior to PHP 7. If you do not use a
* string for the first argument of the statement but instead use a function
* call or expression then that code will be evaluated even when runtime
* assertions are turned off. To avoid this you must use a string as the
* first argument, and assert will pass this string to the eval() statement.
* - Since runtime assertion strings are parsed by eval() use caution when
* using them to work with data that may be unsanitized.
*
* See https://www.drupal.org/node/2492225 for more information on runtime
* assertions.
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup info_types Information types
* @{
* Types of information in Drupal.
*
* Drupal has several distinct types of information, each with its own methods
* for storage and retrieval:
* - Content: Information meant to be displayed on your site: articles, basic
* pages, images, files, custom blocks, etc. Content is stored and accessed
* using @link entity_api Entities @endlink.
* - Session: Information about individual users' interactions with the site,
* such as whether they are logged in. This is really "state" information, but
* it is not stored the same way so it's a separate type here. Session
* information is available from the Request object. The session implements
* \Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Session\SessionInterface.
* - State: Information of a temporary nature, generally machine-generated and
* not human-edited, about the current state of your site. Examples: the time
* when Cron was last run, whether node access permissions need rebuilding,
* etc. See @link state_api the State API topic @endlink for more information.
* - Configuration: Information about your site that is generally (or at least
* can be) human-edited, but is not Content, and is meant to be relatively
* permanent. Examples: the name of your site, the content types and views
* you have defined, etc. See
* @link config_api the Configuration API topic @endlink for more information.
*
* @see cache
* @see i18n
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup extending Extending and altering Drupal
* @{
* Overview of extensions and alteration methods for Drupal.
*
* @section sec_types Types of extensions
* Drupal's core behavior can be extended and altered via these three basic
* types of extensions:
* - Themes: Themes alter the appearance of Drupal sites. They can include
* template files, which alter the HTML markup and other raw output of the
* site; CSS files, which alter the styling applied to the HTML; and
* JavaScript, Flash, images, and other files. For more information, see the
* @link theme_render Theme system and render API topic @endlink and
* https://www.drupal.org/docs/8/theming
* - Modules: Modules add to or alter the behavior and functionality of Drupal,
* by using one or more of the methods listed below. For more information
* about creating modules, see https://www.drupal.org/developing/modules/8
* - Installation profiles: Installation profiles can be used to
* create distributions, which are complete specific-purpose packages of
* Drupal including additional modules, themes, and data. For more
* information, see https://www.drupal.org/developing/distributions.
*
* @section sec_alter Alteration methods for modules
* Here is a list of the ways that modules can alter or extend Drupal's core
* behavior, or the behavior of other modules:
* - Hooks: Specially-named functions that a module defines, which are
* discovered and called at specific times, usually to alter behavior or data.
* See the @link hooks Hooks topic @endlink for more information.
* - Plugins: Classes that a module defines, which are discovered and
* instantiated at specific times to add functionality. See the
* @link plugin_api Plugin API topic @endlink for more information.
* - Entities: Special plugins that define entity types for storing new types
* of content or configuration in Drupal. See the
* @link entity_api Entity API topic @endlink for more information.
* - Services: Classes that perform basic operations within Drupal, such as
* accessing the database and sending email. See the
* @link container Dependency Injection Container and Services topic @endlink
* for more information.
* - Routing: Providing or altering "routes", which are URLs that Drupal
* responds to, or altering routing behavior with event listener classes.
* See the @link menu Routing and menu topic @endlink for more information.
* - Events: Modules can register as event subscribers; when an event is
* dispatched, a method is called on each registered subscriber, allowing each
* one to react. See the @link events Events topic @endlink for more
* information.
*
* @section sec_sample *.info.yml files
* Extensions must each be located in a directory whose name matches the short
* name (or machine name) of the extension, and this directory must contain a
* file named machine_name.info.yml (where machine_name is the machine name of
* the extension). See \Drupal\Core\Extension\InfoParserInterface::parse() for
* documentation of the format of .info.yml files.
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup plugin_api Plugin API
* @{
* Using the Plugin API
*
* @section sec_overview Overview and terminology
*
* The basic idea of plugins is to allow a particular module or subsystem of
* Drupal to provide functionality in an extensible, object-oriented way. The
* controlling module or subsystem defines the basic framework (interface) for
* the functionality, and other modules can create plugins (implementing the
* interface) with particular behaviors. The controlling module instantiates
* existing plugins as needed, and calls methods to invoke their functionality.
* Examples of functionality in Drupal Core that use plugins include: the block
* system (block types are plugins), the entity/field system (entity types,
* field types, field formatters, and field widgets are plugins), the image
* manipulation system (image effects and image toolkits are plugins), and the
* search system (search page types are plugins).
*
* Plugins are grouped into plugin types, each generally defined by an
* interface. Each plugin type is managed by a plugin manager service, which
* uses a plugin discovery method to discover provided plugins of that type and
* instantiate them using a plugin factory.
*
* Some plugin types make use of the following concepts or components:
* - Plugin derivatives: Allows a single plugin class to present itself as
* multiple plugins. Example: the Menu module provides a block for each
* defined menu via a block plugin derivative.
* - Plugin mapping: Allows a plugin class to map a configuration string to an
* instance, and have the plugin automatically instantiated without writing
* additional code.
* - Plugin collections: Provide a way to lazily instantiate a set of plugin
* instances from a single plugin definition.
*
* There are several things a module developer may need to do with plugins:
* - Define a completely new plugin type: see @ref sec_define below.
* - Create a plugin of an existing plugin type: see @ref sec_create below.
* - Perform tasks that involve plugins: see @ref sec_use below.
*
* See https://www.drupal.org/developing/api/8/plugins for more detailed
* documentation on the plugin system. There are also topics for a few
* of the many existing types of plugins:
* - @link block_api Block API @endlink
* - @link entity_api Entity API @endlink
* - @link field Various types of field-related plugins @endlink
* - @link views_plugins Views plugins @endlink (has links to topics covering
* various specific types of Views plugins).
* - @link search Search page plugins @endlink
*
* @section sec_define Defining a new plugin type
* To define a new plugin type:
* - Define an interface for the plugin. This describes the common set of
* behavior, and the methods you will call on each plugin class that is
* instantiated. Usually this interface will extend one or more of the
* following interfaces:
* - \Drupal\Component\Plugin\PluginInspectionInterface
* - \Drupal\Component\Plugin\ConfigurablePluginInterface
* - \Drupal\Component\Plugin\ContextAwarePluginInterface
* - \Drupal\Core\Plugin\PluginFormInterface
* - \Drupal\Core\Executable\ExecutableInterface
* - (optional) Create a base class that provides a partial implementation of
* the interface, for the convenience of developers wishing to create plugins
* of your type. The base class usually extends
* \Drupal\Core\Plugin\PluginBase, or one of the base classes that extends
* this class.
* - Choose a method for plugin discovery, and define classes as necessary.
* See @ref sub_discovery below.
* - Create a plugin manager/factory class and service, which will discover and
* instantiate plugins. See @ref sub_manager below.
* - Use the plugin manager to instantiate plugins. Call methods on your plugin
* interface to perform the tasks of your plugin type.
* - (optional) If appropriate, define a plugin collection. See @ref
* sub_collection below for more information.
*
* @subsection sub_discovery Plugin discovery
* Plugin discovery is the process your plugin manager uses to discover the
* individual plugins of your type that have been defined by your module and
* other modules. Plugin discovery methods are classes that implement
* \Drupal\Component\Plugin\Discovery\DiscoveryInterface. Most plugin types use
* one of the following discovery mechanisms:
* - Annotation: Plugin classes are annotated and placed in a defined namespace
* subdirectory. Most Drupal Core plugins use this method of discovery.
* - Hook: Plugin modules need to implement a hook to tell the manager about
* their plugins.
* - YAML: Plugins are listed in YAML files. Drupal Core uses this method for
* discovering local tasks and local actions. This is mainly useful if all
* plugins use the same class, so it is kind of like a global derivative.
* - Static: Plugin classes are registered within the plugin manager class
* itself. Static discovery is only useful if modules cannot define new
* plugins of this type (if the list of available plugins is static).
*
* It is also possible to define your own custom discovery mechanism or mix
* methods together. And there are many more details, such as annotation
* decorators, that apply to some of the discovery methods. See
* https://www.drupal.org/developing/api/8/plugins for more details.
*
* The remainder of this documentation will assume Annotation-based discovery,
* since this is the most common method.
*
* @subsection sub_manager Defining a plugin manager class and service
* To define an annotation-based plugin manager:
* - Choose a namespace subdirectory for your plugin. For example, search page
* plugins go in directory Plugin/Search under the module namespace.
* - Define an annotation class for your plugin type. This class should extend
* \Drupal\Component\Annotation\Plugin, and for most plugin types, it should
* contain member variables corresponding to the annotations plugins will
* need to provide. All plugins have at least $id: a unique string
* identifier.
* - Define an alter hook for altering the discovered plugin definitions. You
* should document the hook in a *.api.php file.
* - Define a plugin manager class. This class should implement
* \Drupal\Component\Plugin\PluginManagerInterface; most plugin managers do
* this by extending \Drupal\Core\Plugin\DefaultPluginManager. If you do
* extend the default plugin manager, the only method you will probably need
* to define is the class constructor, which will need to call the parent
* constructor to provide information about the annotation class and plugin
* namespace for discovery, set up the alter hook, and possibly set up
* caching. See classes that extend DefaultPluginManager for examples.
* - Define a service for your plugin manager. See the
* @link container Services topic for more information. @endlink Your service
* definition should look something like this, referencing your manager
* class and the parent (default) plugin manager service to inherit
* constructor arguments:
* @code
* plugin.manager.mymodule:
* class: Drupal\mymodule\MyPluginManager
* parent: default_plugin_manager
* @endcode
* - If your plugin is configurable, you will also need to define the
* configuration schema and possibly a configuration entity type. See the
* @link config_api Configuration API topic @endlink for more information.
*
* @subsection sub_collection Defining a plugin collection
* Some configurable plugin types allow administrators to create zero or more
* instances of each plugin, each with its own configuration. For example,
* a single block plugin can be configured several times, to display in
* different regions of a theme, with different visibility settings, a
* different title, or other plugin-specific settings. To make this possible,
* a plugin type can make use of what's known as a plugin collection.
*
* A plugin collection is a class that extends
* \Drupal\Component\Plugin\LazyPluginCollection or one of its subclasses; there
* are several examples in Drupal Core. If your plugin type uses a plugin
* collection, it will usually also have a configuration entity, and the entity
* class should implement
* \Drupal\Core\Entity\EntityWithPluginCollectionInterface. Again, there are
* several examples in Drupal Core; see also the @link config_api Configuration
* API topic @endlink for more information about configuration entities.
*
* @section sec_create Creating a plugin of an existing type
* Assuming the plugin type uses annotation-based discovery, in order to create
* a plugin of an existing type, you will be creating a class. This class must:
* - Implement the plugin interface, so that it has the required methods
* defined. Usually, you'll want to extend the plugin base class, if one has
* been provided.
* - Have the right annotation in its documentation header. See the
* @link annotation Annotation topic @endlink for more information about
* annotation.
* - Be in the right plugin namespace, in order to be discovered.
* Often, the easiest way to make sure this happens is to find an existing
* example of a working plugin class of the desired type, and copy it into your
* module as a starting point.
*
* You can also create a plugin derivative, which allows your plugin class
* to present itself to the user interface as multiple plugins. To do this,
* in addition to the plugin class, you'll need to create a separate plugin
* derivative class implementing
* \Drupal\Component\Plugin\Derivative\DerivativeInterface. The classes
* \Drupal\system\Plugin\Block\SystemMenuBlock (plugin class) and
* \Drupal\system\Plugin\Derivative\SystemMenuBlock (derivative class) are a
* good example to look at.
*
* @section sec_use Performing tasks involving plugins
* Here are the steps to follow to perform a task that involves plugins:
* - Locate the machine name of the plugin manager service, and instantiate the
* service. See the @link container Services topic @endlink for more
* information on how to do this.
* - On the plugin manager class, use methods like getDefinition(),
* getDefinitions(), or other methods specific to particular plugin managers
* to retrieve information about either specific plugins or the entire list of
* defined plugins.
* - Call the createInstance() method on the plugin manager to instantiate
* individual plugin objects.
* - Call methods on the plugin objects to perform the desired tasks.
*
* @see annotation
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup oo_conventions Objected-oriented programming conventions
* @{
* PSR-4, namespaces, class naming, and other conventions.
*
* A lot of the PHP code in Drupal is object oriented (OO), making use of
* @link http://php.net/manual/language.oop5.php PHP classes, interfaces, and traits @endlink
* (which are loosely referred to as "classes" in the rest of this topic). The
* following conventions and standards apply to this version of Drupal:
* - Each class must be in its own file.
* - Classes must be namespaced. If a module defines a class, the namespace
* must start with \Drupal\module_name. If it is defined by Drupal Core for
* use across many modules, the namespace should be \Drupal\Core or
* \Drupal\Component, with the exception of the global class \Drupal. See
* https://www.drupal.org/node/1353118 for more about namespaces.
* - In order for the PSR-4-based class auto-loader to find the class, it must
* be located in a directory corresponding to the namespace. For
* module-defined classes, if the namespace is \Drupal\module_name\foo\bar,
* then the class goes under the main module directory in directory
* src/foo/bar. For Drupal-wide classes, if the namespace is
* \Drupal\Core\foo\bar, then it goes in directory
* core/lib/Drupal/Core/foo/bar. See https://www.drupal.org/node/2156625 for
* more information about PSR-4.
* - Some classes have annotations added to their documentation headers. See
* the @link annotation Annotation topic @endlink for more information.
* - Standard plugin discovery requires particular namespaces and annotation
* for most plugin classes. See the
* @link plugin_api Plugin API topic @endlink for more information.
* - There are project-wide coding standards for OO code, including naming:
* https://www.drupal.org/node/608152
* - Documentation standards for classes are covered on:
* https://www.drupal.org/coding-standards/docs#classes
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup listing_page_class Page header for Classes page
* @{
* Introduction to classes
*
* A lot of the PHP code in Drupal is object oriented (OO), making use of
* @link http://php.net/manual/language.oop5.php PHP classes, interfaces, and traits. @endlink
* See the
* @link oo_conventions Objected-oriented programming conventions @endlink
* for more information.
*
* @see oo_conventions
*
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup listing_page_namespace Page header for Namespaces page
* @{
* Introduction to namespaces
*
* PHP classes, interfaces, and traits in Drupal are
* @link http://php.net/manual/en/language.namespaces.rationale.php namespaced. @endlink
* See the
* @link oo_conventions Objected-oriented programming conventions @endlink
* for more information.
*
* @see oo_conventions
*
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup best_practices Best practices for developers
* @{
* Overview of standards and best practices for developers
*
* Ideally, all code that is included in Drupal Core and contributed modules,
* themes, and distributions will be secure, internationalized, maintainable,
* and efficient. In order to facilitate this, the Drupal community has
* developed a set of guidelines and standards for developers to follow. Most of
* these standards can be found under
* @link https://www.drupal.org/developing/best-practices Best practices on Drupal.org @endlink
*
* Standards and best practices that developers should be aware of include:
* - Security: https://www.drupal.org/writing-secure-code and the
* @link sanitization Sanitization functions topic @endlink
* - Coding standards: https://www.drupal.org/coding-standards
* and https://www.drupal.org/coding-standards/docs
* - Accessibility: https://www.drupal.org/node/1637990 (modules) and
* https://www.drupal.org/node/464472 (themes)
* - Usability: https://www.drupal.org/ui-standards
* - Internationalization: @link i18n Internationalization topic @endlink
* - Automated testing: @link testing Automated tests topic @endlink
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup utility Utility classes and functions
* @{
* Overview of utility classes and functions for developers.
*
* Drupal provides developers with a variety of utility functions that make it
* easier and more efficient to perform tasks that are either really common,
* tedious, or difficult. Utility functions help to reduce code duplication and
* should be used in place of one-off code whenever possible.
*
* @see common.inc
* @see file
* @see format
* @see php_wrappers
* @see sanitization
* @see transliteration
* @see validation
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup hooks Hooks
* @{
* Define functions that alter the behavior of Drupal core.
*
* One way for modules to alter the core behavior of Drupal (or another module)
* is to use hooks. Hooks are specially-named functions that a module defines
* (this is known as "implementing the hook"), which are discovered and called
* at specific times to alter or add to the base behavior or data (this is
* known as "invoking the hook"). Each hook has a name (example:
* hook_batch_alter()), a defined set of parameters, and a defined return value.
* Your modules can implement hooks that are defined by Drupal core or other
* modules that they interact with. Your modules can also define their own
* hooks, in order to let other modules interact with them.
*
* To implement a hook:
* - Locate the documentation for the hook. Hooks are documented in *.api.php
* files, by defining functions whose name starts with "hook_" (these
* files and their functions are never loaded by Drupal -- they exist solely
* for documentation). The function should have a documentation header, as
* well as a sample function body. For example, in the core file
* system.api.php, you can find hooks such as hook_batch_alter(). Also, if
* you are viewing this documentation on an API reference site, the Core
* hooks will be listed in this topic.
* - Copy the function to your module's .module file.
* - Change the name of the function, substituting your module's short name
* (name of the module's directory, and .info.yml file without the extension)
* for the "hook" part of the sample function name. For instance, to implement
* hook_batch_alter(), you would rename it to my_module_batch_alter().
* - Edit the documentation for the function (normally, your implementation
* should just have one line saying "Implements hook_batch_alter().").
* - Edit the body of the function, substituting in what you need your module
* to do.
*
* To define a hook:
* - Choose a unique name for your hook. It should start with "hook_", followed
* by your module's short name.
* - Provide documentation in a *.api.php file in your module's main
* directory. See the "implementing" section above for details of what this
* should contain (parameters, return value, and sample function body).
* - Invoke the hook in your module's code.
*
* To invoke a hook, use methods on
* \Drupal\Core\Extension\ModuleHandlerInterface such as alter(), invoke(),
* and invokeAll(). You can obtain a module handler by calling
* \Drupal::moduleHandler(), or getting the 'module_handler' service on an
* injected container.
*
* @see extending
* @see themeable
* @see callbacks
* @see \Drupal\Core\Extension\ModuleHandlerInterface
* @see \Drupal::moduleHandler()
*
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup callbacks Callbacks
* @{
* Callback function signatures.
*
* Drupal's API sometimes uses callback functions to allow you to define how
* some type of processing happens. A callback is a function with a defined
* signature, which you define in a module. Then you pass the function name as
* a parameter to a Drupal API function or return it as part of a hook
* implementation return value, and your function is called at an appropriate
* time. For instance, when setting up batch processing you might need to
* provide a callback function for each processing step and/or a callback for
* when processing is finished; you would do that by defining these functions
* and passing their names into the batch setup function.
*
* Callback function signatures, like hook definitions, are described by
* creating and documenting dummy functions in a *.api.php file; normally, the
* dummy callback function's name should start with "callback_", and you should
* document the parameters and return value and provide a sample function body.
* Then your API documentation can refer to this callback function in its
* documentation. A user of your API can usually name their callback function
* anything they want, although a standard name would be to replace "callback_"
* with the module name.
*
* @see hooks
* @see themeable
*
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup form_api Form generation
* @{
* Describes how to generate and manipulate forms and process form submissions.
*
* Drupal provides a Form API in order to achieve consistency in its form
* processing and presentation, while simplifying code and reducing the amount
* of HTML that must be explicitly generated by a module.
*
* @section generating_forms Creating forms
* Forms are defined as classes that implement the
* \Drupal\Core\Form\FormInterface and are built using the
* \Drupal\Core\Form\FormBuilder class. Drupal provides a couple of utility
* classes that can be extended as a starting point for most basic forms, the
* most commonly used of which is \Drupal\Core\Form\FormBase. FormBuilder
* handles the low level processing of forms such as rendering the necessary
* HTML, initial processing of incoming $_POST data, and delegating to your
* implementation of FormInterface for validation and processing of submitted
* data.
*
* Here is an example of a Form class:
* @code
* namespace Drupal\mymodule\Form;
*
* use Drupal\Core\Form\FormBase;
* use Drupal\Core\Form\FormStateInterface;
*
* class ExampleForm extends FormBase {
* public function getFormId() {
* // Unique ID of the form.
* return 'example_form';
* }
*
* public function buildForm(array $form, FormStateInterface $form_state) {
* // Create a $form API array.
* $form['phone_number'] = array(
* '#type' => 'tel',
* '#title' => $this->t('Your phone number'),
* );
* $form['save'] = array(
* '#type' => 'submit',
* '#value' => $this->t('Save'),
* );
* return $form;
* }
*
* public function validateForm(array &$form, FormStateInterface $form_state) {
* // Validate submitted form data.
* }
*
* public function submitForm(array &$form, FormStateInterface $form_state) {
* // Handle submitted form data.
* }
* }
* @endcode
*
* @section retrieving_forms Retrieving and displaying forms
* \Drupal::formBuilder()->getForm() should be used to handle retrieving,
* processing, and displaying a rendered HTML form. Given the ExampleForm
* defined above,
* \Drupal::formBuilder()->getForm('Drupal\mymodule\Form\ExampleForm') would
* return the rendered HTML of the form defined by ExampleForm::buildForm(), or
* call the validateForm() and submitForm(), methods depending on the current
* processing state.
*
* The argument to \Drupal::formBuilder()->getForm() is the name of a class that
* implements FormInterface. Any additional arguments passed to the getForm()
* method will be passed along as additional arguments to the
* ExampleForm::buildForm() method.
*
* For example:
* @code
* $extra = '612-123-4567';
* $form = \Drupal::formBuilder()->getForm('Drupal\mymodule\Form\ExampleForm', $extra);
* ...
* public function buildForm(array $form, FormStateInterface $form_state, $extra = NULL)
* $form['phone_number'] = array(
* '#type' => 'tel',
* '#title' => $this->t('Your phone number'),
* '#value' => $extra,
* );
* return $form;
* }
* @endcode
*
* Alternatively, forms can be built directly via the routing system which will
* take care of calling \Drupal::formBuilder()->getForm(). The following example
* demonstrates the use of a routing.yml file to display a form at the given
* route.
*
* @code
* example.form:
* path: '/example-form'
* defaults:
* _title: 'Example form'
* _form: '\Drupal\mymodule\Form\ExampleForm'
* @endcode
*
* The $form argument to form-related functions is a specialized render array
* containing the elements and properties of the form. For more about render
* arrays, see the @link theme_render Render API topic. @endlink For more
* detailed explanations of the Form API workflow, see the
* @link https://www.drupal.org/node/2117411 Form API documentation section. @endlink
* In addition, there is a set of Form API tutorials in the
* @link https://www.drupal.org/project/examples Examples for Developers project. @endlink
*
* In the form builder, validation, submission, and other form methods,
* $form_state is the primary influence on the processing of the form and is
* passed to most methods, so they can use it to communicate with the form
* system and each other. $form_state is an object that implements
* \Drupal\Core\Form\FormStateInterface.
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup queue Queue operations
* @{
* Queue items to allow later processing.
*
* The queue system allows placing items in a queue and processing them later.
* The system tries to ensure that only one consumer can process an item.
*
* Before a queue can be used it needs to be created by
* Drupal\Core\Queue\QueueInterface::createQueue().
*
* Items can be added to the queue by passing an arbitrary data object to
* Drupal\Core\Queue\QueueInterface::createItem().
*
* To process an item, call Drupal\Core\Queue\QueueInterface::claimItem() and
* specify how long you want to have a lease for working on that item.
* When finished processing, the item needs to be deleted by calling
* Drupal\Core\Queue\QueueInterface::deleteItem(). If the consumer dies, the
* item will be made available again by the Drupal\Core\Queue\QueueInterface
* implementation once the lease expires. Another consumer will then be able to
* receive it when calling Drupal\Core\Queue\QueueInterface::claimItem().
* Due to this, the processing code should be aware that an item might be handed
* over for processing more than once.
*
* The $item object used by the Drupal\Core\Queue\QueueInterface can contain
* arbitrary metadata depending on the implementation. Systems using the
* interface should only rely on the data property which will contain the
* information passed to Drupal\Core\Queue\QueueInterface::createItem().
* The full queue item returned by Drupal\Core\Queue\QueueInterface::claimItem()
* needs to be passed to Drupal\Core\Queue\QueueInterface::deleteItem() once
* processing is completed.
*
* There are two kinds of queue backends available: reliable, which preserves
* the order of messages and guarantees that every item will be executed at
* least once. The non-reliable kind only does a best effort to preserve order
* in messages and to execute them at least once but there is a small chance
* that some items get lost. For example, some distributed back-ends like
* Amazon SQS will be managing jobs for a large set of producers and consumers
* where a strict FIFO ordering will likely not be preserved. Another example
* would be an in-memory queue backend which might lose items if it crashes.
* However, such a backend would be able to deal with significantly more writes
* than a reliable queue and for many tasks this is more important. See
* aggregator_cron() for an example of how to effectively use a non-reliable
* queue. Another example is doing Twitter statistics -- the small possibility
* of losing a few items is insignificant next to power of the queue being able
* to keep up with writes. As described in the processing section, regardless
* of the queue being reliable or not, the processing code should be aware that
* an item might be handed over for processing more than once (because the
* processing code might time out before it finishes).
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup annotation Annotations
* @{
* Annotations for class discovery and metadata description.
*
* The Drupal plugin system has a set of reusable components that developers
* can use, override, and extend in their modules. Most of the plugins use
* annotations, which let classes register themselves as plugins and describe
* their metadata. (Annotations can also be used for other purposes, though
* at the moment, Drupal only uses them for the plugin system.)
*
* To annotate a class as a plugin, add code similar to the following to the
* end of the documentation block immediately preceding the class declaration:
* @code
* * @ContentEntityType(
* * id = "comment",
* * label = @Translation("Comment"),
* * ...
* * base_table = "comment"
* * )
* @endcode
*
* Note that you must use double quotes; single quotes will not work in
* annotations.
*
* Some annotation types, which extend the "@ PluginID" annotation class, have
* only a single 'id' key in their annotation. For these, it is possible to use
* a shorthand annotation. For example:
* @code
* * @ViewsArea("entity")
* @endcode
* in place of
* @code
* * @ViewsArea(
* * id = "entity"
* *)
* @endcode
*
* The available annotation classes are listed in this topic, and can be
* identified when you are looking at the Drupal source code by having
* "@ Annotation" in their documentation blocks (without the space after @). To
* find examples of annotation for a particular annotation class, such as
* EntityType, look for class files that have an @ annotation section using the
* annotation class.
*
* @see plugin_translatable
* @see plugin_context
*
* @}
*/
/**
* @addtogroup hooks
* @{
*/
/**
* Perform periodic actions.
*
* Modules that require some commands to be executed periodically can
* implement hook_cron(). The engine will then call the hook whenever a cron
* run happens, as defined by the administrator. Typical tasks managed by
* hook_cron() are database maintenance, backups, recalculation of settings
* or parameters, automated mailing, and retrieving remote data.
*
* Short-running or non-resource-intensive tasks can be executed directly in
* the hook_cron() implementation.
*
* Long-running tasks and tasks that could time out, such as retrieving remote
* data, sending email, and intensive file tasks, should use the queue API
* instead of executing the tasks directly. To do this, first define one or
* more queues via a \Drupal\Core\Annotation\QueueWorker plugin. Then, add items
* that need to be processed to the defined queues.
*/
function hook_cron() {
// Short-running operation example, not using a queue:
// Delete all expired records since the last cron run.
$expires = \Drupal::state()->get('mymodule.last_check', 0);
\Drupal::database()->delete('mymodule_table')
->condition('expires', $expires, '>=')
->execute();
\Drupal::state()->set('mymodule.last_check', REQUEST_TIME);
// Long-running operation example, leveraging a queue:
// Queue news feeds for updates once their refresh interval has elapsed.
$queue = \Drupal::queue('aggregator_feeds');
$ids = \Drupal::entityManager()->getStorage('aggregator_feed')->getFeedIdsToRefresh();
foreach (Feed::loadMultiple($ids) as $feed) {
if ($queue->createItem($feed)) {
// Add timestamp to avoid queueing item more than once.
$feed->setQueuedTime(REQUEST_TIME);
$feed->save();
}
}
$ids = \Drupal::entityQuery('aggregator_feed')
->condition('queued', REQUEST_TIME - (3600 * 6), '<')
->execute();
if ($ids) {
$feeds = Feed::loadMultiple($ids);
foreach ($feeds as $feed) {
$feed->setQueuedTime(0);
$feed->save();
}
}
}
/**
* Alter available data types for typed data wrappers.
*
* @param array $data_types
* An array of data type information.
*
* @see hook_data_type_info()
*/
function hook_data_type_info_alter(&$data_types) {
$data_types['email']['class'] = '\Drupal\mymodule\Type\Email';
}
/**
* Alter cron queue information before cron runs.
*
* Called by \Drupal\Core\Cron to allow modules to alter cron queue settings
* before any jobs are processesed.
*
* @param array $queues
* An array of cron queue information.
*
* @see \Drupal\Core\QueueWorker\QueueWorkerInterface
* @see \Drupal\Core\Annotation\QueueWorker
* @see \Drupal\Core\Cron
*/
function hook_queue_info_alter(&$queues) {
// This site has many feeds so let's spend 90 seconds on each cron run
// updating feeds instead of the default 60.
$queues['aggregator_feeds']['cron']['time'] = 90;
}
/**
* Alter an email message created with MailManagerInterface->mail().
*
* hook_mail_alter() allows modification of email messages created and sent
* with MailManagerInterface->mail(). Usage examples include adding and/or
* changing message text, message fields, and message headers.
*
* Email messages sent using functions other than MailManagerInterface->mail()
* will not invoke hook_mail_alter(). For example, a contributed module directly
* calling the MailInterface->mail() or PHP mail() function will not invoke
* this hook. All core modules use MailManagerInterface->mail() for messaging,
* it is best practice but not mandatory in contributed modules.
*
* @param $message
* An array containing the message data. Keys in this array include:
* - 'id':
* The MailManagerInterface->mail() id of the message. Look at module source
* code or MailManagerInterface->mail() for possible id values.
* - 'to':
* The address or addresses the message will be sent to. The
* formatting of this string must comply with RFC 2822.
* - 'from':
* The address the message will be marked as being from, which is
* either a custom address or the site-wide default email address.
* - 'subject':
* Subject of the email to be sent. This must not contain any newline
* characters, or the email may not be sent properly.
* - 'body':
* An array of strings or objects that implement
* \Drupal\Component\Render\MarkupInterface containing the message text. The
* message body is created by concatenating the individual array strings
* into a single text string using "\n\n" as a separator.
* - 'headers':
* Associative array containing mail headers, such as From, Sender,
* MIME-Version, Content-Type, etc.
* - 'params':
* An array of optional parameters supplied by the caller of
* MailManagerInterface->mail() that is used to build the message before
* hook_mail_alter() is invoked.
* - 'language':
* The language object used to build the message before hook_mail_alter()
* is invoked.
* - 'send':
* Set to FALSE to abort sending this email message.
*
* @see \Drupal\Core\Mail\MailManagerInterface::mail()
*/
function hook_mail_alter(&$message) {
if ($message['id'] == 'modulename_messagekey') {
if (!example_notifications_optin($message['to'], $message['id'])) {
// If the recipient has opted to not receive such messages, cancel
// sending.
$message['send'] = FALSE;
return;
}
$message['body'][] = "--\nMail sent out from " . \Drupal::config('system.site')->get('name');
}
}
/**
* Prepares a message based on parameters;
*
* This hook is called from MailManagerInterface->mail(). Note that hook_mail(),
* unlike hook_mail_alter(), is only called on the $module argument to
* MailManagerInterface->mail(), not all modules.
*
* @param $key
* An identifier of the mail.
* @param $message
* An array to be filled in. Elements in this array include:
* - id: An ID to identify the mail sent. Look at module source code or
* MailManagerInterface->mail() for possible id values.
* - to: The address or addresses the message will be sent to. The
* formatting of this string must comply with RFC 2822.
* - subject: Subject of the email to be sent. This must not contain any
* newline characters, or the mail may not be sent properly.
* MailManagerInterface->mail() sets this to an empty
* string when the hook is invoked.
* - body: An array of lines containing the message to be sent. Drupal will
* format the correct line endings for you. MailManagerInterface->mail()
* sets this to an empty array when the hook is invoked. The array may
* contain either strings or objects implementing
* \Drupal\Component\Render\MarkupInterface.
* - from: The address the message will be marked as being from, which is
* set by MailManagerInterface->mail() to either a custom address or the
* site-wide default email address when the hook is invoked.
* - headers: Associative array containing mail headers, such as From,
* Sender, MIME-Version, Content-Type, etc.
* MailManagerInterface->mail() pre-fills several headers in this array.
* @param $params
* An array of parameters supplied by the caller of
* MailManagerInterface->mail().
*
* @see \Drupal\Core\Mail\MailManagerInterface::mail()
*/
function hook_mail($key, &$message, $params) {
$account = $params['account'];
$context = $params['context'];
$variables = [
'%site_name' => \Drupal::config('system.site')->get('name'),
'%username' => $account->getDisplayName(),
];
if ($context['hook'] == 'taxonomy') {
$entity = $params['entity'];
$vocabulary = Vocabulary::load($entity->id());
$variables += [
'%term_name' => $entity->name,
'%term_description' => $entity->description,
'%term_id' => $entity->id(),
'%vocabulary_name' => $vocabulary->label(),
'%vocabulary_description' => $vocabulary->getDescription(),
'%vocabulary_id' => $vocabulary->id(),
];
}
// Node-based variable translation is only available if we have a node.
if (isset($params['node'])) {
/** @var \Drupal\node\NodeInterface $node */
$node = $params['node'];
$variables += [
'%uid' => $node->getOwnerId(),
'%url' => $node->url('canonical', ['absolute' => TRUE]),
'%node_type' => node_get_type_label($node),
'%title' => $node->getTitle(),
'%teaser' => $node->teaser,
'%body' => $node->body,
];
}
$subject = strtr($context['subject'], $variables);
$body = strtr($context['message'], $variables);
$message['subject'] .= str_replace(["\r", "\n"], '', $subject);
$message['body'][] = MailFormatHelper::htmlToText($body);
}
/**
* Alter the list of mail backend plugin definitions.
*
* @param array $info
* The mail backend plugin definitions to be altered.
*
* @see \Drupal\Core\Annotation\Mail
* @see \Drupal\Core\Mail\MailManager
*/
function hook_mail_backend_info_alter(&$info) {
unset($info['test_mail_collector']);
}
/**
* Alter the default country list.
*
* @param $countries
* The associative array of countries keyed by two-letter country code.
*
* @see \Drupal\Core\Locale\CountryManager::getList()
*/
function hook_countries_alter(&$countries) {
// Elbonia is now independent, so add it to the country list.
$countries['EB'] = 'Elbonia';
}
/**
* Alter display variant plugin definitions.
*
* @param array $definitions
* The array of display variant definitions, keyed by plugin ID.
*
* @see \Drupal\Core\Display\VariantManager
* @see \Drupal\Core\Display\Annotation\DisplayVariant
*/
function hook_display_variant_plugin_alter(array &$definitions) {
$definitions['full_page']['admin_label'] = t('Block layout');
}
/**
* Allow modules to alter layout plugin definitions.
*
* @param \Drupal\Core\Layout\LayoutDefinition[] $definitions
* The array of layout definitions, keyed by plugin ID.
*/
function hook_layout_alter(&$definitions) {
// Remove a layout.
unset($definitions['twocol']);
}
/**
* Flush all persistent and static caches.
*
* This hook asks your module to clear all of its static caches,
* in order to ensure a clean environment for subsequently
* invoked data rebuilds.
*
* Do NOT use this hook for rebuilding information. Only use it to flush custom
* caches.
*
* Static caches using drupal_static() do not need to be reset manually.
* However, all other static variables that do not use drupal_static() must be
* manually reset.
*
* This hook is invoked by drupal_flush_all_caches(). It runs before module data
* is updated and before hook_rebuild().
*
* @see drupal_flush_all_caches()
* @see hook_rebuild()
*/
function hook_cache_flush() {
if (defined('MAINTENANCE_MODE') && MAINTENANCE_MODE == 'update') {
_update_cache_clear();
}
}
/**
* Rebuild data based upon refreshed caches.
*
* This hook allows your module to rebuild its data based on the latest/current
* module data. It runs after hook_cache_flush() and after all module data has
* been updated.
*
* This hook is only invoked after the system has been completely cleared;
* i.e., all previously cached data is known to be gone and every API in the
* system is known to return current information, so your module can safely rely
* on all available data to rebuild its own.
*
* @see hook_cache_flush()
* @see drupal_flush_all_caches()
*/
function hook_rebuild() {
$themes = \Drupal::service('theme_handler')->listInfo();
foreach ($themes as $theme) {
_block_rehash($theme->getName());
}
}
/**
* Alter the configuration synchronization steps.
*
* @param array $sync_steps
* A one-dimensional array of \Drupal\Core\Config\ConfigImporter method names
* or callables that are invoked to complete the import, in the order that
* they will be processed. Each callable item defined in $sync_steps should
* either be a global function or a public static method. The callable should
* accept a $context array by reference. For example:
*
* function _additional_configuration_step(&$context) {
* // Do stuff.
* // If finished set $context['finished'] = 1.
* }
*
* For more information on creating batches, see the
* @link batch Batch operations @endlink documentation.
*
* @see callback_batch_operation()
* @see \Drupal\Core\Config\ConfigImporter::initialize()
*/
function hook_config_import_steps_alter(&$sync_steps, \Drupal\Core\Config\ConfigImporter $config_importer) {
$deletes = $config_importer->getUnprocessedConfiguration('delete');
if (isset($deletes['field.storage.node.body'])) {
$sync_steps[] = '_additional_configuration_step';
}
}
/**
* Alter config typed data definitions.
*
* For example you can alter the typed data types representing each
* configuration schema type to change default labels or form element renderers
* used for configuration translation.
*
* If implementations of this hook add or remove configuration schema a
* ConfigSchemaAlterException will be thrown. Keep in mind that there are tools
* that may use the configuration schema for static analysis of configuration
* files, like the string extractor for the localization system. Such systems
* won't work with dynamically defined configuration schemas.
*
* For adding new data types use configuration schema YAML files instead.
*
* @param $definitions
* Associative array of configuration type definitions keyed by schema type
* names. The elements are themselves array with information about the type.
*
* @see \Drupal\Core\Config\TypedConfigManager
* @see \Drupal\Core\Config\Schema\ConfigSchemaAlterException
*/
function hook_config_schema_info_alter(&$definitions) {
// Enhance the text and date type definitions with classes to generate proper
// form elements in ConfigTranslationFormBase. Other translatable types will
// appear as a one line textfield.
$definitions['text']['form_element_class'] = '\Drupal\config_translation\FormElement\Textarea';
$definitions['date_format']['form_element_class'] = '\Drupal\config_translation\FormElement\DateFormat';
}
/**
* Alter validation constraint plugin definitions.
*
* @param array[] $definitions
* The array of validation constraint definitions, keyed by plugin ID.
*
* @see \Drupal\Core\Validation\ConstraintManager
* @see \Drupal\Core\Validation\Annotation\Constraint
*/
function hook_validation_constraint_alter(array &$definitions) {
$definitions['Null']['class'] = '\Drupal\mymodule\Validator\Constraints\MyClass';
}
/**
* @} End of "addtogroup hooks".
*/
/**
* @defgroup ajax Ajax API
* @{
* Overview for Drupal's Ajax API.
*
* @section sec_overview Overview of Ajax
* Ajax is the process of dynamically updating parts of a page's HTML based on
* data from the server. When a specified event takes place, a PHP callback is
* triggered, which performs server-side logic and may return updated markup or
* JavaScript commands to run. After the return, the browser runs the JavaScript
* or updates the markup on the fly, with no full page refresh necessary.
*
* Many different events can trigger Ajax responses, including:
* - Clicking a button
* - Pressing a key
* - Moving the mouse
*
* @section sec_framework Ajax responses in forms
* Forms that use the Drupal Form API (see the
* @link form_api Form API topic @endlink for more information about forms) can
* trigger AJAX responses. Here is an outline of the steps:
* - Add property '#ajax' to a form element in your form array, to trigger an
* Ajax response.
* - Write an Ajax callback to process the input and respond.
* See sections below for details on these two steps.
*
* @subsection sub_form Adding Ajax triggers to a form
* As an example of adding Ajax triggers to a form, consider editing a date
* format, where the user is provided with a sample of the generated date output
* as they type. To accomplish this, typing in the text field should trigger an
* Ajax response. This is done in the text field form array element
* in \Drupal\config_translation\FormElement\DateFormat::getFormElement():
* @code
* '#ajax' => array(
* 'callback' => 'Drupal\config_translation\FormElement\DateFormat::ajaxSample',
* 'event' => 'keyup',
* 'progress' => array(
* 'type' => 'throbber',
* 'message' => NULL,
* ),
* ),
* @endcode
*
* As you can see from this example, the #ajax property for a form element is
* an array. Here are the details of its elements, all of which are optional:
* - callback: The callback to invoke to handle the server side of the
* Ajax event. More information on callbacks is below in @ref sub_callback.
* - wrapper: The HTML 'id' attribute of the area where the content returned by
* the callback should be placed. Note that callbacks have a choice of
* returning content or JavaScript commands; 'wrapper' is used for content
* returns.
* - method: The jQuery method for placing the new content (used with
* 'wrapper'). Valid options are 'replaceWith' (default), 'append', 'prepend',
* 'before', 'after', or 'html'. See
* http://api.jquery.com/category/manipulation/ for more information on these
* methods.
* - effect: The jQuery effect to use when placing the new HTML (used with
* 'wrapper'). Valid options are 'none' (default), 'slide', or 'fade'.
* - speed: The effect speed to use (used with 'effect' and 'wrapper'). Valid
* options are 'slow' (default), 'fast', or the number of milliseconds the
* effect should run.
* - event: The JavaScript event to respond to. This is selected automatically
* for the type of form element; provide a value to override the default.
* - prevent: A JavaScript event to prevent when the event is triggered. For
* example, if you use event 'mousedown' on a button, you might want to
* prevent 'click' events from also being triggered.
* - progress: An array indicating how to show Ajax processing progress. Can
* contain one or more of these elements:
* - type: Type of indicator: 'throbber' (default) or 'bar'.
* - message: Translated message to display.
* - url: For a bar progress indicator, URL path for determining progress.
* - interval: For a bar progress indicator, how often to update it.
* - url: A \Drupal\Core\Url to which to submit the Ajax request. If omitted,
* defaults to either the same URL as the form or link destination is for
* someone with JavaScript disabled, or a slightly modified version (e.g.,
* with a query parameter added, removed, or changed) of that URL if
* necessary to support Drupal's content negotiation. It is recommended to
* omit this key and use Drupal's content negotiation rather than using
* substantially different URLs between Ajax and non-Ajax.
*
* @subsection sub_callback Setting up a callback to process Ajax
* Once you have set up your form to trigger an Ajax response (see @ref sub_form
* above), you need to write some PHP code to process the response. If you use
* 'path' in your Ajax set-up, your route controller will be triggered with only
* the information you provide in the URL. If you use 'callback', your callback
* method is a function, which will receive the $form and $form_state from the
* triggering form. You can use $form_state to get information about the
* data the user has entered into the form. For instance, in the above example
* for the date format preview,
* \Drupal\config_translation\FormElement\DateFormat\ajaxSample() does this to
* get the format string entered by the user:
* @code
* $format_value = \Drupal\Component\Utility\NestedArray::getValue(
* $form_state->getValues(),
* $form_state->getTriggeringElement()['#array_parents']);
* @endcode
*
* Once you have processed the input, you have your choice of returning HTML
* markup or a set of Ajax commands. If you choose to return HTML markup, you
* can return it as a string or a renderable array, and it will be placed in
* the defined 'wrapper' element (see documentation above in @ref sub_form).
* In addition, any messages returned by drupal_get_messages(), themed as in
* status-messages.html.twig, will be prepended.
*
* To return commands, you need to set up an object of class
* \Drupal\Core\Ajax\AjaxResponse, and then use its addCommand() method to add
* individual commands to it. In the date format preview example, the format
* output is calculated, and then it is returned as replacement markup for a div
* like this:
* @code
* $response = new AjaxResponse();
* $response->addCommand(new ReplaceCommand(
* '#edit-date-format-suffix',
* '' . $format . ''));
* return $response;
* @endcode
*
* The individual commands that you can return implement interface
* \Drupal\Core\Ajax\CommandInterface. Available commands provide the ability
* to pop up alerts, manipulate text and markup in various ways, redirect
* to a new URL, and the generic \Drupal\Core\Ajax\InvokeCommand, which
* invokes an arbitrary jQuery command.
*
* As noted above, status messages are prepended automatically if you use the
* 'wrapper' method and return HTML markup. This is not the case if you return
* commands, but if you would like to show status messages, you can add
* @code
* array('#type' => 'status_messages')
* @endcode
* to a render array, use drupal_render() to render it, and add a command to
* place the messages in an appropriate location.
*
* @section sec_other Other methods for triggering Ajax
* Here are some additional methods you can use to trigger Ajax responses in
* Drupal:
* - Add class 'use-ajax' to a link. The link will be loaded using an Ajax
* call. When using this method, the href of the link can contain '/nojs/' as
* part of the path. When the Ajax JavaScript processes the page, it will
* convert this to '/ajax/'. The server is then able to easily tell if this
* request was made through an actual Ajax request or in a degraded state, and
* respond appropriately.
* - Add class 'use-ajax-submit' to a submit button in a form. The form will
* then be submitted via Ajax to the path specified in the #action. Like the
* ajax-submit class on links, this path will have '/nojs/' replaced with
* '/ajax/' so that the submit handler can tell if the form was submitted in a
* degraded state or not.
* - Add property '#autocomplete_route_name' to a text field in a form. The
* route controller for this route must return an array of options for
* autocomplete, as a \Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\JsonResponse object.
* See the @link menu Routing topic @endlink for more information about
* routing.
*/
/**
* @} End of "defgroup ajax".
*/
/**
* @defgroup service_tag Service Tags
* @{
* Service tags overview
*
* Some services have tags, which are defined in the service definition. Tags
* are used to define a group of related services, or to specify some aspect of
* how the service behaves. Typically, if you tag a service, your service class
* must also implement a corresponding interface. Some common examples:
* - access_check: Indicates a route access checking service; see the
* @link menu Menu and routing system topic @endlink for more information.
* - cache.bin: Indicates a cache bin service; see the
* @link cache Cache topic @endlink for more information.
* - event_subscriber: Indicates an event subscriber service. Event subscribers
* can be used for dynamic routing and route altering; see the
* @link menu Menu and routing system topic @endlink for more information.
* They can also be used for other purposes; see
* http://symfony.com/doc/current/cookbook/doctrine/event_listeners_subscribers.html
* for more information.
* - needs_destruction: Indicates that a destruct() method needs to be called
* at the end of a request to finalize operations, if this service was
* instantiated. Services should implement \Drupal\Core\DestructableInterface
* in this case.
* - context_provider: Indicates a block context provider, used for example
* by block conditions. It has to implement
* \Drupal\Core\Plugin\Context\ContextProviderInterface.
* - http_client_middleware: Indicates that the service provides a guzzle
* middleware, see
* https://guzzle.readthedocs.org/en/latest/handlers-and-middleware.html for
* more information.
*
* Creating a tag for a service does not do anything on its own, but tags
* can be discovered or queried in a compiler pass when the container is built,
* and a corresponding action can be taken. See
* \Drupal\Core\Render\MainContent\MainContentRenderersPass for an example of
* finding tagged services.
*
* See @link container Services and Dependency Injection Container @endlink for
* information on services and the dependency injection container.
*
* @}
*/
/**
* @defgroup events Events
* @{
* Overview of event dispatch and subscribing
*
* @section sec_intro Introduction and terminology
* Events are part of the Symfony framework: they allow for different components
* of the system to interact and communicate with each other. Each event has a
* unique string name. One system component dispatches the event at an
* appropriate time; many events are dispatched by Drupal core and the Symfony
* framework in every request. Other system components can register as event
* subscribers; when an event is dispatched, a method is called on each
* registered subscriber, allowing each one to react. For more on the general
* concept of events, see
* http://symfony.com/doc/current/components/event_dispatcher/introduction.html
*
* @section sec_dispatch Dispatching events
* To dispatch an event, call the
* \Symfony\Component\EventDispatcher\EventDispatcherInterface::dispatch()
* method on the 'event_dispatcher' service (see the
* @link container Services topic @endlink for more information about how to
* interact with services). The first argument is the unique event name, which
* you should normally define as a constant in a separate static class (see
* \Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\KernelEvents and
* \Drupal\Core\Config\ConfigEvents for examples). The second argument is a
* \Symfony\Component\EventDispatcher\Event object; normally you will need to
* extend this class, so that your event class can provide data to the event
* subscribers.
*
* @section sec_subscribe Registering event subscribers
* Here are the steps to register an event subscriber:
* - Define a service in your module, tagged with 'event_subscriber' (see the
* @link container Services topic @endlink for instructions).
* - Define a class for your subscriber service that implements
* \Symfony\Component\EventDispatcher\EventSubscriberInterface
* - In your class, the getSubscribedEvents method returns a list of the events
* this class is subscribed to, and which methods on the class should be
* called for each one. Example:
* @code
* public static function getSubscribedEvents() {
* // Subscribe to kernel terminate with priority 100.
* $events[KernelEvents::TERMINATE][] = array('onTerminate', 100);
* // Subscribe to kernel request with default priority of 0.
* $events[KernelEvents::REQUEST][] = array('onRequest');
* return $events;
* }
* @endcode
* - Write the methods that respond to the events; each one receives the
* event object provided in the dispatch as its one argument. In the above
* example, you would need to write onTerminate() and onRequest() methods.
*
* Note that in your getSubscribedEvents() method, you can optionally set the
* priority of your event subscriber (see terminate example above). Event
* subscribers with higher priority numbers get executed first; the default
* priority is zero. If two event subscribers for the same event have the same
* priority, the one defined in a module with a lower module weight will fire
* first. Subscribers defined in the same services file are fired in
* definition order. If order matters defining a priority is strongly advised
* instead of relying on these two tie breaker rules as they might change in a
* minor release.
* @}
*/