getAsArray(); } /** * @defgroup validation Input validation * @{ * Functions to validate user input. */ /** * Verifies the syntax of the given email address. * * @param string $mail * A string containing an email address. * * @return bool * TRUE if the address is in a valid format. * * @deprecated in Drupal 8.0.x-dev, will be removed before Drupal 9.0.0. * Use \Drupal::service('email.validator')->isValid(). */ function valid_email_address($mail) { return \Drupal::service('email.validator')->isValid($mail); } /** * @} End of "defgroup validation". */ /** * @defgroup sanitization Sanitization functions * @{ * Functions to sanitize values. * * See https://www.drupal.org/writing-secure-code for information * on writing secure code. */ /** * Strips dangerous protocols from a URI and encodes it for output to HTML. * * @param $uri * A plain-text URI that might contain dangerous protocols. * * @return string * A URI stripped of dangerous protocols and encoded for output to an HTML * attribute value. Because it is already encoded, it should not be set as a * value within a $attributes array passed to Drupal\Core\Template\Attribute, * because Drupal\Core\Template\Attribute expects those values to be * plain-text strings. To pass a filtered URI to * Drupal\Core\Template\Attribute, call * \Drupal\Component\Utility\UrlHelper::stripDangerousProtocols() instead. * * @see \Drupal\Component\Utility\UrlHelper::stripDangerousProtocols() * @see \Drupal\Component\Utility\UrlHelper::filterBadProtocol() * * @deprecated in Drupal 8.0.x-dev, will be removed before Drupal 9.0.0. * Use UrlHelper::stripDangerousProtocols() or UrlHelper::filterBadProtocol() * instead. UrlHelper::stripDangerousProtocols() can be used in conjunction * with \Drupal\Component\Utility\SafeMarkup::format() and an @variable * placeholder which will perform the necessary escaping. * UrlHelper::filterBadProtocol() is functionality equivalent to check_url() * apart from the fact it is protected from double escaping bugs. Note that * this method no longer marks its output as safe. */ function check_url($uri) { return Html::escape(UrlHelper::stripDangerousProtocols($uri)); } /** * @} End of "defgroup sanitization". */ /** * @defgroup format Formatting * @{ * Functions to format numbers, strings, dates, etc. */ /** * Generates a string representation for the given byte count. * * @param $size * A size in bytes. * @param $langcode * Optional language code to translate to a language other than what is used * to display the page. * * @return \Drupal\Core\StringTranslation\TranslatableMarkup * A translated string representation of the size. */ function format_size($size, $langcode = NULL) { if ($size < Bytes::KILOBYTE) { return \Drupal::translation()->formatPlural($size, '1 byte', '@count bytes', array(), array('langcode' => $langcode)); } else { $size = $size / Bytes::KILOBYTE; // Convert bytes to kilobytes. $units = ['KB', 'MB', 'GB', 'TB', 'PB', 'EB', 'ZB', 'YB']; foreach ($units as $unit) { if (round($size, 2) >= Bytes::KILOBYTE) { $size = $size / Bytes::KILOBYTE; } else { break; } } $args = ['@size' => round($size, 2)]; $options = ['langcode' => $langcode]; switch ($unit) { case 'KB': return new TranslatableMarkup('@size KB', $args, $options); case 'MB': return new TranslatableMarkup('@size MB', $args, $options); case 'GB': return new TranslatableMarkup('@size GB', $args, $options); case 'TB': return new TranslatableMarkup('@size TB', $args, $options); case 'PB': return new TranslatableMarkup('@size PB', $args, $options); case 'EB': return new TranslatableMarkup('@size EB', $args, $options); case 'ZB': return new TranslatableMarkup('@size ZB', $args, $options); case 'YB': return new TranslatableMarkup('@size YB', $args, $options); } } } /** * Formats a date, using a date type or a custom date format string. * * @param $timestamp * A UNIX timestamp to format. * @param $type * (optional) The format to use, one of: * - One of the built-in formats: 'short', 'medium', * 'long', 'html_datetime', 'html_date', 'html_time', * 'html_yearless_date', 'html_week', 'html_month', 'html_year'. * - The name of a date type defined by a date format config entity. * - The machine name of an administrator-defined date format. * - 'custom', to use $format. * Defaults to 'medium'. * @param $format * (optional) If $type is 'custom', a PHP date format string suitable for * input to date(). Use a backslash to escape ordinary text, so it does not * get interpreted as date format characters. * @param $timezone * (optional) Time zone identifier, as described at * http://php.net/manual/timezones.php Defaults to the time zone used to * display the page. * @param $langcode * (optional) Language code to translate to. Defaults to the language used to * display the page. * * @return * A translated date string in the requested format. * * @see \Drupal\Core\Datetime\DateFormatter::format() * * @deprecated in Drupal 8.0.0, will be removed before Drupal 9.0.0. * Use \Drupal::service('date.formatter')->format(). */ function format_date($timestamp, $type = 'medium', $format = '', $timezone = NULL, $langcode = NULL) { return \Drupal::service('date.formatter')->format($timestamp, $type, $format, $timezone, $langcode); } /** * Returns an ISO8601 formatted date based on the given date. * * @param $date * A UNIX timestamp. * * @return string * An ISO8601 formatted date. */ function date_iso8601($date) { // The DATE_ISO8601 constant cannot be used here because it does not match // date('c') and produces invalid RDF markup. return date('c', $date); } /** * @} End of "defgroup format". */ /** * Formats an attribute string for an HTTP header. * * @param $attributes * An associative array of attributes such as 'rel'. * * @return * A ; separated string ready for insertion in a HTTP header. No escaping is * performed for HTML entities, so this string is not safe to be printed. */ function drupal_http_header_attributes(array $attributes = array()) { foreach ($attributes as $attribute => &$data) { if (is_array($data)) { $data = implode(' ', $data); } $data = $attribute . '="' . $data . '"'; } return $attributes ? ' ' . implode('; ', $attributes) : ''; } /** * Attempts to set the PHP maximum execution time. * * This function is a wrapper around the PHP function set_time_limit(). * When called, set_time_limit() restarts the timeout counter from zero. * In other words, if the timeout is the default 30 seconds, and 25 seconds * into script execution a call such as set_time_limit(20) is made, the * script will run for a total of 45 seconds before timing out. * * If the current time limit is not unlimited it is possible to decrease the * total time limit if the sum of the new time limit and the current time spent * running the script is inferior to the original time limit. It is inherent to * the way set_time_limit() works, it should rather be called with an * appropriate value every time you need to allocate a certain amount of time * to execute a task than only once at the beginning of the script. * * Before calling set_time_limit(), we check if this function is available * because it could be disabled by the server administrator. We also hide all * the errors that could occur when calling set_time_limit(), because it is * not possible to reliably ensure that PHP or a security extension will * not issue a warning/error if they prevent the use of this function. * * @param $time_limit * An integer specifying the new time limit, in seconds. A value of 0 * indicates unlimited execution time. * * @ingroup php_wrappers */ function drupal_set_time_limit($time_limit) { if (function_exists('set_time_limit')) { $current = ini_get('max_execution_time'); // Do not set time limit if it is currently unlimited. if ($current != 0) { @set_time_limit($time_limit); } } } /** * Returns the base URL path (i.e., directory) of the Drupal installation. * * base_path() adds a "/" to the beginning and end of the returned path if the * path is not empty. At the very least, this will return "/". * * Examples: * - http://example.com returns "/" because the path is empty. * - http://example.com/drupal/folder returns "/drupal/folder/". */ function base_path() { return $GLOBALS['base_path']; } /** * Deletes old cached CSS files. * * @deprecated in Drupal 8.x, will be removed before Drupal 9.0. * Use \Drupal\Core\Asset\AssetCollectionOptimizerInterface::deleteAll(). */ function drupal_clear_css_cache() { \Drupal::service('asset.css.collection_optimizer')->deleteAll(); } /** * Constructs an array of the defaults that are used for JavaScript assets. * * @param $data * (optional) The default data parameter for the JavaScript asset array. * * @see hook_js_alter() */ function drupal_js_defaults($data = NULL) { return array( 'type' => 'file', 'group' => JS_DEFAULT, 'weight' => 0, 'scope' => 'header', 'cache' => TRUE, 'preprocess' => TRUE, 'attributes' => array(), 'version' => NULL, 'data' => $data, 'browsers' => array(), ); } /** * Adds JavaScript to change the state of an element based on another element. * * A "state" means a certain property on a DOM element, such as "visible" or * "checked". A state can be applied to an element, depending on the state of * another element on the page. In general, states depend on HTML attributes and * DOM element properties, which change due to user interaction. * * Since states are driven by JavaScript only, it is important to understand * that all states are applied on presentation only, none of the states force * any server-side logic, and that they will not be applied for site visitors * without JavaScript support. All modules implementing states have to make * sure that the intended logic also works without JavaScript being enabled. * * #states is an associative array in the form of: * @code * array( * STATE1 => CONDITIONS_ARRAY1, * STATE2 => CONDITIONS_ARRAY2, * ... * ) * @endcode * Each key is the name of a state to apply to the element, such as 'visible'. * Each value is a list of conditions that denote when the state should be * applied. * * Multiple different states may be specified to act on complex conditions: * @code * array( * 'visible' => CONDITIONS, * 'checked' => OTHER_CONDITIONS, * ) * @endcode * * Every condition is a key/value pair, whose key is a jQuery selector that * denotes another element on the page, and whose value is an array of * conditions, which must bet met on that element: * @code * array( * 'visible' => array( * JQUERY_SELECTOR => REMOTE_CONDITIONS, * JQUERY_SELECTOR => REMOTE_CONDITIONS, * ... * ), * ) * @endcode * All conditions must be met for the state to be applied. * * Each remote condition is a key/value pair specifying conditions on the other * element that need to be met to apply the state to the element: * @code * array( * 'visible' => array( * ':input[name="remote_checkbox"]' => array('checked' => TRUE), * ), * ) * @endcode * * For example, to show a textfield only when a checkbox is checked: * @code * $form['toggle_me'] = array( * '#type' => 'checkbox', * '#title' => t('Tick this box to type'), * ); * $form['settings'] = array( * '#type' => 'textfield', * '#states' => array( * // Only show this field when the 'toggle_me' checkbox is enabled. * 'visible' => array( * ':input[name="toggle_me"]' => array('checked' => TRUE), * ), * ), * ); * @endcode * * The following states may be applied to an element: * - enabled * - disabled * - required * - optional * - visible * - invisible * - checked * - unchecked * - expanded * - collapsed * * The following states may be used in remote conditions: * - empty * - filled * - checked * - unchecked * - expanded * - collapsed * - value * * The following states exist for both elements and remote conditions, but are * not fully implemented and may not change anything on the element: * - relevant * - irrelevant * - valid * - invalid * - touched * - untouched * - readwrite * - readonly * * When referencing select lists and radio buttons in remote conditions, a * 'value' condition must be used: * @code * '#states' => array( * // Show the settings if 'bar' has been selected for 'foo'. * 'visible' => array( * ':input[name="foo"]' => array('value' => 'bar'), * ), * ), * @endcode * * @param $elements * A renderable array element having a #states property as described above. * * @see form_example_states_form() */ function drupal_process_states(&$elements) { $elements['#attached']['library'][] = 'core/drupal.states'; // Elements of '#type' => 'item' are not actual form input elements, but we // still want to be able to show/hide them. Since there's no actual HTML input // element available, setting #attributes does not make sense, but a wrapper // is available, so setting #wrapper_attributes makes it work. $key = ($elements['#type'] == 'item') ? '#wrapper_attributes' : '#attributes'; $elements[$key]['data-drupal-states'] = Json::encode($elements['#states']); } /** * Assists in attaching the tableDrag JavaScript behavior to a themed table. * * Draggable tables should be used wherever an outline or list of sortable items * needs to be arranged by an end-user. Draggable tables are very flexible and * can manipulate the value of form elements placed within individual columns. * * To set up a table to use drag and drop in place of weight select-lists or in * place of a form that contains parent relationships, the form must be themed * into a table. The table must have an ID attribute set and it * may be set as follows: * @code * $table = array( * '#type' => 'table', * '#header' => $header, * '#rows' => $rows, * '#attributes' => array( * 'id' => 'my-module-table', * ), * ); * return drupal_render($table); * @endcode * * In the theme function for the form, a special class must be added to each * form element within the same column, "grouping" them together. * * In a situation where a single weight column is being sorted in the table, the * classes could be added like this (in the theme function): * @code * $form['my_elements'][$delta]['weight']['#attributes']['class'] = array('my-elements-weight'); * @endcode * * Each row of the table must also have a class of "draggable" in order to * enable the drag handles: * @code * $row = array(...); * $rows[] = array( * 'data' => $row, * 'class' => array('draggable'), * ); * @endcode * * When tree relationships are present, the two additional classes * 'tabledrag-leaf' and 'tabledrag-root' can be used to refine the behavior: * - Rows with the 'tabledrag-leaf' class cannot have child rows. * - Rows with the 'tabledrag-root' class cannot be nested under a parent row. * * Calling drupal_attach_tabledrag() would then be written as such: * @code * drupal_attach_tabledrag('my-module-table', array( * 'action' => 'order', * 'relationship' => 'sibling', * 'group' => 'my-elements-weight', * ); * @endcode * * In a more complex case where there are several groups in one column (such as * the block regions on the admin/structure/block page), a separate subgroup * class must also be added to differentiate the groups. * @code * $form['my_elements'][$region][$delta]['weight']['#attributes']['class'] = array('my-elements-weight', 'my-elements-weight-' . $region); * @endcode * * The 'group' option is still 'my-element-weight', and the additional * 'subgroup' option will be passed in as 'my-elements-weight-' . $region. This * also means that you'll need to call drupal_attach_tabledrag() once for every * region added. * * @code * foreach ($regions as $region) { * drupal_attach_tabledrag('my-module-table', array( * 'action' => 'order', * 'relationship' => 'sibling', * 'group' => 'my-elements-weight', * 'subgroup' => 'my-elements-weight-' . $region, * )); * } * @endcode * * In a situation where tree relationships are present, adding multiple * subgroups is not necessary, because the table will contain indentations that * provide enough information about the sibling and parent relationships. See * MenuForm::BuildOverviewForm for an example creating a table * containing parent relationships. * * @param $element * A form element to attach the tableDrag behavior to. * @param array $options * These options are used to generate JavaScript settings necessary to * configure the tableDrag behavior appropriately for this particular table. * An associative array containing the following keys: * - 'table_id': String containing the target table's id attribute. * If the table does not have an id, one will need to be set, * such as . * - 'action': String describing the action to be done on the form item. * Either 'match' 'depth', or 'order': * - 'match' is typically used for parent relationships. * - 'order' is typically used to set weights on other form elements with * the same group. * - 'depth' updates the target element with the current indentation. * - 'relationship': String describing where the "action" option * should be performed. Either 'parent', 'sibling', 'group', or 'self': * - 'parent' will only look for fields up the tree. * - 'sibling' will look for fields in the same group in rows above and * below it. * - 'self' affects the dragged row itself. * - 'group' affects the dragged row, plus any children below it (the entire * dragged group). * - 'group': A class name applied on all related form elements for this action. * - 'subgroup': (optional) If the group has several subgroups within it, this * string should contain the class name identifying fields in the same * subgroup. * - 'source': (optional) If the $action is 'match', this string should contain * the classname identifying what field will be used as the source value * when matching the value in $subgroup. * - 'hidden': (optional) The column containing the field elements may be * entirely hidden from view dynamically when the JavaScript is loaded. Set * to FALSE if the column should not be hidden. * - 'limit': (optional) Limit the maximum amount of parenting in this table. * * @see MenuForm::BuildOverviewForm() */ function drupal_attach_tabledrag(&$element, array $options) { // Add default values to elements. $options = $options + array( 'subgroup' => NULL, 'source' => NULL, 'hidden' => TRUE, 'limit' => 0 ); $group = $options['group']; $tabledrag_id = &drupal_static(__FUNCTION__); $tabledrag_id = (!isset($tabledrag_id)) ? 0 : $tabledrag_id + 1; // If a subgroup or source isn't set, assume it is the same as the group. $target = isset($options['subgroup']) ? $options['subgroup'] : $group; $source = isset($options['source']) ? $options['source'] : $target; $element['#attached']['drupalSettings']['tableDrag'][$options['table_id']][$group][$tabledrag_id] = array( 'target' => $target, 'source' => $source, 'relationship' => $options['relationship'], 'action' => $options['action'], 'hidden' => $options['hidden'], 'limit' => $options['limit'], ); $element['#attached']['library'][] = 'core/drupal.tabledrag'; } /** * Deletes old cached JavaScript files and variables. * * @deprecated in Drupal 8.x, will be removed before Drupal 9.0. * Use \Drupal\Core\Asset\AssetCollectionOptimizerInterface::deleteAll(). */ function drupal_clear_js_cache() { \Drupal::service('asset.js.collection_optimizer')->deleteAll(); } /** * Pre-render callback: Renders a link into #markup. * * @deprecated in Drupal 8.x, will be removed before Drupal 9.0. * Use \Drupal\Core\Render\Element\Link::preRenderLink(). */ function drupal_pre_render_link($element) { return Link::preRenderLink($element); } /** * Pre-render callback: Collects child links into a single array. * * This function can be added as a pre_render callback for a renderable array, * usually one which will be themed by links.html.twig. It iterates through all * unrendered children of the element, collects any #links properties it finds, * merges them into the parent element's #links array, and prevents those * children from being rendered separately. * * The purpose of this is to allow links to be logically grouped into related * categories, so that each child group can be rendered as its own list of * links if drupal_render() is called on it, but calling drupal_render() on the * parent element will still produce a single list containing all the remaining * links, regardless of what group they were in. * * A typical example comes from node links, which are stored in a renderable * array similar to this: * @code * $build['links'] = array( * '#theme' => 'links__node', * '#pre_render' => array('drupal_pre_render_links'), * 'comment' => array( * '#theme' => 'links__node__comment', * '#links' => array( * // An array of links associated with node comments, suitable for * // passing in to links.html.twig. * ), * ), * 'statistics' => array( * '#theme' => 'links__node__statistics', * '#links' => array( * // An array of links associated with node statistics, suitable for * // passing in to links.html.twig. * ), * ), * 'translation' => array( * '#theme' => 'links__node__translation', * '#links' => array( * // An array of links associated with node translation, suitable for * // passing in to links.html.twig. * ), * ), * ); * @endcode * * In this example, the links are grouped by functionality, which can be * helpful to themers who want to display certain kinds of links independently. * For example, adding this code to node.html.twig will result in the comment * links being rendered as a single list: * @code * {{ content.links.comment }} * @endcode * * (where a node's content has been transformed into $content before handing * control to the node.html.twig template). * * The pre_render function defined here allows the above flexibility, but also * allows the following code to be used to render all remaining links into a * single list, regardless of their group: * @code * {{ content.links }} * @endcode * * In the above example, this will result in the statistics and translation * links being rendered together in a single list (but not the comment links, * which were rendered previously on their own). * * Because of the way this function works, the individual properties of each * group (for example, a group-specific #theme property such as * 'links__node__comment' in the example above, or any other property such as * #attributes or #pre_render that is attached to it) are only used when that * group is rendered on its own. When the group is rendered together with other * children, these child-specific properties are ignored, and only the overall * properties of the parent are used. */ function drupal_pre_render_links($element) { $element += array('#links' => array(), '#attached' => array()); foreach (Element::children($element) as $key) { $child = &$element[$key]; // If the child has links which have not been printed yet and the user has // access to it, merge its links in to the parent. if (isset($child['#links']) && empty($child['#printed']) && Element::isVisibleElement($child)) { $element['#links'] += $child['#links']; // Mark the child as having been printed already (so that its links // cannot be mistakenly rendered twice). $child['#printed'] = TRUE; } // Merge attachments. if (isset($child['#attached'])) { $element['#attached'] = BubbleableMetadata::mergeAttachments($element['#attached'], $child['#attached']); } } return $element; } /** * Renders final HTML given a structured array tree. * * @deprecated as of Drupal 8.0.x, will be removed before Drupal 9.0.0. Use the * 'renderer' service instead. * * @see \Drupal\Core\Render\RendererInterface::renderRoot() */ function drupal_render_root(&$elements) { return \Drupal::service('renderer')->renderRoot($elements); } /** * Renders HTML given a structured array tree. * * @deprecated as of Drupal 8.0.x, will be removed before Drupal 9.0.0. Use the * 'renderer' service instead. * * @see \Drupal\Core\Render\RendererInterface::render() */ function drupal_render(&$elements, $is_recursive_call = FALSE) { return \Drupal::service('renderer')->render($elements, $is_recursive_call); } /** * Renders children of an element and concatenates them. * * @param array $element * The structured array whose children shall be rendered. * @param array $children_keys * (optional) If the keys of the element's children are already known, they * can be passed in to save another run of * \Drupal\Core\Render\Element::children(). * * @return string|\Drupal\Component\Render\MarkupInterface * The rendered HTML of all children of the element. * * @deprecated in Drupal 8.0.x and will be removed before 9.0.0. Avoid early * rendering when possible or loop through the elements and render them as * they are available. * * @see drupal_render() */ function drupal_render_children(&$element, $children_keys = NULL) { if ($children_keys === NULL) { $children_keys = Element::children($element); } $output = ''; foreach ($children_keys as $key) { if (!empty($element[$key])) { $output .= drupal_render($element[$key]); } } return Markup::create($output); } /** * Renders an element. * * This function renders an element. The top level element is shown with show() * before rendering, so it will always be rendered even if hide() had been * previously used on it. * * @param $element * The element to be rendered. * * @return * The rendered element. * * @see \Drupal\Core\Render\RendererInterface * @see show() * @see hide() */ function render(&$element) { if (!$element && $element !== 0) { return NULL; } if (is_array($element)) { // Early return if this element was pre-rendered (no need to re-render). if (isset($element['#printed']) && $element['#printed'] == TRUE && isset($element['#markup']) && strlen($element['#markup']) > 0) { return $element['#markup']; } show($element); return \Drupal::service('renderer')->render($element); } else { // Safe-guard for inappropriate use of render() on flat variables: return // the variable as-is. return $element; } } /** * Hides an element from later rendering. * * The first time render() or drupal_render() is called on an element tree, * as each element in the tree is rendered, it is marked with a #printed flag * and the rendered children of the element are cached. Subsequent calls to * render() or drupal_render() will not traverse the child tree of this element * again: they will just use the cached children. So if you want to hide an * element, be sure to call hide() on the element before its parent tree is * rendered for the first time, as it will have no effect on subsequent * renderings of the parent tree. * * @param $element * The element to be hidden. * * @return * The element. * * @see render() * @see show() */ function hide(&$element) { $element['#printed'] = TRUE; return $element; } /** * Shows a hidden element for later rendering. * * You can also use render($element), which shows the element while rendering * it. * * The first time render() or drupal_render() is called on an element tree, * as each element in the tree is rendered, it is marked with a #printed flag * and the rendered children of the element are cached. Subsequent calls to * render() or drupal_render() will not traverse the child tree of this element * again: they will just use the cached children. So if you want to show an * element, be sure to call show() on the element before its parent tree is * rendered for the first time, as it will have no effect on subsequent * renderings of the parent tree. * * @param $element * The element to be shown. * * @return * The element. * * @see render() * @see hide() */ function show(&$element) { $element['#printed'] = FALSE; return $element; } /** * Retrieves the default properties for the defined element type. * * @param $type * An element type as defined by an element plugin. * * @deprecated in Drupal 8.0.0, will be removed before Drupal 9.0.0. * Use \Drupal::service('element_info')->getInfo() instead. */ function element_info($type) { return \Drupal::service('element_info')->getInfo($type); } /** * Retrieves a single property for the defined element type. * * @param $type * An element type as defined by an element plugin. * @param $property_name * The property within the element type that should be returned. * @param $default * (Optional) The value to return if the element type does not specify a * value for the property. Defaults to NULL. * * @deprecated in Drupal 8.0.0, will be removed before Drupal 9.0.0. * Use \Drupal::service('element_info')->getInfoProperty() instead. */ function element_info_property($type, $property_name, $default = NULL) { return \Drupal::service('element_info')->getInfoProperty($type, $property_name, $default); } /** * Flushes all persistent caches, resets all variables, and rebuilds all data structures. * * At times, it is necessary to re-initialize the entire system to account for * changed or new code. This function: * - Clears all persistent caches: * - The bootstrap cache bin containing base system, module system, and theme * system information. * - The common 'default' cache bin containing arbitrary caches. * - The page cache. * - The URL alias path cache. * - Resets all static variables that have been defined via drupal_static(). * - Clears asset (JS/CSS) file caches. * - Updates the system with latest information about extensions (modules and * themes). * - Updates the bootstrap flag for modules implementing bootstrap_hooks(). * - Rebuilds the full database schema information (invoking hook_schema()). * - Rebuilds data structures of all modules (invoking hook_rebuild()). In * core this means * - blocks, node types, date formats and actions are synchronized with the * database * - The 'active' status of fields is refreshed. * - Rebuilds the menu router. * * This means the entire system is reset so all caches and static variables are * effectively empty. After that is guaranteed, information about the currently * active code is updated, and rebuild operations are successively called in * order to synchronize the active system according to the current information * defined in code. * * All modules need to ensure that all of their caches are flushed when * hook_cache_flush() is invoked; any previously known information must no * longer exist. All following hook_rebuild() operations must be based on fresh * and current system data. All modules must be able to rely on this contract. * * @see \Drupal\Core\Cache\CacheHelper::getBins() * @see hook_cache_flush() * @see hook_rebuild() * * This function also resets the theme, which means it is not initialized * anymore and all previously added JavaScript and CSS is gone. Normally, this * function is called as an end-of-POST-request operation that is followed by a * redirect, so this effect is not visible. Since the full reset is the whole * point of this function, callers need to take care for backing up all needed * variables and properly restoring or re-initializing them on their own. For * convenience, this function automatically re-initializes the maintenance theme * if it was initialized before. * * @todo Try to clear page/JS/CSS caches last, so cached pages can still be * served during this possibly long-running operation. (Conflict on bootstrap * cache though.) * @todo Add a global lock to ensure that caches are not primed in concurrent * requests. */ function drupal_flush_all_caches() { $module_handler = \Drupal::moduleHandler(); // Flush all persistent caches. // This is executed based on old/previously known information, which is // sufficient, since new extensions cannot have any primed caches yet. $module_handler->invokeAll('cache_flush'); foreach (Cache::getBins() as $service_id => $cache_backend) { $cache_backend->deleteAll(); } // Flush asset file caches. \Drupal::service('asset.css.collection_optimizer')->deleteAll(); \Drupal::service('asset.js.collection_optimizer')->deleteAll(); _drupal_flush_css_js(); // Reset all static caches. drupal_static_reset(); // Invalidate the container. \Drupal::service('kernel')->invalidateContainer(); // Wipe the Twig PHP Storage cache. PhpStorageFactory::get('twig')->deleteAll(); // Rebuild module and theme data. $module_data = system_rebuild_module_data(); /** @var \Drupal\Core\Extension\ThemeHandlerInterface $theme_handler */ $theme_handler = \Drupal::service('theme_handler'); $theme_handler->refreshInfo(); // In case the active theme gets requested later in the same request we need // to reset the theme manager. \Drupal::theme()->resetActiveTheme(); // Rebuild and reboot a new kernel. A simple DrupalKernel reboot is not // sufficient, since the list of enabled modules might have been adjusted // above due to changed code. $files = array(); foreach ($module_data as $name => $extension) { if ($extension->status) { $files[$name] = $extension; } } \Drupal::service('kernel')->updateModules($module_handler->getModuleList(), $files); // New container, new module handler. $module_handler = \Drupal::moduleHandler(); // Ensure that all modules that are currently supposed to be enabled are // actually loaded. $module_handler->loadAll(); // Rebuild all information based on new module data. $module_handler->invokeAll('rebuild'); // Clear all plugin caches. \Drupal::service('plugin.cache_clearer')->clearCachedDefinitions(); // Rebuild the menu router based on all rebuilt data. // Important: This rebuild must happen last, so the menu router is guaranteed // to be based on up to date information. \Drupal::service('router.builder')->rebuild(); // Re-initialize the maintenance theme, if the current request attempted to // use it. Unlike regular usages of this function, the installer and update // scripts need to flush all caches during GET requests/page building. if (function_exists('_drupal_maintenance_theme')) { \Drupal::theme()->resetActiveTheme(); drupal_maintenance_theme(); } } /** * Changes the dummy query string added to all CSS and JavaScript files. * * Changing the dummy query string appended to CSS and JavaScript files forces * all browsers to reload fresh files. */ function _drupal_flush_css_js() { // The timestamp is converted to base 36 in order to make it more compact. Drupal::state()->set('system.css_js_query_string', base_convert(REQUEST_TIME, 10, 36)); } /** * Outputs debug information. * * The debug information is passed on to trigger_error() after being converted * to a string using _drupal_debug_message(). * * @param $data * Data to be output. * @param $label * Label to prefix the data. * @param $print_r * Flag to switch between print_r() and var_export() for data conversion to * string. Set $print_r to FALSE to use var_export() instead of print_r(). * Passing recursive data structures to var_export() will generate an error. */ function debug($data, $label = NULL, $print_r = TRUE) { // Print $data contents to string. $string = Html::escape($print_r ? print_r($data, TRUE) : var_export($data, TRUE)); // Display values with pre-formatting to increase readability. $string = '
' . $string . '
'; trigger_error(trim($label ? "$label: $string" : $string)); } /** * Checks whether a version is compatible with a given dependency. * * @param $v * A parsed dependency structure e.g. from ModuleHandler::parseDependency(). * @param $current_version * The version to check against (like 4.2). * * @return * NULL if compatible, otherwise the original dependency version string that * caused the incompatibility. * * @see \Drupal\Core\Extension\ModuleHandler::parseDependency() */ function drupal_check_incompatibility($v, $current_version) { if (!empty($v['versions'])) { foreach ($v['versions'] as $required_version) { if ((isset($required_version['op']) && !version_compare($current_version, $required_version['version'], $required_version['op']))) { return $v['original_version']; } } } } /** * Returns a string of supported archive extensions. * * @return * A space-separated string of extensions suitable for use by the file * validation system. */ function archiver_get_extensions() { $valid_extensions = array(); foreach (\Drupal::service('plugin.manager.archiver')->getDefinitions() as $archive) { foreach ($archive['extensions'] as $extension) { foreach (explode('.', $extension) as $part) { if (!in_array($part, $valid_extensions)) { $valid_extensions[] = $part; } } } } return implode(' ', $valid_extensions); } /** * Creates the appropriate archiver for the specified file. * * @param $file * The full path of the archive file. Note that stream wrapper paths are * supported, but not remote ones. * * @return * A newly created instance of the archiver class appropriate * for the specified file, already bound to that file. * If no appropriate archiver class was found, will return FALSE. */ function archiver_get_archiver($file) { // Archivers can only work on local paths $filepath = drupal_realpath($file); if (!is_file($filepath)) { throw new Exception(t('Archivers can only operate on local files: %file not supported', array('%file' => $file))); } return \Drupal::service('plugin.manager.archiver')->getInstance(array('filepath' => $filepath)); } /** * Assembles the Drupal Updater registry. * * An Updater is a class that knows how to update various parts of the Drupal * file system, for example to update modules that have newer releases, or to * install a new theme. * * @return array * The Drupal Updater class registry. * * @see \Drupal\Core\Updater\Updater * @see hook_updater_info() * @see hook_updater_info_alter() */ function drupal_get_updaters() { $updaters = &drupal_static(__FUNCTION__); if (!isset($updaters)) { $updaters = \Drupal::moduleHandler()->invokeAll('updater_info'); \Drupal::moduleHandler()->alter('updater_info', $updaters); uasort($updaters, array(SortArray::class, 'sortByWeightElement')); } return $updaters; } /** * Assembles the Drupal FileTransfer registry. * * @return * The Drupal FileTransfer class registry. * * @see \Drupal\Core\FileTransfer\FileTransfer * @see hook_filetransfer_info() * @see hook_filetransfer_info_alter() */ function drupal_get_filetransfer_info() { $info = &drupal_static(__FUNCTION__); if (!isset($info)) { $info = \Drupal::moduleHandler()->invokeAll('filetransfer_info'); \Drupal::moduleHandler()->alter('filetransfer_info', $info); uasort($info, array(SortArray::class, 'sortByWeightElement')); } return $info; }