fname in debug statement (forgot that one yesterday)
[lhc/web/wiklou.git] / docs / hooks.txt
1 hooks.txt
2
3 This document describes how event hooks work in MediaWiki; how to add
4 hooks for an event; and how to run hooks for an event.
5
6 ==Glossary==
7
8 event
9 Something that happens with the wiki. For example: a user logs
10 in. A wiki page is saved. A wiki page is deleted. Often there are
11 two events associated with a single action: one before the code
12 is run to make the event happen, and one after. Each event has a
13 name, preferably in CamelCase. For example, 'UserLogin',
14 'ArticleSave', 'ArticleSaveComplete', 'ArticleDelete'.
15
16 hook
17 A clump of code and data that should be run when an event
18 happens. This can be either a function and a chunk of data, or an
19 object and a method.
20
21 hook function
22 The function part of a hook.
23
24 ==Rationale==
25
26 Hooks allow us to decouple optionally-run code from code that is run
27 for everyone. It allows MediaWiki hackers, third-party developers and
28 local administrators to define code that will be run at certain points
29 in the mainline code, and to modify the data run by that mainline
30 code. Hooks can keep mainline code simple, and make it easier to
31 write extensions. Hooks are a principled alternative to local patches.
32
33 Consider, for example, two options in MediaWiki. One reverses the
34 order of a title before displaying the article; the other converts the
35 title to all uppercase letters. Currently, in MediaWiki code, we
36 would handle this as follows (note: not real code, here):
37
38 function showAnArticle($article) {
39 global $wgReverseTitle, $wgCapitalizeTitle;
40
41 if ($wgReverseTitle) {
42 wfReverseTitle($article);
43 }
44
45 if ($wgCapitalizeTitle) {
46 wfCapitalizeTitle($article);
47 }
48
49 # code to actually show the article goes here
50 }
51
52 An extension writer, or a local admin, will often add custom code to
53 the function -- with or without a global variable. For example,
54 someone wanting email notification when an article is shown may add:
55
56 function showAnArticle($article) {
57 global $wgReverseTitle, $wgCapitalizeTitle;
58
59 if ($wgReverseTitle) {
60 wfReverseTitle($article);
61 }
62
63 if ($wgCapitalizeTitle) {
64 wfCapitalizeTitle($article);
65 }
66
67 # code to actually show the article goes here
68
69 if ($wgNotifyArticle) {
70 wfNotifyArticleShow($article));
71 }
72 }
73
74 Using a hook-running strategy, we can avoid having all this
75 option-specific stuff in our mainline code. Using hooks, the function
76 becomes:
77
78 function showAnArticle($article) {
79
80 if (wfRunHooks('ArticleShow', array(&$article))) {
81
82 # code to actually show the article goes here
83
84 wfRunHooks('ArticleShowComplete', array(&$article));
85 }
86 }
87
88 We've cleaned up the code here by removing clumps of weird,
89 infrequently used code and moving them off somewhere else. It's much
90 easier for someone working with this code to see what's _really_ going
91 on, and make changes or fix bugs.
92
93 In addition, we can take all the code that deals with the little-used
94 title-reversing options (say) and put it in one place. Instead of
95 having little title-reversing if-blocks spread all over the codebase
96 in showAnArticle, deleteAnArticle, exportArticle, etc., we can
97 concentrate it all in an extension file:
98
99 function reverseArticleTitle($article) {
100 # ...
101 }
102
103 function reverseForExport($article) {
104 # ...
105 }
106
107 The setup function for the extension just has to add its hook
108 functions to the appropriate events:
109
110 setupTitleReversingExtension() {
111 global $wgHooks;
112
113 $wgHooks['ArticleShow'][] = 'reverseArticleTitle';
114 $wgHooks['ArticleDelete'][] = 'reverseArticleTitle';
115 $wgHooks['ArticleExport'][] = 'reverseForExport';
116 }
117
118 Having all this code related to the title-reversion option in one
119 place means that it's easier to read and understand; you don't have to
120 do a grep-find to see where the $wgReverseTitle variable is used, say.
121
122 If the code is well enough isolated, it can even be excluded when not
123 used -- making for some slight savings in memory and load-up
124 performance at runtime. Admins who want to have all the reversed
125 titles can add:
126
127 require_once('extensions/ReverseTitle.php');
128
129 ...to their LocalSettings.php file; those of us who don't want or need
130 it can just leave it out.
131
132 The extensions don't even have to be shipped with MediaWiki; they
133 could be provided by a third-party developer or written by the admin
134 him/herself.
135
136 ==Writing hooks==
137
138 A hook is a chunk of code run at some particular event. It consists of:
139
140 * a function with some optional accompanying data, or
141 * an object with a method and some optional accompanying data.
142
143 Hooks are registered by adding them to the global $wgHooks array for a
144 given event. All the following are valid ways to define hooks:
145
146 $wgHooks['EventName'][] = 'someFunction'; # function, no data
147 $wgHooks['EventName'][] = array('someFunction', $someData);
148 $wgHooks['EventName'][] = array('someFunction'); # weird, but OK
149
150 $wgHooks['EventName'][] = $object; # object only
151 $wgHooks['EventName'][] = array($object, 'someMethod');
152 $wgHooks['EventName'][] = array($object, 'someMethod', $someData);
153 $wgHooks['EventName'][] = array($object); # weird but OK
154
155 When an event occurs, the function (or object method) will be called
156 with the optional data provided as well as event-specific parameters.
157 The above examples would result in the following code being executed
158 when 'EventName' happened:
159
160 # function, no data
161 someFunction($param1, $param2)
162 # function with data
163 someFunction($someData, $param1, $param2)
164
165 # object only
166 $object->onEventName($param1, $param2)
167 # object with method
168 $object->someMethod($param1, $param2)
169 # object with method and data
170 $object->someMethod($someData, $param1, $param2)
171
172 Note that when an object is the hook, and there's no specified method,
173 the default method called is 'onEventName'. For different events this
174 would be different: 'onArticleSave', 'onUserLogin', etc.
175
176 The extra data is useful if we want to use the same function or object
177 for different purposes. For example:
178
179 $wgHooks['ArticleSaveComplete'][] = array('ircNotify', 'TimStarling');
180 $wgHooks['ArticleSaveComplete'][] = array('ircNotify', 'brion');
181
182 This code would result in ircNotify being run twice when an article is
183 saved: once for 'TimStarling', and once for 'brion'.
184
185 Hooks can return three possible values:
186
187 * true: the hook has operated successfully
188 * "some string": an error occurred; processing should
189 stop and the error should be shown to the user
190 * false: the hook has successfully done the work
191 necessary and the calling function should skip
192
193 The last result would be for cases where the hook function replaces
194 the main functionality. For example, if you wanted to authenticate
195 users to a custom system (LDAP, another PHP program, whatever), you
196 could do:
197
198 $wgHooks['UserLogin'][] = array('ldapLogin', $ldapServer);
199
200 function ldapLogin($username, $password) {
201 # log user into LDAP
202 return false;
203 }
204
205 Returning false makes less sense for events where the action is
206 complete, and will normally be ignored.
207
208 ==Using hooks==
209
210 A calling function or method uses the wfRunHooks() function to run
211 the hooks related to a particular event, like so:
212
213 class Article {
214 # ...
215 function protect() {
216 global $wgUser;
217 if (wfRunHooks('ArticleProtect', array(&$this, &$wgUser))) {
218 # protect the article
219 wfRunHooks('ArticleProtectComplete', array(&$this, &$wgUser));
220 }
221 }
222
223 wfRunHooks() returns true if the calling function should continue
224 processing (the hooks ran OK, or there are no hooks to run), or false
225 if it shouldn't (an error occurred, or one of the hooks handled the
226 action already). Checking the return value matters more for "before"
227 hooks than for "complete" hooks.
228
229 Note that hook parameters are passed in an array; this is a necessary
230 inconvenience to make it possible to pass reference values (that can
231 be changed) into the hook code. Also note that earlier versions of
232 wfRunHooks took a variable number of arguments; the array() calling
233 protocol came about after MediaWiki 1.4rc1.
234
235 ==Events and parameters==
236
237 This is a list of known events and parameters; please add to it if
238 you're going to add events to the MediaWiki code.
239
240 'AbortNewAccount': Return false to cancel account creation.
241 $user: the User object about to be created (read-only, incomplete)
242 $message: out parameter: error message to display on abort
243
244 'AddNewAccount': after a user account is created
245 $user: the User object that was created. (Parameter added in 1.7)
246
247 'ArticleDelete': before an article is deleted
248 $article: the article (object) being deleted
249 $user: the user (object) deleting the article
250 $reason: the reason (string) the article is being deleted
251
252 'ArticleDeleteComplete': after an article is deleted
253 $article: the article that was deleted
254 $user: the user that deleted the article
255 $reason: the reason the article was deleted
256
257 'ArticleProtect': before an article is protected
258 $article: the article being protected
259 $user: the user doing the protection
260 $protect: boolean whether this is a protect or an unprotect
261 $reason: Reason for protect
262 $moveonly: boolean whether this is for move only or not
263
264 'ArticleProtectComplete': after an article is protected
265 $article: the article that was protected
266 $user: the user who did the protection
267 $protect: boolean whether it was a protect or an unprotect
268 $reason: Reason for protect
269 $moveonly: boolean whether it was for move only or not
270
271 'ArticleSave': before an article is saved
272 $article: the article (object) being saved
273 $user: the user (object) saving the article
274 $text: the new article text
275 $summary: the article summary (comment)
276 $isminor: minor flag
277 $iswatch: watch flag
278 $section: section #
279
280 'ArticleSaveComplete': after an article is saved
281 $article: the article (object) saved
282 $user: the user (object) who saved the article
283 $text: the new article text
284 $summary: the article summary (comment)
285 $isminor: minor flag
286 $iswatch: watch flag
287 $section: section #
288
289 'AutoAuthenticate': called to authenticate users on external/environmental means
290 $user: writes user object to this parameter
291
292 'BlockIp': before an IP address or user is blocked
293 $block: the Block object about to be saved
294 $user: the user _doing_ the block (not the one being blocked)
295
296 'BlockIpComplete': after an IP address or user is blocked
297 $block: the Block object that was saved
298 $user: the user who did the block (not the one being blocked)
299
300 'EditFilter': Perform checks on an edit
301 $editor: Edit form (see includes/EditPage.php)
302 $text: Contents of the edit box
303 $section: Section being edited
304 &$error: Error message to return
305
306 Return false to halt editing; you'll need to handle error messages, etc. yourself.
307 Alternatively, modifying $error and returning true will cause the contents of $error
308 to be echoed at the top of the edit form as wikitext. Return true without altering
309 $error to allow the edit to proceed.
310
311 'EmailConfirmed': When checking that the user's email address is "confirmed"
312 $user: User being checked
313 $confirmed: Whether or not the email address is confirmed
314 This runs before the other checks, such as anonymity and the real check; return
315 true to allow those checks to occur, and false if checking is done.
316
317 'EmailUser': before sending email from one user to another
318 $to: address of receiving user
319 $from: address of sending user
320 $subject: subject of the mail
321 $text: text of the mail
322
323 'EmailUserComplete': after sending email from one user to another
324 $to: address of receiving user
325 $from: address of sending user
326 $subject: subject of the mail
327 $text: text of the mail
328
329 'GetInternalURL': modify fully-qualified URLs used for squid cache purging
330 $title: Title object of page
331 $url: string value as output (out parameter, can modify)
332 $query: query options passed to Title::getInternalURL()
333
334 'GetLocalURL': modify local URLs as output into page links
335 $title: Title object of page
336 $url: string value as output (out parameter, can modify)
337 $query: query options passed to Title::getLocalURL()
338
339 'GetFullURL': modify fully-qualified URLs used in redirects/export/offsite data
340 $title: Title object of page
341 $url: string value as output (out parameter, can modify)
342 $query: query options passed to Title::getFullURL()
343
344 'LogPageValidTypes': action being logged.
345 $type: array of strings
346
347 'LogPageLogName': name of the logging page(s).
348 $typeText: array of strings
349
350 'LogPageLogHeader': strings used by wfMsg as a header.
351 $headerText: array of strings
352
353 'MarkPatrolled': before an edit is marked patrolled
354 $rcid: ID of the revision to be marked patrolled
355 $user: the user (object) marking the revision as patrolled
356 $wcOnlySysopsCanPatrol: config setting indicating whether the user
357 needs to be a sysop in order to mark an edit patrolled
358
359 'MarkPatrolledComplete': after an edit is marked patrolled
360 $rcid: ID of the revision marked as patrolled
361 $user: user (object) who marked the edit patrolled
362 $wcOnlySysopsCanPatrol: config setting indicating whether the user
363 must be a sysop to patrol the edit
364
365 'OutputPageBeforeHTML': a page has been processed by the parser and
366 the resulting HTML is about to be displayed.
367 $parserOutput: the parserOutput (object) that corresponds to the page
368 $text: the text that will be displayed, in HTML (string)
369
370 'PageRenderingHash': alter the parser cache option hash key
371 A parser extension which depends on user options should install
372 this hook and append its values to the key.
373 $hash: reference to a hash key string which can be modified
374
375 'PersonalUrls': Alter the user-specific navigation links (e.g. "my page,
376 my talk page, my contributions" etc).
377
378 &$personal_urls: Array of link specifiers (see SkinTemplate.php)
379 $title: Title object representing the current page
380
381 'TitleMoveComplete': after moving an article (title)
382 $old: old title
383 $nt: new title
384 $user: user who did the move
385 $pageid: database ID of the page that's been moved
386 $redirid: database ID of the created redirect
387
388 'UnknownAction': An unknown "action" has occured (useful for defining
389 your own actions)
390 $action: action name
391 $article: article "acted on"
392
393 'UnwatchArticle': before a watch is removed from an article
394 $user: user watching
395 $article: article object to be removed
396
397 'UnwatchArticle': after a watch is removed from an article
398 $user: user that was watching
399 $article: article object removed
400
401 'UploadVerification': additional chances to reject an uploaded file
402 string $saveName: destination file name
403 string $tempName: filesystem path to the temporary file for checks
404 string &$error: output: HTML error to show if upload canceled by returning false
405
406 'UploadComplete': Upon completion of a file upload
407 $image: Image object representing the file that was uploaded
408
409 'UserCan': To interrupt/advise the "user can do X to Y article" check
410 $title: Title object being checked against
411 $user : Current user object
412 $action: Action being checked
413 $result: Pointer to result returned if hook returns false. If null is returned,
414 UserCan checks are continued by internal code
415
416 'UserCreateForm': change to manipulate the login form
417 $template: SimpleTemplate instance for the form
418
419 'UserLoginComplete': after a user has logged in
420 $user: the user object that was created on login
421
422 'UserLoginForm': change to manipulate the login form
423 $template: SimpleTemplate instance for the form
424
425 'UserLogout': before a user logs out
426 $user: the user object that is about to be logged out
427
428 'UserLogoutComplete': after a user has logged out
429 $user: the user object _after_ logout (won't have name, ID, etc.)
430
431 'UserRights': After a user's group memberships are changed
432 $user : User object that was changed
433 $add : Array of strings corresponding to groups added
434 $remove: Array of strings corresponding to groups removed
435
436 'WatchArticle': before a watch is added to an article
437 $user: user that will watch
438 $article: article object to be watched
439
440 'WatchArticleComplete': after a watch is added to an article
441 $user: user that watched
442 $article: article object watched
443
444 'UnwatchArticleComplete': after a watch is removed from an article
445 $user: user that watched
446 $article: article object that was watched
447
448 'CategoryPageView': before viewing a categorypage in CategoryPage::view
449 $catpage: CategoryPage instance
450
451 'SkinTemplateContentActions': after building the $content_action array right
452 before returning it, see content_action.php in
453 the extension module for a demonstration of how
454 to use this hook.
455 $content_actions: The array of content actions
456
457
458 More hooks might be available but undocumented, you can execute
459 ./maintenance/findhooks.php to find hidden one.