function zenophile_callback in Zenophile 6
Same name and namespace in other branches
- 6.2 zenophile.drush.inc \zenophile_callback()
Drush command callback.
1 string reference to 'zenophile_callback'
- zenophile_drush_command in ./
zenophile.drush.inc - Implementation of hook_drush_command().
File
- ./
zenophile.drush.inc, line 61 - Zenophile Drush commands.
Code
function zenophile_callback() {
$args = func_get_args();
$fake_form = array(
'values' => array(
'sysname' => $args[0],
'description' => $args[1],
'parent' => 'STARTERKIT',
'friendly' => '',
'layout' => 'fixed',
'fresh' => TRUE,
'site' => 'all',
'sidebar-left' => '200',
'sidebar-right' => '200',
'page' => '960',
'sidebar-pos' => 'normal',
),
);
foreach (array_keys($fake_form['values']) as $key) {
$value = drush_get_option($key);
if ($value !== NULL) {
$fake_form['values'][$key] = stripslashes($value);
}
}
drupal_execute('zenophile_create', $fake_form);
// _drush_log_drupal_messages() does not log "status" messages, which is how
// we try to tell the user that we were successful. So we'll log those
// manually. First, save them in a var, because _drush_log_drupal_messages()'s
// call to drupal_get_messages() is going to flush them.
$messages = drupal_get_messages(NULL, FALSE);
_drush_log_drupal_messages();
if (isset($messages['status'])) {
// There will probably never be more than one, but we'll iterate anyway.
foreach ($messages['status'] as $msg) {
drush_log(strip_tags($msg), 'success');
}
}
}