root / drupal7 / modules / system / system.api.php @ 6a4d64c4
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<?php
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/**
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* @file
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* Hooks provided by Drupal core and the System module.
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*/
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/**
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* @addtogroup hooks
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* @{
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*/
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/**
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* Defines one or more hooks that are exposed by a module.
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*
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* Normally hooks do not need to be explicitly defined. However, by declaring a
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* hook explicitly, a module may define a "group" for it. Modules that implement
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* a hook may then place their implementation in either $module.module or in
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* $module.$group.inc. If the hook is located in $module.$group.inc, then that
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* file will be automatically loaded when needed.
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* In general, hooks that are rarely invoked and/or are very large should be
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* placed in a separate include file, while hooks that are very short or very
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* frequently called should be left in the main module file so that they are
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* always available.
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*
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* @return
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* An associative array whose keys are hook names and whose values are an
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* associative array containing:
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* - group: A string defining the group to which the hook belongs. The module
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* system will determine whether a file with the name $module.$group.inc
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* exists, and automatically load it when required.
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*
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* See system_hook_info() for all hook groups defined by Drupal core.
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*
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* @see hook_hook_info_alter().
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*/
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function hook_hook_info() { |
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$hooks['token_info'] = array( |
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'group' => 'tokens', |
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); |
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$hooks['tokens'] = array( |
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'group' => 'tokens', |
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); |
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return $hooks; |
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} |
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/**
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* Alter information from hook_hook_info().
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*
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* @param $hooks
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* Information gathered by module_hook_info() from other modules'
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* implementations of hook_hook_info(). Alter this array directly.
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* See hook_hook_info() for information on what this may contain.
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*/
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function hook_hook_info_alter(&$hooks) { |
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// Our module wants to completely override the core tokens, so make
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// sure the core token hooks are not found.
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$hooks['token_info']['group'] = 'mytokens'; |
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$hooks['tokens']['group'] = 'mytokens'; |
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} |
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/**
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* Inform the base system and the Field API about one or more entity types.
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*
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* Inform the system about one or more entity types (i.e., object types that
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* can be loaded via entity_load() and, optionally, to which fields can be
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* attached).
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*
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* @return
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* An array whose keys are entity type names and whose values identify
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* properties of those types that the system needs to know about:
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* - label: The human-readable name of the type.
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* - controller class: The name of the class that is used to load the objects.
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* The class has to implement the DrupalEntityControllerInterface interface.
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* Leave blank to use the DrupalDefaultEntityController implementation.
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* - base table: (used by DrupalDefaultEntityController) The name of the
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* entity type's base table.
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* - revision table: The name of the entity type's revision table (if any).
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* - static cache: (used by DrupalDefaultEntityController) FALSE to disable
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* static caching of entities during a page request. Defaults to TRUE.
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* - field cache: (used by Field API loading and saving of field data) FALSE
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* to disable Field API's persistent cache of field data. Only recommended
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* if a higher level persistent cache is available for the entity type.
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* Defaults to TRUE.
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* - load hook: The name of the hook which should be invoked by
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* DrupalDefaultEntityController:attachLoad(), for example 'node_load'.
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* - uri callback: The name of an implementation of
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* callback_entity_info_uri().
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* - label callback: (optional) The name of an implementation of
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* callback_entity_info_label(), which returns the label of the entity. The
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* entity label is the main string associated with an entity; for example,
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* the title of a node or the subject of a comment. If there is an entity
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* object property that defines the label, then using the 'label' element of
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* the 'entity keys' return value component suffices to provide this
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* information (see below). Alternatively, specifying this callback allows
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* more complex logic to determine the label of an entity. See also the
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* entity_label() function, which implements this logic.
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* - language callback: (optional) The name of an implementation of
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* callback_entity_info_language(). In most situations, when needing to
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* determine this value, inspecting a property named after the 'language'
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* element of the 'entity keys' should be enough. The language callback is
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* meant to be used primarily for temporary alterations of the property
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* value: entity-defining modules are encouraged to always define a
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* language property, instead of using the callback as main entity language
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* source. In fact not having a language property defined is likely to
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* prevent an entity from being queried by language. Moreover, given that
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* entity_language() is not necessarily used everywhere it would be
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* appropriate, modules implementing the language callback should be aware
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* that this might not be always called.
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* - fieldable: Set to TRUE if you want your entity type to accept fields
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* being attached to it.
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* - translation: An associative array of modules registered as field
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* translation handlers. Array keys are the module names, array values
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* can be any data structure the module uses to provide field translation.
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* Any empty value disallows the module to appear as a translation handler.
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* - entity keys: An array describing how the Field API can extract the
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* information it needs from the objects of the type. Elements:
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* - id: The name of the property that contains the primary id of the
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* entity. Every entity object passed to the Field API must have this
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* property and its value must be numeric.
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* - revision: The name of the property that contains the revision id of
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* the entity. The Field API assumes that all revision ids are unique
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* across all entities of a type. This entry can be omitted if the
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* entities of this type are not versionable.
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* - bundle: The name of the property that contains the bundle name for the
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* entity. The bundle name defines which set of fields are attached to
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* the entity (e.g. what nodes call "content type"). This entry can be
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* omitted if this entity type exposes a single bundle (all entities have
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* the same collection of fields). The name of this single bundle will be
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* the same as the entity type.
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* - label: The name of the property that contains the entity label. For
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* example, if the entity's label is located in $entity->subject, then
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* 'subject' should be specified here. If complex logic is required to
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* build the label, a 'label callback' should be defined instead (see
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* the 'label callback' section above for details).
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* - language: The name of the property, typically 'language', that contains
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* the language code representing the language the entity has been created
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* in. This value may be changed when editing the entity and represents
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* the language its textual components are supposed to have. If no
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* language property is available, the 'language callback' may be used
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* instead. This entry can be omitted if the entities of this type are not
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* language-aware.
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* - bundle keys: An array describing how the Field API can extract the
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* information it needs from the bundle objects for this type. This entry
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* is required if the 'path' provided in the 'bundles'/'admin' section
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* identifies the bundle using a named menu placeholder whose loader
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* callback returns an object (e.g., $vocabulary for taxonomy terms, or
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* $node_type for nodes). If the path does not include the bundle, or the
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* bundle is just a string rather than an automatically loaded object, then
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* this can be omitted. Elements:
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* - bundle: The name of the property of the bundle object that contains
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* the name of the bundle object.
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* - bundles: An array describing all bundles for this object type. Keys are
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* bundles machine names, as found in the objects' 'bundle' property
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* (defined in the 'entity keys' entry above). This entry can be omitted if
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* this entity type exposes a single bundle (all entities have the same
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* collection of fields). The name of this single bundle will be the same as
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* the entity type. Elements:
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* - label: The human-readable name of the bundle.
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* - uri callback: Same as the 'uri callback' key documented above for the
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* entity type, but for the bundle only. When determining the URI of an
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* entity, if a 'uri callback' is defined for both the entity type and
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* the bundle, the one for the bundle is used.
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* - admin: An array of information that allows Field UI pages to attach
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* themselves to the existing administration pages for the bundle.
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* Elements:
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* - path: the path of the bundle's main administration page, as defined
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* in hook_menu(). If the path includes a placeholder for the bundle,
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* the 'bundle argument' and 'real path' keys below are required.
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* - bundle argument: The position of the bundle placeholder in 'path', if
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* any.
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* - real path: The actual path (no placeholder) of the bundle's main
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* administration page. This will be used to generate links.
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* - access callback: As in hook_menu(). 'user_access' will be assumed if
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* no value is provided.
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* - access arguments: As in hook_menu().
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* - view modes: An array describing the view modes for the entity type. View
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* modes let entities be displayed differently depending on the context.
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* For instance, a node can be displayed differently on its own page
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* ('full' mode), on the home page or taxonomy listings ('teaser' mode), or
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* in an RSS feed ('rss' mode). Modules taking part in the display of the
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* entity (notably the Field API) can adjust their behavior depending on
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* the requested view mode. An additional 'default' view mode is available
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* for all entity types. This view mode is not intended for actual entity
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* display, but holds default display settings. For each available view
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* mode, administrators can configure whether it should use its own set of
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* field display settings, or just replicate the settings of the 'default'
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* view mode, thus reducing the amount of display configurations to keep
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* track of. Keys of the array are view mode names. Each view mode is
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* described by an array with the following key/value pairs:
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* - label: The human-readable name of the view mode
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* - custom settings: A boolean specifying whether the view mode should by
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* default use its own custom field display settings. If FALSE, entities
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* displayed in this view mode will reuse the 'default' display settings
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* by default (e.g. right after the module exposing the view mode is
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* enabled), but administrators can later use the Field UI to apply custom
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* display settings specific to the view mode.
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*
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* @see entity_load()
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* @see hook_entity_info_alter()
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*/
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function hook_entity_info() { |
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$return = array( |
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'node' => array( |
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'label' => t('Node'), |
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'controller class' => 'NodeController', |
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'base table' => 'node', |
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'revision table' => 'node_revision', |
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'uri callback' => 'node_uri', |
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'fieldable' => TRUE, |
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'translation' => array( |
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'locale' => TRUE, |
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), |
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'entity keys' => array( |
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'id' => 'nid', |
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'revision' => 'vid', |
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'bundle' => 'type', |
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'language' => 'language', |
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), |
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'bundle keys' => array( |
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'bundle' => 'type', |
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), |
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'bundles' => array(), |
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'view modes' => array( |
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'full' => array( |
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'label' => t('Full content'), |
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'custom settings' => FALSE, |
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), |
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'teaser' => array( |
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'label' => t('Teaser'), |
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'custom settings' => TRUE, |
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), |
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'rss' => array( |
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'label' => t('RSS'), |
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'custom settings' => FALSE, |
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), |
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), |
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), |
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); |
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// Search integration is provided by node.module, so search-related
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// view modes for nodes are defined here and not in search.module.
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if (module_exists('search')) { |
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$return['node']['view modes'] += array( |
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'search_index' => array( |
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'label' => t('Search index'), |
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'custom settings' => FALSE, |
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), |
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'search_result' => array( |
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'label' => t('Search result highlighting input'), |
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'custom settings' => FALSE, |
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), |
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); |
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} |
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// Bundles must provide a human readable name so we can create help and error
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// messages, and the path to attach Field admin pages to.
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foreach (node_type_get_names() as $type => $name) { |
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$return['node']['bundles'][$type] = array( |
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'label' => $name, |
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'admin' => array( |
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'path' => 'admin/structure/types/manage/%node_type', |
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'real path' => 'admin/structure/types/manage/' . str_replace('_', '-', $type), |
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'bundle argument' => 4, |
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'access arguments' => array('administer content types'), |
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), |
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); |
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} |
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return $return; |
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} |
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/**
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* Alter the entity info.
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*
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* Modules may implement this hook to alter the information that defines an
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* entity. All properties that are available in hook_entity_info() can be
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* altered here.
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*
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* @param $entity_info
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* The entity info array, keyed by entity name.
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*
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* @see hook_entity_info()
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*/
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function hook_entity_info_alter(&$entity_info) { |
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// Set the controller class for nodes to an alternate implementation of the
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// DrupalEntityController interface.
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$entity_info['node']['controller class'] = 'MyCustomNodeController'; |
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} |
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/**
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* Act on entities when loaded.
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*
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* This is a generic load hook called for all entity types loaded via the
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* entity API.
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*
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* @param $entities
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* The entities keyed by entity ID.
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* @param $type
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* The type of entities being loaded (i.e. node, user, comment).
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*/
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function hook_entity_load($entities, $type) { |
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foreach ($entities as $entity) { |
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$entity->foo = mymodule_add_something($entity, $type); |
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} |
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} |
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/**
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* Act on an entity before it is about to be created or updated.
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*
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* @param $entity
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* The entity object.
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* @param $type
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* The type of entity being saved (i.e. node, user, comment).
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*/
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function hook_entity_presave($entity, $type) { |
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$entity->changed = REQUEST_TIME; |
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} |
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/**
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* Act on entities when inserted.
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*
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* @param $entity
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* The entity object.
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* @param $type
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* The type of entity being inserted (i.e. node, user, comment).
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*/
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function hook_entity_insert($entity, $type) { |
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// Insert the new entity into a fictional table of all entities.
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$info = entity_get_info($type); |
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list($id) = entity_extract_ids($type, $entity); |
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db_insert('example_entity')
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->fields(array(
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'type' => $type, |
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'id' => $id, |
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'created' => REQUEST_TIME, |
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'updated' => REQUEST_TIME, |
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)) |
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->execute(); |
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} |
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|
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/**
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* Act on entities when updated.
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*
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* @param $entity
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* The entity object.
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* @param $type
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* The type of entity being updated (i.e. node, user, comment).
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*/
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function hook_entity_update($entity, $type) { |
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// Update the entity's entry in a fictional table of all entities.
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$info = entity_get_info($type); |
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list($id) = entity_extract_ids($type, $entity); |
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db_update('example_entity')
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->fields(array(
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'updated' => REQUEST_TIME, |
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)) |
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->condition('type', $type) |
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->condition('id', $id) |
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->execute(); |
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} |
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|
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/**
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* Act on entities when deleted.
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*
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* @param $entity
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* The entity object.
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* @param $type
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* The type of entity being deleted (i.e. node, user, comment).
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*/
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function hook_entity_delete($entity, $type) { |
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// Delete the entity's entry from a fictional table of all entities.
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$info = entity_get_info($type); |
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list($id) = entity_extract_ids($type, $entity); |
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db_delete('example_entity')
|
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->condition('type', $type) |
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->condition('id', $id) |
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->execute(); |
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} |
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|
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/**
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* Alter or execute an EntityFieldQuery.
|
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*
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* @param EntityFieldQuery $query
|
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* An EntityFieldQuery. One of the most important properties to be changed is
|
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* EntityFieldQuery::executeCallback. If this is set to an existing function,
|
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* this function will get the query as its single argument and its result
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* will be the returned as the result of EntityFieldQuery::execute(). This can
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* be used to change the behavior of EntityFieldQuery entirely. For example,
|
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* the default implementation can only deal with one field storage engine, but
|
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* it is possible to write a module that can query across field storage
|
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* engines. Also, the default implementation presumes entities are stored in
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* SQL, but the execute callback could instead query any other entity storage,
|
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* local or remote.
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*
|
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* Note the $query->altered attribute which is TRUE in case the query has
|
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* already been altered once. This happens with cloned queries.
|
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* If there is a pager, then such a cloned query will be executed to count
|
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* all elements. This query can be detected by checking for
|
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* ($query->pager && $query->count), allowing the driver to return 0 from
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* the count query and disable the pager.
|
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*/
|
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function hook_entity_query_alter($query) { |
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$query->executeCallback = 'my_module_query_callback'; |
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} |
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|
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/**
|
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* Act on entities being assembled before rendering.
|
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*
|
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* @param $entity
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* The entity object.
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* @param $type
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* The type of entity being rendered (i.e. node, user, comment).
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* @param $view_mode
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* The view mode the entity is rendered in.
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* @param $langcode
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* The language code used for rendering.
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*
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* The module may add elements to $entity->content prior to rendering. The
|
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* structure of $entity->content is a renderable array as expected by
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* drupal_render().
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*
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* @see hook_entity_view_alter()
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* @see hook_comment_view()
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* @see hook_node_view()
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* @see hook_user_view()
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*/
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function hook_entity_view($entity, $type, $view_mode, $langcode) { |
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$entity->content['my_additional_field'] = array( |
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'#markup' => $additional_field, |
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'#weight' => 10, |
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'#theme' => 'mymodule_my_additional_field', |
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); |
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} |
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|
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/**
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* Alter the results of ENTITY_view().
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*
|
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* This hook is called after the content has been assembled in a structured
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* array and may be used for doing processing which requires that the complete
|
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* entity content structure has been built.
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*
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* If a module wishes to act on the rendered HTML of the entity rather than the
|
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* structured content array, it may use this hook to add a #post_render
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* callback. Alternatively, it could also implement hook_preprocess_ENTITY().
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* See drupal_render() and theme() for details.
|
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*
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* @param $build
|
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* A renderable array representing the entity content.
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* @param $type
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* The type of entity being rendered (i.e. node, user, comment).
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*
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* @see hook_entity_view()
|
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* @see hook_comment_view_alter()
|
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* @see hook_node_view_alter()
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* @see hook_taxonomy_term_view_alter()
|
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* @see hook_user_view_alter()
|
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*/
|
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function hook_entity_view_alter(&$build, $type) { |
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if ($build['#view_mode'] == 'full' && isset($build['an_additional_field'])) { |
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// Change its weight.
|
462 |
$build['an_additional_field']['#weight'] = -10; |
463 |
|
464 |
// Add a #post_render callback to act on the rendered HTML of the entity.
|
465 |
$build['#post_render'][] = 'my_module_node_post_render'; |
466 |
} |
467 |
} |
468 |
|
469 |
/**
|
470 |
* Change the view mode of an entity that is being displayed.
|
471 |
*
|
472 |
* @param string $view_mode
|
473 |
* The view_mode that is to be used to display the entity.
|
474 |
* @param array $context
|
475 |
* Array with contextual information, including:
|
476 |
* - entity_type: The type of the entity that is being viewed.
|
477 |
* - entity: The entity object.
|
478 |
* - langcode: The langcode the entity is being viewed in.
|
479 |
*/
|
480 |
function hook_entity_view_mode_alter(&$view_mode, $context) { |
481 |
// For nodes, change the view mode when it is teaser.
|
482 |
if ($context['entity_type'] == 'node' && $view_mode == 'teaser') { |
483 |
$view_mode = 'my_custom_view_mode'; |
484 |
} |
485 |
} |
486 |
|
487 |
/**
|
488 |
* Define administrative paths.
|
489 |
*
|
490 |
* Modules may specify whether or not the paths they define in hook_menu() are
|
491 |
* to be considered administrative. Other modules may use this information to
|
492 |
* display those pages differently (e.g. in a modal overlay, or in a different
|
493 |
* theme).
|
494 |
*
|
495 |
* To change the administrative status of menu items defined in another module's
|
496 |
* hook_menu(), modules should implement hook_admin_paths_alter().
|
497 |
*
|
498 |
* @return
|
499 |
* An associative array. For each item, the key is the path in question, in
|
500 |
* a format acceptable to drupal_match_path(). The value for each item should
|
501 |
* be TRUE (for paths considered administrative) or FALSE (for non-
|
502 |
* administrative paths).
|
503 |
*
|
504 |
* @see hook_menu()
|
505 |
* @see drupal_match_path()
|
506 |
* @see hook_admin_paths_alter()
|
507 |
*/
|
508 |
function hook_admin_paths() { |
509 |
$paths = array( |
510 |
'mymodule/*/add' => TRUE, |
511 |
'mymodule/*/edit' => TRUE, |
512 |
); |
513 |
return $paths; |
514 |
} |
515 |
|
516 |
/**
|
517 |
* Redefine administrative paths defined by other modules.
|
518 |
*
|
519 |
* @param $paths
|
520 |
* An associative array of administrative paths, as defined by implementations
|
521 |
* of hook_admin_paths().
|
522 |
*
|
523 |
* @see hook_admin_paths()
|
524 |
*/
|
525 |
function hook_admin_paths_alter(&$paths) { |
526 |
// Treat all user pages as administrative.
|
527 |
$paths['user'] = TRUE; |
528 |
$paths['user/*'] = TRUE; |
529 |
// Treat the forum topic node form as a non-administrative page.
|
530 |
$paths['node/add/forum'] = FALSE; |
531 |
} |
532 |
|
533 |
/**
|
534 |
* Act on entities as they are being prepared for view.
|
535 |
*
|
536 |
* Allows you to operate on multiple entities as they are being prepared for
|
537 |
* view. Only use this if attaching the data during the entity_load() phase
|
538 |
* is not appropriate, for example when attaching other 'entity' style objects.
|
539 |
*
|
540 |
* @param $entities
|
541 |
* The entities keyed by entity ID.
|
542 |
* @param $type
|
543 |
* The type of entities being loaded (i.e. node, user, comment).
|
544 |
* @param $langcode
|
545 |
* The language to display the entity in.
|
546 |
*/
|
547 |
function hook_entity_prepare_view($entities, $type, $langcode) { |
548 |
// Load a specific node into the user object for later theming.
|
549 |
if ($type == 'user') { |
550 |
$nodes = mymodule_get_user_nodes(array_keys($entities)); |
551 |
foreach ($entities as $uid => $entity) { |
552 |
$entity->user_node = $nodes[$uid]; |
553 |
} |
554 |
} |
555 |
} |
556 |
|
557 |
/**
|
558 |
* Perform periodic actions.
|
559 |
*
|
560 |
* Modules that require some commands to be executed periodically can
|
561 |
* implement hook_cron(). The engine will then call the hook whenever a cron
|
562 |
* run happens, as defined by the administrator. Typical tasks managed by
|
563 |
* hook_cron() are database maintenance, backups, recalculation of settings
|
564 |
* or parameters, automated mailing, and retrieving remote data.
|
565 |
*
|
566 |
* Short-running or non-resource-intensive tasks can be executed directly in
|
567 |
* the hook_cron() implementation.
|
568 |
*
|
569 |
* Long-running tasks and tasks that could time out, such as retrieving remote
|
570 |
* data, sending email, and intensive file tasks, should use the queue API
|
571 |
* instead of executing the tasks directly. To do this, first define one or
|
572 |
* more queues via hook_cron_queue_info(). Then, add items that need to be
|
573 |
* processed to the defined queues.
|
574 |
*/
|
575 |
function hook_cron() { |
576 |
// Short-running operation example, not using a queue:
|
577 |
// Delete all expired records since the last cron run.
|
578 |
$expires = variable_get('mymodule_cron_last_run', REQUEST_TIME); |
579 |
db_delete('mymodule_table')
|
580 |
->condition('expires', $expires, '>=') |
581 |
->execute(); |
582 |
variable_set('mymodule_cron_last_run', REQUEST_TIME); |
583 |
|
584 |
// Long-running operation example, leveraging a queue:
|
585 |
// Fetch feeds from other sites.
|
586 |
$result = db_query('SELECT * FROM {aggregator_feed} WHERE checked + refresh < :time AND refresh <> :never', array( |
587 |
':time' => REQUEST_TIME, |
588 |
':never' => AGGREGATOR_CLEAR_NEVER, |
589 |
)); |
590 |
$queue = DrupalQueue::get('aggregator_feeds'); |
591 |
foreach ($result as $feed) { |
592 |
$queue->createItem($feed); |
593 |
} |
594 |
} |
595 |
|
596 |
/**
|
597 |
* Declare queues holding items that need to be run periodically.
|
598 |
*
|
599 |
* While there can be only one hook_cron() process running at the same time,
|
600 |
* there can be any number of processes defined here running. Because of
|
601 |
* this, long running tasks are much better suited for this API. Items queued
|
602 |
* in hook_cron() might be processed in the same cron run if there are not many
|
603 |
* items in the queue, otherwise it might take several requests, which can be
|
604 |
* run in parallel.
|
605 |
*
|
606 |
* @return
|
607 |
* An associative array where the key is the queue name and the value is
|
608 |
* again an associative array. Possible keys are:
|
609 |
* - 'worker callback': The name of the function to call. It will be called
|
610 |
* with one argument, the item created via DrupalQueue::createItem().
|
611 |
* - 'time': (optional) How much time Drupal should spend on calling this
|
612 |
* worker in seconds. Defaults to 15.
|
613 |
* - 'skip on cron': (optional) Set to TRUE to avoid being processed during
|
614 |
* cron runs (for example, if you want to control all queue execution
|
615 |
* manually).
|
616 |
*
|
617 |
* @see hook_cron()
|
618 |
* @see hook_cron_queue_info_alter()
|
619 |
*/
|
620 |
function hook_cron_queue_info() { |
621 |
$queues['aggregator_feeds'] = array( |
622 |
'worker callback' => 'aggregator_refresh', |
623 |
'time' => 60, |
624 |
); |
625 |
return $queues; |
626 |
} |
627 |
|
628 |
/**
|
629 |
* Alter cron queue information before cron runs.
|
630 |
*
|
631 |
* Called by drupal_cron_run() to allow modules to alter cron queue settings
|
632 |
* before any jobs are processesed.
|
633 |
*
|
634 |
* @param array $queues
|
635 |
* An array of cron queue information.
|
636 |
*
|
637 |
* @see hook_cron_queue_info()
|
638 |
* @see drupal_cron_run()
|
639 |
*/
|
640 |
function hook_cron_queue_info_alter(&$queues) { |
641 |
// This site has many feeds so let's spend 90 seconds on each cron run
|
642 |
// updating feeds instead of the default 60.
|
643 |
$queues['aggregator_feeds']['time'] = 90; |
644 |
} |
645 |
|
646 |
/**
|
647 |
* Allows modules to declare their own Form API element types and specify their
|
648 |
* default values.
|
649 |
*
|
650 |
* This hook allows modules to declare their own form element types and to
|
651 |
* specify their default values. The values returned by this hook will be
|
652 |
* merged with the elements returned by hook_form() implementations and so
|
653 |
* can return defaults for any Form APIs keys in addition to those explicitly
|
654 |
* mentioned below.
|
655 |
*
|
656 |
* Each of the form element types defined by this hook is assumed to have
|
657 |
* a matching theme function, e.g. theme_elementtype(), which should be
|
658 |
* registered with hook_theme() as normal.
|
659 |
*
|
660 |
* For more information about custom element types see the explanation at
|
661 |
* http://drupal.org/node/169815.
|
662 |
*
|
663 |
* @return
|
664 |
* An associative array describing the element types being defined. The array
|
665 |
* contains a sub-array for each element type, with the machine-readable type
|
666 |
* name as the key. Each sub-array has a number of possible attributes:
|
667 |
* - "#input": boolean indicating whether or not this element carries a value
|
668 |
* (even if it's hidden).
|
669 |
* - "#process": array of callback functions taking $element, $form_state,
|
670 |
* and $complete_form.
|
671 |
* - "#after_build": array of callback functions taking $element and $form_state.
|
672 |
* - "#validate": array of callback functions taking $form and $form_state.
|
673 |
* - "#element_validate": array of callback functions taking $element and
|
674 |
* $form_state.
|
675 |
* - "#pre_render": array of callback functions taking $element and $form_state.
|
676 |
* - "#post_render": array of callback functions taking $element and $form_state.
|
677 |
* - "#submit": array of callback functions taking $form and $form_state.
|
678 |
* - "#title_display": optional string indicating if and how #title should be
|
679 |
* displayed, see theme_form_element() and theme_form_element_label().
|
680 |
*
|
681 |
* @see hook_element_info_alter()
|
682 |
* @see system_element_info()
|
683 |
*/
|
684 |
function hook_element_info() { |
685 |
$types['filter_format'] = array( |
686 |
'#input' => TRUE, |
687 |
); |
688 |
return $types; |
689 |
} |
690 |
|
691 |
/**
|
692 |
* Alter the element type information returned from modules.
|
693 |
*
|
694 |
* A module may implement this hook in order to alter the element type defaults
|
695 |
* defined by a module.
|
696 |
*
|
697 |
* @param $type
|
698 |
* All element type defaults as collected by hook_element_info().
|
699 |
*
|
700 |
* @see hook_element_info()
|
701 |
*/
|
702 |
function hook_element_info_alter(&$type) { |
703 |
// Decrease the default size of textfields.
|
704 |
if (isset($type['textfield']['#size'])) { |
705 |
$type['textfield']['#size'] = 40; |
706 |
} |
707 |
} |
708 |
|
709 |
/**
|
710 |
* Perform cleanup tasks.
|
711 |
*
|
712 |
* This hook is run at the end of most regular page requests. It is often
|
713 |
* used for page logging and specialized cleanup. This hook MUST NOT print
|
714 |
* anything because by the time it runs the response is already sent to
|
715 |
* the browser.
|
716 |
*
|
717 |
* Only use this hook if your code must run even for cached page views.
|
718 |
* If you have code which must run once on all non-cached pages, use
|
719 |
* hook_init() instead. That is the usual case. If you implement this hook
|
720 |
* and see an error like 'Call to undefined function', it is likely that
|
721 |
* you are depending on the presence of a module which has not been loaded yet.
|
722 |
* It is not loaded because Drupal is still in bootstrap mode.
|
723 |
*
|
724 |
* @param $destination
|
725 |
* If this hook is invoked as part of a drupal_goto() call, then this argument
|
726 |
* will be a fully-qualified URL that is the destination of the redirect.
|
727 |
*/
|
728 |
function hook_exit($destination = NULL) { |
729 |
db_update('counter')
|
730 |
->expression('hits', 'hits + 1') |
731 |
->condition('type', 1) |
732 |
->execute(); |
733 |
} |
734 |
|
735 |
/**
|
736 |
* Perform necessary alterations to the JavaScript before it is presented on
|
737 |
* the page.
|
738 |
*
|
739 |
* @param $javascript
|
740 |
* An array of all JavaScript being presented on the page.
|
741 |
*
|
742 |
* @see drupal_add_js()
|
743 |
* @see drupal_get_js()
|
744 |
* @see drupal_js_defaults()
|
745 |
*/
|
746 |
function hook_js_alter(&$javascript) { |
747 |
// Swap out jQuery to use an updated version of the library.
|
748 |
$javascript['misc/jquery.js']['data'] = drupal_get_path('module', 'jquery_update') . '/jquery.js'; |
749 |
} |
750 |
|
751 |
/**
|
752 |
* Registers JavaScript/CSS libraries associated with a module.
|
753 |
*
|
754 |
* Modules implementing this return an array of arrays. The key to each
|
755 |
* sub-array is the machine readable name of the library. Each library may
|
756 |
* contain the following items:
|
757 |
*
|
758 |
* - 'title': The human readable name of the library.
|
759 |
* - 'website': The URL of the library's web site.
|
760 |
* - 'version': A string specifying the version of the library; intentionally
|
761 |
* not a float because a version like "1.2.3" is not a valid float. Use PHP's
|
762 |
* version_compare() to compare different versions.
|
763 |
* - 'js': An array of JavaScript elements; each element's key is used as $data
|
764 |
* argument, each element's value is used as $options array for
|
765 |
* drupal_add_js(). To add library-specific (not module-specific) JavaScript
|
766 |
* settings, the key may be skipped, the value must specify
|
767 |
* 'type' => 'setting', and the actual settings must be contained in a 'data'
|
768 |
* element of the value.
|
769 |
* - 'css': Like 'js', an array of CSS elements passed to drupal_add_css().
|
770 |
* - 'dependencies': An array of libraries that are required for a library. Each
|
771 |
* element is an array listing the module and name of another library. Note
|
772 |
* that all dependencies for each dependent library will also be added when
|
773 |
* this library is added.
|
774 |
*
|
775 |
* Registered information for a library should contain re-usable data only.
|
776 |
* Module- or implementation-specific data and integration logic should be added
|
777 |
* separately.
|
778 |
*
|
779 |
* @return
|
780 |
* An array defining libraries associated with a module.
|
781 |
*
|
782 |
* @see system_library()
|
783 |
* @see drupal_add_library()
|
784 |
* @see drupal_get_library()
|
785 |
*/
|
786 |
function hook_library() { |
787 |
// Library One.
|
788 |
$libraries['library-1'] = array( |
789 |
'title' => 'Library One', |
790 |
'website' => 'http://example.com/library-1', |
791 |
'version' => '1.2', |
792 |
'js' => array( |
793 |
drupal_get_path('module', 'my_module') . '/library-1.js' => array(), |
794 |
), |
795 |
'css' => array( |
796 |
drupal_get_path('module', 'my_module') . '/library-2.css' => array( |
797 |
'type' => 'file', |
798 |
'media' => 'screen', |
799 |
), |
800 |
), |
801 |
); |
802 |
// Library Two.
|
803 |
$libraries['library-2'] = array( |
804 |
'title' => 'Library Two', |
805 |
'website' => 'http://example.com/library-2', |
806 |
'version' => '3.1-beta1', |
807 |
'js' => array( |
808 |
// JavaScript settings may use the 'data' key.
|
809 |
array(
|
810 |
'type' => 'setting', |
811 |
'data' => array('library2' => TRUE), |
812 |
), |
813 |
), |
814 |
'dependencies' => array( |
815 |
// Require jQuery UI core by System module.
|
816 |
array('system', 'ui'), |
817 |
// Require our other library.
|
818 |
array('my_module', 'library-1'), |
819 |
// Require another library.
|
820 |
array('other_module', 'library-3'), |
821 |
), |
822 |
); |
823 |
return $libraries; |
824 |
} |
825 |
|
826 |
/**
|
827 |
* Alters the JavaScript/CSS library registry.
|
828 |
*
|
829 |
* Allows certain, contributed modules to update libraries to newer versions
|
830 |
* while ensuring backwards compatibility. In general, such manipulations should
|
831 |
* only be done by designated modules, since most modules that integrate with a
|
832 |
* certain library also depend on the API of a certain library version.
|
833 |
*
|
834 |
* @param $libraries
|
835 |
* The JavaScript/CSS libraries provided by $module. Keyed by internal library
|
836 |
* name and passed by reference.
|
837 |
* @param $module
|
838 |
* The name of the module that registered the libraries.
|
839 |
*
|
840 |
* @see hook_library()
|
841 |
*/
|
842 |
function hook_library_alter(&$libraries, $module) { |
843 |
// Update Farbtastic to version 2.0.
|
844 |
if ($module == 'system' && isset($libraries['farbtastic'])) { |
845 |
// Verify existing version is older than the one we are updating to.
|
846 |
if (version_compare($libraries['farbtastic']['version'], '2.0', '<')) { |
847 |
// Update the existing Farbtastic to version 2.0.
|
848 |
$libraries['farbtastic']['version'] = '2.0'; |
849 |
$libraries['farbtastic']['js'] = array( |
850 |
drupal_get_path('module', 'farbtastic_update') . '/farbtastic-2.0.js' => array(), |
851 |
); |
852 |
} |
853 |
} |
854 |
} |
855 |
|
856 |
/**
|
857 |
* Alter CSS files before they are output on the page.
|
858 |
*
|
859 |
* @param $css
|
860 |
* An array of all CSS items (files and inline CSS) being requested on the page.
|
861 |
*
|
862 |
* @see drupal_add_css()
|
863 |
* @see drupal_get_css()
|
864 |
*/
|
865 |
function hook_css_alter(&$css) { |
866 |
// Remove defaults.css file.
|
867 |
unset($css[drupal_get_path('module', 'system') . '/defaults.css']); |
868 |
} |
869 |
|
870 |
/**
|
871 |
* Alter the commands that are sent to the user through the Ajax framework.
|
872 |
*
|
873 |
* @param $commands
|
874 |
* An array of all commands that will be sent to the user.
|
875 |
*
|
876 |
* @see ajax_render()
|
877 |
*/
|
878 |
function hook_ajax_render_alter(&$commands) { |
879 |
// Inject any new status messages into the content area.
|
880 |
$commands[] = ajax_command_prepend('#block-system-main .content', theme('status_messages')); |
881 |
} |
882 |
|
883 |
/**
|
884 |
* Add elements to a page before it is rendered.
|
885 |
*
|
886 |
* Use this hook when you want to add elements at the page level. For your
|
887 |
* additions to be printed, they have to be placed below a top level array key
|
888 |
* of the $page array that has the name of a region of the active theme.
|
889 |
*
|
890 |
* By default, valid region keys are 'page_top', 'header', 'sidebar_first',
|
891 |
* 'content', 'sidebar_second' and 'page_bottom'. To get a list of all regions
|
892 |
* of the active theme, use system_region_list($theme). Note that $theme is a
|
893 |
* global variable.
|
894 |
*
|
895 |
* If you want to alter the elements added by other modules or if your module
|
896 |
* depends on the elements of other modules, use hook_page_alter() instead which
|
897 |
* runs after this hook.
|
898 |
*
|
899 |
* @param $page
|
900 |
* Nested array of renderable elements that make up the page.
|
901 |
*
|
902 |
* @see hook_page_alter()
|
903 |
* @see drupal_render_page()
|
904 |
*/
|
905 |
function hook_page_build(&$page) { |
906 |
if (menu_get_object('node', 1)) { |
907 |
// We are on a node detail page. Append a standard disclaimer to the
|
908 |
// content region.
|
909 |
$page['content']['disclaimer'] = array( |
910 |
'#markup' => t('Acme, Inc. is not responsible for the contents of this sample code.'), |
911 |
'#weight' => 25, |
912 |
); |
913 |
} |
914 |
} |
915 |
|
916 |
/**
|
917 |
* Alter a menu router item right after it has been retrieved from the database or cache.
|
918 |
*
|
919 |
* This hook is invoked by menu_get_item() and allows for run-time alteration of router
|
920 |
* information (page_callback, title, and so on) before it is translated and checked for
|
921 |
* access. The passed-in $router_item is statically cached for the current request, so this
|
922 |
* hook is only invoked once for any router item that is retrieved via menu_get_item().
|
923 |
*
|
924 |
* Usually, modules will only want to inspect the router item and conditionally
|
925 |
* perform other actions (such as preparing a state for the current request).
|
926 |
* Note that this hook is invoked for any router item that is retrieved by
|
927 |
* menu_get_item(), which may or may not be called on the path itself, so implementations
|
928 |
* should check the $path parameter if the alteration should fire for the current request
|
929 |
* only.
|
930 |
*
|
931 |
* @param $router_item
|
932 |
* The menu router item for $path.
|
933 |
* @param $path
|
934 |
* The originally passed path, for which $router_item is responsible.
|
935 |
* @param $original_map
|
936 |
* The path argument map, as contained in $path.
|
937 |
*
|
938 |
* @see menu_get_item()
|
939 |
*/
|
940 |
function hook_menu_get_item_alter(&$router_item, $path, $original_map) { |
941 |
// When retrieving the router item for the current path...
|
942 |
if ($path == $_GET['q']) { |
943 |
// ...call a function that prepares something for this request.
|
944 |
mymodule_prepare_something(); |
945 |
} |
946 |
} |
947 |
|
948 |
/**
|
949 |
* Define menu items and page callbacks.
|
950 |
*
|
951 |
* This hook enables modules to register paths in order to define how URL
|
952 |
* requests are handled. Paths may be registered for URL handling only, or they
|
953 |
* can register a link to be placed in a menu (usually the Navigation menu). A
|
954 |
* path and its associated information is commonly called a "menu router item".
|
955 |
* This hook is rarely called (for example, when modules are enabled), and
|
956 |
* its results are cached in the database.
|
957 |
*
|
958 |
* hook_menu() implementations return an associative array whose keys define
|
959 |
* paths and whose values are an associative array of properties for each
|
960 |
* path. (The complete list of properties is in the return value section below.)
|
961 |
*
|
962 |
* @section sec_callback_funcs Callback Functions
|
963 |
* The definition for each path may include a page callback function, which is
|
964 |
* invoked when the registered path is requested. If there is no other
|
965 |
* registered path that fits the requested path better, any further path
|
966 |
* components are passed to the callback function. For example, your module
|
967 |
* could register path 'abc/def':
|
968 |
* @code
|
969 |
* function mymodule_menu() {
|
970 |
* $items['abc/def'] = array(
|
971 |
* 'page callback' => 'mymodule_abc_view',
|
972 |
* );
|
973 |
* return $items;
|
974 |
* }
|
975 |
*
|
976 |
* function mymodule_abc_view($ghi = 0, $jkl = '') {
|
977 |
* // ...
|
978 |
* }
|
979 |
* @endcode
|
980 |
* When path 'abc/def' is requested, no further path components are in the
|
981 |
* request, and no additional arguments are passed to the callback function (so
|
982 |
* $ghi and $jkl would take the default values as defined in the function
|
983 |
* signature). When 'abc/def/123/foo' is requested, $ghi will be '123' and
|
984 |
* $jkl will be 'foo'. Note that this automatic passing of optional path
|
985 |
* arguments applies only to page and theme callback functions.
|
986 |
*
|
987 |
* @subsection sub_callback_arguments Callback Arguments
|
988 |
* In addition to optional path arguments, the page callback and other callback
|
989 |
* functions may specify argument lists as arrays. These argument lists may
|
990 |
* contain both fixed/hard-coded argument values and integers that correspond
|
991 |
* to path components. When integers are used and the callback function is
|
992 |
* called, the corresponding path components will be substituted for the
|
993 |
* integers. That is, the integer 0 in an argument list will be replaced with
|
994 |
* the first path component, integer 1 with the second, and so on (path
|
995 |
* components are numbered starting from zero). To pass an integer without it
|
996 |
* being replaced with its respective path component, use the string value of
|
997 |
* the integer (e.g., '1') as the argument value. This substitution feature
|
998 |
* allows you to re-use a callback function for several different paths. For
|
999 |
* example:
|
1000 |
* @code
|
1001 |
* function mymodule_menu() {
|
1002 |
* $items['abc/def'] = array(
|
1003 |
* 'page callback' => 'mymodule_abc_view',
|
1004 |
* 'page arguments' => array(1, 'foo'),
|
1005 |
* );
|
1006 |
* return $items;
|
1007 |
* }
|
1008 |
* @endcode
|
1009 |
* When path 'abc/def' is requested, the page callback function will get 'def'
|
1010 |
* as the first argument and (always) 'foo' as the second argument.
|
1011 |
*
|
1012 |
* If a page callback function uses an argument list array, and its path is
|
1013 |
* requested with optional path arguments, then the list array's arguments are
|
1014 |
* passed to the callback function first, followed by the optional path
|
1015 |
* arguments. Using the above example, when path 'abc/def/bar/baz' is requested,
|
1016 |
* mymodule_abc_view() will be called with 'def', 'foo', 'bar' and 'baz' as
|
1017 |
* arguments, in that order.
|
1018 |
*
|
1019 |
* Special care should be taken for the page callback drupal_get_form(), because
|
1020 |
* your specific form callback function will always receive $form and
|
1021 |
* &$form_state as the first function arguments:
|
1022 |
* @code
|
1023 |
* function mymodule_abc_form($form, &$form_state) {
|
1024 |
* // ...
|
1025 |
* return $form;
|
1026 |
* }
|
1027 |
* @endcode
|
1028 |
* See @link form_api Form API documentation @endlink for details.
|
1029 |
*
|
1030 |
* @section sec_path_wildcards Wildcards in Paths
|
1031 |
* @subsection sub_simple_wildcards Simple Wildcards
|
1032 |
* Wildcards within paths also work with integer substitution. For example,
|
1033 |
* your module could register path 'my-module/%/edit':
|
1034 |
* @code
|
1035 |
* $items['my-module/%/edit'] = array(
|
1036 |
* 'page callback' => 'mymodule_abc_edit',
|
1037 |
* 'page arguments' => array(1),
|
1038 |
* );
|
1039 |
* @endcode
|
1040 |
* When path 'my-module/foo/edit' is requested, integer 1 will be replaced
|
1041 |
* with 'foo' and passed to the callback function. Note that wildcards may not
|
1042 |
* be used as the first component.
|
1043 |
*
|
1044 |
* @subsection sub_autoload_wildcards Auto-Loader Wildcards
|
1045 |
* Registered paths may also contain special "auto-loader" wildcard components
|
1046 |
* in the form of '%mymodule_abc', where the '%' part means that this path
|
1047 |
* component is a wildcard, and the 'mymodule_abc' part defines the prefix for a
|
1048 |
* load function, which here would be named mymodule_abc_load(). When a matching
|
1049 |
* path is requested, your load function will receive as its first argument the
|
1050 |
* path component in the position of the wildcard; load functions may also be
|
1051 |
* passed additional arguments (see "load arguments" in the return value
|
1052 |
* section below). For example, your module could register path
|
1053 |
* 'my-module/%mymodule_abc/edit':
|
1054 |
* @code
|
1055 |
* $items['my-module/%mymodule_abc/edit'] = array(
|
1056 |
* 'page callback' => 'mymodule_abc_edit',
|
1057 |
* 'page arguments' => array(1),
|
1058 |
* );
|
1059 |
* @endcode
|
1060 |
* When path 'my-module/123/edit' is requested, your load function
|
1061 |
* mymodule_abc_load() will be invoked with the argument '123', and should
|
1062 |
* load and return an "abc" object with internal id 123:
|
1063 |
* @code
|
1064 |
* function mymodule_abc_load($abc_id) {
|
1065 |
* return db_query("SELECT * FROM {mymodule_abc} WHERE abc_id = :abc_id", array(':abc_id' => $abc_id))->fetchObject();
|
1066 |
* }
|
1067 |
* @endcode
|
1068 |
* This 'abc' object will then be passed into the callback functions defined
|
1069 |
* for the menu item, such as the page callback function mymodule_abc_edit()
|
1070 |
* to replace the integer 1 in the argument array. Note that a load function
|
1071 |
* should return FALSE when it is unable to provide a loadable object. For
|
1072 |
* example, the node_load() function for the 'node/%node/edit' menu item will
|
1073 |
* return FALSE for the path 'node/999/edit' if a node with a node ID of 999
|
1074 |
* does not exist. The menu routing system will return a 404 error in this case.
|
1075 |
*
|
1076 |
* @subsection sub_argument_wildcards Argument Wildcards
|
1077 |
* You can also define a %wildcard_to_arg() function (for the example menu
|
1078 |
* entry above this would be 'mymodule_abc_to_arg()'). The _to_arg() function
|
1079 |
* is invoked to retrieve a value that is used in the path in place of the
|
1080 |
* wildcard. A good example is user.module, which defines
|
1081 |
* user_uid_optional_to_arg() (corresponding to the menu entry
|
1082 |
* 'tracker/%user_uid_optional'). This function returns the user ID of the
|
1083 |
* current user.
|
1084 |
*
|
1085 |
* The _to_arg() function will get called with three arguments:
|
1086 |
* - $arg: A string representing whatever argument may have been supplied by
|
1087 |
* the caller (this is particularly useful if you want the _to_arg()
|
1088 |
* function only supply a (default) value if no other value is specified,
|
1089 |
* as in the case of user_uid_optional_to_arg().
|
1090 |
* - $map: An array of all path fragments (e.g. array('node','123','edit') for
|
1091 |
* 'node/123/edit').
|
1092 |
* - $index: An integer indicating which element of $map corresponds to $arg.
|
1093 |
*
|
1094 |
* _load() and _to_arg() functions may seem similar at first glance, but they
|
1095 |
* have different purposes and are called at different times. _load()
|
1096 |
* functions are called when the menu system is collecting arguments to pass
|
1097 |
* to the callback functions defined for the menu item. _to_arg() functions
|
1098 |
* are called when the menu system is generating links to related paths, such
|
1099 |
* as the tabs for a set of MENU_LOCAL_TASK items.
|
1100 |
*
|
1101 |
* @section sec_render_tabs Rendering Menu Items As Tabs
|
1102 |
* You can also make groups of menu items to be rendered (by default) as tabs
|
1103 |
* on a page. To do that, first create one menu item of type MENU_NORMAL_ITEM,
|
1104 |
* with your chosen path, such as 'foo'. Then duplicate that menu item, using a
|
1105 |
* subdirectory path, such as 'foo/tab1', and changing the type to
|
1106 |
* MENU_DEFAULT_LOCAL_TASK to make it the default tab for the group. Then add
|
1107 |
* the additional tab items, with paths such as "foo/tab2" etc., with type
|
1108 |
* MENU_LOCAL_TASK. Example:
|
1109 |
* @code
|
1110 |
* // Make "Foo settings" appear on the admin Config page
|
1111 |
* $items['admin/config/system/foo'] = array(
|
1112 |
* 'title' => 'Foo settings',
|
1113 |
* 'type' => MENU_NORMAL_ITEM,
|
1114 |
* // Page callback, etc. need to be added here.
|
1115 |
* );
|
1116 |
* // Make "Tab 1" the main tab on the "Foo settings" page
|
1117 |
* $items['admin/config/system/foo/tab1'] = array(
|
1118 |
* 'title' => 'Tab 1',
|
1119 |
* 'type' => MENU_DEFAULT_LOCAL_TASK,
|
1120 |
* // Access callback, page callback, and theme callback will be inherited
|
1121 |
* // from 'admin/config/system/foo', if not specified here to override.
|
1122 |
* );
|
1123 |
* // Make an additional tab called "Tab 2" on "Foo settings"
|
1124 |
* $items['admin/config/system/foo/tab2'] = array(
|
1125 |
* 'title' => 'Tab 2',
|
1126 |
* 'type' => MENU_LOCAL_TASK,
|
1127 |
* // Page callback and theme callback will be inherited from
|
1128 |
* // 'admin/config/system/foo', if not specified here to override.
|
1129 |
* // Need to add access callback or access arguments.
|
1130 |
* );
|
1131 |
* @endcode
|
1132 |
*
|
1133 |
* @return
|
1134 |
* An array of menu items. Each menu item has a key corresponding to the
|
1135 |
* Drupal path being registered. The corresponding array value is an
|
1136 |
* associative array that may contain the following key-value pairs:
|
1137 |
* - "title": Required. The untranslated title of the menu item.
|
1138 |
* - "title callback": Function to generate the title; defaults to t().
|
1139 |
* If you require only the raw string to be output, set this to FALSE.
|
1140 |
* - "title arguments": Arguments to send to t() or your custom callback,
|
1141 |
* with path component substitution as described above.
|
1142 |
* - "description": The untranslated description of the menu item.
|
1143 |
* - "page callback": The function to call to display a web page when the user
|
1144 |
* visits the path. If omitted, the parent menu item's callback will be used
|
1145 |
* instead.
|
1146 |
* - "page arguments": An array of arguments to pass to the page callback
|
1147 |
* function, with path component substitution as described above.
|
1148 |
* - "delivery callback": The function to call to package the result of the
|
1149 |
* page callback function and send it to the browser. Defaults to
|
1150 |
* drupal_deliver_html_page() unless a value is inherited from a parent menu
|
1151 |
* item. Note that this function is called even if the access checks fail,
|
1152 |
* so any custom delivery callback function should take that into account.
|
1153 |
* See drupal_deliver_html_page() for an example.
|
1154 |
* - "access callback": A function returning TRUE if the user has access
|
1155 |
* rights to this menu item, and FALSE if not. It can also be a boolean
|
1156 |
* constant instead of a function, and you can also use numeric values
|
1157 |
* (will be cast to boolean). Defaults to user_access() unless a value is
|
1158 |
* inherited from the parent menu item; only MENU_DEFAULT_LOCAL_TASK items
|
1159 |
* can inherit access callbacks. To use the user_access() default callback,
|
1160 |
* you must specify the permission to check as 'access arguments' (see
|
1161 |
* below).
|
1162 |
* - "access arguments": An array of arguments to pass to the access callback
|
1163 |
* function, with path component substitution as described above. If the
|
1164 |
* access callback is inherited (see above), the access arguments will be
|
1165 |
* inherited with it, unless overridden in the child menu item.
|
1166 |
* - "theme callback": (optional) A function returning the machine-readable
|
1167 |
* name of the theme that will be used to render the page. If not provided,
|
1168 |
* the value will be inherited from a parent menu item. If there is no
|
1169 |
* theme callback, or if the function does not return the name of a current
|
1170 |
* active theme on the site, the theme for this page will be determined by
|
1171 |
* either hook_custom_theme() or the default theme instead. As a general
|
1172 |
* rule, the use of theme callback functions should be limited to pages
|
1173 |
* whose functionality is very closely tied to a particular theme, since
|
1174 |
* they can only be overridden by modules which specifically target those
|
1175 |
* pages in hook_menu_alter(). Modules implementing more generic theme
|
1176 |
* switching functionality (for example, a module which allows the theme to
|
1177 |
* be set dynamically based on the current user's role) should use
|
1178 |
* hook_custom_theme() instead.
|
1179 |
* - "theme arguments": An array of arguments to pass to the theme callback
|
1180 |
* function, with path component substitution as described above.
|
1181 |
* - "file": A file that will be included before the page callback is called;
|
1182 |
* this allows page callback functions to be in separate files. The file
|
1183 |
* should be relative to the implementing module's directory unless
|
1184 |
* otherwise specified by the "file path" option. Does not apply to other
|
1185 |
* callbacks (only page callback).
|
1186 |
* - "file path": The path to the directory containing the file specified in
|
1187 |
* "file". This defaults to the path to the module implementing the hook.
|
1188 |
* - "load arguments": An array of arguments to be passed to each of the
|
1189 |
* wildcard object loaders in the path, after the path argument itself.
|
1190 |
* For example, if a module registers path node/%node/revisions/%/view
|
1191 |
* with load arguments set to array(3), the '%node' in the path indicates
|
1192 |
* that the loader function node_load() will be called with the second
|
1193 |
* path component as the first argument. The 3 in the load arguments
|
1194 |
* indicates that the fourth path component will also be passed to
|
1195 |
* node_load() (numbering of path components starts at zero). So, if path
|
1196 |
* node/12/revisions/29/view is requested, node_load(12, 29) will be called.
|
1197 |
* There are also two "magic" values that can be used in load arguments.
|
1198 |
* "%index" indicates the index of the wildcard path component. "%map"
|
1199 |
* indicates the path components as an array. For example, if a module
|
1200 |
* registers for several paths of the form 'user/%user_category/edit/*', all
|
1201 |
* of them can use the same load function user_category_load(), by setting
|
1202 |
* the load arguments to array('%map', '%index'). For instance, if the user
|
1203 |
* is editing category 'foo' by requesting path 'user/32/edit/foo', the load
|
1204 |
* function user_category_load() will be called with 32 as its first
|
1205 |
* argument, the array ('user', 32, 'edit', 'foo') as the map argument,
|
1206 |
* and 1 as the index argument (because %user_category is the second path
|
1207 |
* component and numbering starts at zero). user_category_load() can then
|
1208 |
* use these values to extract the information that 'foo' is the category
|
1209 |
* being requested.
|
1210 |
* - "weight": An integer that determines the relative position of items in
|
1211 |
* the menu; higher-weighted items sink. Defaults to 0. Menu items with the
|
1212 |
* same weight are ordered alphabetically.
|
1213 |
* - "menu_name": Optional. Set this to a custom menu if you don't want your
|
1214 |
* item to be placed in Navigation.
|
1215 |
* - "expanded": Optional. If set to TRUE, and if a menu link is provided for
|
1216 |
* this menu item (as a result of other properties), then the menu link is
|
1217 |
* always expanded, equivalent to its 'always expanded' checkbox being set
|
1218 |
* in the UI.
|
1219 |
* - "context": (optional) Defines the context a tab may appear in. By
|
1220 |
* default, all tabs are only displayed as local tasks when being rendered
|
1221 |
* in a page context. All tabs that should be accessible as contextual links
|
1222 |
* in page region containers outside of the parent menu item's primary page
|
1223 |
* context should be registered using one of the following contexts:
|
1224 |
* - MENU_CONTEXT_PAGE: (default) The tab is displayed as local task for the
|
1225 |
* page context only.
|
1226 |
* - MENU_CONTEXT_INLINE: The tab is displayed as contextual link outside of
|
1227 |
* the primary page context only.
|
1228 |
* Contexts can be combined. For example, to display a tab both on a page
|
1229 |
* and inline, a menu router item may specify:
|
1230 |
* @code
|
1231 |
* 'context' => MENU_CONTEXT_PAGE | MENU_CONTEXT_INLINE,
|
1232 |
* @endcode
|
1233 |
* - "tab_parent": For local task menu items, the path of the task's parent
|
1234 |
* item; defaults to the same path without the last component (e.g., the
|
1235 |
* default parent for 'admin/people/create' is 'admin/people').
|
1236 |
* - "tab_root": For local task menu items, the path of the closest non-tab
|
1237 |
* item; same default as "tab_parent".
|
1238 |
* - "position": Position of the block ('left' or 'right') on the system
|
1239 |
* administration page for this item.
|
1240 |
* - "type": A bitmask of flags describing properties of the menu item.
|
1241 |
* Many shortcut bitmasks are provided as constants in menu.inc:
|
1242 |
* - MENU_NORMAL_ITEM: Normal menu items show up in the menu tree and can be
|
1243 |
* moved/hidden by the administrator.
|
1244 |
* - MENU_CALLBACK: Callbacks simply register a path so that the correct
|
1245 |
* information is generated when the path is accessed.
|
1246 |
* - MENU_SUGGESTED_ITEM: Modules may "suggest" menu items that the
|
1247 |
* administrator may enable.
|
1248 |
* - MENU_LOCAL_ACTION: Local actions are menu items that describe actions
|
1249 |
* on the parent item such as adding a new user or block, and are
|
1250 |
* rendered in the action-links list in your theme.
|
1251 |
* - MENU_LOCAL_TASK: Local tasks are menu items that describe different
|
1252 |
* displays of data, and are generally rendered as tabs.
|
1253 |
* - MENU_DEFAULT_LOCAL_TASK: Every set of local tasks should provide one
|
1254 |
* "default" task, which should display the same page as the parent item.
|
1255 |
* If the "type" element is omitted, MENU_NORMAL_ITEM is assumed.
|
1256 |
* - "options": An array of options to be passed to l() when generating a link
|
1257 |
* from this menu item. Note that the "options" parameter has no effect on
|
1258 |
* MENU_LOCAL_TASK, MENU_DEFAULT_LOCAL_TASK, and MENU_LOCAL_ACTION items.
|
1259 |
*
|
1260 |
* For a detailed usage example, see page_example.module.
|
1261 |
* For comprehensive documentation on the menu system, see
|
1262 |
* http://drupal.org/node/102338.
|
1263 |
*/
|
1264 |
function hook_menu() { |
1265 |
$items['example'] = array( |
1266 |
'title' => 'Example Page', |
1267 |
'page callback' => 'example_page', |
1268 |
'access arguments' => array('access content'), |
1269 |
'type' => MENU_SUGGESTED_ITEM, |
1270 |
); |
1271 |
$items['example/feed'] = array( |
1272 |
'title' => 'Example RSS feed', |
1273 |
'page callback' => 'example_feed', |
1274 |
'access arguments' => array('access content'), |
1275 |
'type' => MENU_CALLBACK, |
1276 |
); |
1277 |
|
1278 |
return $items; |
1279 |
} |
1280 |
|
1281 |
/**
|
1282 |
* Alter the data being saved to the {menu_router} table after hook_menu is invoked.
|
1283 |
*
|
1284 |
* This hook is invoked by menu_router_build(). The menu definitions are passed
|
1285 |
* in by reference. Each element of the $items array is one item returned
|
1286 |
* by a module from hook_menu. Additional items may be added, or existing items
|
1287 |
* altered.
|
1288 |
*
|
1289 |
* @param $items
|
1290 |
* Associative array of menu router definitions returned from hook_menu().
|
1291 |
*/
|
1292 |
function hook_menu_alter(&$items) { |
1293 |
// Example - disable the page at node/add
|
1294 |
$items['node/add']['access callback'] = FALSE; |
1295 |
} |
1296 |
|
1297 |
/**
|
1298 |
* Alter the data being saved to the {menu_links} table by menu_link_save().
|
1299 |
*
|
1300 |
* @param $item
|
1301 |
* Associative array defining a menu link as passed into menu_link_save().
|
1302 |
*
|
1303 |
* @see hook_translated_menu_link_alter()
|
1304 |
*/
|
1305 |
function hook_menu_link_alter(&$item) { |
1306 |
// Make all new admin links hidden (a.k.a disabled).
|
1307 |
if (strpos($item['link_path'], 'admin') === 0 && empty($item['mlid'])) { |
1308 |
$item['hidden'] = 1; |
1309 |
} |
1310 |
// Flag a link to be altered by hook_translated_menu_link_alter().
|
1311 |
if ($item['link_path'] == 'devel/cache/clear') { |
1312 |
$item['options']['alter'] = TRUE; |
1313 |
} |
1314 |
// Flag a link to be altered by hook_translated_menu_link_alter(), but only
|
1315 |
// if it is derived from a menu router item; i.e., do not alter a custom
|
1316 |
// menu link pointing to the same path that has been created by a user.
|
1317 |
if ($item['link_path'] == 'user' && $item['module'] == 'system') { |
1318 |
$item['options']['alter'] = TRUE; |
1319 |
} |
1320 |
} |
1321 |
|
1322 |
/**
|
1323 |
* Alter a menu link after it has been translated and before it is rendered.
|
1324 |
*
|
1325 |
* This hook is invoked from _menu_link_translate() after a menu link has been
|
1326 |
* translated; i.e., after dynamic path argument placeholders (%) have been
|
1327 |
* replaced with actual values, the user access to the link's target page has
|
1328 |
* been checked, and the link has been localized. It is only invoked if
|
1329 |
* $item['options']['alter'] has been set to a non-empty value (e.g., TRUE).
|
1330 |
* This flag should be set using hook_menu_link_alter().
|
1331 |
*
|
1332 |
* Implementations of this hook are able to alter any property of the menu link.
|
1333 |
* For example, this hook may be used to add a page-specific query string to all
|
1334 |
* menu links, or hide a certain link by setting:
|
1335 |
* @code
|
1336 |
* 'hidden' => 1,
|
1337 |
* @endcode
|
1338 |
*
|
1339 |
* @param $item
|
1340 |
* Associative array defining a menu link after _menu_link_translate()
|
1341 |
* @param $map
|
1342 |
* Associative array containing the menu $map (path parts and/or objects).
|
1343 |
*
|
1344 |
* @see hook_menu_link_alter()
|
1345 |
*/
|
1346 |
function hook_translated_menu_link_alter(&$item, $map) { |
1347 |
if ($item['href'] == 'devel/cache/clear') { |
1348 |
$item['localized_options']['query'] = drupal_get_destination(); |
1349 |
} |
1350 |
} |
1351 |
|
1352 |
/**
|
1353 |
* Inform modules that a menu link has been created.
|
1354 |
*
|
1355 |
* This hook is used to notify modules that menu items have been
|
1356 |
* created. Contributed modules may use the information to perform
|
1357 |
* actions based on the information entered into the menu system.
|
1358 |
*
|
1359 |
* @param $link
|
1360 |
* Associative array defining a menu link as passed into menu_link_save().
|
1361 |
*
|
1362 |
* @see hook_menu_link_update()
|
1363 |
* @see hook_menu_link_delete()
|
1364 |
*/
|
1365 |
function hook_menu_link_insert($link) { |
1366 |
// In our sample case, we track menu items as editing sections
|
1367 |
// of the site. These are stored in our table as 'disabled' items.
|
1368 |
$record['mlid'] = $link['mlid']; |
1369 |
$record['menu_name'] = $link['menu_name']; |
1370 |
$record['status'] = 0; |
1371 |
drupal_write_record('menu_example', $record); |
1372 |
} |
1373 |
|
1374 |
/**
|
1375 |
* Inform modules that a menu link has been updated.
|
1376 |
*
|
1377 |
* This hook is used to notify modules that menu items have been
|
1378 |
* updated. Contributed modules may use the information to perform
|
1379 |
* actions based on the information entered into the menu system.
|
1380 |
*
|
1381 |
* @param $link
|
1382 |
* Associative array defining a menu link as passed into menu_link_save().
|
1383 |
*
|
1384 |
* @see hook_menu_link_insert()
|
1385 |
* @see hook_menu_link_delete()
|
1386 |
*/
|
1387 |
function hook_menu_link_update($link) { |
1388 |
// If the parent menu has changed, update our record.
|
1389 |
$menu_name = db_query("SELECT menu_name FROM {menu_example} WHERE mlid = :mlid", array(':mlid' => $link['mlid']))->fetchField(); |
1390 |
if ($menu_name != $link['menu_name']) { |
1391 |
db_update('menu_example')
|
1392 |
->fields(array('menu_name' => $link['menu_name'])) |
1393 |
->condition('mlid', $link['mlid']) |
1394 |
->execute(); |
1395 |
} |
1396 |
} |
1397 |
|
1398 |
/**
|
1399 |
* Inform modules that a menu link has been deleted.
|
1400 |
*
|
1401 |
* This hook is used to notify modules that menu items have been
|
1402 |
* deleted. Contributed modules may use the information to perform
|
1403 |
* actions based on the information entered into the menu system.
|
1404 |
*
|
1405 |
* @param $link
|
1406 |
* Associative array defining a menu link as passed into menu_link_save().
|
1407 |
*
|
1408 |
* @see hook_menu_link_insert()
|
1409 |
* @see hook_menu_link_update()
|
1410 |
*/
|
1411 |
function hook_menu_link_delete($link) { |
1412 |
// Delete the record from our table.
|
1413 |
db_delete('menu_example')
|
1414 |
->condition('mlid', $link['mlid']) |
1415 |
->execute(); |
1416 |
} |
1417 |
|
1418 |
/**
|
1419 |
* Alter tabs and actions displayed on the page before they are rendered.
|
1420 |
*
|
1421 |
* This hook is invoked by menu_local_tasks(). The system-determined tabs and
|
1422 |
* actions are passed in by reference. Additional tabs or actions may be added,
|
1423 |
* or existing items altered.
|
1424 |
*
|
1425 |
* Each tab or action is an associative array containing:
|
1426 |
* - #theme: The theme function to use to render.
|
1427 |
* - #link: An associative array containing:
|
1428 |
* - title: The localized title of the link.
|
1429 |
* - href: The system path to link to.
|
1430 |
* - localized_options: An array of options to pass to l().
|
1431 |
* - #active: Whether the link should be marked as 'active'.
|
1432 |
*
|
1433 |
* @param $data
|
1434 |
* An associative array containing:
|
1435 |
* - actions: An associative array containing:
|
1436 |
* - count: The amount of actions determined by the menu system, which can
|
1437 |
* be ignored.
|
1438 |
* - output: A list of of actions, each one being an associative array
|
1439 |
* as described above.
|
1440 |
* - tabs: An indexed array (list) of tab levels (up to 2 levels), each
|
1441 |
* containing an associative array:
|
1442 |
* - count: The amount of tabs determined by the menu system. This value
|
1443 |
* does not need to be altered if there is more than one tab.
|
1444 |
* - output: A list of of tabs, each one being an associative array as
|
1445 |
* described above.
|
1446 |
* @param $router_item
|
1447 |
* The menu system router item of the page.
|
1448 |
* @param $root_path
|
1449 |
* The path to the root item for this set of tabs.
|
1450 |
*/
|
1451 |
function hook_menu_local_tasks_alter(&$data, $router_item, $root_path) { |
1452 |
// Add an action linking to node/add to all pages.
|
1453 |
$data['actions']['output'][] = array( |
1454 |
'#theme' => 'menu_local_task', |
1455 |
'#link' => array( |
1456 |
'title' => t('Add new content'), |
1457 |
'href' => 'node/add', |
1458 |
'localized_options' => array( |
1459 |
'attributes' => array( |
1460 |
'title' => t('Add new content'), |
1461 |
), |
1462 |
), |
1463 |
), |
1464 |
); |
1465 |
|
1466 |
// Add a tab linking to node/add to all pages.
|
1467 |
$data['tabs'][0]['output'][] = array( |
1468 |
'#theme' => 'menu_local_task', |
1469 |
'#link' => array( |
1470 |
'title' => t('Example tab'), |
1471 |
'href' => 'node/add', |
1472 |
'localized_options' => array( |
1473 |
'attributes' => array( |
1474 |
'title' => t('Add new content'), |
1475 |
), |
1476 |
), |
1477 |
), |
1478 |
// Define whether this link is active. This can be omitted for
|
1479 |
// implementations that add links to pages outside of the current page
|
1480 |
// context.
|
1481 |
'#active' => ($router_item['path'] == $root_path), |
1482 |
); |
1483 |
} |
1484 |
|
1485 |
/**
|
1486 |
* Alter links in the active trail before it is rendered as the breadcrumb.
|
1487 |
*
|
1488 |
* This hook is invoked by menu_get_active_breadcrumb() and allows alteration
|
1489 |
* of the breadcrumb links for the current page, which may be preferred instead
|
1490 |
* of setting a custom breadcrumb via drupal_set_breadcrumb().
|
1491 |
*
|
1492 |
* Implementations should take into account that menu_get_active_breadcrumb()
|
1493 |
* subsequently performs the following adjustments to the active trail *after*
|
1494 |
* this hook has been invoked:
|
1495 |
* - The last link in $active_trail is removed, if its 'href' is identical to
|
1496 |
* the 'href' of $item. This happens, because the breadcrumb normally does
|
1497 |
* not contain a link to the current page.
|
1498 |
* - The (second to) last link in $active_trail is removed, if the current $item
|
1499 |
* is a MENU_DEFAULT_LOCAL_TASK. This happens in order to do not show a link
|
1500 |
* to the current page, when being on the path for the default local task;
|
1501 |
* e.g. when being on the path node/%/view, the breadcrumb should not contain
|
1502 |
* a link to node/%.
|
1503 |
*
|
1504 |
* Each link in the active trail must contain:
|
1505 |
* - title: The localized title of the link.
|
1506 |
* - href: The system path to link to.
|
1507 |
* - localized_options: An array of options to pass to url().
|
1508 |
*
|
1509 |
* @param $active_trail
|
1510 |
* An array containing breadcrumb links for the current page.
|
1511 |
* @param $item
|
1512 |
* The menu router item of the current page.
|
1513 |
*
|
1514 |
* @see drupal_set_breadcrumb()
|
1515 |
* @see menu_get_active_breadcrumb()
|
1516 |
* @see menu_get_active_trail()
|
1517 |
* @see menu_set_active_trail()
|
1518 |
*/
|
1519 |
function hook_menu_breadcrumb_alter(&$active_trail, $item) { |
1520 |
// Always display a link to the current page by duplicating the last link in
|
1521 |
// the active trail. This means that menu_get_active_breadcrumb() will remove
|
1522 |
// the last link (for the current page), but since it is added once more here,
|
1523 |
// it will appear.
|
1524 |
if (!drupal_is_front_page()) {
|
1525 |
$end = end($active_trail); |
1526 |
if ($item['href'] == $end['href']) { |
1527 |
$active_trail[] = $end; |
1528 |
} |
1529 |
} |
1530 |
} |
1531 |
|
1532 |
/**
|
1533 |
* Alter contextual links before they are rendered.
|
1534 |
*
|
1535 |
* This hook is invoked by menu_contextual_links(). The system-determined
|
1536 |
* contextual links are passed in by reference. Additional links may be added
|
1537 |
* or existing links can be altered.
|
1538 |
*
|
1539 |
* Each contextual link must at least contain:
|
1540 |
* - title: The localized title of the link.
|
1541 |
* - href: The system path to link to.
|
1542 |
* - localized_options: An array of options to pass to url().
|
1543 |
*
|
1544 |
* @param $links
|
1545 |
* An associative array containing contextual links for the given $root_path,
|
1546 |
* as described above. The array keys are used to build CSS class names for
|
1547 |
* contextual links and must therefore be unique for each set of contextual
|
1548 |
* links.
|
1549 |
* @param $router_item
|
1550 |
* The menu router item belonging to the $root_path being requested.
|
1551 |
* @param $root_path
|
1552 |
* The (parent) path that has been requested to build contextual links for.
|
1553 |
* This is a normalized path, which means that an originally passed path of
|
1554 |
* 'node/123' became 'node/%'.
|
1555 |
*
|
1556 |
* @see hook_contextual_links_view_alter()
|
1557 |
* @see menu_contextual_links()
|
1558 |
* @see hook_menu()
|
1559 |
* @see contextual_preprocess()
|
1560 |
*/
|
1561 |
function hook_menu_contextual_links_alter(&$links, $router_item, $root_path) { |
1562 |
// Add a link to all contextual links for nodes.
|
1563 |
if ($root_path == 'node/%') { |
1564 |
$links['foo'] = array( |
1565 |
'title' => t('Do fu'), |
1566 |
'href' => 'foo/do', |
1567 |
'localized_options' => array( |
1568 |
'query' => array( |
1569 |
'foo' => 'bar', |
1570 |
), |
1571 |
), |
1572 |
); |
1573 |
} |
1574 |
} |
1575 |
|
1576 |
/**
|
1577 |
* Perform alterations before a page is rendered.
|
1578 |
*
|
1579 |
* Use this hook when you want to remove or alter elements at the page
|
1580 |
* level, or add elements at the page level that depend on an other module's
|
1581 |
* elements (this hook runs after hook_page_build().
|
1582 |
*
|
1583 |
* If you are making changes to entities such as forms, menus, or user
|
1584 |
* profiles, use those objects' native alter hooks instead (hook_form_alter(),
|
1585 |
* for example).
|
1586 |
*
|
1587 |
* The $page array contains top level elements for each block region:
|
1588 |
* @code
|
1589 |
* $page['page_top']
|
1590 |
* $page['header']
|
1591 |
* $page['sidebar_first']
|
1592 |
* $page['content']
|
1593 |
* $page['sidebar_second']
|
1594 |
* $page['page_bottom']
|
1595 |
* @endcode
|
1596 |
*
|
1597 |
* The 'content' element contains the main content of the current page, and its
|
1598 |
* structure will vary depending on what module is responsible for building the
|
1599 |
* page. Some legacy modules may not return structured content at all: their
|
1600 |
* pre-rendered markup will be located in $page['content']['main']['#markup'].
|
1601 |
*
|
1602 |
* Pages built by Drupal's core Node and Blog modules use a standard structure:
|
1603 |
*
|
1604 |
* @code
|
1605 |
* // Node body.
|
1606 |
* $page['content']['system_main']['nodes'][$nid]['body']
|
1607 |
* // Array of links attached to the node (add comments, read more).
|
1608 |
* $page['content']['system_main']['nodes'][$nid]['links']
|
1609 |
* // The node object itself.
|
1610 |
* $page['content']['system_main']['nodes'][$nid]['#node']
|
1611 |
* // The results pager.
|
1612 |
* $page['content']['system_main']['pager']
|
1613 |
* @endcode
|
1614 |
*
|
1615 |
* Blocks may be referenced by their module/delta pair within a region:
|
1616 |
* @code
|
1617 |
* // The login block in the first sidebar region.
|
1618 |
* $page['sidebar_first']['user_login']['#block'];
|
1619 |
* @endcode
|
1620 |
*
|
1621 |
* @param $page
|
1622 |
* Nested array of renderable elements that make up the page.
|
1623 |
*
|
1624 |
* @see hook_page_build()
|
1625 |
* @see drupal_render_page()
|
1626 |
*/
|
1627 |
function hook_page_alter(&$page) { |
1628 |
// Add help text to the user login block.
|
1629 |
$page['sidebar_first']['user_login']['help'] = array( |
1630 |
'#weight' => -10, |
1631 |
'#markup' => t('To post comments or add new content, you first have to log in.'), |
1632 |
); |
1633 |
} |
1634 |
|
1635 |
/**
|
1636 |
* Perform alterations before a form is rendered.
|
1637 |
*
|
1638 |
* One popular use of this hook is to add form elements to the node form. When
|
1639 |
* altering a node form, the node object can be accessed at $form['#node'].
|
1640 |
*
|
1641 |
* In addition to hook_form_alter(), which is called for all forms, there are
|
1642 |
* two more specific form hooks available. The first,
|
1643 |
* hook_form_BASE_FORM_ID_alter(), allows targeting of a form/forms via a base
|
1644 |
* form (if one exists). The second, hook_form_FORM_ID_alter(), can be used to
|
1645 |
* target a specific form directly.
|
1646 |
*
|
1647 |
* The call order is as follows: all existing form alter functions are called
|
1648 |
* for module A, then all for module B, etc., followed by all for any base
|
1649 |
* theme(s), and finally for the theme itself. The module order is determined
|
1650 |
* by system weight, then by module name.
|
1651 |
*
|
1652 |
* Within each module, form alter hooks are called in the following order:
|
1653 |
* first, hook_form_alter(); second, hook_form_BASE_FORM_ID_alter(); third,
|
1654 |
* hook_form_FORM_ID_alter(). So, for each module, the more general hooks are
|
1655 |
* called first followed by the more specific.
|
1656 |
*
|
1657 |
* @param $form
|
1658 |
* Nested array of form elements that comprise the form.
|
1659 |
* @param $form_state
|
1660 |
* A keyed array containing the current state of the form. The arguments
|
1661 |
* that drupal_get_form() was originally called with are available in the
|
1662 |
* array $form_state['build_info']['args'].
|
1663 |
* @param $form_id
|
1664 |
* String representing the name of the form itself. Typically this is the
|
1665 |
* name of the function that generated the form.
|
1666 |
*
|
1667 |
* @see hook_form_BASE_FORM_ID_alter()
|
1668 |
* @see hook_form_FORM_ID_alter()
|
1669 |
* @see forms_api_reference.html
|
1670 |
*/
|
1671 |
function hook_form_alter(&$form, &$form_state, $form_id) { |
1672 |
if (isset($form['type']) && $form['type']['#value'] . '_node_settings' == $form_id) { |
1673 |
$form['workflow']['upload_' . $form['type']['#value']] = array( |
1674 |
'#type' => 'radios', |
1675 |
'#title' => t('Attachments'), |
1676 |
'#default_value' => variable_get('upload_' . $form['type']['#value'], 1), |
1677 |
'#options' => array(t('Disabled'), t('Enabled')), |
1678 |
); |
1679 |
} |
1680 |
} |
1681 |
|
1682 |
/**
|
1683 |
* Provide a form-specific alteration instead of the global hook_form_alter().
|
1684 |
*
|
1685 |
* Modules can implement hook_form_FORM_ID_alter() to modify a specific form,
|
1686 |
* rather than implementing hook_form_alter() and checking the form ID, or
|
1687 |
* using long switch statements to alter multiple forms.
|
1688 |
*
|
1689 |
* Form alter hooks are called in the following order: hook_form_alter(),
|
1690 |
* hook_form_BASE_FORM_ID_alter(), hook_form_FORM_ID_alter(). See
|
1691 |
* hook_form_alter() for more details.
|
1692 |
*
|
1693 |
* @param $form
|
1694 |
* Nested array of form elements that comprise the form.
|
1695 |
* @param $form_state
|
1696 |
* A keyed array containing the current state of the form. The arguments
|
1697 |
* that drupal_get_form() was originally called with are available in the
|
1698 |
* array $form_state['build_info']['args'].
|
1699 |
* @param $form_id
|
1700 |
* String representing the name of the form itself. Typically this is the
|
1701 |
* name of the function that generated the form.
|
1702 |
*
|
1703 |
* @see hook_form_alter()
|
1704 |
* @see hook_form_BASE_FORM_ID_alter()
|
1705 |
* @see drupal_prepare_form()
|
1706 |
* @see forms_api_reference.html
|
1707 |
*/
|
1708 |
function hook_form_FORM_ID_alter(&$form, &$form_state, $form_id) { |
1709 |
// Modification for the form with the given form ID goes here. For example, if
|
1710 |
// FORM_ID is "user_register_form" this code would run only on the user
|
1711 |
// registration form.
|
1712 |
|
1713 |
// Add a checkbox to registration form about agreeing to terms of use.
|
1714 |
$form['terms_of_use'] = array( |
1715 |
'#type' => 'checkbox', |
1716 |
'#title' => t("I agree with the website's terms and conditions."), |
1717 |
'#required' => TRUE, |
1718 |
); |
1719 |
} |
1720 |
|
1721 |
/**
|
1722 |
* Provide a form-specific alteration for shared ('base') forms.
|
1723 |
*
|
1724 |
* By default, when drupal_get_form() is called, Drupal looks for a function
|
1725 |
* with the same name as the form ID, and uses that function to build the form.
|
1726 |
* In contrast, base forms allow multiple form IDs to be mapped to a single base
|
1727 |
* (also called 'factory') form function.
|
1728 |
*
|
1729 |
* Modules can implement hook_form_BASE_FORM_ID_alter() to modify a specific
|
1730 |
* base form, rather than implementing hook_form_alter() and checking for
|
1731 |
* conditions that would identify the shared form constructor.
|
1732 |
*
|
1733 |
* To identify the base form ID for a particular form (or to determine whether
|
1734 |
* one exists) check the $form_state. The base form ID is stored under
|
1735 |
* $form_state['build_info']['base_form_id'].
|
1736 |
*
|
1737 |
* See hook_forms() for more information on how to implement base forms in
|
1738 |
* Drupal.
|
1739 |
*
|
1740 |
* Form alter hooks are called in the following order: hook_form_alter(),
|
1741 |
* hook_form_BASE_FORM_ID_alter(), hook_form_FORM_ID_alter(). See
|
1742 |
* hook_form_alter() for more details.
|
1743 |
*
|
1744 |
* @param $form
|
1745 |
* Nested array of form elements that comprise the form.
|
1746 |
* @param $form_state
|
1747 |
* A keyed array containing the current state of the form.
|
1748 |
* @param $form_id
|
1749 |
* String representing the name of the form itself. Typically this is the
|
1750 |
* name of the function that generated the form.
|
1751 |
*
|
1752 |
* @see hook_form_alter()
|
1753 |
* @see hook_form_FORM_ID_alter()
|
1754 |
* @see drupal_prepare_form()
|
1755 |
* @see hook_forms()
|
1756 |
*/
|
1757 |
function hook_form_BASE_FORM_ID_alter(&$form, &$form_state, $form_id) { |
1758 |
// Modification for the form with the given BASE_FORM_ID goes here. For
|
1759 |
// example, if BASE_FORM_ID is "node_form", this code would run on every
|
1760 |
// node form, regardless of node type.
|
1761 |
|
1762 |
// Add a checkbox to the node form about agreeing to terms of use.
|
1763 |
$form['terms_of_use'] = array( |
1764 |
'#type' => 'checkbox', |
1765 |
'#title' => t("I agree with the website's terms and conditions."), |
1766 |
'#required' => TRUE, |
1767 |
); |
1768 |
} |
1769 |
|
1770 |
/**
|
1771 |
* Map form_ids to form builder functions.
|
1772 |
*
|
1773 |
* By default, when drupal_get_form() is called, the system will look for a
|
1774 |
* function with the same name as the form ID, and use that function to build
|
1775 |
* the form. If no such function is found, Drupal calls this hook. Modules
|
1776 |
* implementing this hook can then provide their own instructions for mapping
|
1777 |
* form IDs to constructor functions. As a result, you can easily map multiple
|
1778 |
* form IDs to a single form constructor (referred to as a 'base' form).
|
1779 |
*
|
1780 |
* Using a base form can help to avoid code duplication, by allowing many
|
1781 |
* similar forms to use the same code base. Another benefit is that it becomes
|
1782 |
* much easier for other modules to apply a general change to the group of
|
1783 |
* forms; hook_form_BASE_FORM_ID_alter() can be used to easily alter multiple
|
1784 |
* forms at once by directly targeting the shared base form.
|
1785 |
*
|
1786 |
* Two example use cases where base forms may be useful are given below.
|
1787 |
*
|
1788 |
* First, you can use this hook to tell the form system to use a different
|
1789 |
* function to build certain forms in your module; this is often used to define
|
1790 |
* a form "factory" function that is used to build several similar forms. In
|
1791 |
* this case, your hook implementation will likely ignore all of the input
|
1792 |
* arguments. See node_forms() for an example of this. Note, node_forms() is the
|
1793 |
* hook_forms() implementation; the base form itself is defined in node_form().
|
1794 |
*
|
1795 |
* Second, you could use this hook to define how to build a form with a
|
1796 |
* dynamically-generated form ID. In this case, you would need to verify that
|
1797 |
* the $form_id input matched your module's format for dynamically-generated
|
1798 |
* form IDs, and if so, act appropriately.
|
1799 |
*
|
1800 |
* @param $form_id
|
1801 |
* The unique string identifying the desired form.
|
1802 |
* @param $args
|
1803 |
* An array containing the original arguments provided to drupal_get_form()
|
1804 |
* or drupal_form_submit(). These are always passed to the form builder and
|
1805 |
* do not have to be specified manually in 'callback arguments'.
|
1806 |
*
|
1807 |
* @return
|
1808 |
* An associative array whose keys define form_ids and whose values are an
|
1809 |
* associative array defining the following keys:
|
1810 |
* - callback: The name of the form builder function to invoke. This will be
|
1811 |
* used for the base form ID, for example, to target a base form using
|
1812 |
* hook_form_BASE_FORM_ID_alter().
|
1813 |
* - callback arguments: (optional) Additional arguments to pass to the
|
1814 |
* function defined in 'callback', which are prepended to $args.
|
1815 |
* - wrapper_callback: (optional) The name of a form builder function to
|
1816 |
* invoke before the form builder defined in 'callback' is invoked. This
|
1817 |
* wrapper callback may prepopulate the $form array with form elements,
|
1818 |
* which will then be already contained in the $form that is passed on to
|
1819 |
* the form builder defined in 'callback'. For example, a wrapper callback
|
1820 |
* could setup wizard-alike form buttons that are the same for a variety of
|
1821 |
* forms that belong to the wizard, which all share the same wrapper
|
1822 |
* callback.
|
1823 |
*/
|
1824 |
function hook_forms($form_id, $args) { |
1825 |
// Simply reroute the (non-existing) $form_id 'mymodule_first_form' to
|
1826 |
// 'mymodule_main_form'.
|
1827 |
$forms['mymodule_first_form'] = array( |
1828 |
'callback' => 'mymodule_main_form', |
1829 |
); |
1830 |
|
1831 |
// Reroute the $form_id and prepend an additional argument that gets passed to
|
1832 |
// the 'mymodule_main_form' form builder function.
|
1833 |
$forms['mymodule_second_form'] = array( |
1834 |
'callback' => 'mymodule_main_form', |
1835 |
'callback arguments' => array('some parameter'), |
1836 |
); |
1837 |
|
1838 |
// Reroute the $form_id, but invoke the form builder function
|
1839 |
// 'mymodule_main_form_wrapper' first, so we can prepopulate the $form array
|
1840 |
// that is passed to the actual form builder 'mymodule_main_form'.
|
1841 |
$forms['mymodule_wrapped_form'] = array( |
1842 |
'callback' => 'mymodule_main_form', |
1843 |
'wrapper_callback' => 'mymodule_main_form_wrapper', |
1844 |
); |
1845 |
|
1846 |
return $forms; |
1847 |
} |
1848 |
|
1849 |
/**
|
1850 |
* Perform setup tasks for all page requests.
|
1851 |
*
|
1852 |
* This hook is run at the beginning of the page request. It is typically
|
1853 |
* used to set up global parameters that are needed later in the request.
|
1854 |
*
|
1855 |
* Only use this hook if your code must run even for cached page views. This
|
1856 |
* hook is called before the theme, modules, or most include files are loaded
|
1857 |
* into memory. It happens while Drupal is still in bootstrap mode.
|
1858 |
*
|
1859 |
* @see hook_init()
|
1860 |
*/
|
1861 |
function hook_boot() { |
1862 |
// We need user_access() in the shutdown function. Make sure it gets loaded.
|
1863 |
drupal_load('module', 'user'); |
1864 |
drupal_register_shutdown_function('devel_shutdown');
|
1865 |
} |
1866 |
|
1867 |
/**
|
1868 |
* Perform setup tasks for non-cached page requests.
|
1869 |
*
|
1870 |
* This hook is run at the beginning of the page request. It is typically
|
1871 |
* used to set up global parameters that are needed later in the request.
|
1872 |
* When this hook is called, the theme and all modules are already loaded in
|
1873 |
* memory.
|
1874 |
*
|
1875 |
* This hook is not run on cached pages.
|
1876 |
*
|
1877 |
* To add CSS or JS that should be present on all pages, modules should not
|
1878 |
* implement this hook, but declare these files in their .info file.
|
1879 |
*
|
1880 |
* @see hook_boot()
|
1881 |
*/
|
1882 |
function hook_init() { |
1883 |
// Since this file should only be loaded on the front page, it cannot be
|
1884 |
// declared in the info file.
|
1885 |
if (drupal_is_front_page()) {
|
1886 |
drupal_add_css(drupal_get_path('module', 'foo') . '/foo.css'); |
1887 |
} |
1888 |
} |
1889 |
|
1890 |
/**
|
1891 |
* Define image toolkits provided by this module.
|
1892 |
*
|
1893 |
* The file which includes each toolkit's functions must be declared as part of
|
1894 |
* the files array in the module .info file so that the registry will find and
|
1895 |
* parse it.
|
1896 |
*
|
1897 |
* The toolkit's functions must be named image_toolkitname_operation().
|
1898 |
* where the operation may be:
|
1899 |
* - 'load': Required. See image_gd_load() for usage.
|
1900 |
* - 'save': Required. See image_gd_save() for usage.
|
1901 |
* - 'settings': Optional. See image_gd_settings() for usage.
|
1902 |
* - 'resize': Optional. See image_gd_resize() for usage.
|
1903 |
* - 'rotate': Optional. See image_gd_rotate() for usage.
|
1904 |
* - 'crop': Optional. See image_gd_crop() for usage.
|
1905 |
* - 'desaturate': Optional. See image_gd_desaturate() for usage.
|
1906 |
*
|
1907 |
* @return
|
1908 |
* An array with the toolkit name as keys and sub-arrays with these keys:
|
1909 |
* - 'title': A string with the toolkit's title.
|
1910 |
* - 'available': A Boolean value to indicate that the toolkit is operating
|
1911 |
* properly, e.g. all required libraries exist.
|
1912 |
*
|
1913 |
* @see system_image_toolkits()
|
1914 |
*/
|
1915 |
function hook_image_toolkits() { |
1916 |
return array( |
1917 |
'working' => array( |
1918 |
'title' => t('A toolkit that works.'), |
1919 |
'available' => TRUE, |
1920 |
), |
1921 |
'broken' => array( |
1922 |
'title' => t('A toolkit that is "broken" and will not be listed.'), |
1923 |
'available' => FALSE, |
1924 |
), |
1925 |
); |
1926 |
} |
1927 |
|
1928 |
/**
|
1929 |
* Alter an email message created with the drupal_mail() function.
|
1930 |
*
|
1931 |
* hook_mail_alter() allows modification of email messages created and sent
|
1932 |
* with drupal_mail(). Usage examples include adding and/or changing message
|
1933 |
* text, message fields, and message headers.
|
1934 |
*
|
1935 |
* Email messages sent using functions other than drupal_mail() will not
|
1936 |
* invoke hook_mail_alter(). For example, a contributed module directly
|
1937 |
* calling the drupal_mail_system()->mail() or PHP mail() function
|
1938 |
* will not invoke this hook. All core modules use drupal_mail() for
|
1939 |
* messaging, it is best practice but not mandatory in contributed modules.
|
1940 |
*
|
1941 |
* @param $message
|
1942 |
* An array containing the message data. Keys in this array include:
|
1943 |
* - 'id':
|
1944 |
* The drupal_mail() id of the message. Look at module source code or
|
1945 |
* drupal_mail() for possible id values.
|
1946 |
* - 'to':
|
1947 |
* The address or addresses the message will be sent to. The formatting of
|
1948 |
* this string will be validated with the
|
1949 |
* @link http://php.net/manual/filter.filters.validate.php PHP e-mail validation filter. @endlink
|
1950 |
* - 'from':
|
1951 |
* The address the message will be marked as being from, which is
|
1952 |
* either a custom address or the site-wide default email address.
|
1953 |
* - 'subject':
|
1954 |
* Subject of the email to be sent. This must not contain any newline
|
1955 |
* characters, or the email may not be sent properly.
|
1956 |
* - 'body':
|
1957 |
* An array of strings containing the message text. The message body is
|
1958 |
* created by concatenating the individual array strings into a single text
|
1959 |
* string using "\n\n" as a separator.
|
1960 |
* - 'headers':
|
1961 |
* Associative array containing mail headers, such as From, Sender,
|
1962 |
* MIME-Version, Content-Type, etc.
|
1963 |
* - 'params':
|
1964 |
* An array of optional parameters supplied by the caller of drupal_mail()
|
1965 |
* that is used to build the message before hook_mail_alter() is invoked.
|
1966 |
* - 'language':
|
1967 |
* The language object used to build the message before hook_mail_alter()
|
1968 |
* is invoked.
|
1969 |
* - 'send':
|
1970 |
* Set to FALSE to abort sending this email message.
|
1971 |
*
|
1972 |
* @see drupal_mail()
|
1973 |
*/
|
1974 |
function hook_mail_alter(&$message) { |
1975 |
if ($message['id'] == 'modulename_messagekey') { |
1976 |
if (!example_notifications_optin($message['to'], $message['id'])) { |
1977 |
// If the recipient has opted to not receive such messages, cancel
|
1978 |
// sending.
|
1979 |
$message['send'] = FALSE; |
1980 |
return;
|
1981 |
} |
1982 |
$message['body'][] = "--\nMail sent out from " . variable_get('site_name', t('Drupal')); |
1983 |
} |
1984 |
} |
1985 |
|
1986 |
/**
|
1987 |
* Alter the registry of modules implementing a hook.
|
1988 |
*
|
1989 |
* This hook is invoked during module_implements(). A module may implement this
|
1990 |
* hook in order to reorder the implementing modules, which are otherwise
|
1991 |
* ordered by the module's system weight.
|
1992 |
*
|
1993 |
* Note that hooks invoked using drupal_alter() can have multiple variations
|
1994 |
* (such as hook_form_alter() and hook_form_FORM_ID_alter()). drupal_alter()
|
1995 |
* will call all such variants defined by a single module in turn. For the
|
1996 |
* purposes of hook_module_implements_alter(), these variants are treated as
|
1997 |
* a single hook. Thus, to ensure that your implementation of
|
1998 |
* hook_form_FORM_ID_alter() is called at the right time, you will have to
|
1999 |
* change the order of hook_form_alter() implementation in
|
2000 |
* hook_module_implements_alter().
|
2001 |
*
|
2002 |
* @param $implementations
|
2003 |
* An array keyed by the module's name. The value of each item corresponds
|
2004 |
* to a $group, which is usually FALSE, unless the implementation is in a
|
2005 |
* file named $module.$group.inc.
|
2006 |
* @param $hook
|
2007 |
* The name of the module hook being implemented.
|
2008 |
*/
|
2009 |
function hook_module_implements_alter(&$implementations, $hook) { |
2010 |
if ($hook == 'rdf_mapping') { |
2011 |
// Move my_module_rdf_mapping() to the end of the list. module_implements()
|
2012 |
// iterates through $implementations with a foreach loop which PHP iterates
|
2013 |
// in the order that the items were added, so to move an item to the end of
|
2014 |
// the array, we remove it and then add it.
|
2015 |
$group = $implementations['my_module']; |
2016 |
unset($implementations['my_module']); |
2017 |
$implementations['my_module'] = $group; |
2018 |
} |
2019 |
} |
2020 |
|
2021 |
/**
|
2022 |
* Return additional themes provided by modules.
|
2023 |
*
|
2024 |
* Only use this hook for testing purposes. Use a hidden MYMODULE_test.module
|
2025 |
* to implement this hook. Testing themes should be hidden, too.
|
2026 |
*
|
2027 |
* This hook is invoked from _system_rebuild_theme_data() and allows modules to
|
2028 |
* register additional themes outside of the regular 'themes' directories of a
|
2029 |
* Drupal installation.
|
2030 |
*
|
2031 |
* @return
|
2032 |
* An associative array. Each key is the system name of a theme and each value
|
2033 |
* is the corresponding path to the theme's .info file.
|
2034 |
*/
|
2035 |
function hook_system_theme_info() { |
2036 |
$themes['mymodule_test_theme'] = drupal_get_path('module', 'mymodule') . '/mymodule_test_theme/mymodule_test_theme.info'; |
2037 |
return $themes; |
2038 |
} |
2039 |
|
2040 |
/**
|
2041 |
* Alter the information parsed from module and theme .info files
|
2042 |
*
|
2043 |
* This hook is invoked in _system_rebuild_module_data() and in
|
2044 |
* _system_rebuild_theme_data(). A module may implement this hook in order to
|
2045 |
* add to or alter the data generated by reading the .info file with
|
2046 |
* drupal_parse_info_file().
|
2047 |
*
|
2048 |
* @param $info
|
2049 |
* The .info file contents, passed by reference so that it can be altered.
|
2050 |
* @param $file
|
2051 |
* Full information about the module or theme, including $file->name, and
|
2052 |
* $file->filename
|
2053 |
* @param $type
|
2054 |
* Either 'module' or 'theme', depending on the type of .info file that was
|
2055 |
* passed.
|
2056 |
*/
|
2057 |
function hook_system_info_alter(&$info, $file, $type) { |
2058 |
// Only fill this in if the .info file does not define a 'datestamp'.
|
2059 |
if (empty($info['datestamp'])) { |
2060 |
$info['datestamp'] = filemtime($file->filename); |
2061 |
} |
2062 |
} |
2063 |
|
2064 |
/**
|
2065 |
* Define user permissions.
|
2066 |
*
|
2067 |
* This hook can supply permissions that the module defines, so that they
|
2068 |
* can be selected on the user permissions page and used to grant or restrict
|
2069 |
* access to actions the module performs.
|
2070 |
*
|
2071 |
* Permissions are checked using user_access().
|
2072 |
*
|
2073 |
* For a detailed usage example, see page_example.module.
|
2074 |
*
|
2075 |
* @return
|
2076 |
* An array whose keys are permission names and whose corresponding values
|
2077 |
* are arrays containing the following key-value pairs:
|
2078 |
* - title: The human-readable name of the permission, to be shown on the
|
2079 |
* permission administration page. This should be wrapped in the t()
|
2080 |
* function so it can be translated.
|
2081 |
* - description: (optional) A description of what the permission does. This
|
2082 |
* should be wrapped in the t() function so it can be translated.
|
2083 |
* - restrict access: (optional) A boolean which can be set to TRUE to
|
2084 |
* indicate that site administrators should restrict access to this
|
2085 |
* permission to trusted users. This should be used for permissions that
|
2086 |
* have inherent security risks across a variety of potential use cases
|
2087 |
* (for example, the "administer filters" and "bypass node access"
|
2088 |
* permissions provided by Drupal core). When set to TRUE, a standard
|
2089 |
* warning message defined in user_admin_permissions() and output via
|
2090 |
* theme_user_permission_description() will be associated with the
|
2091 |
* permission and displayed with it on the permission administration page.
|
2092 |
* Defaults to FALSE.
|
2093 |
* - warning: (optional) A translated warning message to display for this
|
2094 |
* permission on the permission administration page. This warning overrides
|
2095 |
* the automatic warning generated by 'restrict access' being set to TRUE.
|
2096 |
* This should rarely be used, since it is important for all permissions to
|
2097 |
* have a clear, consistent security warning that is the same across the
|
2098 |
* site. Use the 'description' key instead to provide any information that
|
2099 |
* is specific to the permission you are defining.
|
2100 |
*
|
2101 |
* @see theme_user_permission_description()
|
2102 |
*/
|
2103 |
function hook_permission() { |
2104 |
return array( |
2105 |
'administer my module' => array( |
2106 |
'title' => t('Administer my module'), |
2107 |
'description' => t('Perform administration tasks for my module.'), |
2108 |
), |
2109 |
); |
2110 |
} |
2111 |
|
2112 |
/**
|
2113 |
* Provide online user help.
|
2114 |
*
|
2115 |
* By implementing hook_help(), a module can make documentation available to
|
2116 |
* the user for the module as a whole, or for specific paths. Help for
|
2117 |
* developers should usually be provided via function header comments in the
|
2118 |
* code, or in special API example files.
|
2119 |
*
|
2120 |
* The page-specific help information provided by this hook appears as a system
|
2121 |
* help block on that page. The module overview help information is displayed
|
2122 |
* by the Help module. It can be accessed from the page at admin/help or from
|
2123 |
* the Modules page.
|
2124 |
*
|
2125 |
* For detailed usage examples of:
|
2126 |
* - Module overview help, see node_help(). Module overview help should follow
|
2127 |
* @link https://drupal.org/node/632280 the standard help template. @endlink
|
2128 |
* - Page-specific help with simple paths, see dashboard_help().
|
2129 |
* - Page-specific help using wildcards in path and $arg, see node_help()
|
2130 |
* and block_help().
|
2131 |
*
|
2132 |
* @param $path
|
2133 |
* The router menu path, as defined in hook_menu(), for the help that is
|
2134 |
* being requested; e.g., 'admin/people' or 'user/register'. If the router
|
2135 |
* path includes a wildcard, then this will appear in $path as %, even if it
|
2136 |
* is a named %autoloader wildcard in the hook_menu() implementation; for
|
2137 |
* example, node pages would have $path equal to 'node/%' or 'node/%/view'.
|
2138 |
* For the help page for the module as a whole, $path will have the value
|
2139 |
* 'admin/help#module_name', where 'module_name" is the machine name of your
|
2140 |
* module.
|
2141 |
* @param $arg
|
2142 |
* An array that corresponds to the return value of the arg() function, for
|
2143 |
* modules that want to provide help that is specific to certain values
|
2144 |
* of wildcards in $path. For example, you could provide help for the path
|
2145 |
* 'user/1' by looking for the path 'user/%' and $arg[1] == '1'. This given
|
2146 |
* array should always be used rather than directly invoking arg(), because
|
2147 |
* your hook implementation may be called for other purposes besides building
|
2148 |
* the current page's help. Note that depending on which module is invoking
|
2149 |
* hook_help, $arg may contain only empty strings. Regardless, $arg[0] to
|
2150 |
* $arg[11] will always be set.
|
2151 |
*
|
2152 |
* @return
|
2153 |
* A localized string containing the help text.
|
2154 |
*/
|
2155 |
function hook_help($path, $arg) { |
2156 |
switch ($path) { |
2157 |
// Main module help for the block module
|
2158 |
case 'admin/help#block': |
2159 |
return '<p>' . t('Blocks are boxes of content rendered into an area, or region, of a web page. The default theme Bartik, for example, implements the regions "Sidebar first", "Sidebar second", "Featured", "Content", "Header", "Footer", etc., and a block may appear in any one of these areas. The <a href="@blocks">blocks administration page</a> provides a drag-and-drop interface for assigning a block to a region, and for controlling the order of blocks within regions.', array('@blocks' => url('admin/structure/block'))) . '</p>'; |
2160 |
|
2161 |
// Help for another path in the block module
|
2162 |
case 'admin/structure/block': |
2163 |
return '<p>' . t('This page provides a drag-and-drop interface for assigning a block to a region, and for controlling the order of blocks within regions. Since not all themes implement the same regions, or display regions in the same way, blocks are positioned on a per-theme basis. Remember that your changes will not be saved until you click the <em>Save blocks</em> button at the bottom of the page.') . '</p>'; |
2164 |
} |
2165 |
} |
2166 |
|
2167 |
/**
|
2168 |
* Register a module (or theme's) theme implementations.
|
2169 |
*
|
2170 |
* The implementations declared by this hook have two purposes: either they
|
2171 |
* specify how a particular render array is to be rendered as HTML (this is
|
2172 |
* usually the case if the theme function is assigned to the render array's
|
2173 |
* #theme property), or they return the HTML that should be returned by an
|
2174 |
* invocation of theme(). See
|
2175 |
* @link http://drupal.org/node/933976 Using the theme layer Drupal 7.x @endlink
|
2176 |
* for more information on how to implement theme hooks.
|
2177 |
*
|
2178 |
* The following parameters are all optional.
|
2179 |
*
|
2180 |
* @param array $existing
|
2181 |
* An array of existing implementations that may be used for override
|
2182 |
* purposes. This is primarily useful for themes that may wish to examine
|
2183 |
* existing implementations to extract data (such as arguments) so that
|
2184 |
* it may properly register its own, higher priority implementations.
|
2185 |
* @param $type
|
2186 |
* Whether a theme, module, etc. is being processed. This is primarily useful
|
2187 |
* so that themes tell if they are the actual theme being called or a parent
|
2188 |
* theme. May be one of:
|
2189 |
* - 'module': A module is being checked for theme implementations.
|
2190 |
* - 'base_theme_engine': A theme engine is being checked for a theme that is
|
2191 |
* a parent of the actual theme being used.
|
2192 |
* - 'theme_engine': A theme engine is being checked for the actual theme
|
2193 |
* being used.
|
2194 |
* - 'base_theme': A base theme is being checked for theme implementations.
|
2195 |
* - 'theme': The actual theme in use is being checked.
|
2196 |
* @param $theme
|
2197 |
* The actual name of theme, module, etc. that is being being processed.
|
2198 |
* @param $path
|
2199 |
* The directory path of the theme or module, so that it doesn't need to be
|
2200 |
* looked up.
|
2201 |
*
|
2202 |
* @return array
|
2203 |
* An associative array of theme hook information. The keys on the outer
|
2204 |
* array are the internal names of the hooks, and the values are arrays
|
2205 |
* containing information about the hook. Each information array must contain
|
2206 |
* either a 'variables' element or a 'render element' element, but not both.
|
2207 |
* Use 'render element' if you are theming a single element or element tree
|
2208 |
* composed of elements, such as a form array, a page array, or a single
|
2209 |
* checkbox element. Use 'variables' if your theme implementation is
|
2210 |
* intended to be called directly through theme() and has multiple arguments
|
2211 |
* for the data and style; in this case, the variables not supplied by the
|
2212 |
* calling function will be given default values and passed to the template
|
2213 |
* or theme function. The returned theme information array can contain the
|
2214 |
* following key/value pairs:
|
2215 |
* - variables: (see above) Each array key is the name of the variable, and
|
2216 |
* the value given is used as the default value if the function calling
|
2217 |
* theme() does not supply it. Template implementations receive each array
|
2218 |
* key as a variable in the template file (so they must be legal PHP
|
2219 |
* variable names). Function implementations are passed the variables in a
|
2220 |
* single $variables function argument.
|
2221 |
* - render element: (see above) The name of the renderable element or element
|
2222 |
* tree to pass to the theme function. This name is used as the name of the
|
2223 |
* variable that holds the renderable element or tree in preprocess and
|
2224 |
* process functions.
|
2225 |
* - file: The file the implementation resides in. This file will be included
|
2226 |
* prior to the theme being rendered, to make sure that the function or
|
2227 |
* preprocess function (as needed) is actually loaded; this makes it
|
2228 |
* possible to split theme functions out into separate files quite easily.
|
2229 |
* - path: Override the path of the file to be used. Ordinarily the module or
|
2230 |
* theme path will be used, but if the file will not be in the default
|
2231 |
* path, include it here. This path should be relative to the Drupal root
|
2232 |
* directory.
|
2233 |
* - template: If specified, this theme implementation is a template, and
|
2234 |
* this is the template file without an extension. Do not put .tpl.php on
|
2235 |
* this file; that extension will be added automatically by the default
|
2236 |
* rendering engine (which is PHPTemplate). If 'path', above, is specified,
|
2237 |
* the template should also be in this path.
|
2238 |
* - function: If specified, this will be the function name to invoke for
|
2239 |
* this implementation. If neither 'template' nor 'function' is specified,
|
2240 |
* a default function name will be assumed. For example, if a module
|
2241 |
* registers the 'node' theme hook, 'theme_node' will be assigned to its
|
2242 |
* function. If the chameleon theme registers the node hook, it will be
|
2243 |
* assigned 'chameleon_node' as its function.
|
2244 |
* - base hook: A string declaring the base theme hook if this theme
|
2245 |
* implementation is actually implementing a suggestion for another theme
|
2246 |
* hook.
|
2247 |
* - pattern: A regular expression pattern to be used to allow this theme
|
2248 |
* implementation to have a dynamic name. The convention is to use __ to
|
2249 |
* differentiate the dynamic portion of the theme. For example, to allow
|
2250 |
* forums to be themed individually, the pattern might be: 'forum__'. Then,
|
2251 |
* when the forum is themed, call:
|
2252 |
* @code
|
2253 |
* theme(array('forum__' . $tid, 'forum'), $forum)
|
2254 |
* @endcode
|
2255 |
* - preprocess functions: A list of functions used to preprocess this data.
|
2256 |
* Ordinarily this won't be used; it's automatically filled in. By default,
|
2257 |
* for a module this will be filled in as template_preprocess_HOOK. For
|
2258 |
* a theme this will be filled in as phptemplate_preprocess and
|
2259 |
* phptemplate_preprocess_HOOK as well as themename_preprocess and
|
2260 |
* themename_preprocess_HOOK.
|
2261 |
* - override preprocess functions: Set to TRUE when a theme does NOT want
|
2262 |
* the standard preprocess functions to run. This can be used to give a
|
2263 |
* theme FULL control over how variables are set. For example, if a theme
|
2264 |
* wants total control over how certain variables in the page.tpl.php are
|
2265 |
* set, this can be set to true. Please keep in mind that when this is used
|
2266 |
* by a theme, that theme becomes responsible for making sure necessary
|
2267 |
* variables are set.
|
2268 |
* - type: (automatically derived) Where the theme hook is defined:
|
2269 |
* 'module', 'theme_engine', or 'theme'.
|
2270 |
* - theme path: (automatically derived) The directory path of the theme or
|
2271 |
* module, so that it doesn't need to be looked up.
|
2272 |
*
|
2273 |
* @see hook_theme_registry_alter()
|
2274 |
*/
|
2275 |
function hook_theme($existing, $type, $theme, $path) { |
2276 |
return array( |
2277 |
'forum_display' => array( |
2278 |
'variables' => array('forums' => NULL, 'topics' => NULL, 'parents' => NULL, 'tid' => NULL, 'sortby' => NULL, 'forum_per_page' => NULL), |
2279 |
), |
2280 |
'forum_list' => array( |
2281 |
'variables' => array('forums' => NULL, 'parents' => NULL, 'tid' => NULL), |
2282 |
), |
2283 |
'forum_topic_list' => array( |
2284 |
'variables' => array('tid' => NULL, 'topics' => NULL, 'sortby' => NULL, 'forum_per_page' => NULL), |
2285 |
), |
2286 |
'forum_icon' => array( |
2287 |
'variables' => array('new_posts' => NULL, 'num_posts' => 0, 'comment_mode' => 0, 'sticky' => 0), |
2288 |
), |
2289 |
'status_report' => array( |
2290 |
'render element' => 'requirements', |
2291 |
'file' => 'system.admin.inc', |
2292 |
), |
2293 |
'system_date_time_settings' => array( |
2294 |
'render element' => 'form', |
2295 |
'file' => 'system.admin.inc', |
2296 |
), |
2297 |
); |
2298 |
} |
2299 |
|
2300 |
/**
|
2301 |
* Alter the theme registry information returned from hook_theme().
|
2302 |
*
|
2303 |
* The theme registry stores information about all available theme hooks,
|
2304 |
* including which callback functions those hooks will call when triggered,
|
2305 |
* what template files are exposed by these hooks, and so on.
|
2306 |
*
|
2307 |
* Note that this hook is only executed as the theme cache is re-built.
|
2308 |
* Changes here will not be visible until the next cache clear.
|
2309 |
*
|
2310 |
* The $theme_registry array is keyed by theme hook name, and contains the
|
2311 |
* information returned from hook_theme(), as well as additional properties
|
2312 |
* added by _theme_process_registry().
|
2313 |
*
|
2314 |
* For example:
|
2315 |
* @code
|
2316 |
* $theme_registry['user_profile'] = array(
|
2317 |
* 'variables' => array(
|
2318 |
* 'account' => NULL,
|
2319 |
* ),
|
2320 |
* 'template' => 'modules/user/user-profile',
|
2321 |
* 'file' => 'modules/user/user.pages.inc',
|
2322 |
* 'type' => 'module',
|
2323 |
* 'theme path' => 'modules/user',
|
2324 |
* 'preprocess functions' => array(
|
2325 |
* 0 => 'template_preprocess',
|
2326 |
* 1 => 'template_preprocess_user_profile',
|
2327 |
* ),
|
2328 |
* );
|
2329 |
* @endcode
|
2330 |
*
|
2331 |
* @param $theme_registry
|
2332 |
* The entire cache of theme registry information, post-processing.
|
2333 |
*
|
2334 |
* @see hook_theme()
|
2335 |
* @see _theme_process_registry()
|
2336 |
*/
|
2337 |
function hook_theme_registry_alter(&$theme_registry) { |
2338 |
// Kill the next/previous forum topic navigation links.
|
2339 |
foreach ($theme_registry['forum_topic_navigation']['preprocess functions'] as $key => $value) { |
2340 |
if ($value == 'template_preprocess_forum_topic_navigation') { |
2341 |
unset($theme_registry['forum_topic_navigation']['preprocess functions'][$key]); |
2342 |
} |
2343 |
} |
2344 |
} |
2345 |
|
2346 |
/**
|
2347 |
* Return the machine-readable name of the theme to use for the current page.
|
2348 |
*
|
2349 |
* This hook can be used to dynamically set the theme for the current page
|
2350 |
* request. It should be used by modules which need to override the theme
|
2351 |
* based on dynamic conditions (for example, a module which allows the theme to
|
2352 |
* be set based on the current user's role). The return value of this hook will
|
2353 |
* be used on all pages except those which have a valid per-page or per-section
|
2354 |
* theme set via a theme callback function in hook_menu(); the themes on those
|
2355 |
* pages can only be overridden using hook_menu_alter().
|
2356 |
*
|
2357 |
* Note that returning different themes for the same path may not work with page
|
2358 |
* caching. This is most likely to be a problem if an anonymous user on a given
|
2359 |
* path could have different themes returned under different conditions.
|
2360 |
*
|
2361 |
* Since only one theme can be used at a time, the last (i.e., highest
|
2362 |
* weighted) module which returns a valid theme name from this hook will
|
2363 |
* prevail.
|
2364 |
*
|
2365 |
* @return
|
2366 |
* The machine-readable name of the theme that should be used for the current
|
2367 |
* page request. The value returned from this function will only have an
|
2368 |
* effect if it corresponds to a currently-active theme on the site. Do not
|
2369 |
* return a value if you do not wish to set a custom theme.
|
2370 |
*/
|
2371 |
function hook_custom_theme() { |
2372 |
// Allow the user to request a particular theme via a query parameter.
|
2373 |
if (isset($_GET['theme'])) { |
2374 |
return $_GET['theme']; |
2375 |
} |
2376 |
} |
2377 |
|
2378 |
/**
|
2379 |
* Register XML-RPC callbacks.
|
2380 |
*
|
2381 |
* This hook lets a module register callback functions to be called when
|
2382 |
* particular XML-RPC methods are invoked by a client.
|
2383 |
*
|
2384 |
* @return
|
2385 |
* An array which maps XML-RPC methods to Drupal functions. Each array
|
2386 |
* element is either a pair of method => function or an array with four
|
2387 |
* entries:
|
2388 |
* - The XML-RPC method name (for example, module.function).
|
2389 |
* - The Drupal callback function (for example, module_function).
|
2390 |
* - The method signature is an array of XML-RPC types. The first element
|
2391 |
* of this array is the type of return value and then you should write a
|
2392 |
* list of the types of the parameters. XML-RPC types are the following
|
2393 |
* (See the types at http://www.xmlrpc.com/spec):
|
2394 |
* - "boolean": 0 (false) or 1 (true).
|
2395 |
* - "double": a floating point number (for example, -12.214).
|
2396 |
* - "int": a integer number (for example, -12).
|
2397 |
* - "array": an array without keys (for example, array(1, 2, 3)).
|
2398 |
* - "struct": an associative array or an object (for example,
|
2399 |
* array('one' => 1, 'two' => 2)).
|
2400 |
* - "date": when you return a date, then you may either return a
|
2401 |
* timestamp (time(), mktime() etc.) or an ISO8601 timestamp. When
|
2402 |
* date is specified as an input parameter, then you get an object,
|
2403 |
* which is described in the function xmlrpc_date
|
2404 |
* - "base64": a string containing binary data, automatically
|
2405 |
* encoded/decoded automatically.
|
2406 |
* - "string": anything else, typically a string.
|
2407 |
* - A descriptive help string, enclosed in a t() function for translation
|
2408 |
* purposes.
|
2409 |
* Both forms are shown in the example.
|
2410 |
*/
|
2411 |
function hook_xmlrpc() { |
2412 |
return array( |
2413 |
'drupal.login' => 'drupal_login', |
2414 |
array(
|
2415 |
'drupal.site.ping',
|
2416 |
'drupal_directory_ping',
|
2417 |
array('boolean', 'string', 'string', 'string', 'string', 'string'), |
2418 |
t('Handling ping request'))
|
2419 |
); |
2420 |
} |
2421 |
|
2422 |
/**
|
2423 |
* Alters the definition of XML-RPC methods before they are called.
|
2424 |
*
|
2425 |
* This hook allows modules to modify the callback definition of declared
|
2426 |
* XML-RPC methods, right before they are invoked by a client. Methods may be
|
2427 |
* added, or existing methods may be altered.
|
2428 |
*
|
2429 |
* Note that hook_xmlrpc() supports two distinct and incompatible formats to
|
2430 |
* define a callback, so care must be taken when altering other methods.
|
2431 |
*
|
2432 |
* @param $methods
|
2433 |
* An asssociative array of method callback definitions, as returned from
|
2434 |
* hook_xmlrpc() implementations.
|
2435 |
*
|
2436 |
* @see hook_xmlrpc()
|
2437 |
* @see xmlrpc_server()
|
2438 |
*/
|
2439 |
function hook_xmlrpc_alter(&$methods) { |
2440 |
// Directly change a simple method.
|
2441 |
$methods['drupal.login'] = 'mymodule_login'; |
2442 |
|
2443 |
// Alter complex definitions.
|
2444 |
foreach ($methods as $key => &$method) { |
2445 |
// Skip simple method definitions.
|
2446 |
if (!is_int($key)) { |
2447 |
continue;
|
2448 |
} |
2449 |
// Perform the wanted manipulation.
|
2450 |
if ($method[0] == 'drupal.site.ping') { |
2451 |
$method[1] = 'mymodule_directory_ping'; |
2452 |
} |
2453 |
} |
2454 |
} |
2455 |
|
2456 |
/**
|
2457 |
* Log an event message.
|
2458 |
*
|
2459 |
* This hook allows modules to route log events to custom destinations, such as
|
2460 |
* SMS, Email, pager, syslog, ...etc.
|
2461 |
*
|
2462 |
* @param $log_entry
|
2463 |
* An associative array containing the following keys:
|
2464 |
* - type: The type of message for this entry.
|
2465 |
* - user: The user object for the user who was logged in when the event
|
2466 |
* happened.
|
2467 |
* - uid: The user ID for the user who was logged in when the event happened.
|
2468 |
* - request_uri: The request URI for the page the event happened in.
|
2469 |
* - referer: The page that referred the user to the page where the event
|
2470 |
* occurred.
|
2471 |
* - ip: The IP address where the request for the page came from.
|
2472 |
* - timestamp: The UNIX timestamp of the date/time the event occurred.
|
2473 |
* - severity: The severity of the message; one of the following values as
|
2474 |
* defined in @link http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc3164.html RFC 3164: @endlink
|
2475 |
* - WATCHDOG_EMERGENCY: Emergency, system is unusable.
|
2476 |
* - WATCHDOG_ALERT: Alert, action must be taken immediately.
|
2477 |
* - WATCHDOG_CRITICAL: Critical conditions.
|
2478 |
* - WATCHDOG_ERROR: Error conditions.
|
2479 |
* - WATCHDOG_WARNING: Warning conditions.
|
2480 |
* - WATCHDOG_NOTICE: Normal but significant conditions.
|
2481 |
* - WATCHDOG_INFO: Informational messages.
|
2482 |
* - WATCHDOG_DEBUG: Debug-level messages.
|
2483 |
* - link: An optional link provided by the module that called the watchdog()
|
2484 |
* function.
|
2485 |
* - message: The text of the message to be logged. Variables in the message
|
2486 |
* are indicated by using placeholder strings alongside the variables
|
2487 |
* argument to declare the value of the placeholders. See t() for
|
2488 |
* documentation on how the message and variable parameters interact.
|
2489 |
* - variables: An array of variables to be inserted into the message on
|
2490 |
* display. Will be NULL or missing if a message is already translated or if
|
2491 |
* the message is not possible to translate.
|
2492 |
*/
|
2493 |
function hook_watchdog(array $log_entry) { |
2494 |
global $base_url, $language; |
2495 |
|
2496 |
$severity_list = array( |
2497 |
WATCHDOG_EMERGENCY => t('Emergency'), |
2498 |
WATCHDOG_ALERT => t('Alert'), |
2499 |
WATCHDOG_CRITICAL => t('Critical'), |
2500 |
WATCHDOG_ERROR => t('Error'), |
2501 |
WATCHDOG_WARNING => t('Warning'), |
2502 |
WATCHDOG_NOTICE => t('Notice'), |
2503 |
WATCHDOG_INFO => t('Info'), |
2504 |
WATCHDOG_DEBUG => t('Debug'), |
2505 |
); |
2506 |
|
2507 |
$to = 'someone@example.com'; |
2508 |
$params = array(); |
2509 |
$params['subject'] = t('[@site_name] @severity_desc: Alert from your web site', array( |
2510 |
'@site_name' => variable_get('site_name', 'Drupal'), |
2511 |
'@severity_desc' => $severity_list[$log_entry['severity']], |
2512 |
)); |
2513 |
|
2514 |
$params['message'] = "\nSite: @base_url"; |
2515 |
$params['message'] .= "\nSeverity: (@severity) @severity_desc"; |
2516 |
$params['message'] .= "\nTimestamp: @timestamp"; |
2517 |
$params['message'] .= "\nType: @type"; |
2518 |
$params['message'] .= "\nIP Address: @ip"; |
2519 |
$params['message'] .= "\nRequest URI: @request_uri"; |
2520 |
$params['message'] .= "\nReferrer URI: @referer_uri"; |
2521 |
$params['message'] .= "\nUser: (@uid) @name"; |
2522 |
$params['message'] .= "\nLink: @link"; |
2523 |
$params['message'] .= "\nMessage: \n\n@message"; |
2524 |
|
2525 |
$params['message'] = t($params['message'], array( |
2526 |
'@base_url' => $base_url, |
2527 |
'@severity' => $log_entry['severity'], |
2528 |
'@severity_desc' => $severity_list[$log_entry['severity']], |
2529 |
'@timestamp' => format_date($log_entry['timestamp']), |
2530 |
'@type' => $log_entry['type'], |
2531 |
'@ip' => $log_entry['ip'], |
2532 |
'@request_uri' => $log_entry['request_uri'], |
2533 |
'@referer_uri' => $log_entry['referer'], |
2534 |
'@uid' => $log_entry['uid'], |
2535 |
'@name' => $log_entry['user']->name, |
2536 |
'@link' => strip_tags($log_entry['link']), |
2537 |
'@message' => strip_tags($log_entry['message']), |
2538 |
)); |
2539 |
|
2540 |
drupal_mail('emaillog', 'entry', $to, $language, $params); |
2541 |
} |
2542 |
|
2543 |
/**
|
2544 |
* Prepare a message based on parameters; called from drupal_mail().
|
2545 |
*
|
2546 |
* Note that hook_mail(), unlike hook_mail_alter(), is only called on the
|
2547 |
* $module argument to drupal_mail(), not all modules.
|
2548 |
*
|
2549 |
* @param $key
|
2550 |
* An identifier of the mail.
|
2551 |
* @param $message
|
2552 |
* An array to be filled in. Elements in this array include:
|
2553 |
* - id: An ID to identify the mail sent. Look at module source code
|
2554 |
* or drupal_mail() for possible id values.
|
2555 |
* - to: The address or addresses the message will be sent to. The formatting
|
2556 |
* of this string will be validated with the
|
2557 |
* @link http://php.net/manual/filter.filters.validate.php PHP e-mail validation filter. @endlink
|
2558 |
* - subject: Subject of the e-mail to be sent. This must not contain any
|
2559 |
* newline characters, or the mail may not be sent properly. drupal_mail()
|
2560 |
* sets this to an empty string when the hook is invoked.
|
2561 |
* - body: An array of lines containing the message to be sent. Drupal will
|
2562 |
* format the correct line endings for you. drupal_mail() sets this to an
|
2563 |
* empty array when the hook is invoked.
|
2564 |
* - from: The address the message will be marked as being from, which is
|
2565 |
* set by drupal_mail() to either a custom address or the site-wide
|
2566 |
* default email address when the hook is invoked.
|
2567 |
* - headers: Associative array containing mail headers, such as From,
|
2568 |
* Sender, MIME-Version, Content-Type, etc. drupal_mail() pre-fills
|
2569 |
* several headers in this array.
|
2570 |
* @param $params
|
2571 |
* An array of parameters supplied by the caller of drupal_mail().
|
2572 |
*/
|
2573 |
function hook_mail($key, &$message, $params) { |
2574 |
$account = $params['account']; |
2575 |
$context = $params['context']; |
2576 |
$variables = array( |
2577 |
'%site_name' => variable_get('site_name', 'Drupal'), |
2578 |
'%username' => format_username($account), |
2579 |
); |
2580 |
if ($context['hook'] == 'taxonomy') { |
2581 |
$entity = $params['entity']; |
2582 |
$vocabulary = taxonomy_vocabulary_load($entity->vid); |
2583 |
$variables += array( |
2584 |
'%term_name' => $entity->name, |
2585 |
'%term_description' => $entity->description, |
2586 |
'%term_id' => $entity->tid, |
2587 |
'%vocabulary_name' => $vocabulary->name, |
2588 |
'%vocabulary_description' => $vocabulary->description, |
2589 |
'%vocabulary_id' => $vocabulary->vid, |
2590 |
); |
2591 |
} |
2592 |
|
2593 |
// Node-based variable translation is only available if we have a node.
|
2594 |
if (isset($params['node'])) { |
2595 |
$node = $params['node']; |
2596 |
$variables += array( |
2597 |
'%uid' => $node->uid, |
2598 |
'%node_url' => url('node/' . $node->nid, array('absolute' => TRUE)), |
2599 |
'%node_type' => node_type_get_name($node), |
2600 |
'%title' => $node->title, |
2601 |
'%teaser' => $node->teaser, |
2602 |
'%body' => $node->body, |
2603 |
); |
2604 |
} |
2605 |
$subject = strtr($context['subject'], $variables); |
2606 |
$body = strtr($context['message'], $variables); |
2607 |
$message['subject'] .= str_replace(array("\r", "\n"), '', $subject); |
2608 |
$message['body'][] = drupal_html_to_text($body); |
2609 |
} |
2610 |
|
2611 |
/**
|
2612 |
* Add a list of cache tables to be cleared.
|
2613 |
*
|
2614 |
* This hook allows your module to add cache table names to the list of cache
|
2615 |
* tables that will be cleared by the Clear button on the Performance page or
|
2616 |
* whenever drupal_flush_all_caches is invoked.
|
2617 |
*
|
2618 |
* @return
|
2619 |
* An array of cache table names.
|
2620 |
*
|
2621 |
* @see drupal_flush_all_caches()
|
2622 |
*/
|
2623 |
function hook_flush_caches() { |
2624 |
return array('cache_example'); |
2625 |
} |
2626 |
|
2627 |
/**
|
2628 |
* Perform necessary actions after modules are installed.
|
2629 |
*
|
2630 |
* This function differs from hook_install() in that it gives all other modules
|
2631 |
* a chance to perform actions when a module is installed, whereas
|
2632 |
* hook_install() is only called on the module actually being installed. See
|
2633 |
* module_enable() for a detailed description of the order in which install and
|
2634 |
* enable hooks are invoked.
|
2635 |
*
|
2636 |
* @param $modules
|
2637 |
* An array of the modules that were installed.
|
2638 |
*
|
2639 |
* @see module_enable()
|
2640 |
* @see hook_modules_enabled()
|
2641 |
* @see hook_install()
|
2642 |
*/
|
2643 |
function hook_modules_installed($modules) { |
2644 |
if (in_array('lousy_module', $modules)) { |
2645 |
variable_set('lousy_module_conflicting_variable', FALSE); |
2646 |
} |
2647 |
} |
2648 |
|
2649 |
/**
|
2650 |
* Perform necessary actions after modules are enabled.
|
2651 |
*
|
2652 |
* This function differs from hook_enable() in that it gives all other modules a
|
2653 |
* chance to perform actions when modules are enabled, whereas hook_enable() is
|
2654 |
* only called on the module actually being enabled. See module_enable() for a
|
2655 |
* detailed description of the order in which install and enable hooks are
|
2656 |
* invoked.
|
2657 |
*
|
2658 |
* @param $modules
|
2659 |
* An array of the modules that were enabled.
|
2660 |
*
|
2661 |
* @see hook_enable()
|
2662 |
* @see hook_modules_installed()
|
2663 |
* @see module_enable()
|
2664 |
*/
|
2665 |
function hook_modules_enabled($modules) { |
2666 |
if (in_array('lousy_module', $modules)) { |
2667 |
drupal_set_message(t('mymodule is not compatible with lousy_module'), 'error'); |
2668 |
mymodule_disable_functionality(); |
2669 |
} |
2670 |
} |
2671 |
|
2672 |
/**
|
2673 |
* Perform necessary actions after modules are disabled.
|
2674 |
*
|
2675 |
* This function differs from hook_disable() in that it gives all other modules
|
2676 |
* a chance to perform actions when modules are disabled, whereas hook_disable()
|
2677 |
* is only called on the module actually being disabled.
|
2678 |
*
|
2679 |
* @param $modules
|
2680 |
* An array of the modules that were disabled.
|
2681 |
*
|
2682 |
* @see hook_disable()
|
2683 |
* @see hook_modules_uninstalled()
|
2684 |
*/
|
2685 |
function hook_modules_disabled($modules) { |
2686 |
if (in_array('lousy_module', $modules)) { |
2687 |
mymodule_enable_functionality(); |
2688 |
} |
2689 |
} |
2690 |
|
2691 |
/**
|
2692 |
* Perform necessary actions after modules are uninstalled.
|
2693 |
*
|
2694 |
* This function differs from hook_uninstall() in that it gives all other
|
2695 |
* modules a chance to perform actions when a module is uninstalled, whereas
|
2696 |
* hook_uninstall() is only called on the module actually being uninstalled.
|
2697 |
*
|
2698 |
* It is recommended that you implement this hook if your module stores
|
2699 |
* data that may have been set by other modules.
|
2700 |
*
|
2701 |
* @param $modules
|
2702 |
* An array of the modules that were uninstalled.
|
2703 |
*
|
2704 |
* @see hook_uninstall()
|
2705 |
* @see hook_modules_disabled()
|
2706 |
*/
|
2707 |
function hook_modules_uninstalled($modules) { |
2708 |
foreach ($modules as $module) { |
2709 |
db_delete('mymodule_table')
|
2710 |
->condition('module', $module) |
2711 |
->execute(); |
2712 |
} |
2713 |
mymodule_cache_rebuild(); |
2714 |
} |
2715 |
|
2716 |
/**
|
2717 |
* Registers PHP stream wrapper implementations associated with a module.
|
2718 |
*
|
2719 |
* Provide a facility for managing and querying user-defined stream wrappers
|
2720 |
* in PHP. PHP's internal stream_get_wrappers() doesn't return the class
|
2721 |
* registered to handle a stream, which we need to be able to find the handler
|
2722 |
* for class instantiation.
|
2723 |
*
|
2724 |
* If a module registers a scheme that is already registered with PHP, it will
|
2725 |
* be unregistered and replaced with the specified class.
|
2726 |
*
|
2727 |
* @return
|
2728 |
* A nested array, keyed first by scheme name ("public" for "public://"),
|
2729 |
* then keyed by the following values:
|
2730 |
* - 'name' A short string to name the wrapper.
|
2731 |
* - 'class' A string specifying the PHP class that implements the
|
2732 |
* DrupalStreamWrapperInterface interface.
|
2733 |
* - 'description' A string with a short description of what the wrapper does.
|
2734 |
* - 'type' (Optional) A bitmask of flags indicating what type of streams this
|
2735 |
* wrapper will access - local or remote, readable and/or writeable, etc.
|
2736 |
* Many shortcut constants are defined in stream_wrappers.inc. Defaults to
|
2737 |
* STREAM_WRAPPERS_NORMAL which includes all of these bit flags:
|
2738 |
* - STREAM_WRAPPERS_READ
|
2739 |
* - STREAM_WRAPPERS_WRITE
|
2740 |
* - STREAM_WRAPPERS_VISIBLE
|
2741 |
*
|
2742 |
* @see file_get_stream_wrappers()
|
2743 |
* @see hook_stream_wrappers_alter()
|
2744 |
* @see system_stream_wrappers()
|
2745 |
*/
|
2746 |
function hook_stream_wrappers() { |
2747 |
return array( |
2748 |
'public' => array( |
2749 |
'name' => t('Public files'), |
2750 |
'class' => 'DrupalPublicStreamWrapper', |
2751 |
'description' => t('Public local files served by the webserver.'), |
2752 |
'type' => STREAM_WRAPPERS_LOCAL_NORMAL, |
2753 |
), |
2754 |
'private' => array( |
2755 |
'name' => t('Private files'), |
2756 |
'class' => 'DrupalPrivateStreamWrapper', |
2757 |
'description' => t('Private local files served by Drupal.'), |
2758 |
'type' => STREAM_WRAPPERS_LOCAL_NORMAL, |
2759 |
), |
2760 |
'temp' => array( |
2761 |
'name' => t('Temporary files'), |
2762 |
'class' => 'DrupalTempStreamWrapper', |
2763 |
'description' => t('Temporary local files for upload and previews.'), |
2764 |
'type' => STREAM_WRAPPERS_LOCAL_HIDDEN, |
2765 |
), |
2766 |
'cdn' => array( |
2767 |
'name' => t('Content delivery network files'), |
2768 |
'class' => 'MyModuleCDNStreamWrapper', |
2769 |
'description' => t('Files served by a content delivery network.'), |
2770 |
// 'type' can be omitted to use the default of STREAM_WRAPPERS_NORMAL
|
2771 |
), |
2772 |
'youtube' => array( |
2773 |
'name' => t('YouTube video'), |
2774 |
'class' => 'MyModuleYouTubeStreamWrapper', |
2775 |
'description' => t('Video streamed from YouTube.'), |
2776 |
// A module implementing YouTube integration may decide to support using
|
2777 |
// the YouTube API for uploading video, but here, we assume that this
|
2778 |
// particular module only supports playing YouTube video.
|
2779 |
'type' => STREAM_WRAPPERS_READ_VISIBLE, |
2780 |
), |
2781 |
); |
2782 |
} |
2783 |
|
2784 |
/**
|
2785 |
* Alters the list of PHP stream wrapper implementations.
|
2786 |
*
|
2787 |
* @see file_get_stream_wrappers()
|
2788 |
* @see hook_stream_wrappers()
|
2789 |
*/
|
2790 |
function hook_stream_wrappers_alter(&$wrappers) { |
2791 |
// Change the name of private files to reflect the performance.
|
2792 |
$wrappers['private']['name'] = t('Slow files'); |
2793 |
} |
2794 |
|
2795 |
/**
|
2796 |
* Load additional information into file objects.
|
2797 |
*
|
2798 |
* file_load_multiple() calls this hook to allow modules to load
|
2799 |
* additional information into each file.
|
2800 |
*
|
2801 |
* @param $files
|
2802 |
* An array of file objects, indexed by fid.
|
2803 |
*
|
2804 |
* @see file_load_multiple()
|
2805 |
* @see file_load()
|
2806 |
*/
|
2807 |
function hook_file_load($files) { |
2808 |
// Add the upload specific data into the file object.
|
2809 |
$result = db_query('SELECT * FROM {upload} u WHERE u.fid IN (:fids)', array(':fids' => array_keys($files)))->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC); |
2810 |
foreach ($result as $record) { |
2811 |
foreach ($record as $key => $value) { |
2812 |
$files[$record['fid']]->$key = $value; |
2813 |
} |
2814 |
} |
2815 |
} |
2816 |
|
2817 |
/**
|
2818 |
* Check that files meet a given criteria.
|
2819 |
*
|
2820 |
* This hook lets modules perform additional validation on files. They're able
|
2821 |
* to report a failure by returning one or more error messages.
|
2822 |
*
|
2823 |
* @param $file
|
2824 |
* The file object being validated.
|
2825 |
* @return
|
2826 |
* An array of error messages. If there are no problems with the file return
|
2827 |
* an empty array.
|
2828 |
*
|
2829 |
* @see file_validate()
|
2830 |
*/
|
2831 |
function hook_file_validate($file) { |
2832 |
$errors = array(); |
2833 |
|
2834 |
if (empty($file->filename)) { |
2835 |
$errors[] = t("The file's name is empty. Please give a name to the file."); |
2836 |
} |
2837 |
if (strlen($file->filename) > 255) { |
2838 |
$errors[] = t("The file's name exceeds the 255 characters limit. Please rename the file and try again."); |
2839 |
} |
2840 |
|
2841 |
return $errors; |
2842 |
} |
2843 |
|
2844 |
/**
|
2845 |
* Act on a file being inserted or updated.
|
2846 |
*
|
2847 |
* This hook is called when a file has been added to the database. The hook
|
2848 |
* doesn't distinguish between files created as a result of a copy or those
|
2849 |
* created by an upload.
|
2850 |
*
|
2851 |
* @param $file
|
2852 |
* The file that has just been created.
|
2853 |
*
|
2854 |
* @see file_save()
|
2855 |
*/
|
2856 |
function hook_file_presave($file) { |
2857 |
// Change the file timestamp to an hour prior.
|
2858 |
$file->timestamp -= 3600; |
2859 |
} |
2860 |
|
2861 |
/**
|
2862 |
* Respond to a file being added.
|
2863 |
*
|
2864 |
* This hook is called after a file has been added to the database. The hook
|
2865 |
* doesn't distinguish between files created as a result of a copy or those
|
2866 |
* created by an upload.
|
2867 |
*
|
2868 |
* @param $file
|
2869 |
* The file that has been added.
|
2870 |
*
|
2871 |
* @see file_save()
|
2872 |
*/
|
2873 |
function hook_file_insert($file) { |
2874 |
// Add a message to the log, if the file is a jpg
|
2875 |
$validate = file_validate_extensions($file, 'jpg'); |
2876 |
if (empty($validate)) { |
2877 |
watchdog('file', 'A jpg has been added.'); |
2878 |
} |
2879 |
} |
2880 |
|
2881 |
/**
|
2882 |
* Respond to a file being updated.
|
2883 |
*
|
2884 |
* This hook is called when file_save() is called on an existing file.
|
2885 |
*
|
2886 |
* @param $file
|
2887 |
* The file that has just been updated.
|
2888 |
*
|
2889 |
* @see file_save()
|
2890 |
*/
|
2891 |
function hook_file_update($file) { |
2892 |
$file_user = user_load($file->uid); |
2893 |
// Make sure that the file name starts with the owner's user name.
|
2894 |
if (strpos($file->filename, $file_user->name) !== 0) { |
2895 |
$old_filename = $file->filename; |
2896 |
$file->filename = $file_user->name . '_' . $file->filename; |
2897 |
$file->save();
|
2898 |
|
2899 |
watchdog('file', t('%source has been renamed to %destination', array('%source' => $old_filename, '%destination' => $file->filename))); |
2900 |
} |
2901 |
} |
2902 |
|
2903 |
/**
|
2904 |
* Respond to a file that has been copied.
|
2905 |
*
|
2906 |
* @param $file
|
2907 |
* The newly copied file object.
|
2908 |
* @param $source
|
2909 |
* The original file before the copy.
|
2910 |
*
|
2911 |
* @see file_copy()
|
2912 |
*/
|
2913 |
function hook_file_copy($file, $source) { |
2914 |
$file_user = user_load($file->uid); |
2915 |
// Make sure that the file name starts with the owner's user name.
|
2916 |
if (strpos($file->filename, $file_user->name) !== 0) { |
2917 |
$file->filename = $file_user->name . '_' . $file->filename; |
2918 |
$file->save();
|
2919 |
|
2920 |
watchdog('file', t('Copied file %source has been renamed to %destination', array('%source' => $source->filename, '%destination' => $file->filename))); |
2921 |
} |
2922 |
} |
2923 |
|
2924 |
/**
|
2925 |
* Respond to a file that has been moved.
|
2926 |
*
|
2927 |
* @param $file
|
2928 |
* The updated file object after the move.
|
2929 |
* @param $source
|
2930 |
* The original file object before the move.
|
2931 |
*
|
2932 |
* @see file_move()
|
2933 |
*/
|
2934 |
function hook_file_move($file, $source) { |
2935 |
$file_user = user_load($file->uid); |
2936 |
// Make sure that the file name starts with the owner's user name.
|
2937 |
if (strpos($file->filename, $file_user->name) !== 0) { |
2938 |
$file->filename = $file_user->name . '_' . $file->filename; |
2939 |
$file->save();
|
2940 |
|
2941 |
watchdog('file', t('Moved file %source has been renamed to %destination', array('%source' => $source->filename, '%destination' => $file->filename))); |
2942 |
} |
2943 |
} |
2944 |
|
2945 |
/**
|
2946 |
* Respond to a file being deleted.
|
2947 |
*
|
2948 |
* @param $file
|
2949 |
* The file that has just been deleted.
|
2950 |
*
|
2951 |
* @see file_delete()
|
2952 |
*/
|
2953 |
function hook_file_delete($file) { |
2954 |
// Delete all information associated with the file.
|
2955 |
db_delete('upload')->condition('fid', $file->fid)->execute(); |
2956 |
} |
2957 |
|
2958 |
/**
|
2959 |
* Control access to private file downloads and specify HTTP headers.
|
2960 |
*
|
2961 |
* This hook allows modules enforce permissions on file downloads when the
|
2962 |
* private file download method is selected. Modules can also provide headers
|
2963 |
* to specify information like the file's name or MIME type.
|
2964 |
*
|
2965 |
* @param $uri
|
2966 |
* The URI of the file.
|
2967 |
* @return
|
2968 |
* If the user does not have permission to access the file, return -1. If the
|
2969 |
* user has permission, return an array with the appropriate headers. If the
|
2970 |
* file is not controlled by the current module, the return value should be
|
2971 |
* NULL.
|
2972 |
*
|
2973 |
* @see file_download()
|
2974 |
*/
|
2975 |
function hook_file_download($uri) { |
2976 |
// Check if the file is controlled by the current module.
|
2977 |
if (!file_prepare_directory($uri)) { |
2978 |
$uri = FALSE; |
2979 |
} |
2980 |
if (strpos(file_uri_target($uri), variable_get('user_picture_path', 'pictures') . '/picture-') === 0) { |
2981 |
if (!user_access('access user profiles')) { |
2982 |
// Access to the file is denied.
|
2983 |
return -1; |
2984 |
} |
2985 |
else {
|
2986 |
$info = image_get_info($uri); |
2987 |
return array('Content-Type' => $info['mime_type']); |
2988 |
} |
2989 |
} |
2990 |
} |
2991 |
|
2992 |
/**
|
2993 |
* Alter the URL to a file.
|
2994 |
*
|
2995 |
* This hook is called from file_create_url(), and is called fairly
|
2996 |
* frequently (10+ times per page), depending on how many files there are in a
|
2997 |
* given page.
|
2998 |
* If CSS and JS aggregation are disabled, this can become very frequently
|
2999 |
* (50+ times per page) so performance is critical.
|
3000 |
*
|
3001 |
* This function should alter the URI, if it wants to rewrite the file URL.
|
3002 |
*
|
3003 |
* @param $uri
|
3004 |
* The URI to a file for which we need an external URL, or the path to a
|
3005 |
* shipped file.
|
3006 |
*/
|
3007 |
function hook_file_url_alter(&$uri) { |
3008 |
global $user; |
3009 |
|
3010 |
// User 1 will always see the local file in this example.
|
3011 |
if ($user->uid == 1) { |
3012 |
return;
|
3013 |
} |
3014 |
|
3015 |
$cdn1 = 'http://cdn1.example.com'; |
3016 |
$cdn2 = 'http://cdn2.example.com'; |
3017 |
$cdn_extensions = array('css', 'js', 'gif', 'jpg', 'jpeg', 'png'); |
3018 |
|
3019 |
// Most CDNs don't support private file transfers without a lot of hassle,
|
3020 |
// so don't support this in the common case.
|
3021 |
$schemes = array('public'); |
3022 |
|
3023 |
$scheme = file_uri_scheme($uri); |
3024 |
|
3025 |
// Only serve shipped files and public created files from the CDN.
|
3026 |
if (!$scheme || in_array($scheme, $schemes)) { |
3027 |
// Shipped files.
|
3028 |
if (!$scheme) { |
3029 |
$path = $uri; |
3030 |
} |
3031 |
// Public created files.
|
3032 |
else {
|
3033 |
$wrapper = file_stream_wrapper_get_instance_by_scheme($scheme); |
3034 |
$path = $wrapper->getDirectoryPath() . '/' . file_uri_target($uri); |
3035 |
} |
3036 |
|
3037 |
// Clean up Windows paths.
|
3038 |
$path = str_replace('\\', '/', $path); |
3039 |
|
3040 |
// Serve files with one of the CDN extensions from CDN 1, all others from
|
3041 |
// CDN 2.
|
3042 |
$pathinfo = pathinfo($path); |
3043 |
if (isset($pathinfo['extension']) && in_array($pathinfo['extension'], $cdn_extensions)) { |
3044 |
$uri = $cdn1 . '/' . $path; |
3045 |
} |
3046 |
else {
|
3047 |
$uri = $cdn2 . '/' . $path; |
3048 |
} |
3049 |
} |
3050 |
} |
3051 |
|
3052 |
/**
|
3053 |
* Check installation requirements and do status reporting.
|
3054 |
*
|
3055 |
* This hook has three closely related uses, determined by the $phase argument:
|
3056 |
* - Checking installation requirements ($phase == 'install').
|
3057 |
* - Checking update requirements ($phase == 'update').
|
3058 |
* - Status reporting ($phase == 'runtime').
|
3059 |
*
|
3060 |
* Note that this hook, like all others dealing with installation and updates,
|
3061 |
* must reside in a module_name.install file, or it will not properly abort
|
3062 |
* the installation of the module if a critical requirement is missing.
|
3063 |
*
|
3064 |
* During the 'install' phase, modules can for example assert that
|
3065 |
* library or server versions are available or sufficient.
|
3066 |
* Note that the installation of a module can happen during installation of
|
3067 |
* Drupal itself (by install.php) with an installation profile or later by hand.
|
3068 |
* As a consequence, install-time requirements must be checked without access
|
3069 |
* to the full Drupal API, because it is not available during install.php.
|
3070 |
* For localization you should for example use $t = get_t() to
|
3071 |
* retrieve the appropriate localization function name (t() or st()).
|
3072 |
* If a requirement has a severity of REQUIREMENT_ERROR, install.php will abort
|
3073 |
* or at least the module will not install.
|
3074 |
* Other severity levels have no effect on the installation.
|
3075 |
* Module dependencies do not belong to these installation requirements,
|
3076 |
* but should be defined in the module's .info file.
|
3077 |
*
|
3078 |
* The 'runtime' phase is not limited to pure installation requirements
|
3079 |
* but can also be used for more general status information like maintenance
|
3080 |
* tasks and security issues.
|
3081 |
* The returned 'requirements' will be listed on the status report in the
|
3082 |
* administration section, with indication of the severity level.
|
3083 |
* Moreover, any requirement with a severity of REQUIREMENT_ERROR severity will
|
3084 |
* result in a notice on the administration configuration page.
|
3085 |
*
|
3086 |
* @param $phase
|
3087 |
* The phase in which requirements are checked:
|
3088 |
* - install: The module is being installed.
|
3089 |
* - update: The module is enabled and update.php is run.
|
3090 |
* - runtime: The runtime requirements are being checked and shown on the
|
3091 |
* status report page.
|
3092 |
*
|
3093 |
* @return
|
3094 |
* An associative array where the keys are arbitrary but must be unique (it
|
3095 |
* is suggested to use the module short name as a prefix) and the values are
|
3096 |
* themselves associative arrays with the following elements:
|
3097 |
* - title: The name of the requirement.
|
3098 |
* - value: The current value (e.g., version, time, level, etc). During
|
3099 |
* install phase, this should only be used for version numbers, do not set
|
3100 |
* it if not applicable.
|
3101 |
* - description: The description of the requirement/status.
|
3102 |
* - severity: The requirement's result/severity level, one of:
|
3103 |
* - REQUIREMENT_INFO: For info only.
|
3104 |
* - REQUIREMENT_OK: The requirement is satisfied.
|
3105 |
* - REQUIREMENT_WARNING: The requirement failed with a warning.
|
3106 |
* - REQUIREMENT_ERROR: The requirement failed with an error.
|
3107 |
*/
|
3108 |
function hook_requirements($phase) { |
3109 |
$requirements = array(); |
3110 |
// Ensure translations don't break during installation.
|
3111 |
$t = get_t();
|
3112 |
|
3113 |
// Report Drupal version
|
3114 |
if ($phase == 'runtime') { |
3115 |
$requirements['drupal'] = array( |
3116 |
'title' => $t('Drupal'), |
3117 |
'value' => VERSION, |
3118 |
'severity' => REQUIREMENT_INFO |
3119 |
); |
3120 |
} |
3121 |
|
3122 |
// Test PHP version
|
3123 |
$requirements['php'] = array( |
3124 |
'title' => $t('PHP'), |
3125 |
'value' => ($phase == 'runtime') ? l(phpversion(), 'admin/reports/status/php') : phpversion(), |
3126 |
); |
3127 |
if (version_compare(phpversion(), DRUPAL_MINIMUM_PHP) < 0) { |
3128 |
$requirements['php']['description'] = $t('Your PHP installation is too old. Drupal requires at least PHP %version.', array('%version' => DRUPAL_MINIMUM_PHP)); |
3129 |
$requirements['php']['severity'] = REQUIREMENT_ERROR; |
3130 |
} |
3131 |
|
3132 |
// Report cron status
|
3133 |
if ($phase == 'runtime') { |
3134 |
$cron_last = variable_get('cron_last'); |
3135 |
|
3136 |
if (is_numeric($cron_last)) { |
3137 |
$requirements['cron']['value'] = $t('Last run !time ago', array('!time' => format_interval(REQUEST_TIME - $cron_last))); |
3138 |
} |
3139 |
else {
|
3140 |
$requirements['cron'] = array( |
3141 |
'description' => $t('Cron has not run. It appears cron jobs have not been setup on your system. Check the help pages for <a href="@url">configuring cron jobs</a>.', array('@url' => 'http://drupal.org/cron')), |
3142 |
'severity' => REQUIREMENT_ERROR, |
3143 |
'value' => $t('Never run'), |
3144 |
); |
3145 |
} |
3146 |
|
3147 |
$requirements['cron']['description'] .= ' ' . $t('You can <a href="@cron">run cron manually</a>.', array('@cron' => url('admin/reports/status/run-cron'))); |
3148 |
|
3149 |
$requirements['cron']['title'] = $t('Cron maintenance tasks'); |
3150 |
} |
3151 |
|
3152 |
return $requirements; |
3153 |
} |
3154 |
|
3155 |
/**
|
3156 |
* Define the current version of the database schema.
|
3157 |
*
|
3158 |
* A Drupal schema definition is an array structure representing one or more
|
3159 |
* tables and their related keys and indexes. A schema is defined by
|
3160 |
* hook_schema() which must live in your module's .install file.
|
3161 |
*
|
3162 |
* This hook is called at install and uninstall time, and in the latter case, it
|
3163 |
* cannot rely on the .module file being loaded or hooks being known. If the
|
3164 |
* .module file is needed, it may be loaded with drupal_load().
|
3165 |
*
|
3166 |
* The tables declared by this hook will be automatically created when the
|
3167 |
* module is first enabled, and removed when the module is uninstalled. This
|
3168 |
* happens before hook_install() is invoked, and after hook_uninstall() is
|
3169 |
* invoked, respectively.
|
3170 |
*
|
3171 |
* By declaring the tables used by your module via an implementation of
|
3172 |
* hook_schema(), these tables will be available on all supported database
|
3173 |
* engines. You don't have to deal with the different SQL dialects for table
|
3174 |
* creation and alteration of the supported database engines.
|
3175 |
*
|
3176 |
* See the Schema API Handbook at http://drupal.org/node/146843 for details on
|
3177 |
* schema definition structures.
|
3178 |
*
|
3179 |
* @return array
|
3180 |
* A schema definition structure array. For each element of the
|
3181 |
* array, the key is a table name and the value is a table structure
|
3182 |
* definition.
|
3183 |
*
|
3184 |
* @see hook_schema_alter()
|
3185 |
*
|
3186 |
* @ingroup schemaapi
|
3187 |
*/
|
3188 |
function hook_schema() { |
3189 |
$schema['node'] = array( |
3190 |
// Example (partial) specification for table "node".
|
3191 |
'description' => 'The base table for nodes.', |
3192 |
'fields' => array( |
3193 |
'nid' => array( |
3194 |
'description' => 'The primary identifier for a node.', |
3195 |
'type' => 'serial', |
3196 |
'unsigned' => TRUE, |
3197 |
'not null' => TRUE, |
3198 |
), |
3199 |
'vid' => array( |
3200 |
'description' => 'The current {node_revision}.vid version identifier.', |
3201 |
'type' => 'int', |
3202 |
'unsigned' => TRUE, |
3203 |
'not null' => TRUE, |
3204 |
'default' => 0, |
3205 |
), |
3206 |
'type' => array( |
3207 |
'description' => 'The {node_type} of this node.', |
3208 |
'type' => 'varchar', |
3209 |
'length' => 32, |
3210 |
'not null' => TRUE, |
3211 |
'default' => '', |
3212 |
), |
3213 |
'title' => array( |
3214 |
'description' => 'The title of this node, always treated as non-markup plain text.', |
3215 |
'type' => 'varchar', |
3216 |
'length' => 255, |
3217 |
'not null' => TRUE, |
3218 |
'default' => '', |
3219 |
), |
3220 |
), |
3221 |
'indexes' => array( |
3222 |
'node_changed' => array('changed'), |
3223 |
'node_created' => array('created'), |
3224 |
), |
3225 |
'unique keys' => array( |
3226 |
'nid_vid' => array('nid', 'vid'), |
3227 |
'vid' => array('vid'), |
3228 |
), |
3229 |
'foreign keys' => array( |
3230 |
'node_revision' => array( |
3231 |
'table' => 'node_revision', |
3232 |
'columns' => array('vid' => 'vid'), |
3233 |
), |
3234 |
'node_author' => array( |
3235 |
'table' => 'users', |
3236 |
'columns' => array('uid' => 'uid'), |
3237 |
), |
3238 |
), |
3239 |
'primary key' => array('nid'), |
3240 |
); |
3241 |
return $schema; |
3242 |
} |
3243 |
|
3244 |
/**
|
3245 |
* Perform alterations to existing database schemas.
|
3246 |
*
|
3247 |
* When a module modifies the database structure of another module (by
|
3248 |
* changing, adding or removing fields, keys or indexes), it should
|
3249 |
* implement hook_schema_alter() to update the default $schema to take its
|
3250 |
* changes into account.
|
3251 |
*
|
3252 |
* See hook_schema() for details on the schema definition structure.
|
3253 |
*
|
3254 |
* @param $schema
|
3255 |
* Nested array describing the schemas for all modules.
|
3256 |
*
|
3257 |
* @ingroup schemaapi
|
3258 |
*/
|
3259 |
function hook_schema_alter(&$schema) { |
3260 |
// Add field to existing schema.
|
3261 |
$schema['users']['fields']['timezone_id'] = array( |
3262 |
'type' => 'int', |
3263 |
'not null' => TRUE, |
3264 |
'default' => 0, |
3265 |
'description' => 'Per-user timezone configuration.', |
3266 |
); |
3267 |
} |
3268 |
|
3269 |
/**
|
3270 |
* Perform alterations to a structured query.
|
3271 |
*
|
3272 |
* Structured (aka dynamic) queries that have tags associated may be altered by any module
|
3273 |
* before the query is executed.
|
3274 |
*
|
3275 |
* @param $query
|
3276 |
* A Query object describing the composite parts of a SQL query.
|
3277 |
*
|
3278 |
* @see hook_query_TAG_alter()
|
3279 |
* @see node_query_node_access_alter()
|
3280 |
* @see QueryAlterableInterface
|
3281 |
* @see SelectQueryInterface
|
3282 |
*/
|
3283 |
function hook_query_alter(QueryAlterableInterface $query) { |
3284 |
if ($query->hasTag('micro_limit')) { |
3285 |
$query->range(0, 2); |
3286 |
} |
3287 |
} |
3288 |
|
3289 |
/**
|
3290 |
* Perform alterations to a structured query for a given tag.
|
3291 |
*
|
3292 |
* @param $query
|
3293 |
* An Query object describing the composite parts of a SQL query.
|
3294 |
*
|
3295 |
* @see hook_query_alter()
|
3296 |
* @see node_query_node_access_alter()
|
3297 |
* @see QueryAlterableInterface
|
3298 |
* @see SelectQueryInterface
|
3299 |
*/
|
3300 |
function hook_query_TAG_alter(QueryAlterableInterface $query) { |
3301 |
// Skip the extra expensive alterations if site has no node access control modules.
|
3302 |
if (!node_access_view_all_nodes()) {
|
3303 |
// Prevent duplicates records.
|
3304 |
$query->distinct();
|
3305 |
// The recognized operations are 'view', 'update', 'delete'.
|
3306 |
if (!$op = $query->getMetaData('op')) { |
3307 |
$op = 'view'; |
3308 |
} |
3309 |
// Skip the extra joins and conditions for node admins.
|
3310 |
if (!user_access('bypass node access')) { |
3311 |
// The node_access table has the access grants for any given node.
|
3312 |
$access_alias = $query->join('node_access', 'na', '%alias.nid = n.nid'); |
3313 |
$or = db_or();
|
3314 |
// If any grant exists for the specified user, then user has access to the node for the specified operation.
|
3315 |
foreach (node_access_grants($op, $query->getMetaData('account')) as $realm => $gids) { |
3316 |
foreach ($gids as $gid) { |
3317 |
$or->condition(db_and()
|
3318 |
->condition($access_alias . '.gid', $gid) |
3319 |
->condition($access_alias . '.realm', $realm) |
3320 |
); |
3321 |
} |
3322 |
} |
3323 |
|
3324 |
if (count($or->conditions())) { |
3325 |
$query->condition($or); |
3326 |
} |
3327 |
|
3328 |
$query->condition($access_alias . 'grant_' . $op, 1, '>='); |
3329 |
} |
3330 |
} |
3331 |
} |
3332 |
|
3333 |
/**
|
3334 |
* Perform setup tasks when the module is installed.
|
3335 |
*
|
3336 |
* If the module implements hook_schema(), the database tables will
|
3337 |
* be created before this hook is fired.
|
3338 |
*
|
3339 |
* Implementations of this hook are by convention declared in the module's
|
3340 |
* .install file. The implementation can rely on the .module file being loaded.
|
3341 |
* The hook will only be called the first time a module is enabled or after it
|
3342 |
* is re-enabled after being uninstalled. The module's schema version will be
|
3343 |
* set to the module's greatest numbered update hook. Because of this, any time
|
3344 |
* a hook_update_N() is added to the module, this function needs to be updated
|
3345 |
* to reflect the current version of the database schema.
|
3346 |
*
|
3347 |
* See the @link http://drupal.org/node/146843 Schema API documentation @endlink
|
3348 |
* for details on hook_schema and how database tables are defined.
|
3349 |
*
|
3350 |
* Note that since this function is called from a full bootstrap, all functions
|
3351 |
* (including those in modules enabled by the current page request) are
|
3352 |
* available when this hook is called. Use cases could be displaying a user
|
3353 |
* message, or calling a module function necessary for initial setup, etc.
|
3354 |
*
|
3355 |
* Please be sure that anything added or modified in this function that can
|
3356 |
* be removed during uninstall should be removed with hook_uninstall().
|
3357 |
*
|
3358 |
* @see hook_schema()
|
3359 |
* @see module_enable()
|
3360 |
* @see hook_enable()
|
3361 |
* @see hook_disable()
|
3362 |
* @see hook_uninstall()
|
3363 |
* @see hook_modules_installed()
|
3364 |
*/
|
3365 |
function hook_install() { |
3366 |
// Populate the default {node_access} record.
|
3367 |
db_insert('node_access')
|
3368 |
->fields(array(
|
3369 |
'nid' => 0, |
3370 |
'gid' => 0, |
3371 |
'realm' => 'all', |
3372 |
'grant_view' => 1, |
3373 |
'grant_update' => 0, |
3374 |
'grant_delete' => 0, |
3375 |
)) |
3376 |
->execute(); |
3377 |
} |
3378 |
|
3379 |
/**
|
3380 |
* Perform a single update.
|
3381 |
*
|
3382 |
* For each change that requires one or more actions to be performed when
|
3383 |
* updating a site, add a new hook_update_N(), which will be called by
|
3384 |
* update.php. The documentation block preceding this function is stripped of
|
3385 |
* newlines and used as the description for the update on the pending updates
|
3386 |
* task list. Schema updates should adhere to the
|
3387 |
* @link http://drupal.org/node/150215 Schema API. @endlink
|
3388 |
*
|
3389 |
* Implementations of hook_update_N() are named (module name)_update_(number).
|
3390 |
* The numbers are composed of three parts:
|
3391 |
* - 1 digit for Drupal core compatibility.
|
3392 |
* - 1 digit for your module's major release version (e.g., is this the 7.x-1.*
|
3393 |
* (1) or 7.x-2.* (2) series of your module?). This digit should be 0 for
|
3394 |
* initial porting of your module to a new Drupal core API.
|
3395 |
* - 2 digits for sequential counting, starting with 00.
|
3396 |
*
|
3397 |
* Examples:
|
3398 |
* - mymodule_update_7000(): This is the required update for mymodule to run
|
3399 |
* with Drupal core API 7.x when upgrading from Drupal core API 6.x.
|
3400 |
* - mymodule_update_7100(): This is the first update to get the database ready
|
3401 |
* to run mymodule 7.x-1.*.
|
3402 |
* - mymodule_update_7200(): This is the first update to get the database ready
|
3403 |
* to run mymodule 7.x-2.*. Users can directly update from 6.x-2.* to 7.x-2.*
|
3404 |
* and they get all 70xx and 72xx updates, but not 71xx updates, because
|
3405 |
* those reside in the 7.x-1.x branch only.
|
3406 |
*
|
3407 |
* A good rule of thumb is to remove updates older than two major releases of
|
3408 |
* Drupal. See hook_update_last_removed() to notify Drupal about the removals.
|
3409 |
* For further information about releases and release numbers see:
|
3410 |
* @link http://drupal.org/node/711070 Maintaining a drupal.org project with Git @endlink
|
3411 |
*
|
3412 |
* Never renumber update functions.
|
3413 |
*
|
3414 |
* Implementations of this hook should be placed in a mymodule.install file in
|
3415 |
* the same directory as mymodule.module. Drupal core's updates are implemented
|
3416 |
* using the system module as a name and stored in database/updates.inc.
|
3417 |
*
|
3418 |
* Not all module functions are available from within a hook_update_N() function.
|
3419 |
* In order to call a function from your mymodule.module or an include file,
|
3420 |
* you need to explicitly load that file first.
|
3421 |
*
|
3422 |
* During database updates the schema of any module could be out of date. For
|
3423 |
* this reason, caution is needed when using any API function within an update
|
3424 |
* function - particularly CRUD functions, functions that depend on the schema
|
3425 |
* (for example by using drupal_write_record()), and any functions that invoke
|
3426 |
* hooks. See @link update_api Update versions of API functions @endlink for
|
3427 |
* details.
|
3428 |
*
|
3429 |
* The $sandbox parameter should be used when a multipass update is needed, in
|
3430 |
* circumstances where running the whole update at once could cause PHP to
|
3431 |
* timeout. Each pass is run in a way that avoids PHP timeouts, provided each
|
3432 |
* pass remains under the timeout limit. To signify that an update requires
|
3433 |
* at least one more pass, set $sandbox['#finished'] to a number less than 1
|
3434 |
* (you need to do this each pass). The value of $sandbox['#finished'] will be
|
3435 |
* unset between passes but all other data in $sandbox will be preserved. The
|
3436 |
* system will stop iterating this update when $sandbox['#finished'] is left
|
3437 |
* unset or set to a number higher than 1. It is recommended that
|
3438 |
* $sandbox['#finished'] is initially set to 0, and then updated each pass to a
|
3439 |
* number between 0 and 1 that represents the overall % completed for this
|
3440 |
* update, finishing with 1.
|
3441 |
*
|
3442 |
* See the @link batch Batch operations topic @endlink for more information on
|
3443 |
* how to use the Batch API.
|
3444 |
*
|
3445 |
* @param array $sandbox
|
3446 |
* Stores information for multipass updates. See above for more information.
|
3447 |
*
|
3448 |
* @throws DrupalUpdateException|PDOException
|
3449 |
* In case of error, update hooks should throw an instance of DrupalUpdateException
|
3450 |
* with a meaningful message for the user. If a database query fails for whatever
|
3451 |
* reason, it will throw a PDOException.
|
3452 |
*
|
3453 |
* @return string|null
|
3454 |
* Optionally, update hooks may return a translated string that will be
|
3455 |
* displayed to the user after the update has completed. If no message is
|
3456 |
* returned, no message will be presented to the user.
|
3457 |
*
|
3458 |
* @see batch
|
3459 |
* @see schemaapi
|
3460 |
* @see update_api
|
3461 |
* @see hook_update_last_removed()
|
3462 |
* @see update_get_update_list()
|
3463 |
*/
|
3464 |
function hook_update_N(&$sandbox) { |
3465 |
// For non-multipass updates, the signature can simply be;
|
3466 |
// function hook_update_N() {
|
3467 |
|
3468 |
// For most updates, the following is sufficient.
|
3469 |
db_add_field('mytable1', 'newcol', array('type' => 'int', 'not null' => TRUE, 'description' => 'My new integer column.')); |
3470 |
|
3471 |
// However, for more complex operations that may take a long time,
|
3472 |
// you may hook into Batch API as in the following example.
|
3473 |
|
3474 |
// Update 3 users at a time to have an exclamation point after their names.
|
3475 |
// (They're really happy that we can do batch API in this hook!)
|
3476 |
if (!isset($sandbox['progress'])) { |
3477 |
$sandbox['progress'] = 0; |
3478 |
$sandbox['current_uid'] = 0; |
3479 |
// We'll -1 to disregard the uid 0...
|
3480 |
$sandbox['max'] = db_query('SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT uid) FROM {users}')->fetchField() - 1; |
3481 |
} |
3482 |
|
3483 |
$users = db_select('users', 'u') |
3484 |
->fields('u', array('uid', 'name')) |
3485 |
->condition('uid', $sandbox['current_uid'], '>') |
3486 |
->range(0, 3) |
3487 |
->orderBy('uid', 'ASC') |
3488 |
->execute(); |
3489 |
|
3490 |
foreach ($users as $user) { |
3491 |
$user->name .= '!'; |
3492 |
db_update('users')
|
3493 |
->fields(array('name' => $user->name)) |
3494 |
->condition('uid', $user->uid) |
3495 |
->execute(); |
3496 |
|
3497 |
$sandbox['progress']++; |
3498 |
$sandbox['current_uid'] = $user->uid; |
3499 |
} |
3500 |
|
3501 |
$sandbox['#finished'] = empty($sandbox['max']) ? 1 : ($sandbox['progress'] / $sandbox['max']); |
3502 |
|
3503 |
// To display a message to the user when the update is completed, return it.
|
3504 |
// If you do not want to display a completion message, simply return nothing.
|
3505 |
return t('The update did what it was supposed to do.'); |
3506 |
|
3507 |
// In case of an error, simply throw an exception with an error message.
|
3508 |
throw new DrupalUpdateException('Something went wrong; here is what you should do.'); |
3509 |
} |
3510 |
|
3511 |
/**
|
3512 |
* Return an array of information about module update dependencies.
|
3513 |
*
|
3514 |
* This can be used to indicate update functions from other modules that your
|
3515 |
* module's update functions depend on, or vice versa. It is used by the update
|
3516 |
* system to determine the appropriate order in which updates should be run, as
|
3517 |
* well as to search for missing dependencies.
|
3518 |
*
|
3519 |
* Implementations of this hook should be placed in a mymodule.install file in
|
3520 |
* the same directory as mymodule.module.
|
3521 |
*
|
3522 |
* @return
|
3523 |
* A multidimensional array containing information about the module update
|
3524 |
* dependencies. The first two levels of keys represent the module and update
|
3525 |
* number (respectively) for which information is being returned, and the
|
3526 |
* value is an array of information about that update's dependencies. Within
|
3527 |
* this array, each key represents a module, and each value represents the
|
3528 |
* number of an update function within that module. In the event that your
|
3529 |
* update function depends on more than one update from a particular module,
|
3530 |
* you should always list the highest numbered one here (since updates within
|
3531 |
* a given module always run in numerical order).
|
3532 |
*
|
3533 |
* @see update_resolve_dependencies()
|
3534 |
* @see hook_update_N()
|
3535 |
*/
|
3536 |
function hook_update_dependencies() { |
3537 |
// Indicate that the mymodule_update_7000() function provided by this module
|
3538 |
// must run after the another_module_update_7002() function provided by the
|
3539 |
// 'another_module' module.
|
3540 |
$dependencies['mymodule'][7000] = array( |
3541 |
'another_module' => 7002, |
3542 |
); |
3543 |
// Indicate that the mymodule_update_7001() function provided by this module
|
3544 |
// must run before the yet_another_module_update_7004() function provided by
|
3545 |
// the 'yet_another_module' module. (Note that declaring dependencies in this
|
3546 |
// direction should be done only in rare situations, since it can lead to the
|
3547 |
// following problem: If a site has already run the yet_another_module
|
3548 |
// module's database updates before it updates its codebase to pick up the
|
3549 |
// newest mymodule code, then the dependency declared here will be ignored.)
|
3550 |
$dependencies['yet_another_module'][7004] = array( |
3551 |
'mymodule' => 7001, |
3552 |
); |
3553 |
return $dependencies; |
3554 |
} |
3555 |
|
3556 |
/**
|
3557 |
* Return a number which is no longer available as hook_update_N().
|
3558 |
*
|
3559 |
* If you remove some update functions from your mymodule.install file, you
|
3560 |
* should notify Drupal of those missing functions. This way, Drupal can
|
3561 |
* ensure that no update is accidentally skipped.
|
3562 |
*
|
3563 |
* Implementations of this hook should be placed in a mymodule.install file in
|
3564 |
* the same directory as mymodule.module.
|
3565 |
*
|
3566 |
* @return
|
3567 |
* An integer, corresponding to hook_update_N() which has been removed from
|
3568 |
* mymodule.install.
|
3569 |
*
|
3570 |
* @see hook_update_N()
|
3571 |
*/
|
3572 |
function hook_update_last_removed() { |
3573 |
// We've removed the 5.x-1.x version of mymodule, including database updates.
|
3574 |
// The next update function is mymodule_update_5200().
|
3575 |
return 5103; |
3576 |
} |
3577 |
|
3578 |
/**
|
3579 |
* Remove any information that the module sets.
|
3580 |
*
|
3581 |
* The information that the module should remove includes:
|
3582 |
* - variables that the module has set using variable_set() or system_settings_form()
|
3583 |
* - modifications to existing tables
|
3584 |
*
|
3585 |
* The module should not remove its entry from the {system} table. Database
|
3586 |
* tables defined by hook_schema() will be removed automatically.
|
3587 |
*
|
3588 |
* The uninstall hook must be implemented in the module's .install file. It
|
3589 |
* will fire when the module gets uninstalled but before the module's database
|
3590 |
* tables are removed, allowing your module to query its own tables during
|
3591 |
* this routine.
|
3592 |
*
|
3593 |
* When hook_uninstall() is called, your module will already be disabled, so
|
3594 |
* its .module file will not be automatically included. If you need to call API
|
3595 |
* functions from your .module file in this hook, use drupal_load() to make
|
3596 |
* them available. (Keep this usage to a minimum, though, especially when
|
3597 |
* calling API functions that invoke hooks, or API functions from modules
|
3598 |
* listed as dependencies, since these may not be available or work as expected
|
3599 |
* when the module is disabled.)
|
3600 |
*
|
3601 |
* @see hook_install()
|
3602 |
* @see hook_schema()
|
3603 |
* @see hook_disable()
|
3604 |
* @see hook_modules_uninstalled()
|
3605 |
*/
|
3606 |
function hook_uninstall() { |
3607 |
variable_del('upload_file_types');
|
3608 |
} |
3609 |
|
3610 |
/**
|
3611 |
* Perform necessary actions after module is enabled.
|
3612 |
*
|
3613 |
* The hook is called every time the module is enabled. It should be
|
3614 |
* implemented in the module's .install file. The implementation can
|
3615 |
* rely on the .module file being loaded.
|
3616 |
*
|
3617 |
* @see module_enable()
|
3618 |
* @see hook_install()
|
3619 |
* @see hook_modules_enabled()
|
3620 |
*/
|
3621 |
function hook_enable() { |
3622 |
mymodule_cache_rebuild(); |
3623 |
} |
3624 |
|
3625 |
/**
|
3626 |
* Perform necessary actions before module is disabled.
|
3627 |
*
|
3628 |
* The hook is called every time the module is disabled. It should be
|
3629 |
* implemented in the module's .install file. The implementation can rely
|
3630 |
* on the .module file being loaded.
|
3631 |
*
|
3632 |
* @see hook_uninstall()
|
3633 |
* @see hook_modules_disabled()
|
3634 |
*/
|
3635 |
function hook_disable() { |
3636 |
mymodule_cache_rebuild(); |
3637 |
} |
3638 |
|
3639 |
/**
|
3640 |
* Perform necessary alterations to the list of files parsed by the registry.
|
3641 |
*
|
3642 |
* Modules can manually modify the list of files before the registry parses
|
3643 |
* them. The $modules array provides the .info file information, which includes
|
3644 |
* the list of files registered to each module. Any files in the list can then
|
3645 |
* be added to the list of files that the registry will parse, or modify
|
3646 |
* attributes of a file.
|
3647 |
*
|
3648 |
* A necessary alteration made by the core SimpleTest module is to force .test
|
3649 |
* files provided by disabled modules into the list of files parsed by the
|
3650 |
* registry.
|
3651 |
*
|
3652 |
* @param $files
|
3653 |
* List of files to be parsed by the registry. The list will contain
|
3654 |
* files found in each enabled module's info file and the core includes
|
3655 |
* directory. The array is keyed by the file path and contains an array of
|
3656 |
* the related module's name and weight as used internally by
|
3657 |
* _registry_update() and related functions.
|
3658 |
*
|
3659 |
* For example:
|
3660 |
* @code
|
3661 |
* $files["modules/system/system.module"] = array(
|
3662 |
* 'module' => 'system',
|
3663 |
* 'weight' => 0,
|
3664 |
* );
|
3665 |
* @endcode
|
3666 |
* @param $modules
|
3667 |
* An array containing all module information stored in the {system} table.
|
3668 |
* Each element of the array also contains the module's .info file
|
3669 |
* information in the property 'info'. An additional 'dir' property has been
|
3670 |
* added to the module information which provides the path to the directory
|
3671 |
* in which the module resides. The example shows how to take advantage of
|
3672 |
* both properties.
|
3673 |
*
|
3674 |
* @see _registry_update()
|
3675 |
* @see simpletest_test_get_all()
|
3676 |
*/
|
3677 |
function hook_registry_files_alter(&$files, $modules) { |
3678 |
foreach ($modules as $module) { |
3679 |
// Only add test files for disabled modules, as enabled modules should
|
3680 |
// already include any test files they provide.
|
3681 |
if (!$module->status) { |
3682 |
$dir = $module->dir; |
3683 |
foreach ($module->info['files'] as $file) { |
3684 |
if (substr($file, -5) == '.test') { |
3685 |
$files["$dir/$file"] = array('module' => $module->name, 'weight' => $module->weight); |
3686 |
} |
3687 |
} |
3688 |
} |
3689 |
} |
3690 |
} |
3691 |
|
3692 |
/**
|
3693 |
* Return an array of tasks to be performed by an installation profile.
|
3694 |
*
|
3695 |
* Any tasks you define here will be run, in order, after the installer has
|
3696 |
* finished the site configuration step but before it has moved on to the
|
3697 |
* final import of languages and the end of the installation. You can have any
|
3698 |
* number of custom tasks to perform during this phase.
|
3699 |
*
|
3700 |
* Each task you define here corresponds to a callback function which you must
|
3701 |
* separately define and which is called when your task is run. This function
|
3702 |
* will receive the global installation state variable, $install_state, as
|
3703 |
* input, and has the opportunity to access or modify any of its settings. See
|
3704 |
* the install_state_defaults() function in the installer for the list of
|
3705 |
* $install_state settings used by Drupal core.
|
3706 |
*
|
3707 |
* At the end of your task function, you can indicate that you want the
|
3708 |
* installer to pause and display a page to the user by returning any themed
|
3709 |
* output that should be displayed on that page (but see below for tasks that
|
3710 |
* use the form API or batch API; the return values of these task functions are
|
3711 |
* handled differently). You should also use drupal_set_title() within the task
|
3712 |
* callback function to set a custom page title. For some tasks, however, you
|
3713 |
* may want to simply do some processing and pass control to the next task
|
3714 |
* without ending the page request; to indicate this, simply do not send back
|
3715 |
* a return value from your task function at all. This can be used, for
|
3716 |
* example, by installation profiles that need to configure certain site
|
3717 |
* settings in the database without obtaining any input from the user.
|
3718 |
*
|
3719 |
* The task function is treated specially if it defines a form or requires
|
3720 |
* batch processing; in that case, you should return either the form API
|
3721 |
* definition or batch API array, as appropriate. See below for more
|
3722 |
* information on the 'type' key that you must define in the task definition
|
3723 |
* to inform the installer that your task falls into one of those two
|
3724 |
* categories. It is important to use these APIs directly, since the installer
|
3725 |
* may be run non-interactively (for example, via a command line script), all
|
3726 |
* in one page request; in that case, the installer will automatically take
|
3727 |
* care of submitting forms and processing batches correctly for both types of
|
3728 |
* installations. You can inspect the $install_state['interactive'] boolean to
|
3729 |
* see whether or not the current installation is interactive, if you need
|
3730 |
* access to this information.
|
3731 |
*
|
3732 |
* Remember that a user installing Drupal interactively will be able to reload
|
3733 |
* an installation page multiple times, so you should use variable_set() and
|
3734 |
* variable_get() if you are collecting any data that you need to store and
|
3735 |
* inspect later. It is important to remove any temporary variables using
|
3736 |
* variable_del() before your last task has completed and control is handed
|
3737 |
* back to the installer.
|
3738 |
*
|
3739 |
* @param array $install_state
|
3740 |
* An array of information about the current installation state.
|
3741 |
*
|
3742 |
* @return array
|
3743 |
* A keyed array of tasks the profile will perform during the final stage of
|
3744 |
* the installation. Each key represents the name of a function (usually a
|
3745 |
* function defined by this profile, although that is not strictly required)
|
3746 |
* that is called when that task is run. The values are associative arrays
|
3747 |
* containing the following key-value pairs (all of which are optional):
|
3748 |
* - display_name: The human-readable name of the task. This will be
|
3749 |
* displayed to the user while the installer is running, along with a list
|
3750 |
* of other tasks that are being run. Leave this unset to prevent the task
|
3751 |
* from appearing in the list.
|
3752 |
* - display: This is a boolean which can be used to provide finer-grained
|
3753 |
* control over whether or not the task will display. This is mostly useful
|
3754 |
* for tasks that are intended to display only under certain conditions;
|
3755 |
* for these tasks, you can set 'display_name' to the name that you want to
|
3756 |
* display, but then use this boolean to hide the task only when certain
|
3757 |
* conditions apply.
|
3758 |
* - type: A string representing the type of task. This parameter has three
|
3759 |
* possible values:
|
3760 |
* - normal: (default) This indicates that the task will be treated as a
|
3761 |
* regular callback function, which does its processing and optionally
|
3762 |
* returns HTML output.
|
3763 |
* - batch: This indicates that the task function will return a batch API
|
3764 |
* definition suitable for batch_set(). The installer will then take care
|
3765 |
* of automatically running the task via batch processing.
|
3766 |
* - form: This indicates that the task function will return a standard
|
3767 |
* form API definition (and separately define validation and submit
|
3768 |
* handlers, as appropriate). The installer will then take care of
|
3769 |
* automatically directing the user through the form submission process.
|
3770 |
* - run: A constant representing the manner in which the task will be run.
|
3771 |
* This parameter has three possible values:
|
3772 |
* - INSTALL_TASK_RUN_IF_NOT_COMPLETED: (default) This indicates that the
|
3773 |
* task will run once during the installation of the profile.
|
3774 |
* - INSTALL_TASK_SKIP: This indicates that the task will not run during
|
3775 |
* the current installation page request. It can be used to skip running
|
3776 |
* an installation task when certain conditions are met, even though the
|
3777 |
* task may still show on the list of installation tasks presented to the
|
3778 |
* user.
|
3779 |
* - INSTALL_TASK_RUN_IF_REACHED: This indicates that the task will run on
|
3780 |
* each installation page request that reaches it. This is rarely
|
3781 |
* necessary for an installation profile to use; it is primarily used by
|
3782 |
* the Drupal installer for bootstrap-related tasks.
|
3783 |
* - function: Normally this does not need to be set, but it can be used to
|
3784 |
* force the installer to call a different function when the task is run
|
3785 |
* (rather than the function whose name is given by the array key). This
|
3786 |
* could be used, for example, to allow the same function to be called by
|
3787 |
* two different tasks.
|
3788 |
*
|
3789 |
* @see install_state_defaults()
|
3790 |
* @see batch_set()
|
3791 |
*/
|
3792 |
function hook_install_tasks(&$install_state) { |
3793 |
// Here, we define a variable to allow tasks to indicate that a particular,
|
3794 |
// processor-intensive batch process needs to be triggered later on in the
|
3795 |
// installation.
|
3796 |
$myprofile_needs_batch_processing = variable_get('myprofile_needs_batch_processing', FALSE); |
3797 |
$tasks = array( |
3798 |
// This is an example of a task that defines a form which the user who is
|
3799 |
// installing the site will be asked to fill out. To implement this task,
|
3800 |
// your profile would define a function named myprofile_data_import_form()
|
3801 |
// as a normal form API callback function, with associated validation and
|
3802 |
// submit handlers. In the submit handler, in addition to saving whatever
|
3803 |
// other data you have collected from the user, you might also call
|
3804 |
// variable_set('myprofile_needs_batch_processing', TRUE) if the user has
|
3805 |
// entered data which requires that batch processing will need to occur
|
3806 |
// later on.
|
3807 |
'myprofile_data_import_form' => array( |
3808 |
'display_name' => st('Data import options'), |
3809 |
'type' => 'form', |
3810 |
), |
3811 |
// Similarly, to implement this task, your profile would define a function
|
3812 |
// named myprofile_settings_form() with associated validation and submit
|
3813 |
// handlers. This form might be used to collect and save additional
|
3814 |
// information from the user that your profile needs. There are no extra
|
3815 |
// steps required for your profile to act as an "installation wizard"; you
|
3816 |
// can simply define as many tasks of type 'form' as you wish to execute,
|
3817 |
// and the forms will be presented to the user, one after another.
|
3818 |
'myprofile_settings_form' => array( |
3819 |
'display_name' => st('Additional options'), |
3820 |
'type' => 'form', |
3821 |
), |
3822 |
// This is an example of a task that performs batch operations. To
|
3823 |
// implement this task, your profile would define a function named
|
3824 |
// myprofile_batch_processing() which returns a batch API array definition
|
3825 |
// that the installer will use to execute your batch operations. Due to the
|
3826 |
// 'myprofile_needs_batch_processing' variable used here, this task will be
|
3827 |
// hidden and skipped unless your profile set it to TRUE in one of the
|
3828 |
// previous tasks.
|
3829 |
'myprofile_batch_processing' => array( |
3830 |
'display_name' => st('Import additional data'), |
3831 |
'display' => $myprofile_needs_batch_processing, |
3832 |
'type' => 'batch', |
3833 |
'run' => $myprofile_needs_batch_processing ? INSTALL_TASK_RUN_IF_NOT_COMPLETED : INSTALL_TASK_SKIP, |
3834 |
), |
3835 |
// This is an example of a task that will not be displayed in the list that
|
3836 |
// the user sees. To implement this task, your profile would define a
|
3837 |
// function named myprofile_final_site_setup(), in which additional,
|
3838 |
// automated site setup operations would be performed. Since this is the
|
3839 |
// last task defined by your profile, you should also use this function to
|
3840 |
// call variable_del('myprofile_needs_batch_processing') and clean up the
|
3841 |
// variable that was used above. If you want the user to pass to the final
|
3842 |
// Drupal installation tasks uninterrupted, return no output from this
|
3843 |
// function. Otherwise, return themed output that the user will see (for
|
3844 |
// example, a confirmation page explaining that your profile's tasks are
|
3845 |
// complete, with a link to reload the current page and therefore pass on
|
3846 |
// to the final Drupal installation tasks when the user is ready to do so).
|
3847 |
'myprofile_final_site_setup' => array( |
3848 |
), |
3849 |
); |
3850 |
return $tasks; |
3851 |
} |
3852 |
|
3853 |
/**
|
3854 |
* Change the page the user is sent to by drupal_goto().
|
3855 |
*
|
3856 |
* @param $path
|
3857 |
* A Drupal path or a full URL.
|
3858 |
* @param $options
|
3859 |
* An associative array of additional URL options to pass to url().
|
3860 |
* @param $http_response_code
|
3861 |
* The HTTP status code to use for the redirection. See drupal_goto() for more
|
3862 |
* information.
|
3863 |
*/
|
3864 |
function hook_drupal_goto_alter(&$path, &$options, &$http_response_code) { |
3865 |
// A good addition to misery module.
|
3866 |
$http_response_code = 500; |
3867 |
} |
3868 |
|
3869 |
/**
|
3870 |
* Alter XHTML HEAD tags before they are rendered by drupal_get_html_head().
|
3871 |
*
|
3872 |
* Elements available to be altered are only those added using
|
3873 |
* drupal_add_html_head_link() or drupal_add_html_head(). CSS and JS files
|
3874 |
* are handled using drupal_add_css() and drupal_add_js(), so the head links
|
3875 |
* for those files will not appear in the $head_elements array.
|
3876 |
*
|
3877 |
* @param $head_elements
|
3878 |
* An array of renderable elements. Generally the values of the #attributes
|
3879 |
* array will be the most likely target for changes.
|
3880 |
*/
|
3881 |
function hook_html_head_alter(&$head_elements) { |
3882 |
foreach ($head_elements as $key => $element) { |
3883 |
if (isset($element['#attributes']['rel']) && $element['#attributes']['rel'] == 'canonical') { |
3884 |
// I want a custom canonical URL.
|
3885 |
$head_elements[$key]['#attributes']['href'] = mymodule_canonical_url(); |
3886 |
} |
3887 |
} |
3888 |
} |
3889 |
|
3890 |
/**
|
3891 |
* Alter the full list of installation tasks.
|
3892 |
*
|
3893 |
* @param $tasks
|
3894 |
* An array of all available installation tasks, including those provided by
|
3895 |
* Drupal core. You can modify this array to change or replace any part of
|
3896 |
* the Drupal installation process that occurs after the installation profile
|
3897 |
* is selected.
|
3898 |
* @param $install_state
|
3899 |
* An array of information about the current installation state.
|
3900 |
*/
|
3901 |
function hook_install_tasks_alter(&$tasks, $install_state) { |
3902 |
// Replace the "Choose language" installation task provided by Drupal core
|
3903 |
// with a custom callback function defined by this installation profile.
|
3904 |
$tasks['install_select_locale']['function'] = 'myprofile_locale_selection'; |
3905 |
} |
3906 |
|
3907 |
/**
|
3908 |
* Alter MIME type mappings used to determine MIME type from a file extension.
|
3909 |
*
|
3910 |
* This hook is run when file_mimetype_mapping() is called. It is used to
|
3911 |
* allow modules to add to or modify the default mapping from
|
3912 |
* file_default_mimetype_mapping().
|
3913 |
*
|
3914 |
* @param $mapping
|
3915 |
* An array of mimetypes correlated to the extensions that relate to them.
|
3916 |
* The array has 'mimetypes' and 'extensions' elements, each of which is an
|
3917 |
* array.
|
3918 |
*
|
3919 |
* @see file_default_mimetype_mapping()
|
3920 |
*/
|
3921 |
function hook_file_mimetype_mapping_alter(&$mapping) { |
3922 |
// Add new MIME type 'drupal/info'.
|
3923 |
$mapping['mimetypes']['example_info'] = 'drupal/info'; |
3924 |
// Add new extension '.info' and map it to the 'drupal/info' MIME type.
|
3925 |
$mapping['extensions']['info'] = 'example_info'; |
3926 |
// Override existing extension mapping for '.ogg' files.
|
3927 |
$mapping['extensions']['ogg'] = 189; |
3928 |
} |
3929 |
|
3930 |
/**
|
3931 |
* Declares information about actions.
|
3932 |
*
|
3933 |
* Any module can define actions, and then call actions_do() to make those
|
3934 |
* actions happen in response to events. The trigger module provides a user
|
3935 |
* interface for associating actions with module-defined triggers, and it makes
|
3936 |
* sure the core triggers fire off actions when their events happen.
|
3937 |
*
|
3938 |
* An action consists of two or three parts:
|
3939 |
* - an action definition (returned by this hook)
|
3940 |
* - a function which performs the action (which by convention is named
|
3941 |
* MODULE_description-of-function_action)
|
3942 |
* - an optional form definition function that defines a configuration form
|
3943 |
* (which has the name of the action function with '_form' appended to it.)
|
3944 |
*
|
3945 |
* The action function takes two to four arguments, which come from the input
|
3946 |
* arguments to actions_do().
|
3947 |
*
|
3948 |
* @return
|
3949 |
* An associative array of action descriptions. The keys of the array
|
3950 |
* are the names of the action functions, and each corresponding value
|
3951 |
* is an associative array with the following key-value pairs:
|
3952 |
* - 'type': The type of object this action acts upon. Core actions have types
|
3953 |
* 'node', 'user', 'comment', and 'system'.
|
3954 |
* - 'label': The human-readable name of the action, which should be passed
|
3955 |
* through the t() function for translation.
|
3956 |
* - 'configurable': If FALSE, then the action doesn't require any extra
|
3957 |
* configuration. If TRUE, then your module must define a form function with
|
3958 |
* the same name as the action function with '_form' appended (e.g., the
|
3959 |
* form for 'node_assign_owner_action' is 'node_assign_owner_action_form'.)
|
3960 |
* This function takes $context as its only parameter, and is paired with
|
3961 |
* the usual _submit function, and possibly a _validate function.
|
3962 |
* - 'triggers': An array of the events (that is, hooks) that can trigger this
|
3963 |
* action. For example: array('node_insert', 'user_update'). You can also
|
3964 |
* declare support for any trigger by returning array('any') for this value.
|
3965 |
* - 'behavior': (optional) A machine-readable array of behaviors of this
|
3966 |
* action, used to signal additionally required actions that may need to be
|
3967 |
* triggered. Currently recognized behaviors by Trigger module:
|
3968 |
* - 'changes_property': If an action with this behavior is assigned to a
|
3969 |
* trigger other than a "presave" hook, any save actions also assigned to
|
3970 |
* this trigger are moved later in the list. If no save action is present,
|
3971 |
* one will be added.
|
3972 |
* Modules that are processing actions (like Trigger module) should take
|
3973 |
* special care for the "presave" hook, in which case a dependent "save"
|
3974 |
* action should NOT be invoked.
|
3975 |
*
|
3976 |
* @ingroup actions
|
3977 |
*/
|
3978 |
function hook_action_info() { |
3979 |
return array( |
3980 |
'comment_unpublish_action' => array( |
3981 |
'type' => 'comment', |
3982 |
'label' => t('Unpublish comment'), |
3983 |
'configurable' => FALSE, |
3984 |
'behavior' => array('changes_property'), |
3985 |
'triggers' => array('comment_presave', 'comment_insert', 'comment_update'), |
3986 |
), |
3987 |
'comment_unpublish_by_keyword_action' => array( |
3988 |
'type' => 'comment', |
3989 |
'label' => t('Unpublish comment containing keyword(s)'), |
3990 |
'configurable' => TRUE, |
3991 |
'behavior' => array('changes_property'), |
3992 |
'triggers' => array('comment_presave', 'comment_insert', 'comment_update'), |
3993 |
), |
3994 |
'comment_save_action' => array( |
3995 |
'type' => 'comment', |
3996 |
'label' => t('Save comment'), |
3997 |
'configurable' => FALSE, |
3998 |
'triggers' => array('comment_insert', 'comment_update'), |
3999 |
), |
4000 |
); |
4001 |
} |
4002 |
|
4003 |
/**
|
4004 |
* Executes code after an action is deleted.
|
4005 |
*
|
4006 |
* @param $aid
|
4007 |
* The action ID.
|
4008 |
*/
|
4009 |
function hook_actions_delete($aid) { |
4010 |
db_delete('actions_assignments')
|
4011 |
->condition('aid', $aid) |
4012 |
->execute(); |
4013 |
} |
4014 |
|
4015 |
/**
|
4016 |
* Alters the actions declared by another module.
|
4017 |
*
|
4018 |
* Called by actions_list() to allow modules to alter the return values from
|
4019 |
* implementations of hook_action_info().
|
4020 |
*
|
4021 |
* @see trigger_example_action_info_alter()
|
4022 |
*/
|
4023 |
function hook_action_info_alter(&$actions) { |
4024 |
$actions['node_unpublish_action']['label'] = t('Unpublish and remove from public view.'); |
4025 |
} |
4026 |
|
4027 |
/**
|
4028 |
* Declare archivers to the system.
|
4029 |
*
|
4030 |
* An archiver is a class that is able to package and unpackage one or more files
|
4031 |
* into a single possibly compressed file. Common examples of such files are
|
4032 |
* zip files and tar.gz files. All archiver classes must implement
|
4033 |
* ArchiverInterface.
|
4034 |
*
|
4035 |
* Each entry should be keyed on a unique value, and specify three
|
4036 |
* additional keys:
|
4037 |
* - class: The name of the PHP class for this archiver.
|
4038 |
* - extensions: An array of file extensions that this archiver supports.
|
4039 |
* - weight: This optional key specifies the weight of this archiver.
|
4040 |
* When mapping file extensions to archivers, the first archiver by
|
4041 |
* weight found that supports the requested extension will be used.
|
4042 |
*
|
4043 |
* @see hook_archiver_info_alter()
|
4044 |
*/
|
4045 |
function hook_archiver_info() { |
4046 |
return array( |
4047 |
'tar' => array( |
4048 |
'class' => 'ArchiverTar', |
4049 |
'extensions' => array('tar', 'tar.gz', 'tar.bz2'), |
4050 |
), |
4051 |
); |
4052 |
} |
4053 |
|
4054 |
/**
|
4055 |
* Alter archiver information declared by other modules.
|
4056 |
*
|
4057 |
* See hook_archiver_info() for a description of archivers and the archiver
|
4058 |
* information structure.
|
4059 |
*
|
4060 |
* @param $info
|
4061 |
* Archiver information to alter (return values from hook_archiver_info()).
|
4062 |
*/
|
4063 |
function hook_archiver_info_alter(&$info) { |
4064 |
$info['tar']['extensions'][] = 'tgz'; |
4065 |
} |
4066 |
|
4067 |
/**
|
4068 |
* Define additional date types.
|
4069 |
*
|
4070 |
* Next to the 'long', 'medium' and 'short' date types defined in core, any
|
4071 |
* module can define additional types that can be used when displaying dates,
|
4072 |
* by implementing this hook. A date type is basically just a name for a date
|
4073 |
* format.
|
4074 |
*
|
4075 |
* Date types are used in the administration interface: a user can assign
|
4076 |
* date format types defined in hook_date_formats() to date types defined in
|
4077 |
* this hook. Once a format has been assigned by a user, the machine name of a
|
4078 |
* type can be used in the format_date() function to format a date using the
|
4079 |
* chosen formatting.
|
4080 |
*
|
4081 |
* To define a date type in a module and make sure a format has been assigned to
|
4082 |
* it, without requiring a user to visit the administrative interface, use
|
4083 |
* @code variable_set('date_format_' . $type, $format); @endcode
|
4084 |
* where $type is the machine-readable name defined here, and $format is a PHP
|
4085 |
* date format string.
|
4086 |
*
|
4087 |
* To avoid namespace collisions with date types defined by other modules, it is
|
4088 |
* recommended that each date type starts with the module name. A date type
|
4089 |
* can consist of letters, numbers and underscores.
|
4090 |
*
|
4091 |
* @return
|
4092 |
* An array of date types where the keys are the machine-readable names and
|
4093 |
* the values are the human-readable labels.
|
4094 |
*
|
4095 |
* @see hook_date_formats()
|
4096 |
* @see format_date()
|
4097 |
*/
|
4098 |
function hook_date_format_types() { |
4099 |
// Define the core date format types.
|
4100 |
return array( |
4101 |
'long' => t('Long'), |
4102 |
'medium' => t('Medium'), |
4103 |
'short' => t('Short'), |
4104 |
); |
4105 |
} |
4106 |
|
4107 |
/**
|
4108 |
* Modify existing date types.
|
4109 |
*
|
4110 |
* Allows other modules to modify existing date types like 'long'. Called by
|
4111 |
* _system_date_format_types_build(). For instance, A module may use this hook
|
4112 |
* to apply settings across all date types, such as locking all date types so
|
4113 |
* they appear to be provided by the system.
|
4114 |
*
|
4115 |
* @param $types
|
4116 |
* A list of date types. Each date type is keyed by the machine-readable name
|
4117 |
* and the values are associative arrays containing:
|
4118 |
* - is_new: Set to FALSE to override previous settings.
|
4119 |
* - module: The name of the module that created the date type.
|
4120 |
* - type: The machine-readable date type name.
|
4121 |
* - title: The human-readable date type name.
|
4122 |
* - locked: Specifies that the date type is system-provided.
|
4123 |
*/
|
4124 |
function hook_date_format_types_alter(&$types) { |
4125 |
foreach ($types as $name => $type) { |
4126 |
$types[$name]['locked'] = 1; |
4127 |
} |
4128 |
} |
4129 |
|
4130 |
/**
|
4131 |
* Define additional date formats.
|
4132 |
*
|
4133 |
* This hook is used to define the PHP date format strings that can be assigned
|
4134 |
* to date types in the administrative interface. A module can provide date
|
4135 |
* format strings for the core-provided date types ('long', 'medium', and
|
4136 |
* 'short'), or for date types defined in hook_date_format_types() by itself
|
4137 |
* or another module.
|
4138 |
*
|
4139 |
* Since date formats can be locale-specific, you can specify the locales that
|
4140 |
* each date format string applies to. There may be more than one locale for a
|
4141 |
* format. There may also be more than one format for the same locale. For
|
4142 |
* example d/m/Y and Y/m/d work equally well in some locales. You may wish to
|
4143 |
* define some additional date formats that aren't specific to any one locale,
|
4144 |
* for example, "Y m". For these cases, the 'locales' component of the return
|
4145 |
* value should be omitted.
|
4146 |
*
|
4147 |
* Providing a date format here does not normally assign the format to be
|
4148 |
* used with the associated date type -- a user has to choose a format for each
|
4149 |
* date type in the administrative interface. There is one exception: locale
|
4150 |
* initialization chooses a locale-specific format for the three core-provided
|
4151 |
* types (see locale_get_localized_date_format() for details). If your module
|
4152 |
* needs to ensure that a date type it defines has a format associated with it,
|
4153 |
* call @code variable_set('date_format_' . $type, $format); @endcode
|
4154 |
* where $type is the machine-readable name defined in hook_date_format_types(),
|
4155 |
* and $format is a PHP date format string.
|
4156 |
*
|
4157 |
* @return
|
4158 |
* A list of date formats to offer as choices in the administrative
|
4159 |
* interface. Each date format is a keyed array consisting of three elements:
|
4160 |
* - 'type': The date type name that this format can be used with, as
|
4161 |
* declared in an implementation of hook_date_format_types().
|
4162 |
* - 'format': A PHP date format string to use when formatting dates. It
|
4163 |
* can contain any of the formatting options described at
|
4164 |
* http://php.net/manual/function.date.php
|
4165 |
* - 'locales': (optional) An array of 2 and 5 character locale codes,
|
4166 |
* defining which locales this format applies to (for example, 'en',
|
4167 |
* 'en-us', etc.). If your date format is not language-specific, leave this
|
4168 |
* array empty.
|
4169 |
*
|
4170 |
* @see hook_date_format_types()
|
4171 |
*/
|
4172 |
function hook_date_formats() { |
4173 |
return array( |
4174 |
array(
|
4175 |
'type' => 'mymodule_extra_long', |
4176 |
'format' => 'l jS F Y H:i:s e', |
4177 |
'locales' => array('en-ie'), |
4178 |
), |
4179 |
array(
|
4180 |
'type' => 'mymodule_extra_long', |
4181 |
'format' => 'l jS F Y h:i:sa', |
4182 |
'locales' => array('en', 'en-us'), |
4183 |
), |
4184 |
array(
|
4185 |
'type' => 'short', |
4186 |
'format' => 'F Y', |
4187 |
'locales' => array(), |
4188 |
), |
4189 |
); |
4190 |
} |
4191 |
|
4192 |
/**
|
4193 |
* Alter date formats declared by another module.
|
4194 |
*
|
4195 |
* Called by _system_date_format_types_build() to allow modules to alter the
|
4196 |
* return values from implementations of hook_date_formats().
|
4197 |
*/
|
4198 |
function hook_date_formats_alter(&$formats) { |
4199 |
foreach ($formats as $id => $format) { |
4200 |
$formats[$id]['locales'][] = 'en-ca'; |
4201 |
} |
4202 |
} |
4203 |
|
4204 |
/**
|
4205 |
* Alters the delivery callback used to send the result of the page callback to the browser.
|
4206 |
*
|
4207 |
* Called by drupal_deliver_page() to allow modules to alter how the
|
4208 |
* page is delivered to the browser.
|
4209 |
*
|
4210 |
* This hook is intended for altering the delivery callback based on
|
4211 |
* information unrelated to the path of the page accessed. For example,
|
4212 |
* it can be used to set the delivery callback based on a HTTP request
|
4213 |
* header (as shown in the code sample). To specify a delivery callback
|
4214 |
* based on path information, use hook_menu() or hook_menu_alter().
|
4215 |
*
|
4216 |
* This hook can also be used as an API function that can be used to explicitly
|
4217 |
* set the delivery callback from some other function. For example, for a module
|
4218 |
* named MODULE:
|
4219 |
* @code
|
4220 |
* function MODULE_page_delivery_callback_alter(&$callback, $set = FALSE) {
|
4221 |
* static $stored_callback;
|
4222 |
* if ($set) {
|
4223 |
* $stored_callback = $callback;
|
4224 |
* }
|
4225 |
* elseif (isset($stored_callback)) {
|
4226 |
* $callback = $stored_callback;
|
4227 |
* }
|
4228 |
* }
|
4229 |
* function SOMEWHERE_ELSE() {
|
4230 |
* $desired_delivery_callback = 'foo';
|
4231 |
* MODULE_page_delivery_callback_alter($desired_delivery_callback, TRUE);
|
4232 |
* }
|
4233 |
* @endcode
|
4234 |
*
|
4235 |
* @param $callback
|
4236 |
* The name of a function.
|
4237 |
*
|
4238 |
* @see drupal_deliver_page()
|
4239 |
*/
|
4240 |
function hook_page_delivery_callback_alter(&$callback) { |
4241 |
// jQuery sets a HTTP_X_REQUESTED_WITH header of 'XMLHttpRequest'.
|
4242 |
// If a page would normally be delivered as an html page, and it is called
|
4243 |
// from jQuery, deliver it instead as an Ajax response.
|
4244 |
if (isset($_SERVER['HTTP_X_REQUESTED_WITH']) && $_SERVER['HTTP_X_REQUESTED_WITH'] == 'XMLHttpRequest' && $callback == 'drupal_deliver_html_page') { |
4245 |
$callback = 'ajax_deliver'; |
4246 |
} |
4247 |
} |
4248 |
|
4249 |
/**
|
4250 |
* Alters theme operation links.
|
4251 |
*
|
4252 |
* @param $theme_groups
|
4253 |
* An associative array containing groups of themes.
|
4254 |
*
|
4255 |
* @see system_themes_page()
|
4256 |
*/
|
4257 |
function hook_system_themes_page_alter(&$theme_groups) { |
4258 |
foreach ($theme_groups as $state => &$group) { |
4259 |
foreach ($theme_groups[$state] as &$theme) { |
4260 |
// Add a foo link to each list of theme operations.
|
4261 |
$theme->operations[] = array( |
4262 |
'title' => t('Foo'), |
4263 |
'href' => 'admin/appearance/foo', |
4264 |
'query' => array('theme' => $theme->name) |
4265 |
); |
4266 |
} |
4267 |
} |
4268 |
} |
4269 |
|
4270 |
/**
|
4271 |
* Alters inbound URL requests.
|
4272 |
*
|
4273 |
* @param $path
|
4274 |
* The path being constructed, which, if a path alias, has been resolved to a
|
4275 |
* Drupal path by the database, and which also may have been altered by other
|
4276 |
* modules before this one.
|
4277 |
* @param $original_path
|
4278 |
* The original path, before being checked for path aliases or altered by any
|
4279 |
* modules.
|
4280 |
* @param $path_language
|
4281 |
* The language of the path.
|
4282 |
*
|
4283 |
* @see drupal_get_normal_path()
|
4284 |
*/
|
4285 |
function hook_url_inbound_alter(&$path, $original_path, $path_language) { |
4286 |
// Create the path user/me/edit, which allows a user to edit their account.
|
4287 |
if (preg_match('|^user/me/edit(/.*)?|', $path, $matches)) { |
4288 |
global $user; |
4289 |
$path = 'user/' . $user->uid . '/edit' . $matches[1]; |
4290 |
} |
4291 |
} |
4292 |
|
4293 |
/**
|
4294 |
* Alters outbound URLs.
|
4295 |
*
|
4296 |
* @param $path
|
4297 |
* The outbound path to alter, not adjusted for path aliases yet. It won't be
|
4298 |
* adjusted for path aliases until all modules are finished altering it, thus
|
4299 |
* being consistent with hook_url_inbound_alter(), which adjusts for all path
|
4300 |
* aliases before allowing modules to alter it. This may have been altered by
|
4301 |
* other modules before this one.
|
4302 |
* @param $options
|
4303 |
* A set of URL options for the URL so elements such as a fragment or a query
|
4304 |
* string can be added to the URL.
|
4305 |
* @param $original_path
|
4306 |
* The original path, before being altered by any modules.
|
4307 |
*
|
4308 |
* @see url()
|
4309 |
*/
|
4310 |
function hook_url_outbound_alter(&$path, &$options, $original_path) { |
4311 |
// Use an external RSS feed rather than the Drupal one.
|
4312 |
if ($path == 'rss.xml') { |
4313 |
$path = 'http://example.com/rss.xml'; |
4314 |
$options['external'] = TRUE; |
4315 |
} |
4316 |
|
4317 |
// Instead of pointing to user/[uid]/edit, point to user/me/edit.
|
4318 |
if (preg_match('|^user/([0-9]*)/edit(/.*)?|', $path, $matches)) { |
4319 |
global $user; |
4320 |
if ($user->uid == $matches[1]) { |
4321 |
$path = 'user/me/edit' . $matches[2]; |
4322 |
} |
4323 |
} |
4324 |
} |
4325 |
|
4326 |
/**
|
4327 |
* Alter the username that is displayed for a user.
|
4328 |
*
|
4329 |
* Called by format_username() to allow modules to alter the username that's
|
4330 |
* displayed. Can be used to ensure user privacy in situations where
|
4331 |
* $account->name is too revealing.
|
4332 |
*
|
4333 |
* @param $name
|
4334 |
* The string that format_username() will return.
|
4335 |
*
|
4336 |
* @param $account
|
4337 |
* The account object passed to format_username().
|
4338 |
*
|
4339 |
* @see format_username()
|
4340 |
*/
|
4341 |
function hook_username_alter(&$name, $account) { |
4342 |
// Display the user's uid instead of name.
|
4343 |
if (isset($account->uid)) { |
4344 |
$name = t('User !uid', array('!uid' => $account->uid)); |
4345 |
} |
4346 |
} |
4347 |
|
4348 |
/**
|
4349 |
* Provide replacement values for placeholder tokens.
|
4350 |
*
|
4351 |
* This hook is invoked when someone calls token_replace(). That function first
|
4352 |
* scans the text for [type:token] patterns, and splits the needed tokens into
|
4353 |
* groups by type. Then hook_tokens() is invoked on each token-type group,
|
4354 |
* allowing your module to respond by providing replacement text for any of
|
4355 |
* the tokens in the group that your module knows how to process.
|
4356 |
*
|
4357 |
* A module implementing this hook should also implement hook_token_info() in
|
4358 |
* order to list its available tokens on editing screens.
|
4359 |
*
|
4360 |
* @param $type
|
4361 |
* The machine-readable name of the type (group) of token being replaced, such
|
4362 |
* as 'node', 'user', or another type defined by a hook_token_info()
|
4363 |
* implementation.
|
4364 |
* @param $tokens
|
4365 |
* An array of tokens to be replaced. The keys are the machine-readable token
|
4366 |
* names, and the values are the raw [type:token] strings that appeared in the
|
4367 |
* original text.
|
4368 |
* @param $data
|
4369 |
* (optional) An associative array of data objects to be used when generating
|
4370 |
* replacement values, as supplied in the $data parameter to token_replace().
|
4371 |
* @param $options
|
4372 |
* (optional) An associative array of options for token replacement; see
|
4373 |
* token_replace() for possible values.
|
4374 |
*
|
4375 |
* @return
|
4376 |
* An associative array of replacement values, keyed by the raw [type:token]
|
4377 |
* strings from the original text.
|
4378 |
*
|
4379 |
* @see hook_token_info()
|
4380 |
* @see hook_tokens_alter()
|
4381 |
*/
|
4382 |
function hook_tokens($type, $tokens, array $data = array(), array $options = array()) { |
4383 |
$url_options = array('absolute' => TRUE); |
4384 |
if (isset($options['language'])) { |
4385 |
$url_options['language'] = $options['language']; |
4386 |
$language_code = $options['language']->language; |
4387 |
} |
4388 |
else {
|
4389 |
$language_code = NULL; |
4390 |
} |
4391 |
$sanitize = !empty($options['sanitize']); |
4392 |
|
4393 |
$replacements = array(); |
4394 |
|
4395 |
if ($type == 'node' && !empty($data['node'])) { |
4396 |
$node = $data['node']; |
4397 |
|
4398 |
foreach ($tokens as $name => $original) { |
4399 |
switch ($name) { |
4400 |
// Simple key values on the node.
|
4401 |
case 'nid': |
4402 |
$replacements[$original] = $node->nid; |
4403 |
break;
|
4404 |
|
4405 |
case 'title': |
4406 |
$replacements[$original] = $sanitize ? check_plain($node->title) : $node->title; |
4407 |
break;
|
4408 |
|
4409 |
case 'edit-url': |
4410 |
$replacements[$original] = url('node/' . $node->nid . '/edit', $url_options); |
4411 |
break;
|
4412 |
|
4413 |
// Default values for the chained tokens handled below.
|
4414 |
case 'author': |
4415 |
$name = ($node->uid == 0) ? variable_get('anonymous', t('Anonymous')) : $node->name; |
4416 |
$replacements[$original] = $sanitize ? filter_xss($name) : $name; |
4417 |
break;
|
4418 |
|
4419 |
case 'created': |
4420 |
$replacements[$original] = format_date($node->created, 'medium', '', NULL, $language_code); |
4421 |
break;
|
4422 |
} |
4423 |
} |
4424 |
|
4425 |
if ($author_tokens = token_find_with_prefix($tokens, 'author')) { |
4426 |
$author = user_load($node->uid); |
4427 |
$replacements += token_generate('user', $author_tokens, array('user' => $author), $options); |
4428 |
} |
4429 |
|
4430 |
if ($created_tokens = token_find_with_prefix($tokens, 'created')) { |
4431 |
$replacements += token_generate('date', $created_tokens, array('date' => $node->created), $options); |
4432 |
} |
4433 |
} |
4434 |
|
4435 |
return $replacements; |
4436 |
} |
4437 |
|
4438 |
/**
|
4439 |
* Alter replacement values for placeholder tokens.
|
4440 |
*
|
4441 |
* @param $replacements
|
4442 |
* An associative array of replacements returned by hook_tokens().
|
4443 |
* @param $context
|
4444 |
* The context in which hook_tokens() was called. An associative array with
|
4445 |
* the following keys, which have the same meaning as the corresponding
|
4446 |
* parameters of hook_tokens():
|
4447 |
* - 'type'
|
4448 |
* - 'tokens'
|
4449 |
* - 'data'
|
4450 |
* - 'options'
|
4451 |
*
|
4452 |
* @see hook_tokens()
|
4453 |
*/
|
4454 |
function hook_tokens_alter(array &$replacements, array $context) { |
4455 |
$options = $context['options']; |
4456 |
|
4457 |
if (isset($options['language'])) { |
4458 |
$url_options['language'] = $options['language']; |
4459 |
$language_code = $options['language']->language; |
4460 |
} |
4461 |
else {
|
4462 |
$language_code = NULL; |
4463 |
} |
4464 |
$sanitize = !empty($options['sanitize']); |
4465 |
|
4466 |
if ($context['type'] == 'node' && !empty($context['data']['node'])) { |
4467 |
$node = $context['data']['node']; |
4468 |
|
4469 |
// Alter the [node:title] token, and replace it with the rendered content
|
4470 |
// of a field (field_title).
|
4471 |
if (isset($context['tokens']['title'])) { |
4472 |
$title = field_view_field('node', $node, 'field_title', 'default', $language_code); |
4473 |
$replacements[$context['tokens']['title']] = drupal_render($title); |
4474 |
} |
4475 |
} |
4476 |
} |
4477 |
|
4478 |
/**
|
4479 |
* Provide information about available placeholder tokens and token types.
|
4480 |
*
|
4481 |
* Tokens are placeholders that can be put into text by using the syntax
|
4482 |
* [type:token], where type is the machine-readable name of a token type, and
|
4483 |
* token is the machine-readable name of a token within this group. This hook
|
4484 |
* provides a list of types and tokens to be displayed on text editing screens,
|
4485 |
* so that people editing text can see what their token options are.
|
4486 |
*
|
4487 |
* The actual token replacement is done by token_replace(), which invokes
|
4488 |
* hook_tokens(). Your module will need to implement that hook in order to
|
4489 |
* generate token replacements from the tokens defined here.
|
4490 |
*
|
4491 |
* @return
|
4492 |
* An associative array of available tokens and token types. The outer array
|
4493 |
* has two components:
|
4494 |
* - types: An associative array of token types (groups). Each token type is
|
4495 |
* an associative array with the following components:
|
4496 |
* - name: The translated human-readable short name of the token type.
|
4497 |
* - description: A translated longer description of the token type.
|
4498 |
* - needs-data: The type of data that must be provided to token_replace()
|
4499 |
* in the $data argument (i.e., the key name in $data) in order for tokens
|
4500 |
* of this type to be used in the $text being processed. For instance, if
|
4501 |
* the token needs a node object, 'needs-data' should be 'node', and to
|
4502 |
* use this token in token_replace(), the caller needs to supply a node
|
4503 |
* object as $data['node']. Some token data can also be supplied
|
4504 |
* indirectly; for instance, a node object in $data supplies a user object
|
4505 |
* (the author of the node), allowing user tokens to be used when only
|
4506 |
* a node data object is supplied.
|
4507 |
* - tokens: An associative array of tokens. The outer array is keyed by the
|
4508 |
* group name (the same key as in the types array). Within each group of
|
4509 |
* tokens, each token item is keyed by the machine name of the token, and
|
4510 |
* each token item has the following components:
|
4511 |
* - name: The translated human-readable short name of the token.
|
4512 |
* - description: A translated longer description of the token.
|
4513 |
* - type (optional): A 'needs-data' data type supplied by this token, which
|
4514 |
* should match a 'needs-data' value from another token type. For example,
|
4515 |
* the node author token provides a user object, which can then be used
|
4516 |
* for token replacement data in token_replace() without having to supply
|
4517 |
* a separate user object.
|
4518 |
*
|
4519 |
* @see hook_token_info_alter()
|
4520 |
* @see hook_tokens()
|
4521 |
*/
|
4522 |
function hook_token_info() { |
4523 |
$type = array( |
4524 |
'name' => t('Nodes'), |
4525 |
'description' => t('Tokens related to individual nodes.'), |
4526 |
'needs-data' => 'node', |
4527 |
); |
4528 |
|
4529 |
// Core tokens for nodes.
|
4530 |
$node['nid'] = array( |
4531 |
'name' => t("Node ID"), |
4532 |
'description' => t("The unique ID of the node."), |
4533 |
); |
4534 |
$node['title'] = array( |
4535 |
'name' => t("Title"), |
4536 |
'description' => t("The title of the node."), |
4537 |
); |
4538 |
$node['edit-url'] = array( |
4539 |
'name' => t("Edit URL"), |
4540 |
'description' => t("The URL of the node's edit page."), |
4541 |
); |
4542 |
|
4543 |
// Chained tokens for nodes.
|
4544 |
$node['created'] = array( |
4545 |
'name' => t("Date created"), |
4546 |
'description' => t("The date the node was posted."), |
4547 |
'type' => 'date', |
4548 |
); |
4549 |
$node['author'] = array( |
4550 |
'name' => t("Author"), |
4551 |
'description' => t("The author of the node."), |
4552 |
'type' => 'user', |
4553 |
); |
4554 |
|
4555 |
return array( |
4556 |
'types' => array('node' => $type), |
4557 |
'tokens' => array('node' => $node), |
4558 |
); |
4559 |
} |
4560 |
|
4561 |
/**
|
4562 |
* Alter the metadata about available placeholder tokens and token types.
|
4563 |
*
|
4564 |
* @param $data
|
4565 |
* The associative array of token definitions from hook_token_info().
|
4566 |
*
|
4567 |
* @see hook_token_info()
|
4568 |
*/
|
4569 |
function hook_token_info_alter(&$data) { |
4570 |
// Modify description of node tokens for our site.
|
4571 |
$data['tokens']['node']['nid'] = array( |
4572 |
'name' => t("Node ID"), |
4573 |
'description' => t("The unique ID of the article."), |
4574 |
); |
4575 |
$data['tokens']['node']['title'] = array( |
4576 |
'name' => t("Title"), |
4577 |
'description' => t("The title of the article."), |
4578 |
); |
4579 |
|
4580 |
// Chained tokens for nodes.
|
4581 |
$data['tokens']['node']['created'] = array( |
4582 |
'name' => t("Date created"), |
4583 |
'description' => t("The date the article was posted."), |
4584 |
'type' => 'date', |
4585 |
); |
4586 |
} |
4587 |
|
4588 |
/**
|
4589 |
* Alter batch information before a batch is processed.
|
4590 |
*
|
4591 |
* Called by batch_process() to allow modules to alter a batch before it is
|
4592 |
* processed.
|
4593 |
*
|
4594 |
* @param $batch
|
4595 |
* The associative array of batch information. See batch_set() for details on
|
4596 |
* what this could contain.
|
4597 |
*
|
4598 |
* @see batch_set()
|
4599 |
* @see batch_process()
|
4600 |
*
|
4601 |
* @ingroup batch
|
4602 |
*/
|
4603 |
function hook_batch_alter(&$batch) { |
4604 |
// If the current page request is inside the overlay, add ?render=overlay to
|
4605 |
// the success callback URL, so that it appears correctly within the overlay.
|
4606 |
if (overlay_get_mode() == 'child') { |
4607 |
if (isset($batch['url_options']['query'])) { |
4608 |
$batch['url_options']['query']['render'] = 'overlay'; |
4609 |
} |
4610 |
else {
|
4611 |
$batch['url_options']['query'] = array('render' => 'overlay'); |
4612 |
} |
4613 |
} |
4614 |
} |
4615 |
|
4616 |
/**
|
4617 |
* Provide information on Updaters (classes that can update Drupal).
|
4618 |
*
|
4619 |
* An Updater is a class that knows how to update various parts of the Drupal
|
4620 |
* file system, for example to update modules that have newer releases, or to
|
4621 |
* install a new theme.
|
4622 |
*
|
4623 |
* @return
|
4624 |
* An associative array of information about the updater(s) being provided.
|
4625 |
* This array is keyed by a unique identifier for each updater, and the
|
4626 |
* values are subarrays that can contain the following keys:
|
4627 |
* - class: The name of the PHP class which implements this updater.
|
4628 |
* - name: Human-readable name of this updater.
|
4629 |
* - weight: Controls what order the Updater classes are consulted to decide
|
4630 |
* which one should handle a given task. When an update task is being run,
|
4631 |
* the system will loop through all the Updater classes defined in this
|
4632 |
* registry in weight order and let each class respond to the task and
|
4633 |
* decide if each Updater wants to handle the task. In general, this
|
4634 |
* doesn't matter, but if you need to override an existing Updater, make
|
4635 |
* sure your Updater has a lighter weight so that it comes first.
|
4636 |
*
|
4637 |
* @see drupal_get_updaters()
|
4638 |
* @see hook_updater_info_alter()
|
4639 |
*/
|
4640 |
function hook_updater_info() { |
4641 |
return array( |
4642 |
'module' => array( |
4643 |
'class' => 'ModuleUpdater', |
4644 |
'name' => t('Update modules'), |
4645 |
'weight' => 0, |
4646 |
), |
4647 |
'theme' => array( |
4648 |
'class' => 'ThemeUpdater', |
4649 |
'name' => t('Update themes'), |
4650 |
'weight' => 0, |
4651 |
), |
4652 |
); |
4653 |
} |
4654 |
|
4655 |
/**
|
4656 |
* Alter the Updater information array.
|
4657 |
*
|
4658 |
* An Updater is a class that knows how to update various parts of the Drupal
|
4659 |
* file system, for example to update modules that have newer releases, or to
|
4660 |
* install a new theme.
|
4661 |
*
|
4662 |
* @param array $updaters
|
4663 |
* Associative array of updaters as defined through hook_updater_info().
|
4664 |
* Alter this array directly.
|
4665 |
*
|
4666 |
* @see drupal_get_updaters()
|
4667 |
* @see hook_updater_info()
|
4668 |
*/
|
4669 |
function hook_updater_info_alter(&$updaters) { |
4670 |
// Adjust weight so that the theme Updater gets a chance to handle a given
|
4671 |
// update task before module updaters.
|
4672 |
$updaters['theme']['weight'] = -1; |
4673 |
} |
4674 |
|
4675 |
/**
|
4676 |
* Alter the default country list.
|
4677 |
*
|
4678 |
* @param $countries
|
4679 |
* The associative array of countries keyed by ISO 3166-1 country code.
|
4680 |
*
|
4681 |
* @see country_get_list()
|
4682 |
* @see _country_get_predefined_list()
|
4683 |
*/
|
4684 |
function hook_countries_alter(&$countries) { |
4685 |
// Elbonia is now independent, so add it to the country list.
|
4686 |
$countries['EB'] = 'Elbonia'; |
4687 |
} |
4688 |
|
4689 |
/**
|
4690 |
* Control site status before menu dispatching.
|
4691 |
*
|
4692 |
* The hook is called after checking whether the site is offline but before
|
4693 |
* the current router item is retrieved and executed by
|
4694 |
* menu_execute_active_handler(). If the site is in offline mode,
|
4695 |
* $menu_site_status is set to MENU_SITE_OFFLINE.
|
4696 |
*
|
4697 |
* @param $menu_site_status
|
4698 |
* Supported values are MENU_SITE_OFFLINE, MENU_ACCESS_DENIED,
|
4699 |
* MENU_NOT_FOUND and MENU_SITE_ONLINE. Any other value than
|
4700 |
* MENU_SITE_ONLINE will skip the default menu handling system and be passed
|
4701 |
* for delivery to drupal_deliver_page() with a NULL
|
4702 |
* $default_delivery_callback.
|
4703 |
* @param $path
|
4704 |
* Contains the system path that is going to be loaded. This is read only,
|
4705 |
* use hook_url_inbound_alter() to change the path.
|
4706 |
*/
|
4707 |
function hook_menu_site_status_alter(&$menu_site_status, $path) { |
4708 |
// Allow access to my_module/authentication even if site is in offline mode.
|
4709 |
if ($menu_site_status == MENU_SITE_OFFLINE && user_is_anonymous() && $path == 'my_module/authentication') { |
4710 |
$menu_site_status = MENU_SITE_ONLINE; |
4711 |
} |
4712 |
} |
4713 |
|
4714 |
/**
|
4715 |
* Register information about FileTransfer classes provided by a module.
|
4716 |
*
|
4717 |
* The FileTransfer class allows transferring files over a specific type of
|
4718 |
* connection. Core provides classes for FTP and SSH. Contributed modules are
|
4719 |
* free to extend the FileTransfer base class to add other connection types,
|
4720 |
* and if these classes are registered via hook_filetransfer_info(), those
|
4721 |
* connection types will be available to site administrators using the Update
|
4722 |
* manager when they are redirected to the authorize.php script to authorize
|
4723 |
* the file operations.
|
4724 |
*
|
4725 |
* @return array
|
4726 |
* Nested array of information about FileTransfer classes. Each key is a
|
4727 |
* FileTransfer type (not human readable, used for form elements and
|
4728 |
* variable names, etc), and the values are subarrays that define properties
|
4729 |
* of that type. The keys in each subarray are:
|
4730 |
* - 'title': Required. The human-readable name of the connection type.
|
4731 |
* - 'class': Required. The name of the FileTransfer class. The constructor
|
4732 |
* will always be passed the full path to the root of the site that should
|
4733 |
* be used to restrict where file transfer operations can occur (the $jail)
|
4734 |
* and an array of settings values returned by the settings form.
|
4735 |
* - 'file': Required. The include file containing the FileTransfer class.
|
4736 |
* This should be a separate .inc file, not just the .module file, so that
|
4737 |
* the minimum possible code is loaded when authorize.php is running.
|
4738 |
* - 'file path': Optional. The directory (relative to the Drupal root)
|
4739 |
* where the include file lives. If not defined, defaults to the base
|
4740 |
* directory of the module implementing the hook.
|
4741 |
* - 'weight': Optional. Integer weight used for sorting connection types on
|
4742 |
* the authorize.php form.
|
4743 |
*
|
4744 |
* @see FileTransfer
|
4745 |
* @see authorize.php
|
4746 |
* @see hook_filetransfer_info_alter()
|
4747 |
* @see drupal_get_filetransfer_info()
|
4748 |
*/
|
4749 |
function hook_filetransfer_info() { |
4750 |
$info['sftp'] = array( |
4751 |
'title' => t('SFTP (Secure FTP)'), |
4752 |
'file' => 'sftp.filetransfer.inc', |
4753 |
'class' => 'FileTransferSFTP', |
4754 |
'weight' => 10, |
4755 |
); |
4756 |
return $info; |
4757 |
} |
4758 |
|
4759 |
/**
|
4760 |
* Alter the FileTransfer class registry.
|
4761 |
*
|
4762 |
* @param array $filetransfer_info
|
4763 |
* Reference to a nested array containing information about the FileTransfer
|
4764 |
* class registry.
|
4765 |
*
|
4766 |
* @see hook_filetransfer_info()
|
4767 |
*/
|
4768 |
function hook_filetransfer_info_alter(&$filetransfer_info) { |
4769 |
if (variable_get('paranoia', FALSE)) { |
4770 |
// Remove the FTP option entirely.
|
4771 |
unset($filetransfer_info['ftp']); |
4772 |
// Make sure the SSH option is listed first.
|
4773 |
$filetransfer_info['ssh']['weight'] = -10; |
4774 |
} |
4775 |
} |
4776 |
|
4777 |
/**
|
4778 |
* @} End of "addtogroup hooks".
|
4779 |
*/
|
4780 |
|
4781 |
/**
|
4782 |
* @addtogroup callbacks
|
4783 |
* @{
|
4784 |
*/
|
4785 |
|
4786 |
/**
|
4787 |
* Return the URI for an entity.
|
4788 |
*
|
4789 |
* Callback for hook_entity_info().
|
4790 |
*
|
4791 |
* @param $entity
|
4792 |
* The entity to return the URI for.
|
4793 |
*
|
4794 |
* @return
|
4795 |
* An associative array with the following elements:
|
4796 |
* - 'path': The URL path for the entity.
|
4797 |
* - 'options': (optional) An array of options for the url() function.
|
4798 |
* The actual entity URI can be constructed by passing these elements to
|
4799 |
* url().
|
4800 |
*/
|
4801 |
function callback_entity_info_uri($entity) { |
4802 |
return array( |
4803 |
'path' => 'node/' . $entity->nid, |
4804 |
); |
4805 |
} |
4806 |
|
4807 |
/**
|
4808 |
* Return the label of an entity.
|
4809 |
*
|
4810 |
* Callback for hook_entity_info().
|
4811 |
*
|
4812 |
* @param $entity
|
4813 |
* The entity for which to generate the label.
|
4814 |
* @param $entity_type
|
4815 |
* The entity type; e.g., 'node' or 'user'.
|
4816 |
*
|
4817 |
* @return
|
4818 |
* An unsanitized string with the label of the entity.
|
4819 |
*
|
4820 |
* @see entity_label()
|
4821 |
*/
|
4822 |
function callback_entity_info_label($entity, $entity_type) { |
4823 |
return empty($entity->title) ? 'Untitled entity' : $entity->title; |
4824 |
} |
4825 |
|
4826 |
/**
|
4827 |
* Return the language code of the entity.
|
4828 |
*
|
4829 |
* Callback for hook_entity_info().
|
4830 |
*
|
4831 |
* The language callback is meant to be used primarily for temporary alterations
|
4832 |
* of the property value.
|
4833 |
*
|
4834 |
* @param $entity
|
4835 |
* The entity for which to return the language.
|
4836 |
* @param $entity_type
|
4837 |
* The entity type; e.g., 'node' or 'user'.
|
4838 |
*
|
4839 |
* @return
|
4840 |
* The language code for the language of the entity.
|
4841 |
*
|
4842 |
* @see entity_language()
|
4843 |
*/
|
4844 |
function callback_entity_info_language($entity, $entity_type) { |
4845 |
return $entity->language; |
4846 |
} |
4847 |
|
4848 |
/**
|
4849 |
* @} End of "addtogroup callbacks".
|
4850 |
*/
|
4851 |
|
4852 |
/**
|
4853 |
* @defgroup update_api Update versions of API functions
|
4854 |
* @{
|
4855 |
* Functions that are similar to normal API functions, but do not invoke hooks.
|
4856 |
*
|
4857 |
* These simplified versions of core API functions are provided for use by
|
4858 |
* update functions (hook_update_N() implementations).
|
4859 |
*
|
4860 |
* During database updates the schema of any module could be out of date. For
|
4861 |
* this reason, caution is needed when using any API function within an update
|
4862 |
* function - particularly CRUD functions, functions that depend on the schema
|
4863 |
* (for example by using drupal_write_record()), and any functions that invoke
|
4864 |
* hooks.
|
4865 |
*
|
4866 |
* Instead, a simplified utility function should be used. If a utility version
|
4867 |
* of the API function you require does not already exist, then you should
|
4868 |
* create a new function. The new utility function should be named
|
4869 |
* _update_N_mymodule_my_function(). N is the schema version the function acts
|
4870 |
* on (the schema version is the number N from the hook_update_N()
|
4871 |
* implementation where this schema was introduced, or a number following the
|
4872 |
* same numbering scheme), and mymodule_my_function is the name of the original
|
4873 |
* API function including the module's name.
|
4874 |
*
|
4875 |
* Examples:
|
4876 |
* - _update_6000_mymodule_save(): This function performs a save operation
|
4877 |
* without invoking any hooks using the 6.x schema.
|
4878 |
* - _update_7000_mymodule_save(): This function performs the same save
|
4879 |
* operation using the 7.x schema.
|
4880 |
*
|
4881 |
* The utility function should not invoke any hooks, and should perform database
|
4882 |
* operations using functions from the
|
4883 |
* @link database Database abstraction layer, @endlink
|
4884 |
* like db_insert(), db_update(), db_delete(), db_query(), and so on.
|
4885 |
*
|
4886 |
* If a change to the schema necessitates a change to the utility function, a
|
4887 |
* new function should be created with a name based on the version of the schema
|
4888 |
* it acts on. See _update_7000_bar_get_types() and _update_7001_bar_get_types()
|
4889 |
* in the code examples that follow.
|
4890 |
*
|
4891 |
* For example, foo.install could contain:
|
4892 |
* @code
|
4893 |
* function foo_update_dependencies() {
|
4894 |
* // foo_update_7010() needs to run after bar_update_7000().
|
4895 |
* $dependencies['foo'][7010] = array(
|
4896 |
* 'bar' => 7000,
|
4897 |
* );
|
4898 |
*
|
4899 |
* // foo_update_7036() needs to run after bar_update_7001().
|
4900 |
* $dependencies['foo'][7036] = array(
|
4901 |
* 'bar' => 7001,
|
4902 |
* );
|
4903 |
*
|
4904 |
* return $dependencies;
|
4905 |
* }
|
4906 |
*
|
4907 |
* function foo_update_7000() {
|
4908 |
* // No updates have been run on the {bar_types} table yet, so this needs
|
4909 |
* // to work with the 6.x schema.
|
4910 |
* foreach (_update_6000_bar_get_types() as $type) {
|
4911 |
* // Rename a variable.
|
4912 |
* }
|
4913 |
* }
|
4914 |
*
|
4915 |
* function foo_update_7010() {
|
4916 |
* // Since foo_update_7010() is going to run after bar_update_7000(), it
|
4917 |
* // needs to operate on the new schema, not the old one.
|
4918 |
* foreach (_update_7000_bar_get_types() as $type) {
|
4919 |
* // Rename a different variable.
|
4920 |
* }
|
4921 |
* }
|
4922 |
*
|
4923 |
* function foo_update_7036() {
|
4924 |
* // This update will run after bar_update_7001().
|
4925 |
* foreach (_update_7001_bar_get_types() as $type) {
|
4926 |
* }
|
4927 |
* }
|
4928 |
* @endcode
|
4929 |
*
|
4930 |
* And bar.install could contain:
|
4931 |
* @code
|
4932 |
* function bar_update_7000() {
|
4933 |
* // Type and bundle are confusing, so we renamed the table.
|
4934 |
* db_rename_table('bar_types', 'bar_bundles');
|
4935 |
* }
|
4936 |
*
|
4937 |
* function bar_update_7001() {
|
4938 |
* // Database table names should be singular when possible.
|
4939 |
* db_rename_table('bar_bundles', 'bar_bundle');
|
4940 |
* }
|
4941 |
*
|
4942 |
* function _update_6000_bar_get_types() {
|
4943 |
* db_query('SELECT * FROM {bar_types}')->fetchAll();
|
4944 |
* }
|
4945 |
*
|
4946 |
* function _update_7000_bar_get_types() {
|
4947 |
* db_query('SELECT * FROM {bar_bundles'})->fetchAll();
|
4948 |
* }
|
4949 |
*
|
4950 |
* function _update_7001_bar_get_types() {
|
4951 |
* db_query('SELECT * FROM {bar_bundle}')->fetchAll();
|
4952 |
* }
|
4953 |
* @endcode
|
4954 |
*
|
4955 |
* @see hook_update_N()
|
4956 |
* @see hook_update_dependencies()
|
4957 |
*/
|
4958 |
|
4959 |
/**
|
4960 |
* @} End of "defgroup update_api".
|
4961 |
*/
|