spletna-stran/web/core/modules/migrate/migrate.api.php

213 lines
9.8 KiB
PHP

<?php
/**
* @file
* Hooks provided by the Migrate module.
*/
use Drupal\migrate\Plugin\MigrationInterface;
use Drupal\migrate\Plugin\MigrateSourceInterface;
use Drupal\migrate\Row;
/**
* @defgroup migration Migrate API
* @{
* Overview of the Migrate API, which migrates data into Drupal.
*
* @section overview Overview of a migration
* Migration is an
* @link http://wikipedia.org/wiki/Extract,_transform,_load Extract, Transform, Load @endlink
* (ETL) process. In the Drupal Migrate API, the extract phase is called
* 'source', the transform phase is called 'process', and the load phase is
* called 'destination'. It is important to understand that the term 'load' in
* ETL refers to loading data into the storage while in a typical Drupal context
* the term 'load' refers to loading data from storage.
*
* In the source phase, a set of data, called the row, is retrieved from the
* data source. The data can be migrated from a database, loaded from a file
* (for example CSV, JSON or XML) or fetched from a web service (for example RSS
* or REST). The row is sent to the process phase where it is transformed as
* needed or marked to be skipped. After processing, the transformed row is
* passed to the destination phase where it is loaded (saved) into the target
* Drupal site.
*
* Migrate API uses the Drupal plugin system for many different purposes. Most
* importantly, the overall ETL process is defined as a migration plugin and the
* three phases (source, process and destination) have their own plugin types.
*
* @section sec_migrations Migrate API migration plugins
* Migration plugin definitions are stored in a module's 'migrations' directory.
* The plugin class is \Drupal\migrate\Plugin\Migration, with interface
* \Drupal\migrate\Plugin\MigrationInterface. Migration plugins are managed by
* the \Drupal\migrate\Plugin\MigrationPluginManager class. Migration plugins
* are only available if the providers of their source plugins are installed.
*
* @link https://www.drupal.org/docs/8/api/migrate-api/migrate-destination-plugins-examples Example migrations in Migrate API handbook. @endlink
*
* @section sec_source Migrate API source plugins
* Migrate API source plugins implement
* \Drupal\migrate\Plugin\MigrateSourceInterface and usually extend
* \Drupal\migrate\Plugin\migrate\source\SourcePluginBase. They are annotated
* with \Drupal\migrate\Annotation\MigrateSource annotation and must be in
* namespace subdirectory 'Plugin\migrate\source' under the namespace of the
* module that defines them. Migrate API source plugins are managed by the
* \Drupal\migrate\Plugin\MigrateSourcePluginManager class.
*
* @link https://api.drupal.org/api/drupal/namespace/Drupal!migrate!Plugin!migrate!source List of source plugins provided by the core Migrate module. @endlink
* @link https://www.drupal.org/docs/8/api/migrate-api/migrate-source-plugins Core and contributed source plugin usage examples in Migrate API handbook. @endlink
*
* @section sec_process Migrate API process plugins
* Migrate API process plugins implement
* \Drupal\migrate\Plugin\MigrateProcessInterface and usually extend
* \Drupal\migrate\ProcessPluginBase. They are annotated with
* \Drupal\migrate\Annotation\MigrateProcessPlugin annotation and must be in
* namespace subdirectory 'Plugin\migrate\process' under the namespace of the
* module that defines them. Migrate API process plugins are managed by the
* \Drupal\migrate\Plugin\MigratePluginManager class.
*
* @link https://api.drupal.org/api/drupal/namespace/Drupal!migrate!Plugin!migrate!process List of process plugins for common operations provided by the core Migrate module. @endlink
*
* @section sec_destination Migrate API destination plugins
* Migrate API destination plugins implement
* \Drupal\migrate\Plugin\MigrateDestinationInterface and usually extend
* \Drupal\migrate\Plugin\migrate\destination\DestinationBase. They are
* annotated with \Drupal\migrate\Annotation\MigrateDestination annotation and
* must be in namespace subdirectory 'Plugin\migrate\destination' under the
* namespace of the module that defines them. Migrate API destination plugins
* are managed by the \Drupal\migrate\Plugin\MigrateDestinationPluginManager
* class.
*
* @link https://api.drupal.org/api/drupal/namespace/Drupal!migrate!Plugin!migrate!destination List of destination plugins for Drupal configuration and content entities provided by the core Migrate module. @endlink
*
* @section sec_key_concepts Migrate API key concepts
* @subsection sec_stubs Stubs
* Taxonomy terms are an example of a data structure where an entity can have a
* reference to a parent. When a term is being migrated, it is possible that its
* parent term has not yet been migrated. Migrate API addresses this 'chicken
* and egg' dilemma by creating a stub term for the parent so that the child
* term can establish a reference to it. When the parent term is eventually
* migrated, Migrate API updates the previously created stub with the actual
* content.
*
* @subsection sec_map_tables Map tables
* Once a migrated row is saved and the destination IDs are known, Migrate API
* saves the source IDs, destination IDs, and the row hash into a map table. The
* source IDs and the hash facilitate tracking changes for continuous
* migrations. Other migrations can use the map tables for lookup purposes when
* establishing relationships between records.
*
* @subsection sec_high_water_mark High-water mark
* A High-water mark allows the Migrate API to track changes so that only data
* that has been created or updated in the source since the migration was
* previously executed is migrated. The only requirement to use the high-water
* feature is to declare the row property to use for the high-water mark. This
* can be any property that indicates the highest value migrated so far. For
* example, a timestamp property that indicates when a row of data was created
* or last updated would make an excellent high-water property. If the migration
* is executed again, only those rows that have a higher timestamp than in the
* previous migration would be included.
*
* @code
* source:
* plugin: d7_node
* high_water_property:
* name: changed
* @endcode
*
* In this example, the row property 'changed' is the high_water_property. If
* the value of 'changed' is greater than the current high-water mark the row
* is processed and the value of the high-water mark is updated to the value of
* 'changed'.
*
* @subsection sec_rollbacks Rollbacks
* When developing a migration, it is quite typical that the first version does
* not provide correct results for all migrated data. Rollbacks allow you to
* undo a migration and then execute it again after adjusting it.
*
* @section sec_more_info Documentation handbooks
* @link https://www.drupal.org/docs/8/api/migrate-api Migrate API handbook. @endlink
* @link https://www.drupal.org/docs/8/upgrade Upgrading to Drupal 8 handbook. @endlink
* @}
*/
/**
* @addtogroup hooks
* @{
*/
/**
* Allows adding data to a row before processing it.
*
* For example, filter module used to store filter format settings in the
* variables table which now needs to be inside the filter format config
* file. So, it needs to be added here.
*
* hook_migrate_MIGRATION_ID_prepare_row() is also available.
*
* @param \Drupal\migrate\Row $row
* The row being imported.
* @param \Drupal\migrate\Plugin\MigrateSourceInterface $source
* The source migration.
* @param \Drupal\migrate\Plugin\MigrationInterface $migration
* The current migration.
*
* @ingroup migration
*/
function hook_migrate_prepare_row(Row $row, MigrateSourceInterface $source, MigrationInterface $migration) {
if ($migration->id() == 'd6_filter_formats') {
$value = $source->getDatabase()->query('SELECT [value] FROM {variable} WHERE [name] = :name', [':name' => 'mymodule_filter_foo_' . $row->getSourceProperty('format')])->fetchField();
if ($value) {
$row->setSourceProperty('settings:mymodule:foo', unserialize($value));
}
}
}
/**
* Allows adding data to a row for a migration with the specified ID.
*
* This provides the same functionality as hook_migrate_prepare_row() but
* removes the need to check the value of $migration->id().
*
* @param \Drupal\migrate\Row $row
* The row being imported.
* @param \Drupal\migrate\Plugin\MigrateSourceInterface $source
* The source migration.
* @param \Drupal\migrate\Plugin\MigrationInterface $migration
* The current migration.
*
* @ingroup migration
*/
function hook_migrate_MIGRATION_ID_prepare_row(Row $row, MigrateSourceInterface $source, MigrationInterface $migration) {
$value = $source->getDatabase()->query('SELECT [value] FROM {variable} WHERE [name] = :name', [':name' => 'mymodule_filter_foo_' . $row->getSourceProperty('format')])->fetchField();
if ($value) {
$row->setSourceProperty('settings:mymodule:foo', unserialize($value));
}
}
/**
* Allows altering the list of discovered migration plugins.
*
* Modules are able to alter specific migrations structures or even remove or
* append additional migrations to the discovery. For example, this
* implementation filters out Drupal 6 migrations from the discovered migration
* list. This is done by checking the migration tags.
*
* @param array[] $migrations
* An associative array of migrations keyed by migration ID. Each value is the
* migration array, obtained by decoding the migration YAML file and enriched
* with some meta information added during discovery phase, like migration
* 'class', 'provider' or '_discovered_file_path'.
*
* @ingroup migration
*/
function hook_migration_plugins_alter(array &$migrations) {
$migrations = array_filter($migrations, function (array $migration) {
$tags = isset($migration['migration_tags']) ? (array) $migration['migration_tags'] : [];
return !in_array('Drupal 6', $tags);
});
}
/**
* @} End of "addtogroup hooks".
*/