1# THIRD-PARTY MODULES 2 3Many webtrees functions are provided by “modules”. 4Modules allows you to add additional features to webtrees and modify existing features. 5 6## Installing and uninstalling modules 7 8A module is a folder containing a file called `module.php`. 9There may be other files in the folder, such as CSS, JS, templates, 10languages, data, etc. 11 12To install a module, copy its folder to `modules_v4`. 13 14To uninstall it, delete its folder from `modules_v4`. 15 16Note that module names (i.e. the folder names) must not contain 17spaces or the characters `.`, `[` and `]`. It must also have a 18maximum length of 30 characters. 19 20TIP: renaming a module from `<module>` to `<module.disable>` 21is a quick way to hide it from webtrees. This works because 22modules containing `.` are ignored. 23 24## Writing modules 25 26To write a module, you need to understand the PHP programming langauge. 27 28The rest of this document is aimed at PHP developers. 29 30TIP: The built-in modules can be found in `app/Module/*.php`. 31These contain lots of useful examples that you can copy/paste. 32 33## Creating a custom module. 34 35This is the minimum code needed to create a custom module. 36 37```php 38<?php 39 40use Fisharebest\Webtrees\Module\AbstractModule; 41use Fisharebest\Webtrees\Module\ModuleCustomInterface; 42use Fisharebest\Webtrees\Module\ModuleCustomTrait; 43 44return new class extends AbstractModule implements ModuleCustomInterface { 45 use ModuleCustomTrait; 46 47 /** 48 * How should this module be labelled on tabs, menus, etc.? 49 * 50 * @return string 51 */ 52 public function title(): string 53 { 54 return 'My Custom module'; 55 } 56 57 /** 58 * A sentence describing what this module does. 59 * 60 * @return string 61 */ 62 public function description(): string 63 { 64 return 'This module doesn‘t do anything'; 65 } 66}; 67``` 68 69If you plan to share your modules with other webtrees users, you should 70provide them with support/contact/version information. This way they will 71know where to go for updates, support, etc. 72Look at the functions and comments in `app/ModuleCustomTrait.php`. 73 74## Available interfaces 75 76Custom modules *must* implement `ModuleCustomInterface` interface. 77They *may* implement one or more of the following interfaces: 78 79* `ModuleAnalyticsInterface` - adds a tracking/analytics provider. 80* `ModuleBlockInterface` - adds a block to the home pages. 81* `ModuleChartInterface` - adds a chart to the chart menu. 82* `ModuleConfigInterface` - adds a configuration page to the control panel. 83* `ModuleGlobalInterface` - adds CSS and JS to all page. 84* `ModuleListInterface` - adds a list to the list menu. 85* `ModuleMenuInterface` - adds an entry to the main menu. 86* `ModuleReportInterface` - adds a report to the report menu. 87* `ModuleSidebarInterface` - adds a sidebar to the individual pages. 88* `ModuleTabInterface` - adds a tab to the individual pages. 89* `ModuleThemeInterface` - adds a theme (this interface is still being developed). 90 91For each module interface that you implement, you must also use the corresponding trait. 92If you don't do this, your module may break whenever the module interface is updated. 93 94Where possible, the interfaces won't change - however new methods may be added 95and existing methods may be deprecated. 96 97Modules may also implement the following interfaces, which allow them to integrate 98more deeply into the application. 99 100* `MiddlewareInterface` - allows a module to intercept the HTTP request/response cycle. 101 102## How to extend/modify an existing modules 103 104To create a module that is just a modified version of an existing module, 105you can extend the existing module (instead of extending `AbstractModule`). 106 107```php 108<?php 109use Fisharebest\Webtrees\Module\ModuleCustomInterface; 110use Fisharebest\Webtrees\Module\ModuleCustomTrait; 111use Fisharebest\Webtrees\Module\PedigreeChartModule; 112 113/** 114 * Creating an anoymous class will prevent conflicts with other custom modules. 115 */ 116return new class extends PedigreeChartModule implements ModuleCustomInterface { 117 use ModuleCustomTrait; 118 119 /** 120 * @return string 121 */ 122 public function description(): string 123 { 124 return 'A modified version of the pedigree chart'; 125 } 126 127 // Change the default layout... 128 public const DEFAULT_ORIENTATION = self::ORIENTATION_DOWN; 129}; 130``` 131 132## Dependency Injection 133 134webtrees uses the “Dependency Injection” pattern extensively. This is a system for 135automatically generating objects. The advantages over using `new SomeClass()` are 136 137* Easier testing - you can pass "dummy" objects to your class. 138* Run-time resolution - you can request an Interface, and webtrees will find a specific instance for you. 139* Can swap implementations at runtime. 140 141Note that you cannot type-hint the following objects in the constructor, as they are not 142created until after the modules. 143 144* other modules 145* interfaces, such as `UserInterface` (the current user) 146* the current tree `Tree` or objects that depend on it (`Statistics`) 147as these objects are not created until after the module is created. 148 149Instead, you can fetch these items when they are needed from the "application container" using: 150``` $user = app(UserInterface::class)``` 151 152```php 153<?php 154use Fisharebest\Webtrees\Module\AbstractModule; 155use Fisharebest\Webtrees\Module\ModuleCustomInterface; 156use Fisharebest\Webtrees\Module\ModuleCustomTrait; 157use Fisharebest\Webtrees\Services\TimeoutService; 158use Fisharebest\Webtrees\Tree; 159use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request; 160use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response; 161 162/** 163 * Creating an anoymous class will prevent conflicts with other custom modules. 164 */ 165return new class extends AbstractModule implements ModuleCustomInterface { 166 use ModuleCustomTrait; 167 168 /** @var TimeoutService */ 169 protected $timeout_service; 170 171 /** 172 * IMPORTANT - the constructor is called for *all* modules, even ones 173 * that are disabled. You should do little more than initialise your 174 * private/protected members. 175 * 176 * @param TimeoutService $timeout_service 177 */ 178 public function __construct(TimeoutService $timeout_service) 179 { 180 $this->timeout_service = $timeout_service; 181 } 182 183 /** 184 * Methods that are called in response to HTTP requests use 185 * dependency-injection. You'll almost certainly need the request 186 * object. 187 * 188 * @param Request $request 189 * @param Tree|null $tree 190 * 191 * @return Response 192 */ 193 public function getFooBarAction(Request $request, ?Tree $tree): Response 194 { 195 return new Response(); 196 } 197}; 198``` 199