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GroupwiseMax.php in Zircon Profile 8.0

Same filename and directory in other branches
  1. 8 core/modules/views/src/Plugin/views/relationship/GroupwiseMax.php

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core/modules/views/src/Plugin/views/relationship/GroupwiseMax.php
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<?php

/**
 * @file
 * Contains \Drupal\views\Plugin\views\relationship\GroupwiseMax.
 */
namespace Drupal\views\Plugin\views\relationship;

use Drupal\Core\Database\Query\AlterableInterface;
use Drupal\Core\Form\FormStateInterface;
use Drupal\views\Views;

/**
 * Relationship handler that allows a groupwise maximum of the linked in table.
 * For a definition, see:
 * http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/example-maximum-column-group-row.html
 * In lay terms, instead of joining to get all matching records in the linked
 * table, we get only one record, a 'representative record' picked according
 * to a given criteria.
 *
 * Example:
 * Suppose we have a term view that gives us the terms: Horse, Cat, Aardvark.
 * We wish to show for each term the most recent node of that term.
 * What we want is some kind of relationship from term to node.
 * But a regular relationship will give us all the nodes for each term,
 * giving the view multiple rows per term. What we want is just one
 * representative node per term, the node that is the 'best' in some way:
 * eg, the most recent, the most commented on, the first in alphabetical order.
 *
 * This handler gives us that kind of relationship from term to node.
 * The method of choosing the 'best' implemented with a sort
 * that the user selects in the relationship settings.
 *
 * So if we want our term view to show the most commented node for each term,
 * add the relationship and in its options, pick the 'Comment count' sort.
 *
 * Relationship definition
 *  - 'outer field': The outer field to substitute into the correlated subquery.
 *       This must be the full field name, not the alias.
 *       Eg: 'term_data.tid'.
 *  - 'argument table',
 *    'argument field': These options define a views argument that the subquery
 *     must add to itself to filter by the main view.
 *     Example: the main view shows terms, this handler is being used to get to
 *     the nodes base table. Your argument must be 'term_node', 'tid', as this
 *     is the argument that should be added to a node view to filter on terms.
 *
 * A note on performance:
 * This relationship uses a correlated subquery, which is expensive.
 * Subsequent versions of this handler could also implement the alternative way
 * of doing this, with a join -- though this looks like it could be pretty messy
 * to implement. This is also an expensive method, so providing both methods and
 * allowing the user to choose which one works fastest for their data might be
 * the best way.
 * If your use of this relationship handler is likely to result in large
 * data sets, you might want to consider storing statistics in a separate table,
 * in the same way as node_comment_statistics.
 *
 * @ingroup views_relationship_handlers
 *
 * @ViewsRelationship("groupwise_max")
 */
class GroupwiseMax extends RelationshipPluginBase {

  /**
   * {@inheritdoc}
   */
  protected function defineOptions() {
    $options = parent::defineOptions();
    $options['subquery_sort'] = array(
      'default' => NULL,
    );

    // Descending more useful.
    $options['subquery_order'] = array(
      'default' => 'DESC',
    );
    $options['subquery_regenerate'] = array(
      'default' => FALSE,
    );
    $options['subquery_view'] = array(
      'default' => FALSE,
    );
    $options['subquery_namespace'] = array(
      'default' => FALSE,
    );
    return $options;
  }

  /**
   * {@inheritdoc}
   */
  public function buildOptionsForm(&$form, FormStateInterface $form_state) {
    parent::buildOptionsForm($form, $form_state);

    // Get the sorts that apply to our base.
    $sorts = Views::viewsDataHelper()
      ->fetchFields($this->definition['base'], 'sort');
    $sort_options = array();
    foreach ($sorts as $sort_id => $sort) {
      $sort_options[$sort_id] = "{$sort['group']}: {$sort['title']}";
    }
    $base_table_data = Views::viewsData()
      ->get($this->definition['base']);

    // Extends the relationship's basic options, allowing the user to pick a
    // sort and an order for it.
    $form['subquery_sort'] = array(
      '#type' => 'select',
      '#title' => $this
        ->t('Representative sort criteria'),
      // Provide the base field as sane default sort option.
      '#default_value' => !empty($this->options['subquery_sort']) ? $this->options['subquery_sort'] : $this->definition['base'] . '.' . $base_table_data['table']['base']['field'],
      '#options' => $sort_options,
      '#description' => $this
        ->t("The sort criteria is applied to the data brought in by the relationship to determine how a representative item is obtained for each row. For example, to show the most recent node for each user, pick 'Content: Updated date'."),
    );
    $form['subquery_order'] = array(
      '#type' => 'radios',
      '#title' => $this
        ->t('Representative sort order'),
      '#description' => $this
        ->t("The ordering to use for the sort criteria selected above."),
      '#options' => array(
        'ASC' => $this
          ->t('Ascending'),
        'DESC' => $this
          ->t('Descending'),
      ),
      '#default_value' => $this->options['subquery_order'],
    );
    $form['subquery_namespace'] = array(
      '#type' => 'textfield',
      '#title' => $this
        ->t('Subquery namespace'),
      '#description' => $this
        ->t('Advanced. Enter a namespace for the subquery used by this relationship.'),
      '#default_value' => $this->options['subquery_namespace'],
    );

    // WIP: This stuff doesn't work yet: namespacing issues.
    // A list of suitable views to pick one as the subview.
    $views = array(
      '' => '- None -',
    );
    foreach (Views::getAllViews() as $view) {

      // Only get views that are suitable:
      // - base must the base that our relationship joins towards
      // - must have fields.
      if ($view
        ->get('base_table') == $this->definition['base'] && !empty($view
        ->getDisplay('default')['display_options']['fields'])) {

        // TODO: check the field is the correct sort?
        // or let users hang themselves at this stage and check later?
        $views[$view
          ->id()] = $view
          ->id();
      }
    }
    $form['subquery_view'] = array(
      '#type' => 'select',
      '#title' => $this
        ->t('Representative view'),
      '#default_value' => $this->options['subquery_view'],
      '#options' => $views,
      '#description' => $this
        ->t('Advanced. Use another view to generate the relationship subquery. This allows you to use filtering and more than one sort. If you pick a view here, the sort options above are ignored. Your view must have the ID of its base as its only field, and should have some kind of sorting.'),
    );
    $form['subquery_regenerate'] = array(
      '#type' => 'checkbox',
      '#title' => $this
        ->t('Generate subquery each time view is run'),
      '#default_value' => $this->options['subquery_regenerate'],
      '#description' => $this
        ->t('Will re-generate the subquery for this relationship every time the view is run, instead of only when these options are saved. Use for testing if you are making changes elsewhere. WARNING: seriously impairs performance.'),
    );
  }

  /**
   * Helper function to create a pseudo view.
   *
   * We use this to obtain our subquery SQL.
   */
  protected function getTemporaryView() {
    $view = entity_create('view', array(
      'base_table' => $this->definition['base'],
    ));
    $view
      ->addDisplay('default');
    return $view
      ->getExecutable();
  }

  /**
   * When the form is submitted, make sure to clear the subquery string cache.
   */
  public function submitOptionsForm(&$form, FormStateInterface $form_state) {
    $cid = 'views_relationship_groupwise_max:' . $this->view->storage
      ->id() . ':' . $this->view->current_display . ':' . $this->options['id'];
    \Drupal::cache('data')
      ->delete($cid);
  }

  /**
   * Generate a subquery given the user options, as set in the options.
   *
   * These are passed in rather than picked up from the object because we
   * generate the subquery when the options are saved, rather than when the view
   * is run. This saves considerable time.
   *
   * @param $options
   *   An array of options:
   *    - subquery_sort: the id of a views sort.
   *    - subquery_order: either ASC or DESC.
   *
   * @return string
   *    The subquery SQL string, ready for use in the main query.
   */
  protected function leftQuery($options) {

    // Either load another view, or create one on the fly.
    if ($options['subquery_view']) {
      $temp_view = Views::getView($options['subquery_view']);

      // Remove all fields from default display
      unset($temp_view->display['default']['display_options']['fields']);
    }
    else {

      // Create a new view object on the fly, which we use to generate a query
      // object and then get the SQL we need for the subquery.
      $temp_view = $this
        ->getTemporaryView();

      // Add the sort from the options to the default display.
      // This is broken, in that the sort order field also gets added as a
      // select field. See https://www.drupal.org/node/844910.
      // We work around this further down.
      $sort = $options['subquery_sort'];
      list($sort_table, $sort_field) = explode('.', $sort);
      $sort_options = array(
        'order' => $options['subquery_order'],
      );
      $temp_view
        ->addHandler('default', 'sort', $sort_table, $sort_field, $sort_options);
    }

    // Get the namespace string.
    $temp_view->namespace = !empty($options['subquery_namespace']) ? '_' . $options['subquery_namespace'] : '_INNER';
    $this->subquery_namespace = !empty($options['subquery_namespace']) ? '_' . $options['subquery_namespace'] : 'INNER';

    // The value we add here does nothing, but doing this adds the right tables
    // and puts in a WHERE clause with a placeholder we can grab later.
    $temp_view->args[] = '**CORRELATED**';

    // Add the base table ID field.
    $temp_view
      ->addHandler('default', 'field', $this->definition['base'], $this->definition['field']);
    $relationship_id = NULL;

    // Add the used relationship for the subjoin, if defined.
    if (isset($this->definition['relationship'])) {
      list($relationship_table, $relationship_field) = explode(':', $this->definition['relationship']);
      $relationship_id = $temp_view
        ->addHandler('default', 'relationship', $relationship_table, $relationship_field);
    }
    $temp_item_options = array(
      'relationship' => $relationship_id,
    );

    // Add the correct argument for our relationship's base
    // ie the 'how to get back to base' argument.
    // The relationship definition tells us which one to use.
    $temp_view
      ->addHandler('default', 'argument', $this->definition['argument table'], $this->definition['argument field'], $temp_item_options);

    // Build the view. The creates the query object and produces the query
    // string but does not run any queries.
    $temp_view
      ->build();

    // Now take the SelectQuery object the View has built and massage it
    // somewhat so we can get the SQL query from it.
    $subquery = $temp_view->build_info['query'];

    // Workaround until https://www.drupal.org/node/844910 is fixed:
    // Remove all fields from the SELECT except the base id.
    $fields =& $subquery
      ->getFields();
    foreach (array_keys($fields) as $field_name) {

      // The base id for this subquery is stored in our definition.
      if ($field_name != $this->definition['field']) {
        unset($fields[$field_name]);
      }
    }

    // Make every alias in the subquery safe within the outer query by
    // appending a namespace to it, '_inner' by default.
    $tables =& $subquery
      ->getTables();
    foreach (array_keys($tables) as $table_name) {
      $tables[$table_name]['alias'] .= $this->subquery_namespace;

      // Namespace the join on every table.
      if (isset($tables[$table_name]['condition'])) {
        $tables[$table_name]['condition'] = $this
          ->conditionNamespace($tables[$table_name]['condition']);
      }
    }

    // Namespace fields.
    foreach (array_keys($fields) as $field_name) {
      $fields[$field_name]['table'] .= $this->subquery_namespace;
      $fields[$field_name]['alias'] .= $this->subquery_namespace;
    }

    // Namespace conditions.
    $where =& $subquery
      ->conditions();
    $this
      ->alterSubqueryCondition($subquery, $where);

    // Not sure why, but our sort order clause doesn't have a table.
    // TODO: the call to addHandler() above to add the sort handler is probably
    // wrong -- needs attention from someone who understands it.
    // In the meantime, this works, but with a leap of faith.
    $orders =& $subquery
      ->getOrderBy();
    foreach ($orders as $order_key => $order) {

      // But if we're using a whole view, we don't know what we have!
      if ($options['subquery_view']) {
        list($sort_table, $sort_field) = explode('.', $order_key);
      }
      $orders[$sort_table . $this->subquery_namespace . '.' . $sort_field] = $order;
      unset($orders[$order_key]);
    }

    // The query we get doesn't include the LIMIT, so add it here.
    $subquery
      ->range(0, 1);

    // Extract the SQL the temporary view built.
    $subquery_sql = $subquery
      ->__toString();

    // Replace the placeholder with the outer, correlated field.
    // Eg, change the placeholder ':users_uid' into the outer field 'users.uid'.
    // We have to work directly with the SQL, because putting a name of a field
    // into a SelectQuery that it does not recognize (because it's outer) just
    // makes it treat it as a string.
    $outer_placeholder = ':' . str_replace('.', '_', $this->definition['outer field']);
    $subquery_sql = str_replace($outer_placeholder, $this->definition['outer field'], $subquery_sql);
    return $subquery_sql;
  }

  /**
   * Recursive helper to add a namespace to conditions.
   *
   * Similar to _views_query_tag_alter_condition().
   *
   * (Though why is the condition we get in a simple query 3 levels deep???)
   */
  protected function alterSubqueryCondition(AlterableInterface $query, &$conditions) {
    foreach ($conditions as $condition_id => &$condition) {

      // Skip the #conjunction element.
      if (is_numeric($condition_id)) {
        if (is_string($condition['field'])) {
          $condition['field'] = $this
            ->conditionNamespace($condition['field']);
        }
        elseif (is_object($condition['field'])) {
          $sub_conditions =& $condition['field']
            ->conditions();
          $this
            ->alterSubqueryCondition($query, $sub_conditions);
        }
      }
    }
  }

  /**
   * Helper function to namespace query pieces.
   *
   * Turns 'foo.bar' into '"foo_NAMESPACE".bar'.
   * PostgreSQL doesn't support mixed-cased identifiers unless quoted, so we
   * need to quote each single part to prevent from query exceptions.
   */
  protected function conditionNamespace($string) {
    $parts = explode(' = ', $string);
    foreach ($parts as &$part) {
      if (strpos($part, '.') !== FALSE) {
        $part = '"' . str_replace('.', $this->subquery_namespace . '".', $part);
      }
    }
    return implode(' = ', $parts);
  }

  /**
   * {@inheritdoc}
   */
  public function query() {

    // Figure out what base table this relationship brings to the party.
    $table_data = Views::viewsData()
      ->get($this->definition['base']);
    $base_field = empty($this->definition['base field']) ? $table_data['table']['base']['field'] : $this->definition['base field'];
    $this
      ->ensureMyTable();
    $def = $this->definition;
    $def['table'] = $this->definition['base'];
    $def['field'] = $base_field;
    $def['left_table'] = $this->tableAlias;
    $def['left_field'] = $this->field;
    $def['adjusted'] = TRUE;
    if (!empty($this->options['required'])) {
      $def['type'] = 'INNER';
    }
    if ($this->options['subquery_regenerate']) {

      // For testing only, regenerate the subquery each time.
      $def['left_query'] = $this
        ->leftQuery($this->options);
    }
    else {

      // Get the stored subquery SQL string.
      $cid = 'views_relationship_groupwise_max:' . $this->view->storage
        ->id() . ':' . $this->view->current_display . ':' . $this->options['id'];
      $cache = \Drupal::cache('data')
        ->get($cid);
      if (isset($cache->data)) {
        $def['left_query'] = $cache->data;
      }
      else {
        $def['left_query'] = $this
          ->leftQuery($this->options);
        \Drupal::cache('data')
          ->set($cid, $def['left_query']);
      }
    }
    if (!empty($def['join_id'])) {
      $id = $def['join_id'];
    }
    else {
      $id = 'subquery';
    }
    $join = Views::pluginManager('join')
      ->createInstance($id, $def);

    // use a short alias for this:
    $alias = $def['table'] . '_' . $this->table;
    $this->alias = $this->query
      ->addRelationship($alias, $join, $this->definition['base'], $this->relationship);
  }

}

Classes

Namesort descending Description
GroupwiseMax Relationship handler that allows a groupwise maximum of the linked in table. For a definition, see: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/example-maximum-column-group-row.... In lay terms, instead of joining to get all matching records in the…