# Honeypot [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/geerlingguy/drupal-honeypot.svg?branch=7.x-1.x)](https://travis-ci.org/geerlingguy/drupal-honeypot) ## Installation To install this module, place it in your sites/all/modules folder and enable it on the modules page. ## Configuration All settings for this module are on the Honeypot configuration page, under the Configuration section, in the Content authoring settings. You can visit the configuration page directly at admin/config/content/honeypot. Note that, when testing Honeypot on your website, make sure you're not logged in as an administrative user or user 1; Honeypot allows administrative users to bypass Honeypot protection, so by default, Honeypot will not be added to forms accessed by site administrators. ## Use in Your Own Forms If you want to add honeypot to your own forms, or to any form through your own module's hook_form_alter's, you can simply place the following function call inside your form builder function (or inside a hook_form_alter): honeypot_add_form_protection( $form, $form_state, array('honeypot', 'time_restriction') ); Note that you can enable or disable either the honeypot field, or the time restriction on the form by including or not including the option in the array. ## Testing Honeypot includes a `docker-compose.yml` file that can be used for testing purposes. To build a Drupal 8 environment for local testing, do the following: 1. Make sure you have Docker for Mac (or for whatever OS you're using) installed. 2. Add the following entry to your `/etc/hosts` file: `192.168.22.33 local.drupalhoneypot.com` 3. Run `docker-compose up -d` in this directory. 4. Install Drupal: `docker exec honeypot install-drupal 7.x` (optionally provide a version after `install-drupal`). 5. Link the honeypot module directory into the Drupal modules directory: `docker exec honeypot ln -s /opt/honeypot/ /var/www/drupalvm/drupal/web/sites/all/modules/honeypot` 6. Visit `http://local.drupalhoneypot.com/user` and log in using the admin credentials Drush displayed. > Note: If you're using a Mac, you may also need to perform additional steps to get the hostname working; see [Managing your hosts file](http://docs.drupalvm.com/en/latest/other/docker/#managing-your-hosts-file) in the Drupal VM documentation. ## Credit The Honeypot module was originally developed by Jeff Geerling of Midwestern Mac, LLC (midwesternmac.com), and sponsored by Flocknote (flocknote.com).