Plugin Internals » History » Revision 5
« Previous |
Revision 5/24
(diff)
| Next »
minkbear minkbear, 2010-05-25 14:59
URL for alias_method_chain have been changed.
Plugin Internals¶
- Table of contents
- Plugin Internals
This page will be used as a central place to store information about plugin-development in Redmine.
Require a certain Redmine version¶
Sometimes plugins require a specific feature implemented in the Redmine core or the plugin overrides a specific view which requires you to control on which (specific) versions of Redmine the plugin can be installed to assure that the required core is available. Such prevents a lot of issues regarding plugin-compatibility.
The above can be accomplished by utilizing the requires_redmine
-method (see issue #2162 for the implementation dicussion and it's actual implementation in r2042). Utilisation of the method provides an easy, reliable way to create plugins that require a specific version of Redmine and which are setup to stop Redmine with a message about a non-supported version if the version-requirement is not met.
Overriding the Redmine Core¶
You can override views but not controllers or models in Redmine. Here's how Redmine/Rails works if you try to override a controller (or model) and a view for a fictional plugin MyPlugin
:
Controllers (or models)¶
- Rails bootstraps and loads all it's framework
- Rails starts to load code in the plugins
- Rails finds
IssueController
in MyPlugin and see it defines ashow
action - Rails loads all the other plugins
- Rails then loads the application from ../app
- Rails finds
IssueController
again and see it also defines ashow
action - Rails (or rather Ruby) overwrites the
show
action from the plugin with the one from ../app - Rails finishes loading and serves up requests
Views¶
View loading is very similar but with one small difference (because of Redmine's patch to Engines)
- Rails bootstraps and loads all it's framework
- Rails starts to load code in the plugins
- Rails finds a views directory in ../vendor/plugins/my_plugin/app/views and pre-pends it to the views path
- Rails loads all the other plugins
- Rails then loads the application from ../app
- Rails finishes loading and serves up requests
- Request comes in, and a view needs to be rendered
- Rails looks for a matching template and loads the plugin's template since it was pre-pended to the views path
- Rails renders the plugins'view
Due to the fact that it is so easy to extend models and controllers the Ruby way (via including modules), Redmine shouldn't (and doesn't) maintain an API for overriding the core's models and/or controllers. Views on the other hand are tricky (because of Rails magic) so an API for overriding them is way more useful (and thus implemented in Redmine).
To override an existing Redmine Core view just create a view file named exactly after the one in ../app/views/ and Redmine will use it. For example to override the project index page add a file to ../vendor/plugins/my_plugin/app/views/projects/index.rhtml.
Extending the Redmine Core¶
As explained above: you rarely want to override a model/controller. Instead you should either:- add new methods to a model/controller or
- wrap an existing method.
Adding a new method¶
A quick example of adding a new method can be found on Eric Davis' Budget plugin. Here he added a new method to Issue called deliverable_subject
and also declared a relationship.
Wrapping an existing method¶
A quick example of wrapping an existing method can be found on Eric Davis' Rate plugin. Here he uses the alias_method_chain
to hook into the UsersHelper and wrap the user_settings_tabs
method. So when the Redmine Core calls user_settings_tabs
the codepath looks like:
- Redmine Core calls
UsersHelper#user_settings_tabs
UsersHelper#user_settings_tabs
runs (which is actuallyUsersHelper#user_settings_tabs_with_rate_tab
)UsersHelper#user_settings_tabs_with_rate_tab
calls the originalUsersHelper#user_settings_tabs
(renamed toUsersHelper#user_settings_tabs_without_rate_tab
)- The result then has a new Hash added to it
UsersHelper#user_settings_tabs_with_rate_tab
returns the combined result to the Redmine core, which is then rendered
alias_method_chain
is a pretty advanced method but it's also really powerful.
Using Rails callbacks in Redmine plugins¶
When you want to hook into all issues which are saved/created for example, you can better use Rails callbacks instead of Redmine hooks. Main reason for this is that the:controller_issues_edit_before_save
-hook is not triggered when a new issue is created.For example see the implementation of this in Eric Davis' "Kanban plugin":
- http://github.com/edavis10/redmine_kanban/blob/000cf175795c18033caa43082c4e4d0a9f989623/init.rb#L10
- http://github.com/edavis10/redmine_kanban/blob/000cf175795c18033caa43082c4e4d0a9f989623/lib/redmine_kanban/issue_patch.rb#L13
This will make sure that issue.update_kanban_from_issue
runs every time an issue is saved (new or updated).
If you want to hook into new issues only you can use the before_create
callback instead of the after_save
callback. If you want to make sure that the issue indeed is saved successfully before your code is executed you could better use the after_create
-callback.
References¶
- http://www.redmine.org/boards/3/topics/show/5121 (Which version of Redmine I need to use your plugin?)
- http://www.redmine.org/boards/3/topics/show/4283 (Can a plugin modify the view of the projects page?)
- http://www.redmine.org/boards/3/topics/show/4095 (Rails Engines and extending the issue model)
Updated by minkbear minkbear over 14 years ago · 5 revisions