'html_tag', '#tag' => 'meta', '#attributes' => array( 'charset' => 'utf-8', ), // Security: This always has to be output first. '#weight' => -1000, ); // Show Drupal and the major version number in the META GENERATOR tag. // Get the major version. list($version, ) = explode('.', VERSION); $elements['system_meta_generator'] = array( '#type' => 'html_tag', '#tag' => 'meta', '#attributes' => array( 'name' => 'Generator', 'content' => 'Drupal ' . $version . ' (http://drupal.org)', ), ); // Also send the generator in the HTTP header. $elements['system_meta_generator']['#attached']['drupal_add_http_header'][] = array('X-Generator', $elements['system_meta_generator']['#attributes']['content']); return $elements; } /** * Retrieves output to be displayed in the HEAD tag of the HTML page. */ function drupal_get_html_head() { $elements = drupal_add_html_head(); drupal_alter('html_head', $elements); return drupal_render($elements); } /** * Adds a feed URL for the current page. * * This function can be called as long the HTML header hasn't been sent. * * @param $url * An internal system path or a fully qualified external URL of the feed. * @param $title * The title of the feed. */ function drupal_add_feed($url = NULL, $title = '') { $stored_feed_links = &drupal_static(__FUNCTION__, array()); if (isset($url)) { $stored_feed_links[$url] = theme('feed_icon', array('url' => $url, 'title' => $title)); drupal_add_html_head_link(array( 'rel' => 'alternate', 'type' => 'application/rss+xml', 'title' => $title, // Force the URL to be absolute, for consistency with other tags // output by Drupal. 'href' => url($url, array('absolute' => TRUE)), )); } return $stored_feed_links; } /** * Gets the feed URLs for the current page. * * @param $delimiter * A delimiter to split feeds by. */ function drupal_get_feeds($delimiter = "\n") { $feeds = drupal_add_feed(); return implode($feeds, $delimiter); } /** * @defgroup http_handling HTTP handling * @{ * Functions to properly handle HTTP responses. */ /** * Processes a URL query parameter array to remove unwanted elements. * * @param $query * (optional) An array to be processed. Defaults to $_GET. * @param $exclude * (optional) A list of $query array keys to remove. Use "parent[child]" to * exclude nested items. * @param $parent * Internal use only. Used to build the $query array key for nested items. * * @return * An array containing query parameters, which can be used for url(). */ function drupal_get_query_parameters(array $query = NULL, array $exclude = array(), $parent = '') { // Set defaults, if none given. if (!isset($query)) { $query = $_GET; } // If $exclude is empty, there is nothing to filter. if (empty($exclude)) { return $query; } elseif (!$parent) { $exclude = array_flip($exclude); } $params = array(); foreach ($query as $key => $value) { $string_key = ($parent ? $parent . '[' . $key . ']' : $key); if (isset($exclude[$string_key])) { continue; } if (is_array($value)) { $params[$key] = drupal_get_query_parameters($value, $exclude, $string_key); } else { $params[$key] = $value; } } return $params; } /** * Splits a URL-encoded query string into an array. * * @param $query * The query string to split. * * @return * An array of URL decoded couples $param_name => $value. */ function drupal_get_query_array($query) { $result = array(); if (!empty($query)) { foreach (explode('&', $query) as $param) { $param = explode('=', $param); $result[$param[0]] = isset($param[1]) ? rawurldecode($param[1]) : ''; } } return $result; } /** * Parses an array into a valid, rawurlencoded query string. * * @see \Drupal\Core\Routing\PathBasedGeneratorInterface::httpBuildQuery() * @see drupal_get_query_parameters() * @deprecated as of Drupal 8.0. Use * Drupal::urlGenerator()->httpBuildQuery() instead. * @ingroup php_wrappers */ function drupal_http_build_query(array $query, $parent = '') { return Drupal::urlGenerator()->httpBuildQuery($query, $parent); } /** * Prepares a 'destination' URL query parameter for use with url(). * * Used to direct the user back to the referring page after completing a form. * By default the current URL is returned. If a destination exists in the * previous request, that destination is returned. As such, a destination can * persist across multiple pages. * * @return * An associative array containing the key: * - destination: The path provided via the destination query string or, if * not available, the current path. * * @see current_path() */ function drupal_get_destination() { $destination = &drupal_static(__FUNCTION__); if (isset($destination)) { return $destination; } if (isset($_GET['destination'])) { $destination = array('destination' => $_GET['destination']); } else { $path = current_path(); $query = Drupal::urlGenerator()->httpBuildQuery(drupal_get_query_parameters()); if ($query != '') { $path .= '?' . $query; } $destination = array('destination' => $path); } return $destination; } /** * Parses a system URL string into an associative array suitable for url(). * * This function should only be used for URLs that have been generated by the * system, such as via url(). It should not be used for URLs that come from * external sources, or URLs that link to external resources. * * The returned array contains a 'path' that may be passed separately to url(). * For example: * @code * $options = drupal_parse_url($_GET['destination']); * $my_url = url($options['path'], $options); * $my_link = l('Example link', $options['path'], $options); * @endcode * * This is required, because url() does not support relative URLs containing a * query string or fragment in its $path argument. Instead, any query string * needs to be parsed into an associative query parameter array in * $options['query'] and the fragment into $options['fragment']. * * @param $url * The URL string to parse, f.e. $_GET['destination']. * * @return * An associative array containing the keys: * - 'path': The path of the URL. If the given $url is external, this includes * the scheme and host. * - 'query': An array of query parameters of $url, if existent. * - 'fragment': The fragment of $url, if existent. * * @see url() * @ingroup php_wrappers */ function drupal_parse_url($url) { $options = array( 'path' => NULL, 'query' => array(), 'fragment' => '', ); // External URLs: not using parse_url() here, so we do not have to rebuild // the scheme, host, and path without having any use for it. if (strpos($url, '://') !== FALSE) { // Split off everything before the query string into 'path'. $parts = explode('?', $url); $options['path'] = $parts[0]; // If there is a query string, transform it into keyed query parameters. if (isset($parts[1])) { $query_parts = explode('#', $parts[1]); parse_str($query_parts[0], $options['query']); // Take over the fragment, if there is any. if (isset($query_parts[1])) { $options['fragment'] = $query_parts[1]; } } } // Internal URLs. else { // parse_url() does not support relative URLs, so make it absolute. E.g. the // relative URL "foo/bar:1" isn't properly parsed. $parts = parse_url('http://example.com/' . $url); // Strip the leading slash that was just added. $options['path'] = substr($parts['path'], 1); if (isset($parts['query'])) { parse_str($parts['query'], $options['query']); } if (isset($parts['fragment'])) { $options['fragment'] = $parts['fragment']; } } return $options; } /** * Encodes a Drupal path for use in a URL. * * For aesthetic reasons slashes are not escaped. * * Note that url() takes care of calling this function, so a path passed to that * function should not be encoded in advance. * * @param $path * The Drupal path to encode. */ function drupal_encode_path($path) { return str_replace('%2F', '/', rawurlencode($path)); } /** * Determines if an external URL points to this Drupal installation. * * @param $url * A string containing an external URL, such as "http://example.com/foo". * * @return * TRUE if the URL has the same domain and base path. */ function _external_url_is_local($url) { $url_parts = parse_url($url); $base_host = parse_url($GLOBALS['base_url'], PHP_URL_HOST); if (!isset($url_parts['path'])) { return ($url_parts['host'] == $base_host); } else { // When comparing base paths, we need a trailing slash to make sure a // partial URL match isn't occuring. Since base_path() always returns with // a trailing slash, we don't need to add the trailing slash here. return ($url_parts['host'] == $base_host && stripos($url_parts['path'], base_path()) === 0); } } /** * Helper function for determining hosts excluded from needing a proxy. * * @return * TRUE if a proxy should be used for this host. */ function _drupal_http_use_proxy($host) { $proxy_exceptions = settings()->get('proxy_exceptions', array('localhost', '127.0.0.1')); return !in_array(strtolower($host), $proxy_exceptions, TRUE); } /** * @} End of "defgroup http_handling". */ /** * @defgroup validation Input validation * @{ * Functions to validate user input. */ /** * Verifies the syntax of the given e-mail address. * * This uses the * @link http://php.net/manual/filter.filters.validate.php PHP e-mail validation filter. @endlink * * @param $mail * A string containing an e-mail address. * * @return * TRUE if the address is in a valid format. */ function valid_email_address($mail) { return (bool)filter_var($mail, FILTER_VALIDATE_EMAIL); } /** * Verifies the syntax of the given URL. * * This function should only be used on actual URLs. It should not be used for * Drupal menu paths, which can contain arbitrary characters. * Valid values per RFC 3986. * @param $url * The URL to verify. * @param $absolute * Whether the URL is absolute (beginning with a scheme such as "http:"). * * @return * TRUE if the URL is in a valid format. * * @see \Drupal\Component\Utility\UrlValidator::isValid() * * @deprecated as of Drupal 8.0. Use UrlValidator::isValid() instead. */ function valid_url($url, $absolute = FALSE) { return UrlValidator::isValid($url, $absolute); } /** * Verifies that a number is a multiple of a given step. * * The implementation assumes it is dealing with IEEE 754 double precision * floating point numbers that are used by PHP on most systems. * * This is based on the number/range verification methods of webkit. * * @param $value * The value that needs to be checked. * @param $step * The step scale factor. Must be positive. * @param $offset * (optional) An offset, to which the difference must be a multiple of the * given step. * * @return bool * TRUE if no step mismatch has occured, or FALSE otherwise. * * @see http://opensource.apple.com/source/WebCore/WebCore-1298/html/NumberInputType.cpp */ function valid_number_step($value, $step, $offset = 0.0) { $double_value = (double) abs($value - $offset); // The fractional part of a double has 53 bits. The greatest number that could // be represented with that is 2^53. If the given value is even bigger than // $step * 2^53, then dividing by $step will result in a very small remainder. // Since that remainder can't even be represented with a single precision // float the following computation of the remainder makes no sense and we can // safely ignore it instead. if ($double_value / pow(2.0, 53) > $step) { return TRUE; } // Now compute that remainder of a division by $step. $remainder = (double) abs($double_value - $step * round($double_value / $step)); // $remainder is a double precision floating point number. Remainders that // can't be represented with single precision floats are acceptable. The // fractional part of a float has 24 bits. That means remainders smaller than // $step * 2^-24 are acceptable. $computed_acceptable_error = (double)($step / pow(2.0, 24)); return $computed_acceptable_error >= $remainder || $remainder >= ($step - $computed_acceptable_error); } /** * @} End of "defgroup validation". */ /** * @defgroup sanitization Sanitization functions * @{ * Functions to sanitize values. * * See http://drupal.org/writing-secure-code for information * on writing secure code. */ /** * Strips dangerous protocols (e.g. 'javascript:') from a URI. * * This function must be called for all URIs within user-entered input prior * to being output to an HTML attribute value. It is often called as part of * check_url() or filter_xss(), but those functions return an HTML-encoded * string, so this function can be called independently when the output needs to * be a plain-text string for passing to t(), l(), * Drupal\Core\Template\Attribute, or another function that will call * check_plain() separately. * * @param $uri * A plain-text URI that might contain dangerous protocols. * * @return * A plain-text URI stripped of dangerous protocols. As with all plain-text * strings, this return value must not be output to an HTML page without * check_plain() being called on it. However, it can be passed to functions * expecting plain-text strings. * * @see \Drupal\Component\Utility\Url::stripDangerousProtocols() */ function drupal_strip_dangerous_protocols($uri) { return UrlValidator::stripDangerousProtocols($uri); } /** * 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 * 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 $attributes array passed to Drupal\Core\Template\Attribute, * because Drupal\Core\Template\Attribute expects those values to be * plain-text strings. To pass a filtered URI to * Drupal\Core\Template\Attribute, call drupal_strip_dangerous_protocols() * instead. * * @see \Drupal\Component\Utility\Url::stripDangerousProtocols() * @see \Drupal\Component\Utility\String::checkPlain() */ function check_url($uri) { return String::checkPlain(UrlValidator::stripDangerousProtocols($uri)); } /** * Applies a very permissive XSS/HTML filter for admin-only use. * * Use only for fields where it is impractical to use the * whole filter system, but where some (mainly inline) mark-up * is desired (so check_plain() is not acceptable). * * Allows all tags that can be used inside an HTML body, save * for scripts and styles. * * @param string $string * The string to apply the filter to. * * @return string * The filtered string. * * @see \Drupal\Component\Utility\Xss::filterAdmin() */ function filter_xss_admin($string) { return Xss::filterAdmin($string); } /** * Filters HTML to prevent cross-site-scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities. * * Based on kses by Ulf Harnhammar, see http://sourceforge.net/projects/kses. * For examples of various XSS attacks, see: http://ha.ckers.org/xss.html. * * This code does four things: * - Removes characters and constructs that can trick browsers. * - Makes sure all HTML entities are well-formed. * - Makes sure all HTML tags and attributes are well-formed. * - Makes sure no HTML tags contain URLs with a disallowed protocol (e.g. * javascript:). * * @param $string * The string with raw HTML in it. It will be stripped of everything that can * cause an XSS attack. * @param $allowed_tags * An array of allowed tags. * * @return * An XSS safe version of $string, or an empty string if $string is not * valid UTF-8. * * @see \Drupal\Component\Utility\Xss::filter() * * @ingroup sanitization */ function filter_xss($string, $allowed_tags = array('a', 'em', 'strong', 'cite', 'blockquote', 'code', 'ul', 'ol', 'li', 'dl', 'dt', 'dd')) { return Xss::filter($string, $allowed_tags); } /** * Processes an HTML attribute value and strips dangerous protocols from URLs. * * @param string $string * The string with the attribute value. * * @return string * Cleaned up and HTML-escaped version of $string. * * @see \Drupal\Component\Utility\Url::filterBadProtocol() */ function filter_xss_bad_protocol($string) { return UrlValidator::filterBadProtocol($string); } /** * @} End of "defgroup sanitization". */ /** * @defgroup format Formatting * @{ * Functions to format numbers, strings, dates, etc. */ /** * Formats an RSS channel. * * Arbitrary elements may be added using the $args associative array. */ function format_rss_channel($title, $link, $description, $items, $langcode = NULL, $args = array()) { $langcode = $langcode ? $langcode : language(Language::TYPE_CONTENT)->langcode; $output = "\n"; $output .= ' ' . check_plain($title) . "\n"; $output .= ' ' . check_url($link) . "\n"; // The RSS 2.0 "spec" doesn't indicate HTML can be used in the description. // We strip all HTML tags, but need to prevent double encoding from properly // escaped source data (such as & becoming &amp;). $output .= ' ' . check_plain(decode_entities(strip_tags($description))) . "\n"; $output .= ' ' . check_plain($langcode) . "\n"; $output .= format_xml_elements($args); $output .= $items; $output .= "\n"; return $output; } /** * Formats a single RSS item. * * Arbitrary elements may be added using the $args associative array. */ function format_rss_item($title, $link, $description, $args = array()) { $output = "\n"; $output .= ' ' . check_plain($title) . "\n"; $output .= ' ' . check_url($link) . "\n"; $output .= ' ' . check_plain($description) . "\n"; $output .= format_xml_elements($args); $output .= "\n"; return $output; } /** * Formats XML elements. * * @param $array * An array where each item represents an element and is either a: * - (key => value) pair (value) * - Associative array with fields: * - 'key': element name * - 'value': element contents * - 'attributes': associative array of element attributes * * In both cases, 'value' can be a simple string, or it can be another array * with the same format as $array itself for nesting. */ function format_xml_elements($array) { $output = ''; foreach ($array as $key => $value) { if (is_numeric($key)) { if ($value['key']) { $output .= ' <' . $value['key']; if (isset($value['attributes']) && is_array($value['attributes'])) { $output .= new Attribute($value['attributes']); } if (isset($value['value']) && $value['value'] != '') { $output .= '>' . (is_array($value['value']) ? format_xml_elements($value['value']) : check_plain($value['value'])) . '\n"; } else { $output .= " />\n"; } } } else { $output .= ' <' . $key . '>' . (is_array($value) ? format_xml_elements($value) : check_plain($value)) . "\n"; } } return $output; } /** * Formats a string containing a count of items. * * This function ensures that the string is pluralized correctly. Since t() is * called by this function, make sure not to pass already-localized strings to * it. * * For example: * @code * $output = format_plural($node->comment_count, '1 comment', '@count comments'); * @endcode * * Example with additional replacements: * @code * $output = format_plural($update_count, * 'Changed the content type of 1 post from %old-type to %new-type.', * 'Changed the content type of @count posts from %old-type to %new-type.', * array('%old-type' => $info->old_type, '%new-type' => $info->new_type)); * @endcode * * @param $count * The item count to display. * @param $singular * The string for the singular case. Make sure it is clear this is singular, * to ease translation (e.g. use "1 new comment" instead of "1 new"). Do not * use @count in the singular string. * @param $plural * The string for the plural case. Make sure it is clear this is plural, to * ease translation. Use @count in place of the item count, as in * "@count new comments". * @param $args * An associative array of replacements to make after translation. Instances * of any key in this array are replaced with the corresponding value. * Based on the first character of the key, the value is escaped and/or * themed. See format_string(). Note that you do not need to include @count * in this array; this replacement is done automatically for the plural case. * @param $options * An associative array of additional options. See t() for allowed keys. * * @return * A translated string. * * @see t() * @see format_string() */ function format_plural($count, $singular, $plural, array $args = array(), array $options = array()) { $args['@count'] = $count; // Join both forms to search a translation. $tranlatable_string = implode(LOCALE_PLURAL_DELIMITER, array($singular, $plural)); // Translate as usual. $translated_strings = t($tranlatable_string, $args, $options); // Split joined translation strings into array. $translated_array = explode(LOCALE_PLURAL_DELIMITER, $translated_strings); if ($count == 1) { return $translated_array[0]; } // Get the plural index through the gettext formula. // @todo implement static variable to minimize function_exists() usage. $index = (function_exists('locale_get_plural')) ? locale_get_plural($count, isset($options['langcode']) ? $options['langcode'] : NULL) : -1; if ($index == 0) { // Singular form. return $translated_array[0]; } else { if (isset($translated_array[$index])) { // N-th plural form. return $translated_array[$index]; } else { // If the index cannot be computed or there's no translation, use // the second plural form as a fallback (which allows for most flexiblity // with the replaceable @count value). return $translated_array[1]; } } } /** * Parses a given byte count. * * @param $size * A size expressed as a number of bytes with optional SI or IEC binary unit * prefix (e.g. 2, 3K, 5MB, 10G, 6GiB, 8 bytes, 9mbytes). * * @return * An integer representation of the size in bytes. */ function parse_size($size) { $unit = preg_replace('/[^bkmgtpezy]/i', '', $size); // Remove the non-unit characters from the size. $size = preg_replace('/[^0-9\.]/', '', $size); // Remove the non-numeric characters from the size. if ($unit) { // Find the position of the unit in the ordered string which is the power of magnitude to multiply a kilobyte by. return round($size * pow(DRUPAL_KILOBYTE, stripos('bkmgtpezy', $unit[0]))); } else { return round($size); } } /** * Generates a string representation for the given byte count. * * @param $size * A size in bytes. * @param $langcode * Optional language code to translate to a language other than what is used * to display the page. * * @return * A translated string representation of the size. */ function format_size($size, $langcode = NULL) { if ($size < DRUPAL_KILOBYTE) { return format_plural($size, '1 byte', '@count bytes', array(), array('langcode' => $langcode)); } else { $size = $size / DRUPAL_KILOBYTE; // Convert bytes to kilobytes. $units = array( t('@size KB', array(), array('langcode' => $langcode)), t('@size MB', array(), array('langcode' => $langcode)), t('@size GB', array(), array('langcode' => $langcode)), t('@size TB', array(), array('langcode' => $langcode)), t('@size PB', array(), array('langcode' => $langcode)), t('@size EB', array(), array('langcode' => $langcode)), t('@size ZB', array(), array('langcode' => $langcode)), t('@size YB', array(), array('langcode' => $langcode)), ); foreach ($units as $unit) { if (round($size, 2) >= DRUPAL_KILOBYTE) { $size = $size / DRUPAL_KILOBYTE; } else { break; } } return str_replace('@size', round($size, 2), $unit); } } /** * Formats a time interval with the requested granularity. * * @param $interval * The length of the interval in seconds. * @param $granularity * How many different units to display in the string. * @param $langcode * Optional language code to translate to a language other than * what is used to display the page. * * @return * A translated string representation of the interval. */ function format_interval($interval, $granularity = 2, $langcode = NULL) { $units = array( '1 year|@count years' => 31536000, '1 month|@count months' => 2592000, '1 week|@count weeks' => 604800, '1 day|@count days' => 86400, '1 hour|@count hours' => 3600, '1 min|@count min' => 60, '1 sec|@count sec' => 1 ); $output = ''; foreach ($units as $key => $value) { $key = explode('|', $key); if ($interval >= $value) { $output .= ($output ? ' ' : '') . format_plural(floor($interval / $value), $key[0], $key[1], array(), array('langcode' => $langcode)); $interval %= $value; $granularity--; } if ($granularity == 0) { break; } } return $output ? $output : t('0 sec', array(), array('langcode' => $langcode)); } /** * 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 module in * hook_date_format_types(), if it's been assigned a format. * - 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 $langcode * (optional) Language code to translate to. Defaults to the language used to * display the page. * * @return * A translated date string in the requested format. * * @see \Drupal\Component\Datetime\Date::format() */ function format_date($timestamp, $type = 'medium', $format = '', $timezone = NULL, $langcode = NULL) { return Drupal::service('date')->format($timestamp, $type, $format, $timezone, $langcode); } /** * Returns an ISO8601 formatted date based on the given date. * * Callback for use within hook_rdf_mapping() implementations. * * @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); } /** * Translates a formatted date string. * * Callback for preg_replace_callback() within format_date(). */ function _format_date_callback(array $matches = NULL, $new_langcode = NULL) { // We cache translations to avoid redundant and rather costly calls to t(). static $cache, $langcode; if (!isset($matches)) { $langcode = $new_langcode; return; } $code = $matches[1]; $string = $matches[2]; if (!isset($cache[$langcode][$code][$string])) { $options = array( 'langcode' => $langcode, ); if ($code == 'F') { $options['context'] = 'Long month name'; } if ($code == '') { $cache[$langcode][$code][$string] = $string; } else { $cache[$langcode][$code][$string] = t($string, array(), $options); } } return $cache[$langcode][$code][$string]; } /** * Retrieves the correct datetime format type for this system. * * This value is sometimes required when the format type needs to be determined * before a date can be created. * * @return string * A string as defined in \DrupalComponent\Datetime\DateTimePlus.php: either * 'intl' or 'php', depending on whether IntlDateFormatter is available. */ function datetime_default_format_type() { static $drupal_static_fast; if (!isset($drupal_static_fast)) { $drupal_static_fast['format_type'] = &drupal_static(__FUNCTION__); } $format_type = &$drupal_static_fast['format_type']; if (!isset($format_type)) { $date = new DrupalDateTime(); $format_type = $date->canUseIntl() ? DrupalDateTime::INTL : DrupalDateTime::PHP; } return $format_type; } /** * @} End of "defgroup format". */ /** * Generates an internal or external URL. * * When creating links in modules, consider whether l() could be a better * alternative than url(). * * @see \Drupal\Core\Routing\PathBasedGeneratorInterface::generateFromPath(). */ function url($path = NULL, array $options = array()) { $generator = Drupal::urlGenerator(); try { $url = $generator->generateFromPath($path, $options); } catch (GeneratorNotInitializedException $e) { // Fallback to using globals. // @todo Remove this once there is no code that calls url() when there is // no request. global $base_url, $base_path, $script_path; $generator->setBasePath($base_path); $generator->setBaseUrl($base_url . '/'); $generator->setScriptPath($script_path); $url = $generator->generateFromPath($path, $options); } return $url; } /** * Returns TRUE if a path is external to Drupal (e.g. http://example.com). * * If a path cannot be assessed by Drupal's menu handler, then we must * treat it as potentially insecure. * * @param $path * The internal path or external URL being linked to, such as "node/34" or * "http://example.com/foo". * * @return * Boolean TRUE or FALSE, where TRUE indicates an external path. */ function url_is_external($path) { $colonpos = strpos($path, ':'); // Avoid calling drupal_strip_dangerous_protocols() if there is any // slash (/), hash (#) or question_mark (?) before the colon (:) // occurrence - if any - as this would clearly mean it is not a URL. return $colonpos !== FALSE && !preg_match('![/?#]!', substr($path, 0, $colonpos)) && drupal_strip_dangerous_protocols($path) == $path; } /** * 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. * * @see drupal_add_http_header() */ 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) : ''; } /** * Formats an internal or external URL link as an HTML anchor tag. * * This function correctly handles aliased paths and adds an 'active' class * attribute to links that point to the current page (for theming), so all * internal links output by modules should be generated by this function if * possible. * * However, for links enclosed in translatable text you should use t() and * embed the HTML anchor tag directly in the translated string. For example: * @code * t('Visit the settings page', array('@url' => url('admin'))); * @endcode * This keeps the context of the link title ('settings' in the example) for * translators. * * @param string|array $text * The link text for the anchor tag as a translated string or render array. * @param string $path * The internal path or external URL being linked to, such as "node/34" or * "http://example.com/foo". After the url() function is called to construct * the URL from $path and $options, the resulting URL is passed through * check_plain() before it is inserted into the HTML anchor tag, to ensure * well-formed HTML. See url() for more information and notes. * @param array $options * An associative array of additional options. Defaults to an empty array. It * may contain the following elements. * - 'attributes': An associative array of HTML attributes to apply to the * anchor tag. If element 'class' is included, it must be an array; 'title' * must be a string; other elements are more flexible, as they just need * to work as an argument for the constructor of the class * Drupal\Core\Template\Attribute($options['attributes']). * - 'html' (default FALSE): Whether $text is HTML or just plain-text. For * example, to make an image tag into a link, this must be set to TRUE, or * you will see the escaped HTML image tag. $text is not sanitized if * 'html' is TRUE. The calling function must ensure that $text is already * safe. * - 'language': An optional language object. If the path being linked to is * internal to the site, $options['language'] is used to determine whether * the link is "active", or pointing to the current page (the language as * well as the path must match). This element is also used by url(). * - Additional $options elements used by the url() function. * * @return string * An HTML string containing a link to the given path. * * @see url() */ function l($text, $path, array $options = array()) { // Start building a structured representation of our link to be altered later. $variables = array( 'text' => is_array($text) ? drupal_render($text) : $text, 'path' => $path, 'options' => $options, ); // Merge in default options. $variables['options'] += array( 'attributes' => array(), 'query' => array(), 'html' => FALSE, 'language' => NULL, ); // Because l() is called very often we statically cache values that require an // extra function call. static $drupal_static_fast; if (!isset($drupal_static_fast['active'])) { $drupal_static_fast['active'] = &drupal_static(__FUNCTION__); } $active = &$drupal_static_fast['active']; if (!isset($active)) { $active = array( 'path' => current_path(), 'front_page' => drupal_is_front_page(), 'language' => language(Language::TYPE_URL)->langcode, 'query' => Drupal::service('request')->query->all(), ); } // Determine whether this link is "active', meaning that it links to the // current page. It is important that we stop checking "active" conditions if // we know the link is not active. This helps ensure that l() remains fast. // An active link's path is equal to the current path. $variables['url_is_active'] = ($path == $active['path'] || ($path == '' && $active['front_page'])) // The language of an active link is equal to the current language. && (empty($variables['options']['language']) || $variables['options']['language']->langcode == $active['language']) // The query parameters of an active link are equal to the current parameters. && ($variables['options']['query'] == $active['query']); // Add the "active" class if appropriate. if ($variables['url_is_active']) { $variables['options']['attributes']['class'][] = 'active'; } // Remove all HTML and PHP tags from a tooltip, calling expensive strip_tags() // only when a quick strpos() gives suspicion tags are present. if (isset($variables['options']['attributes']['title']) && strpos($variables['options']['attributes']['title'], '<') !== FALSE) { $variables['options']['attributes']['title'] = strip_tags($variables['options']['attributes']['title']); } // Allow other modules to modify the structure of the link. Drupal::moduleHandler()->alter('link', $variables); // Move attributes out of options. url() doesn't need them. $attributes = new Attribute($variables['options']['attributes']); unset($variables['options']['attributes']); // The result of url() is a plain-text URL. Because we are using it here // in an HTML argument context, we need to encode it properly. $url = check_plain(url($variables['path'], $variables['options'])); // Sanitize the link text if necessary. $text = $variables['options']['html'] ? $variables['text'] : check_plain($variables['text']); return '' . $text . ''; } /** * Forms an associative array from a linear array. * * @see \Drupal\Component\Utility\MapArray::copyValuesToKeys() */ function drupal_map_assoc($array, $callable = NULL) { return MapArray::copyValuesToKeys($array, $callable); } /** * 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. * * It also means that 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')) { @set_time_limit($time_limit); } } /** * Returns the path to a system item (module, theme, etc.). * * @param $type * The type of the item (i.e. theme, theme_engine, module, profile). * @param $name * The name of the item for which the path is requested. * * @return * The path to the requested item or an empty string if the item is not found. */ function drupal_get_path($type, $name) { return dirname(drupal_get_filename($type, $name)); } /** * 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']; } /** * Adds a LINK tag with a distinct 'rel' attribute to the page's HEAD. * * This function can be called as long the HTML header hasn't been sent, which * on normal pages is up through the preprocess step of theme('html'). Adding * a link will overwrite a prior link with the exact same 'rel' and 'href' * attributes. * * @param $attributes * Associative array of element attributes including 'href' and 'rel'. * @param $header * Optional flag to determine if a HTTP 'Link:' header should be sent. */ function drupal_add_html_head_link($attributes, $header = FALSE) { $element = array( '#tag' => 'link', '#attributes' => $attributes, ); $href = $attributes['href']; if ($header) { // Also add a HTTP header "Link:". $href = '<' . check_plain($attributes['href']) . '>;'; unset($attributes['href']); $element['#attached']['drupal_add_http_header'][] = array('Link', $href . drupal_http_header_attributes($attributes), TRUE); } drupal_add_html_head($element, 'drupal_add_html_head_link:' . $attributes['rel'] . ':' . $href); } /** * Adds a cascading stylesheet to the stylesheet queue. * * Calling drupal_static_reset('drupal_add_css') will clear all cascading * stylesheets added so far. * * If CSS aggregation/compression is enabled, all cascading style sheets added * with $options['preprocess'] set to TRUE will be merged into one aggregate * file and compressed by removing all extraneous white space. * Preprocessed inline stylesheets will not be aggregated into this single file; * instead, they are just compressed upon output on the page. Externally hosted * stylesheets are never aggregated or compressed. * * The reason for aggregating the files is outlined quite thoroughly here: * http://www.die.net/musings/page_load_time/ "Load fewer external objects. Due * to request overhead, one bigger file just loads faster than two smaller ones * half its size." * * $options['preprocess'] should be only set to TRUE when a file is required for * all typical visitors and most pages of a site. It is critical that all * preprocessed files are added unconditionally on every page, even if the * files do not happen to be needed on a page. This is normally done by calling * drupal_add_css() in a hook_page_build() implementation. * * Non-preprocessed files should only be added to the page when they are * actually needed. * * @param $data * (optional) The stylesheet data to be added, depending on what is passed * through to the $options['type'] parameter: * - 'file': The path to the CSS file relative to the base_path(), or a * stream wrapper URI. For example: "modules/devel/devel.css" or * "public://generated_css/stylesheet_1.css". Note that Modules should * always prefix the names of their CSS files with the module name; for * example, system-menus.css rather than simply menus.css. Themes can * override module-supplied CSS files based on their filenames, and this * prefixing helps prevent confusing name collisions for theme developers. * See drupal_get_css() where the overrides are performed. Also, if the * direction of the current language is right-to-left (Hebrew, Arabic, * etc.), the function will also look for an RTL CSS file and append it to * the list. The name of this file should have an '-rtl.css' suffix. For * example, a CSS file called 'mymodule-name.css' will have a * 'mymodule-name-rtl.css' file added to the list, if exists in the same * directory. This CSS file should contain overrides for properties which * should be reversed or otherwise different in a right-to-left display. * - 'inline': A string of CSS that should be placed in the given scope. Note * that it is better practice to use 'file' stylesheets, rather than * 'inline', as the CSS would then be aggregated and cached. * - 'external': The absolute path to an external CSS file that is not hosted * on the local server. These files will not be aggregated if CSS * aggregation is enabled. * @param $options * (optional) A string defining the 'type' of CSS that is being added in the * $data parameter ('file', 'inline', or 'external'), or an array which can * have any or all of the following keys: * - 'type': The type of stylesheet being added. Available options are 'file', * 'inline' or 'external'. Defaults to 'file'. * - 'basename': Force a basename for the file being added. Modules are * expected to use stylesheets with unique filenames, but integration of * external libraries may make this impossible. The basename of * 'core/modules/node/node.css' is 'node.css'. If the external library * "node.js" ships with a 'node.css', then a different, unique basename * would be 'node.js.css'. * - 'group': A number identifying the aggregation group in which to add the * stylesheet. Available constants are: * - CSS_AGGREGATE_DEFAULT: (default) Any module-layer CSS. * - CSS_AGGREGATE_THEME: Any theme-layer CSS. * The aggregate group number affects load order and the CSS cascade. * Stylesheets in an aggregate with a lower group number will be output to * the page before stylesheets in an aggregate with a higher group number, * so CSS within higher aggregate groups can take precendence over CSS * within lower aggregate groups. * - 'every_page': For optimal front-end performance when aggregation is * enabled, this should be set to TRUE if the stylesheet is present on every * page of the website for users for whom it is present at all. This * defaults to FALSE. It is set to TRUE for stylesheets added via module and * theme .info.yml files. Modules that add stylesheets within * hook_page_build() implementations, or from other code that ensures that * the stylesheet is added to all website pages, should also set this flag * to TRUE. All stylesheets within the same group that have the 'every_page' * flag set to TRUE and do not have 'preprocess' set to FALSE are aggregated * together into a single aggregate file, and that aggregate file can be * reused across a user's entire site visit, leading to faster navigation * between pages. * However, stylesheets that are only needed on pages less frequently * visited, can be added by code that only runs for those particular pages, * and that code should not set the 'every_page' flag. This minimizes the * size of the aggregate file that the user needs to download when first * visiting the website. Stylesheets without the 'every_page' flag are * aggregated into a separate aggregate file. This other aggregate file is * likely to change from page to page, and each new aggregate file needs to * be downloaded when first encountered, so it should be kept relatively * small by ensuring that most commonly needed stylesheets are added to * every page. * - 'weight': The weight of the stylesheet specifies the order in which the * CSS will appear relative to other stylesheets with the same aggregate * group and 'every_page' flag. The exact ordering of stylesheets is as * follows: * - First by aggregate group. * - Then by the 'every_page' flag, with TRUE coming before FALSE. * - Then by weight. * - Then by the order in which the CSS was added. For example, all else * being the same, a stylesheet added by a call to drupal_add_css() that * happened later in the page request gets added to the page after one for * which drupal_add_css() happened earlier in the page request. * Available constants are: * - CSS_BASE: Styles for HTML elements ("base" styles). * - CSS_LAYOUT: Styles that layout a page. * - CSS_COMPONENT: Styles for design components (and their associated * states and skins.) * - CSS_STATE: Styles for states that are not included with components. * - CSS_SKIN: Styles for skins that are not included with components. * The weight numbers follow the SMACSS convention of CSS categorization. * See http://drupal.org/node/1887922 * - 'media': The media type for the stylesheet, e.g., all, print, screen. * Defaults to 'all'. It is extremely important to leave this set to 'all' * or it will negatively impact front-end peformance. Instead add a @media * block to the included CSS file. * - 'preprocess': If TRUE and CSS aggregation/compression is enabled, the * styles will be aggregated and compressed. Defaults to TRUE. * - 'browsers': An array containing information specifying which browsers * should load the CSS item. See drupal_pre_render_conditional_comments() * for details. * * @return * An array of queued cascading stylesheets. * * @see drupal_get_css() */ function drupal_add_css($data = NULL, $options = NULL) { $css = &drupal_static(__FUNCTION__, array()); // Construct the options, taking the defaults into consideration. if (isset($options)) { if (!is_array($options)) { $options = array('type' => $options); } } else { $options = array(); } // Create an array of CSS files for each media type first, since each type needs to be served // to the browser differently. if (isset($data)) { $options += array( 'type' => 'file', 'group' => CSS_AGGREGATE_DEFAULT, 'weight' => 0, 'every_page' => FALSE, 'media' => 'all', 'preprocess' => TRUE, 'data' => $data, 'browsers' => array(), ); $options['browsers'] += array( 'IE' => TRUE, '!IE' => TRUE, ); // Files with a query string cannot be preprocessed. if ($options['type'] === 'file' && $options['preprocess'] && strpos($options['data'], '?') !== FALSE) { $options['preprocess'] = FALSE; } // Always add a tiny value to the weight, to conserve the insertion order. $options['weight'] += count($css) / 1000; // Add the data to the CSS array depending on the type. switch ($options['type']) { case 'inline': // For inline stylesheets, we don't want to use the $data as the array // key as $data could be a very long string of CSS. $css[] = $options; break; case 'file': // Local CSS files are keyed by basename; if a file with the same // basename is added more than once, it gets overridden. // By default, take over the filename as basename. if (!isset($options['basename'])) { $options['basename'] = drupal_basename($data); } $css[$options['basename']] = $options; break; default: // External files are keyed by their full URI, so the same CSS file is // not added twice. $css[$data] = $options; } } return $css; } /** * Returns a themed representation of all stylesheets to attach to the page. * * It loads the CSS in order, with 'module' first, then 'theme' afterwards. * This ensures proper cascading of styles so themes can easily override * module styles through CSS selectors. * * Themes may replace module-defined CSS files by adding a stylesheet with the * same filename. For example, themes/bartik/system-menus.css would replace * modules/system/system-menus.css. This allows themes to override complete * CSS files, rather than specific selectors, when necessary. * * If the original CSS file is being overridden by a theme, the theme is * responsible for supplying an accompanying RTL CSS file to replace the * module's. * * @param $css * (optional) An array of CSS files. If no array is provided, the default * stylesheets array is used instead. * @param $skip_alter * (optional) If set to TRUE, this function skips calling drupal_alter() on * $css, useful when the calling function passes a $css array that has already * been altered. * * @return * A string of XHTML CSS tags. * * @see drupal_add_css() */ function drupal_get_css($css = NULL, $skip_alter = FALSE) { global $theme_info; if (!isset($css)) { $css = drupal_add_css(); } // Allow modules and themes to alter the CSS items. if (!$skip_alter) { drupal_alter('css', $css); } // Sort CSS items, so that they appear in the correct order. uasort($css, 'drupal_sort_css_js'); // Allow themes to remove CSS files by basename. if (!empty($theme_info->stylesheets_remove)) { foreach ($css as $key => $options) { if (isset($options['basename']) && isset($theme_info->stylesheets_remove[$options['basename']])) { unset($css[$key]); } } } // Allow themes to conditionally override CSS files by basename. if (!empty($theme_info->stylesheets_override)) { foreach ($css as $key => $options) { if (isset($options['basename']) && isset($theme_info->stylesheets_override[$options['basename']])) { $css[$key]['data'] = $theme_info->stylesheets_override[$options['basename']]; } } } // Render the HTML needed to load the CSS. $styles = array( '#type' => 'styles', '#items' => $css, ); if (!empty($setting)) { $styles['#attached']['js'][] = array('type' => 'setting', 'data' => $setting); } return drupal_render($styles); } /** * Sorts CSS and JavaScript resources. * * Callback for uasort() within: * - drupal_get_css() * - drupal_get_js() * * This sort order helps optimize front-end performance while providing modules * and themes with the necessary control for ordering the CSS and JavaScript * appearing on a page. * * @param $a * First item for comparison. The compared items should be associative arrays * of member items from drupal_add_css() or drupal_add_js(). * @param $b * Second item for comparison. * * @see drupal_add_css() * @see drupal_add_js() */ function drupal_sort_css_js($a, $b) { // First order by group, so that all items in the CSS_AGGREGATE_DEFAULT group // appear before items in the CSS_AGGREGATE_THEME group. Modules may create // additional groups by defining their own constants. if ($a['group'] < $b['group']) { return -1; } elseif ($a['group'] > $b['group']) { return 1; } // Within a group, order all infrequently needed, page-specific files after // common files needed throughout the website. Separating this way allows for // the aggregate file generated for all of the common files to be reused // across a site visit without being cut by a page using a less common file. elseif ($a['every_page'] && !$b['every_page']) { return -1; } elseif (!$a['every_page'] && $b['every_page']) { return 1; } // Finally, order by weight. elseif ($a['weight'] < $b['weight']) { return -1; } elseif ($a['weight'] > $b['weight']) { return 1; } else { return 0; } } /** * Grouping callback: Groups CSS items by their types, media, and browsers. * * This function arranges the CSS items that are in the #items property of the * styles element into groups. Arranging the CSS items into groups serves two * purposes. When aggregation is enabled, files within a group are aggregated * into a single file, significantly improving page loading performance by * minimizing network traffic overhead. When aggregation is disabled, grouping * allows multiple files to be loaded from a single STYLE tag, enabling sites * with many modules enabled or a complex theme being used to stay within IE's * 31 CSS inclusion tag limit: http://drupal.org/node/228818. * * This function puts multiple items into the same group if they are groupable * and if they are for the same 'media' and 'browsers'. Items of the 'file' type * are groupable if their 'preprocess' flag is TRUE, items of the 'inline' type * are always groupable, and items of the 'external' type are never groupable. * This function also ensures that the process of grouping items does not change * their relative order. This requirement may result in multiple groups for the * same type, media, and browsers, if needed to accommodate other items in * between. * * @param $css * An array of CSS items, as returned by drupal_add_css(), but after * alteration performed by drupal_get_css(). * * @return * An array of CSS groups. Each group contains the same keys (e.g., 'media', * 'data', etc.) as a CSS item from the $css parameter, with the value of * each key applying to the group as a whole. Each group also contains an * 'items' key, which is the subset of items from $css that are in the group. * * @see drupal_pre_render_styles() * @see system_element_info() */ function drupal_group_css($css) { $groups = array(); // If a group can contain multiple items, we track the information that must // be the same for each item in the group, so that when we iterate the next // item, we can determine if it can be put into the current group, or if a // new group needs to be made for it. $current_group_keys = NULL; // When creating a new group, we pre-increment $i, so by initializing it to // -1, the first group will have index 0. $i = -1; foreach ($css as $item) { // The browsers for which the CSS item needs to be loaded is part of the // information that determines when a new group is needed, but the order of // keys in the array doesn't matter, and we don't want a new group if all // that's different is that order. ksort($item['browsers']); // If the item can be grouped with other items, set $group_keys to an array // of information that must be the same for all items in its group. If the // item can't be grouped with other items, set $group_keys to FALSE. We // put items into a group that can be aggregated together: whether they will // be aggregated is up to the _drupal_css_aggregate() function or an // override of that function specified in hook_css_alter(), but regardless // of the details of that function, a group represents items that can be // aggregated. Since a group may be rendered with a single HTML tag, all // items in the group must share the same information that would need to be // part of that HTML tag. switch ($item['type']) { case 'file': // Group file items if their 'preprocess' flag is TRUE. // Help ensure maximum reuse of aggregate files by only grouping // together items that share the same 'group' value and 'every_page' // flag. See drupal_add_css() for details about that. $group_keys = $item['preprocess'] ? array($item['type'], $item['group'], $item['every_page'], $item['media'], $item['browsers']) : FALSE; break; case 'inline': // Always group inline items. $group_keys = array($item['type'], $item['media'], $item['browsers']); break; case 'external': // Do not group external items. $group_keys = FALSE; break; } // If the group keys don't match the most recent group we're working with, // then a new group must be made. if ($group_keys !== $current_group_keys) { $i++; // Initialize the new group with the same properties as the first item // being placed into it. The item's 'data' and 'weight' properties are // unique to the item and should not be carried over to the group. $groups[$i] = $item; unset($groups[$i]['data'], $groups[$i]['weight']); $groups[$i]['items'] = array(); $current_group_keys = $group_keys ? $group_keys : NULL; } // Add the item to the current group. $groups[$i]['items'][] = $item; } return $groups; } /** * Aggregation callback: Aggregates CSS files and inline content. * * Having the browser load fewer CSS files results in much faster page loads * than when it loads many small files. This function aggregates files within * the same group into a single file unless the site-wide setting to do so is * disabled (commonly the case during site development). To optimize download, * it also compresses the aggregate files by removing comments, whitespace, and * other unnecessary content. Additionally, this functions aggregates inline * content together, regardless of the site-wide aggregation setting. * * @param $css_groups * An array of CSS groups as returned by drupal_group_css(). This function * modifies the group's 'data' property for each group that is aggregated. * * @see drupal_group_css() * @see drupal_pre_render_styles() * @see system_element_info() */ function drupal_aggregate_css(&$css_groups) { // Only aggregate during normal site operation. if (defined('MAINTENANCE_MODE')) { $preprocess_css = FALSE; } else { $config = config('system.performance'); $preprocess_css = $config->get('css.preprocess'); } // For each group that needs aggregation, aggregate its items. foreach ($css_groups as $key => $group) { switch ($group['type']) { // If a file group can be aggregated into a single file, do so, and set // the group's data property to the file path of the aggregate file. case 'file': if ($group['preprocess'] && $preprocess_css) { $css_groups[$key]['data'] = drupal_build_css_cache($group['items']); } break; // Aggregate all inline CSS content into the group's data property. case 'inline': $css_groups[$key]['data'] = ''; foreach ($group['items'] as $item) { $css_groups[$key]['data'] .= drupal_load_stylesheet_content($item['data'], $item['preprocess']); } break; } } } /** * Pre-render callback: Adds the elements needed for CSS tags to be rendered. * * For production websites, LINK tags are preferable to STYLE tags with @import * statements, because: * - They are the standard tag intended for linking to a resource. * - On Firefox 2 and perhaps other browsers, CSS files included with @import * statements don't get saved when saving the complete web page for offline * use: http://drupal.org/node/145218. * - On IE, if only LINK tags and no @import statements are used, all the CSS * files are downloaded in parallel, resulting in faster page load, but if * @import statements are used and span across multiple STYLE tags, all the * ones from one STYLE tag must be downloaded before downloading begins for * the next STYLE tag. Furthermore, IE7 does not support media declaration on * the @import statement, so multiple STYLE tags must be used when different * files are for different media types. Non-IE browsers always download in * parallel, so this is an IE-specific performance quirk: * http://www.stevesouders.com/blog/2009/04/09/dont-use-import/. * * However, IE has an annoying limit of 31 total CSS inclusion tags * (http://drupal.org/node/228818) and LINK tags are limited to one file per * tag, whereas STYLE tags can contain multiple @import statements allowing * multiple files to be loaded per tag. When CSS aggregation is disabled, a * Drupal site can easily have more than 31 CSS files that need to be loaded, so * using LINK tags exclusively would result in a site that would display * incorrectly in IE. Depending on different needs, different strategies can be * employed to decide when to use LINK tags and when to use STYLE tags. * * The strategy employed by this function is to use LINK tags for all aggregate * files and for all files that cannot be aggregated (e.g., if 'preprocess' is * set to FALSE or the type is 'external'), and to use STYLE tags for groups * of files that could be aggregated together but aren't (e.g., if the site-wide * aggregation setting is disabled). This results in all LINK tags when * aggregation is enabled, a guarantee that as many or only slightly more tags * are used with aggregation disabled than enabled (so that if the limit were to * be crossed with aggregation enabled, the site developer would also notice the * problem while aggregation is disabled), and an easy way for a developer to * view HTML source while aggregation is disabled and know what files will be * aggregated together when aggregation becomes enabled. * * This function evaluates the aggregation enabled/disabled condition on a group * by group basis by testing whether an aggregate file has been made for the * group rather than by testing the site-wide aggregation setting. This allows * this function to work correctly even if modules have implemented custom * logic for grouping and aggregating files. * * @param $element * A render array containing: * - '#items': The CSS items as returned by drupal_add_css() and altered by * drupal_get_css(). * - '#group_callback': A function to call to group #items to enable the use * of fewer tags by aggregating files and/or using multiple @import * statements within a single tag. * - '#aggregate_callback': A function to call to aggregate the items within * the groups arranged by the #group_callback function. * * @return * A render array that will render to a string of XHTML CSS tags. * * @see drupal_get_css() */ function drupal_pre_render_styles($elements) { // Group and aggregate the items. if (isset($elements['#group_callback'])) { $elements['#groups'] = $elements['#group_callback']($elements['#items']); } if (isset($elements['#aggregate_callback'])) { $elements['#aggregate_callback']($elements['#groups']); } // A dummy query-string is added to filenames, to gain control over // browser-caching. The string changes on every update or full cache // flush, forcing browsers to load a new copy of the files, as the // URL changed. $query_string = variable_get('css_js_query_string', '0'); // For inline CSS to validate as XHTML, all CSS containing XHTML needs to be // wrapped in CDATA. To make that backwards compatible with HTML 4, we need to // comment out the CDATA-tag. $embed_prefix = "\n/* */\n"; // Defaults for LINK and STYLE elements. $link_element_defaults = array( '#type' => 'html_tag', '#tag' => 'link', '#attributes' => array( 'rel' => 'stylesheet', ), ); $style_element_defaults = array( '#type' => 'html_tag', '#tag' => 'style', ); // Loop through each group. foreach ($elements['#groups'] as $group) { switch ($group['type']) { // For file items, there are three possibilites. // - The group has been aggregated: in this case, output a LINK tag for // the aggregate file. // - The group can be aggregated but has not been (most likely because // the site administrator disabled the site-wide setting): in this case, // output as few STYLE tags for the group as possible, using @import // statement for each file in the group. This enables us to stay within // IE's limit of 31 total CSS inclusion tags. // - The group contains items not eligible for aggregation (their // 'preprocess' flag has been set to FALSE): in this case, output a LINK // tag for each file. case 'file': // The group has been aggregated into a single file: output a LINK tag // for the aggregate file. if (isset($group['data'])) { $element = $link_element_defaults; $element['#attributes']['href'] = file_create_url($group['data']); $element['#attributes']['media'] = $group['media']; $element['#browsers'] = $group['browsers']; $elements[] = $element; } // The group can be aggregated, but hasn't been: combine multiple items // into as few STYLE tags as possible. elseif ($group['preprocess']) { $import = array(); foreach ($group['items'] as $item) { // The dummy query string needs to be added to the URL to control // browser-caching. IE7 does not support a media type on the // @import statement, so we instead specify the media for the // group on the STYLE tag. $import[] = '@import url("' . check_plain(file_create_url($item['data']) . '?' . $query_string) . '");'; } // In addition to IE's limit of 31 total CSS inclusion tags, it also // has a limit of 31 @import statements per STYLE tag. while (!empty($import)) { $import_batch = array_slice($import, 0, 31); $import = array_slice($import, 31); $element = $style_element_defaults; // This simplifies the JavaScript regex, allowing each line // (separated by \n) to be treated as a completely different string. // This means that we can use ^ and $ on one line at a time, and not // worry about style tags since they'll never match the regex. $element['#value'] = "\n" . implode("\n", $import_batch) . "\n"; $element['#attributes']['media'] = $group['media']; $element['#browsers'] = $group['browsers']; $elements[] = $element; } } // The group contains items ineligible for aggregation: output a LINK // tag for each file. else { foreach ($group['items'] as $item) { $element = $link_element_defaults; // The dummy query string needs to be added to the URL to control // browser-caching. $query_string_separator = (strpos($item['data'], '?') !== FALSE) ? '&' : '?'; $element['#attributes']['href'] = file_create_url($item['data']) . $query_string_separator . $query_string; $element['#attributes']['media'] = $item['media']; $element['#browsers'] = $group['browsers']; $elements[] = $element; } } break; // For inline content, the 'data' property contains the CSS content. If // the group's 'data' property is set, then output it in a single STYLE // tag. Otherwise, output a separate STYLE tag for each item. case 'inline': if (isset($group['data'])) { $element = $style_element_defaults; $element['#value'] = $group['data']; $element['#value_prefix'] = $embed_prefix; $element['#value_suffix'] = $embed_suffix; $element['#attributes']['media'] = $group['media']; $element['#browsers'] = $group['browsers']; $elements[] = $element; } else { foreach ($group['items'] as $item) { $element = $style_element_defaults; $element['#value'] = $item['data']; $element['#value_prefix'] = $embed_prefix; $element['#value_suffix'] = $embed_suffix; $element['#attributes']['media'] = $item['media']; $element['#browsers'] = $group['browsers']; $elements[] = $element; } } break; // Output a LINK tag for each external item. The item's 'data' property // contains the full URL. case 'external': foreach ($group['items'] as $item) { $element = $link_element_defaults; $element['#attributes']['href'] = $item['data']; $element['#attributes']['media'] = $item['media']; $element['#browsers'] = $group['browsers']; $elements[] = $element; } break; } } return $elements; } /** * Aggregates and optimizes CSS files into a cache file in the files directory. * * The file name for the CSS cache file is generated from the hash of the * aggregated contents of the files in $css. This forces proxies and browsers * to download new CSS when the CSS changes. * * The cache file name is retrieved on a page load via a lookup variable that * contains an associative array. The array key is the hash of the file names * in $css while the value is the cache file name. The cache file is generated * in two cases. First, if there is no file name value for the key, which will * happen if a new file name has been added to $css or after the lookup * variable is emptied to force a rebuild of the cache. Second, the cache file * is generated if it is missing on disk. Old cache files are not deleted * immediately when the lookup variable is emptied, but are deleted after a set * period by drupal_delete_file_if_stale(). This ensures that files referenced * by a cached page will still be available. * * @param $css * An array of CSS files to aggregate and compress into one file. * * @return * The URI of the CSS cache file, or FALSE if the file could not be saved. */ function drupal_build_css_cache($css) { $data = ''; $uri = ''; $map = Drupal::state()->get('drupal_css_cache_files') ?: array(); // Create a new array so that only the file names are used to create the hash. // This prevents new aggregates from being created unnecessarily. $css_data = array(); foreach ($css as $css_file) { $css_data[] = $css_file['data']; } $key = hash('sha256', serialize($css_data)); if (isset($map[$key])) { $uri = $map[$key]; } if (empty($uri) || !file_exists($uri)) { // Build aggregate CSS file. foreach ($css as $stylesheet) { // Only 'file' stylesheets can be aggregated. if ($stylesheet['type'] == 'file') { $contents = drupal_load_stylesheet($stylesheet['data'], TRUE); // Get the parent directory of this file, relative to the Drupal root. $css_base_url = substr($stylesheet['data'], 0, strrpos($stylesheet['data'], '/')); _drupal_build_css_path(NULL, $css_base_url . '/'); // Anchor all paths in the CSS with its base URL, ignoring external and absolute paths. $data .= preg_replace_callback('/url\(\s*[\'"]?(?![a-z]+:|\/+)([^\'")]+)[\'"]?\s*\)/i', '_drupal_build_css_path', $contents); } } // Per the W3C specification at http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-CSS2/cascade.html#at-import, // @import rules must proceed any other style, so we move those to the top. $regexp = '/@import[^;]+;/i'; preg_match_all($regexp, $data, $matches); $data = preg_replace($regexp, '', $data); $data = implode('', $matches[0]) . $data; // Prefix filename to prevent blocking by firewalls which reject files // starting with "ad*". $filename = 'css_' . Crypt::hashBase64($data) . '.css'; // Create the css/ within the files folder. $csspath = 'public://css'; $uri = $csspath . '/' . $filename; // Create the CSS file. file_prepare_directory($csspath, FILE_CREATE_DIRECTORY); if (!file_exists($uri) && !file_unmanaged_save_data($data, $uri, FILE_EXISTS_REPLACE)) { return FALSE; } // If CSS gzip compression is enabled and the zlib extension is available // then create a gzipped version of this file. This file is served // conditionally to browsers that accept gzip using .htaccess rules. // It's possible that the rewrite rules in .htaccess aren't working on this // server, but there's no harm (other than the time spent generating the // file) in generating the file anyway. Sites on servers where rewrite rules // aren't working can set css.gzip to FALSE in order to skip // generating a file that won't be used. if (config('system.performance')->get('css.gzip') && extension_loaded('zlib')) { if (!file_exists($uri . '.gz') && !file_unmanaged_save_data(gzencode($data, 9, FORCE_GZIP), $uri . '.gz', FILE_EXISTS_REPLACE)) { return FALSE; } } // Save the updated map. $map[$key] = $uri; Drupal::state()->set('drupal_css_cache_files', $map); } return $uri; } /** * Prefixes all paths within a CSS file for drupal_build_css_cache(). */ function _drupal_build_css_path($matches, $base = NULL) { $_base = &drupal_static(__FUNCTION__); // Store base path for preg_replace_callback. if (isset($base)) { $_base = $base; } // Prefix with base and remove '../' segments where possible. $path = $_base . $matches[1]; $last = ''; while ($path != $last) { $last = $path; $path = preg_replace('`(^|/)(?!\.\./)([^/]+)/\.\./`', '$1', $path); } return 'url(' . file_create_url($path) . ')'; } /** * Loads the stylesheet and resolves all @import commands. * * Loads a stylesheet and replaces @import commands with the contents of the * imported file. Use this instead of file_get_contents when processing * stylesheets. * * The returned contents are compressed removing white space and comments only * when CSS aggregation is enabled. This optimization will not apply for * color.module enabled themes with CSS aggregation turned off. * * @param $file * Name of the stylesheet to be processed. * @param $optimize * Defines if CSS contents should be compressed or not. * @param $reset_basepath * Used internally to facilitate recursive resolution of @import commands. * * @return * Contents of the stylesheet, including any resolved @import commands. */ function drupal_load_stylesheet($file, $optimize = NULL, $reset_basepath = TRUE) { // These statics are not cache variables, so we don't use drupal_static(). static $_optimize, $basepath; if ($reset_basepath) { $basepath = ''; } // Store the value of $optimize for preg_replace_callback with nested // @import loops. if (isset($optimize)) { $_optimize = $optimize; } // Stylesheets are relative one to each other. Start by adding a base path // prefix provided by the parent stylesheet (if necessary). if ($basepath && !file_uri_scheme($file)) { $file = $basepath . '/' . $file; } $basepath = dirname($file); // Load the CSS stylesheet. We suppress errors because themes may specify // stylesheets in their .info.yml file that don't exist in the theme's path, // but are merely there to disable certain module CSS files. if ($contents = @file_get_contents($file)) { // Return the processed stylesheet. return drupal_load_stylesheet_content($contents, $_optimize); } return ''; } /** * Processes the contents of a stylesheet for aggregation. * * @param $contents * The contents of the stylesheet. * @param $optimize * (optional) Boolean whether CSS contents should be minified. Defaults to * FALSE. * * @return * Contents of the stylesheet including the imported stylesheets. */ function drupal_load_stylesheet_content($contents, $optimize = FALSE) { // Remove multiple charset declarations for standards compliance (and fixing Safari problems). $contents = preg_replace('/^@charset\s+[\'"](\S*)\b[\'"];/i', '', $contents); if ($optimize) { // Perform some safe CSS optimizations. // Regexp to match comment blocks. $comment = '/\*[^*]*\*+(?:[^/*][^*]*\*+)*/'; // Regexp to match double quoted strings. $double_quot = '"[^"\\\\]*(?:\\\\.[^"\\\\]*)*"'; // Regexp to match single quoted strings. $single_quot = "'[^'\\\\]*(?:\\\\.[^'\\\\]*)*'"; // Strip all comment blocks, but keep double/single quoted strings. $contents = preg_replace( "<($double_quot|$single_quot)|$comment>Ss", "$1", $contents ); // Remove certain whitespace. // There are different conditions for removing leading and trailing // whitespace. // @see http://php.net/manual/regexp.reference.subpatterns.php $contents = preg_replace('< # Strip leading and trailing whitespace. \s*([@{};,])\s* # Strip only leading whitespace from: # - Closing parenthesis: Retain "@media (bar) and foo". | \s+([\)]) # Strip only trailing whitespace from: # - Opening parenthesis: Retain "@media (bar) and foo". # - Colon: Retain :pseudo-selectors. | ([\(:])\s+ >xS', // Only one of the three capturing groups will match, so its reference // will contain the wanted value and the references for the // two non-matching groups will be replaced with empty strings. '$1$2$3', $contents ); // End the file with a new line. $contents = trim($contents); $contents .= "\n"; } // Replaces @import commands with the actual stylesheet content. // This happens recursively but omits external files. $contents = preg_replace_callback('/@import\s*(?:url\(\s*)?[\'"]?(?![a-z]+:)([^\'"\()]+)[\'"]?\s*\)?\s*;/', '_drupal_load_stylesheet', $contents); return $contents; } /** * Loads stylesheets recursively and returns contents with corrected paths. * * This function is used for recursive loading of stylesheets and * returns the stylesheet content with all url() paths corrected. */ function _drupal_load_stylesheet($matches) { $filename = $matches[1]; // Load the imported stylesheet and replace @import commands in there as well. $file = drupal_load_stylesheet($filename, NULL, FALSE); // Determine the file's directory. $directory = dirname($filename); // If the file is in the current directory, make sure '.' doesn't appear in // the url() path. $directory = $directory == '.' ? '' : $directory .'/'; // Alter all internal url() paths. Leave external paths alone. We don't need // to normalize absolute paths here (i.e. remove folder/... segments) because // that will be done later. return preg_replace('/url\(\s*([\'"]?)(?![a-z]+:|\/+)/i', 'url(\1'. $directory, $file); } /** * Deletes old cached CSS files. */ function drupal_clear_css_cache() { Drupal::state()->delete('drupal_css_cache_files'); file_scan_directory('public://css', '/.*/', array('callback' => 'drupal_delete_file_if_stale')); } /** * Deletes files modified more than a set time ago. * * Callback for file_scan_directory() within: * - drupal_clear_css_cache() * - drupal_clear_js_cache() */ function drupal_delete_file_if_stale($uri) { // Default stale file threshold is 30 days. if (REQUEST_TIME - filemtime($uri) > config('system.performance')->get('stale_file_threshold')) { file_unmanaged_delete($uri); } } /** * Prepares a string for use as a CSS identifier (element, class, or ID name). * * http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/syndata.html#characters shows the syntax for valid * CSS identifiers (including element names, classes, and IDs in selectors.) * * @param $identifier * The identifier to clean. * @param $filter * An array of string replacements to use on the identifier. * * @return * The cleaned identifier. */ function drupal_clean_css_identifier($identifier, $filter = array(' ' => '-', '_' => '-', '__' => '__', '/' => '-', '[' => '-', ']' => '')) { // By default, we filter using Drupal's coding standards. $identifier = strtr($identifier, $filter); // Valid characters in a CSS identifier are: // - the hyphen (U+002D) // - a-z (U+0030 - U+0039) // - A-Z (U+0041 - U+005A) // - the underscore (U+005F) // - 0-9 (U+0061 - U+007A) // - ISO 10646 characters U+00A1 and higher // We strip out any character not in the above list. $identifier = preg_replace('/[^\x{002D}\x{0030}-\x{0039}\x{0041}-\x{005A}\x{005F}\x{0061}-\x{007A}\x{00A1}-\x{FFFF}]/u', '', $identifier); return $identifier; } /** * Prepares a string for use as a valid class name. * * Do not pass one string containing multiple classes as they will be * incorrectly concatenated with dashes, i.e. "one two" will become "one-two". * * @param $class * The class name to clean. * * @return * The cleaned class name. */ function drupal_html_class($class) { // The output of this function will never change, so this uses a normal // static instead of drupal_static(). static $classes = array(); if (!isset($classes[$class])) { $classes[$class] = drupal_clean_css_identifier(drupal_strtolower($class)); } return $classes[$class]; } /** * Prepares a string for use as a valid HTML ID and guarantees uniqueness. * * This function ensures that each passed HTML ID value only exists once on the * page. By tracking the already returned ids, this function enables forms, * blocks, and other content to be output multiple times on the same page, * without breaking (X)HTML validation. * * For already existing IDs, a counter is appended to the ID string. Therefore, * JavaScript and CSS code should not rely on any value that was generated by * this function and instead should rely on manually added CSS classes or * similarly reliable constructs. * * Two consecutive hyphens separate the counter from the original ID. To manage * uniqueness across multiple Ajax requests on the same page, Ajax requests * POST an array of all IDs currently present on the page, which are used to * prime this function's cache upon first invocation. * * To allow reverse-parsing of IDs submitted via Ajax, any multiple consecutive * hyphens in the originally passed $id are replaced with a single hyphen. * * @param $id * The ID to clean. * * @return * The cleaned ID. */ function drupal_html_id($id) { // If this is an Ajax request, then content returned by this page request will // be merged with content already on the base page. The HTML IDs must be // unique for the fully merged content. Therefore, initialize $seen_ids to // take into account IDs that are already in use on the base page. $seen_ids_init = &drupal_static(__FUNCTION__ . ':init'); if (!isset($seen_ids_init)) { // Ideally, Drupal would provide an API to persist state information about // prior page requests in the database, and we'd be able to add this // function's $seen_ids static variable to that state information in order // to have it properly initialized for this page request. However, no such // page state API exists, so instead, ajax.js adds all of the in-use HTML // IDs to the POST data of Ajax submissions. Direct use of $_POST is // normally not recommended as it could open up security risks, but because // the raw POST data is cast to a number before being returned by this // function, this usage is safe. if (empty($_POST['ajax_html_ids'])) { $seen_ids_init = array(); } else { // This function ensures uniqueness by appending a counter to the base id // requested by the calling function after the first occurrence of that // requested id. $_POST['ajax_html_ids'] contains the ids as they were // returned by this function, potentially with the appended counter, so // we parse that to reconstruct the $seen_ids array. $ajax_html_ids = explode(' ', $_POST['ajax_html_ids']); foreach ($ajax_html_ids as $seen_id) { // We rely on '--' being used solely for separating a base id from the // counter, which this function ensures when returning an id. $parts = explode('--', $seen_id, 2); if (!empty($parts[1]) && is_numeric($parts[1])) { list($seen_id, $i) = $parts; } else { $i = 1; } if (!isset($seen_ids_init[$seen_id]) || ($i > $seen_ids_init[$seen_id])) { $seen_ids_init[$seen_id] = $i; } } } } $seen_ids = &drupal_static(__FUNCTION__, $seen_ids_init); $id = strtr(drupal_strtolower($id), array(' ' => '-', '_' => '-', '[' => '-', ']' => '')); // As defined in http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/types.html#type-name, HTML IDs can // only contain letters, digits ([0-9]), hyphens ("-"), underscores ("_"), // colons (":"), and periods ("."). We strip out any character not in that // list. Note that the CSS spec doesn't allow colons or periods in identifiers // (http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/syndata.html#characters), so we strip those two // characters as well. $id = preg_replace('/[^A-Za-z0-9\-_]/', '', $id); // Removing multiple consecutive hyphens. $id = preg_replace('/\-+/', '-', $id); // Ensure IDs are unique by appending a counter after the first occurrence. // The counter needs to be appended with a delimiter that does not exist in // the base ID. Requiring a unique delimiter helps ensure that we really do // return unique IDs and also helps us re-create the $seen_ids array during // Ajax requests. if (isset($seen_ids[$id])) { $id = $id . '--' . ++$seen_ids[$id]; } else { $seen_ids[$id] = 1; } return $id; } /** * Adds a JavaScript file, setting, or inline code to the page. * * The behavior of this function depends on the parameters it is called with. * Generally, it handles the addition of JavaScript to the page, either as * reference to an existing file or as inline code. The following actions can be * performed using this function: * - Add a file ('file'): Adds a reference to a JavaScript file to the page. * - Add inline JavaScript code ('inline'): Executes a piece of JavaScript code * on the current page by placing the code directly in the page (for example, * to tell the user that a new message arrived, by opening a pop up, alert * box, etc.). This should only be used for JavaScript that cannot be executed * from a file. When adding inline code, make sure that you are not relying on * $() being the jQuery function. Wrap your code in * @code (function ($) {... })(jQuery); @endcode * or use jQuery() instead of $(). * - Add external JavaScript ('external'): Allows the inclusion of external * JavaScript files that are not hosted on the local server. Note that these * external JavaScript references do not get aggregated when preprocessing is * on. * - Add settings ('setting'): Adds settings to Drupal's global storage of * JavaScript settings. Per-page settings are required by some modules to * function properly. All settings will be accessible at Drupal.settings. * * Examples: * @code * drupal_add_js('core/misc/collapse.js'); * drupal_add_js('core/misc/collapse.js', 'file'); * drupal_add_js('jQuery(document).ready(function () { alert("Hello!"); });', 'inline'); * drupal_add_js('jQuery(document).ready(function () { alert("Hello!"); });', * array('type' => 'inline', 'scope' => 'footer', 'weight' => 5) * ); * drupal_add_js('http://example.com/example.js', 'external'); * drupal_add_js(array('myModule' => array('key' => 'value')), 'setting'); * @endcode * * Calling drupal_static_reset('drupal_add_js') will clear all JavaScript added * so far. * * If JavaScript aggregation is enabled, all JavaScript files added with * $options['preprocess'] set to TRUE will be merged into one aggregate file. * Preprocessed inline JavaScript will not be aggregated into this single file. * Externally hosted JavaScripts are never aggregated. * * The reason for aggregating the files is outlined quite thoroughly here: * http://www.die.net/musings/page_load_time/ "Load fewer external objects. Due * to request overhead, one bigger file just loads faster than two smaller ones * half its size." * * $options['preprocess'] should be only set to TRUE when a file is required for * all typical visitors and most pages of a site. It is critical that all * preprocessed files are added unconditionally on every page, even if the * files are not needed on a page. This is normally done by calling * drupal_add_js() in a hook_page_build() implementation. * * Non-preprocessed files should only be added to the page when they are * actually needed. * * @param $data * (optional) If given, the value depends on the $options parameter, or * $options['type'] if $options is passed as an associative array: * - 'file': Path to the file relative to base_path(). * - 'inline': The JavaScript code that should be placed in the given scope. * - 'external': The absolute path to an external JavaScript file that is not * hosted on the local server. These files will not be aggregated if * JavaScript aggregation is enabled. * - 'setting': An associative array with configuration options. The array is * merged directly into Drupal.settings. All modules should wrap their * actual configuration settings in another variable to prevent conflicts in * the Drupal.settings namespace. Items added with a string key will replace * existing settings with that key; items with numeric array keys will be * added to the existing settings array. * @param $options * (optional) A string defining the type of JavaScript that is being added in * the $data parameter ('file'/'setting'/'inline'/'external'), or an * associative array. JavaScript settings should always pass the string * 'setting' only. Other types can have the following elements in the array: * - type: The type of JavaScript that is to be added to the page. Allowed * values are 'file', 'inline', 'external' or 'setting'. Defaults * to 'file'. * - scope: The location in which you want to place the script. Possible * values are 'header' or 'footer'. If your theme implements different * regions, you can also use these. Defaults to 'header'. * - group: A number identifying the group in which to add the JavaScript. * Available constants are: * - JS_LIBRARY: Any libraries, settings, or jQuery plugins. * - JS_DEFAULT: Any module-layer JavaScript. * - JS_THEME: Any theme-layer JavaScript. * The group number serves as a weight: JavaScript within a lower weight * group is presented on the page before JavaScript within a higher weight * group. * - every_page: For optimal front-end performance when aggregation is * enabled, this should be set to TRUE if the JavaScript is present on every * page of the website for users for whom it is present at all. This * defaults to FALSE. It is set to TRUE for JavaScript files that are added * via module and theme .info.yml files. Modules that add JavaScript within * hook_page_build() implementations, or from other code that ensures that * the JavaScript is added to all website pages, should also set this flag * to TRUE. All JavaScript files within the same group and that have the * 'every_page' flag set to TRUE and do not have 'preprocess' set to FALSE * are aggregated together into a single aggregate file, and that aggregate * file can be reused across a user's entire site visit, leading to faster * navigation between pages. However, JavaScript that is only needed on * pages less frequently visited, can be added by code that only runs for * those particular pages, and that code should not set the 'every_page' * flag. This minimizes the size of the aggregate file that the user needs * to download when first visiting the website. JavaScript without the * 'every_page' flag is aggregated into a separate aggregate file. This * other aggregate file is likely to change from page to page, and each new * aggregate file needs to be downloaded when first encountered, so it * should be kept relatively small by ensuring that most commonly needed * JavaScript is added to every page. * - weight: A number defining the order in which the JavaScript is added to * the page relative to other JavaScript with the same 'scope', 'group', * and 'every_page' value. In some cases, the order in which the JavaScript * is presented on the page is very important. jQuery, for example, must be * added to the page before any jQuery code is run, so jquery.js uses the * JS_LIBRARY group and a weight of -20, jquery.once.js (a library drupal.js * depends on) uses the JS_LIBRARY group and a weight of -19, drupal.js uses * the JS_LIBRARY group and a weight of -1, other libraries use the * JS_LIBRARY group and a weight of 0 or higher, and all other scripts use * one of the other group constants. The exact ordering of JavaScript is as * follows: * - First by scope, with 'header' first, 'footer' last, and any other * scopes provided by a custom theme coming in between, as determined by * the theme. * - Then by group. * - Then by the 'every_page' flag, with TRUE coming before FALSE. * - Then by weight. * - Then by the order in which the JavaScript was added. For example, all * else being the same, JavaScript added by a call to drupal_add_js() that * happened later in the page request gets added to the page after one for * which drupal_add_js() happened earlier in the page request. * - cache: If set to FALSE, the JavaScript file is loaded anew on every page * call; in other words, it is not cached. Used only when 'type' references * a JavaScript file. Defaults to TRUE. * - preprocess: If TRUE and JavaScript aggregation is enabled, the script * file will be aggregated. Defaults to TRUE. * - attributes: An associative array of attributes for the