public function ModuleHandler::alter in Zircon Profile 8
Same name and namespace in other branches
- 8.0 core/lib/Drupal/Core/Extension/ModuleHandler.php \Drupal\Core\Extension\ModuleHandler::alter()
Passes alterable variables to specific hook_TYPE_alter() implementations.
This dispatch function hands off the passed-in variables to type-specific hook_TYPE_alter() implementations in modules. It ensures a consistent interface for all altering operations.
A maximum of 2 alterable arguments is supported. In case more arguments need to be passed and alterable, modules provide additional variables assigned by reference in the last $context argument:
$context = array(
'alterable' => &$alterable,
'unalterable' => $unalterable,
'foo' => 'bar',
);
$this
->alter('mymodule_data', $alterable1, $alterable2, $context);
Note that objects are always passed by reference in PHP5. If it is absolutely required that no implementation alters a passed object in $context, then an object needs to be cloned:
$context = array(
'unalterable_object' => clone $object,
);
$this
->alter('mymodule_data', $data, $context);
Parameters
string|array $type: A string describing the type of the alterable $data. 'form', 'links', 'node_content', and so on are several examples. Alternatively can be an array, in which case hook_TYPE_alter() is invoked for each value in the array, ordered first by module, and then for each module, in the order of values in $type. For example, when Form API is using $this->alter() to execute both hook_form_alter() and hook_form_FORM_ID_alter() implementations, it passes array('form', 'form_' . $form_id) for $type.
mixed $data: The variable that will be passed to hook_TYPE_alter() implementations to be altered. The type of this variable depends on the value of the $type argument. For example, when altering a 'form', $data will be a structured array. When altering a 'profile', $data will be an object.
mixed $context1: (optional) An additional variable that is passed by reference.
mixed $context2: (optional) An additional variable that is passed by reference. If more context needs to be provided to implementations, then this should be an associative array as described above.
Overrides ModuleHandlerInterface::alter
1 call to ModuleHandler::alter()
- ModuleHandler::buildImplementationInfo in core/
lib/ Drupal/ Core/ Extension/ ModuleHandler.php - Builds hook implementation information for a given hook name.
File
- core/
lib/ Drupal/ Core/ Extension/ ModuleHandler.php, line 408 - Contains \Drupal\Core\Extension\ModuleHandler.
Class
- ModuleHandler
- Class that manages modules in a Drupal installation.
Namespace
Drupal\Core\ExtensionCode
public function alter($type, &$data, &$context1 = NULL, &$context2 = NULL) {
// Most of the time, $type is passed as a string, so for performance,
// normalize it to that. When passed as an array, usually the first item in
// the array is a generic type, and additional items in the array are more
// specific variants of it, as in the case of array('form', 'form_FORM_ID').
if (is_array($type)) {
$cid = implode(',', $type);
$extra_types = $type;
$type = array_shift($extra_types);
// Allow if statements in this function to use the faster isset() rather
// than !empty() both when $type is passed as a string, or as an array
// with one item.
if (empty($extra_types)) {
unset($extra_types);
}
}
else {
$cid = $type;
}
// Some alter hooks are invoked many times per page request, so store the
// list of functions to call, and on subsequent calls, iterate through them
// quickly.
if (!isset($this->alterFunctions[$cid])) {
$this->alterFunctions[$cid] = array();
$hook = $type . '_alter';
$modules = $this
->getImplementations($hook);
if (!isset($extra_types)) {
// For the more common case of a single hook, we do not need to call
// function_exists(), since $this->getImplementations() returns only
// modules with implementations.
foreach ($modules as $module) {
$this->alterFunctions[$cid][] = $module . '_' . $hook;
}
}
else {
// For multiple hooks, we need $modules to contain every module that
// implements at least one of them.
$extra_modules = array();
foreach ($extra_types as $extra_type) {
$extra_modules = array_merge($extra_modules, $this
->getImplementations($extra_type . '_alter'));
}
// If any modules implement one of the extra hooks that do not implement
// the primary hook, we need to add them to the $modules array in their
// appropriate order. $this->getImplementations() can only return
// ordered implementations of a single hook. To get the ordered
// implementations of multiple hooks, we mimic the
// $this->getImplementations() logic of first ordering by
// $this->getModuleList(), and then calling
// $this->alter('module_implements').
if (array_diff($extra_modules, $modules)) {
// Merge the arrays and order by getModuleList().
$modules = array_intersect(array_keys($this->moduleList), array_merge($modules, $extra_modules));
// Since $this->getImplementations() already took care of loading the
// necessary include files, we can safely pass FALSE for the array
// values.
$implementations = array_fill_keys($modules, FALSE);
// Let modules adjust the order solely based on the primary hook. This
// ensures the same module order regardless of whether this if block
// runs. Calling $this->alter() recursively in this way does not
// result in an infinite loop, because this call is for a single
// $type, so we won't end up in this code block again.
$this
->alter('module_implements', $implementations, $hook);
$modules = array_keys($implementations);
}
foreach ($modules as $module) {
// Since $modules is a merged array, for any given module, we do not
// know whether it has any particular implementation, so we need a
// function_exists().
$function = $module . '_' . $hook;
if (function_exists($function)) {
$this->alterFunctions[$cid][] = $function;
}
foreach ($extra_types as $extra_type) {
$function = $module . '_' . $extra_type . '_alter';
if (function_exists($function)) {
$this->alterFunctions[$cid][] = $function;
}
}
}
}
}
foreach ($this->alterFunctions[$cid] as $function) {
$function($data, $context1, $context2);
}
}