Webtools integration for OpenEuropa. Webtools are interactive services available to integrate in a website.
Table of contents:
The recommended way of installing the OpenEuropa Webtools module is via Composer.
composer require openeuropa/oe_webtools
In order to enable the module in your project run:
./vendor/bin/drush en oe_webtools
The Webtools module contains a submodule that provides a service for providing analytics information. For more information on how to use and configure this module, check out the module README.
The Webtools module contains a submodule that integrates the webtools captcha capabilities. For more information on how to use and configure this module, check out the module README.
The Webtools eTrans module provides a block that will show a link to the machine translation service of the European Commission. Visitors can click this link to have the current page translated in their preferred language.
The Webtools module contains a submodule that provides a service for retrieving information about language coverage of entity resources. For more information on how to use and test this module, check out the module README.
The Webtools module contains a submodule that provides a widget which integrates with the Laco service. For more information on how to use and configure this module, check out the module README.
The Webtools module contains a submodule that provides a widget which integrates with the Geocoding service.
If you want to use the Webtools Geocoding service, enable the submodule:
drush en oe_webtools_geocoding
The Webtools module contains a submodule that provides a widget which integrates with the maps service.
The Webtools module contains a submodule that provides a service for providing Cookie Consent Kit. For more information on how to use and configure this module, check out the module README.
The Webtools module contains a submodule that provides webtools widgets as supported media providers.
The Webtools module contains a submodule that provides social sharing functionality for a site.
You can build the test site by running the following steps.
- Install all the composer dependencies:
composer install
This will build a fully functional Drupal test site in the ./build
directory that can be used to develop and showcase
the module's functionality.
Before setting up and installing the site make sure to customize default configuration values by copying runner.yml.dist
to ./runner.yml
and overriding relevant properties.
This will also:
- Symlink the theme in
./build/modules/custom/oe_webtools
so that it's available for the test site - Setup Drush and Drupal's settings using values from
./runner.yml.dist
. This includes adding parameters for EULogin - Setup PHPUnit and Behat configuration files using values from
./runner.yml.dist
Please note: project files and directories are symlinked within the test site by using the OpenEuropa Task Runner's Drupal project symlink command.
If you add a new file or directory in the root of the project, you need to re-run drupal:site-setup
in order to make
sure they are be correctly symlinked.
If you don't want to re-run a full site setup for that, you can simply run:
$ ./vendor/bin/run drupal:symlink-project
- Install the site:
./vendor/bin/run drupal:site-install
Your test site will be available at ./build
.
Alternatively, you can build a development site using Docker and Docker Compose with the provided configuration.
Docker provides the necessary services and tools such as a web server and a database server to get the site running, regardless of your local host configuration.
By default, Docker Compose reads two files, a docker-compose.yml
and an optional docker-compose.override.yml
file.
By convention, the docker-compose.yml
contains your base configuration and it's provided by default.
The override file, as its name implies, can contain configuration overrides for existing services or entirely new
services.
If a service is defined in both files, Docker Compose merges the configurations.
Find more information on Docker Compose extension mechanism on the official Docker Compose documentation.
To start, run:
docker-compose up
It's advised to not daemonize docker-compose
so you can turn it off (CTRL+C
) quickly when you're done working.
However, if you'd like to daemonize it, you have to add the flag -d
:
docker-compose up -d
Then:
docker-compose exec web composer install
docker-compose exec web ./vendor/bin/run drupal:site-install
Using default configuration, the development site files should be available in the build
directory and the development site
should be available at: http://127.0.0.1:8080/build.
To run the grumphp checks:
docker-compose exec web ./vendor/bin/grumphp run
To run the phpunit tests:
docker-compose exec web ./vendor/bin/phpunit
To run the behat tests:
docker-compose exec web ./vendor/bin/behat
The project ships with the following Task Runner commands to work with content in the RDF store, they require Docker Compose services to be up and running.
Purge all data:
$ docker-compose exec sparql ./vendor/bin/robo purge
Or, if you can run commands on your host machine:
$ ./vendor/bin/run sparql:purge
Import default data:
$ docker-compose exec sparql ./vendor/bin/robo import
Or, if you can run commands on your host machine:
$ ./vendor/bin/run sparql:import
Reset all data, i.e. run purge and import:
$ docker-compose exec sparql ./vendor/bin/robo purge
$ docker-compose exec sparql ./vendor/bin/robo import
Or, if you can run commands on your host machine:
$ ./vendor/bin/run sparql:reset
To enable step debugging from the command line, pass the XDEBUG_SESSION
environment variable with any value to
the container:
docker-compose exec -e XDEBUG_SESSION=1 web <your command>
Please note that, starting from XDebug 3, a connection error message will be outputted in the console if the variable is set but your client is not listening for debugging connections. The error message will cause false negatives for PHPUnit tests.
To initiate step debugging from the browser, set the correct cookie using a browser extension or a bookmarklet like the ones generated at https://www.jetbrains.com/phpstorm/marklets/.
Please read the full documentation for details on our code of conduct, and the process for submitting pull requests to us.
We use SemVer for versioning. For the available versions, see the tags on this repository.