# This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public # License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this # file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. # # This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as # defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. package Bugzilla::Hook; use strict; sub process { my ($name, $args) = @_; _entering($name); foreach my $extension (@{ Bugzilla->extensions }) { if ($extension->can($name)) { $extension->$name($args); } } _leaving($name); } sub in { my $hook_name = shift; my $currently_in = Bugzilla->request_cache->{hook_stack}->[-1] || ''; return $hook_name eq $currently_in ? 1 : 0; } sub _entering { my ($hook_name) = @_; my $hook_stack = Bugzilla->request_cache->{hook_stack} ||= []; push(@$hook_stack, $hook_name); } sub _leaving { pop @{ Bugzilla->request_cache->{hook_stack} }; } 1; __END__ =head1 NAME Bugzilla::Hook - Extendable extension hooks for Bugzilla code =head1 SYNOPSIS use Bugzilla::Hook; Bugzilla::Hook::process("hookname", { arg => $value, arg2 => $value2 }); =head1 DESCRIPTION Bugzilla allows extension modules to drop in and add routines at arbitrary points in Bugzilla code. These points are referred to as hooks. When a piece of standard Bugzilla code wants to allow an extension to perform additional functions, it uses Bugzilla::Hook's L subroutine to invoke any extension code if installed. The implementation of extensions is described in L. There is sample code for every hook in the Example extension, located in F. =head2 How Hooks Work When a hook named C is run, Bugzilla looks through all enabled L for extensions that implement a subroutine named C. See L for more details about how an extension can run code during a hook. =head1 SUBROUTINES =over =item C =over =item B Invoke any code hooks with a matching name from any installed extensions. See L for more information on Bugzilla's extension mechanism. =item B =over =item C<$name> - The name of the hook to invoke. =item C<$args> - A hashref. The named args to pass to the hook. They will be passed as arguments to the hook method in the extension. =back =item B (nothing) =back =back =head1 HOOKS This describes what hooks exist in Bugzilla currently. They are mostly in alphabetical order, but some related hooks are near each other instead of being alphabetical. =head2 admin_editusers_action This hook allows you to add additional actions to the admin Users page. Params: =over =item C You can add as many new key/value pairs as you want to this hashref. It will be passed to the template. =item C A text which indicates the different behaviors that editusers.cgi will have. With this hook you can change the behavior of an action or add new actions. =item C This is a Bugzilla::User object of the user. =back =head2 attachment_process_data This happens at the very beginning process of the attachment creation. You can edit the attachment content itself as well as all attributes of the attachment, before they are validated and inserted into the DB. Params: =over =item C - A reference pointing either to the content of the file being uploaded or pointing to the filehandle associated with the file. =item C - A hashref whose keys are the same as the input to L. The data in this hashref hasn't been validated yet. =back =head2 auth_login_methods This allows you to add new login types to Bugzilla. (See L.) Params: =over =item C This is a hash--a mapping from login-type "names" to the actual module on disk. The keys will be all the values that were passed to L for the C parameter. The values are the actual path to the module on disk. (For example, if the key is C, the value is F.) For your extension, the path will start with F, where "Foo" is the name of your Extension. (See the code in the example extension.) If your login type is in the hash as a key, you should set that key to the right path to your module. That module's C method will be called, probably with empty parameters. If your login type is I in the hash, you should not set it. You will be prevented from adding new keys to the hash, so make sure your key is in there before you modify it. (In other words, you can't add in login methods that weren't passed to L.) =back =head2 auth_verify_methods This works just like L except it's for login verification methods (See L.) It also takes a C parameter, just like L. =head2 bug_columns B Use L instead. This allows you to add new fields that will show up in every L object. Note that you will also need to use the L hook in conjunction with this hook to make this work. Params: =over =item C - An arrayref containing an array of column names. Push your column name(s) onto the array. =back =head2 bug_end_of_create This happens at the end of L, after all other changes are made to the database. This occurs inside a database transaction. Params: =over =item C - The created bug object. =item C - The timestamp used for all updates in this transaction, as a SQL date string. =back =head2 bug_end_of_create_validators This happens during L, after all parameters have been validated, but before anything has been inserted into the database. Params: =over =item C A hashref. The validated parameters passed to C. =back =head2 bug_end_of_update This happens at the end of L, after all other changes are made to the database. This generally occurs inside a database transaction. Params: =over =item C The changed bug object, with all fields set to their updated values. =item C A bug object pulled from the database before the fields were set to their updated values (so it has the old values available for each field). =item C The timestamp used for all updates in this transaction, as a SQL date string. =item C The hash of changed fields. C<< $changes->{field} = [old, new] >> =back =head2 bug_check_can_change_field This hook controls what fields users are allowed to change. You can add code here for site-specific policy changes and other customizations. This hook is only executed if the field's new and old values differ. Any denies take priority over any allows. So, if another extension denies a change but yours allows the change, the other extension's deny will override your extension's allow. Params: =over =item C L - The current bug object that this field is changing on. =item C The name (from the C table) of the field that we are checking. =item C The new value that the field is being changed to. =item C The old value that the field is being changed from. =item C C - This is how you explicitly allow or deny a change. You should only push something into this array if you want to explicitly allow or explicitly deny the change, and thus skip all other permission checks that would otherwise happen after this hook is called. If you don't care about the field change, then don't push anything into the array. The pushed value should be a choice from the following constants: =over =item C No privileges required. This explicitly B a change. =item C User is not the reporter, assignee or an empowered user, so B. =item C User is not the assignee or an empowered user, so B. =item C User is not a sufficiently empowered user, so B. =back =back =head2 bug_fields Allows the addition of database fields from the bugs table to the standard list of allowable fields in a L object, so that you can call the field as a method. Note: You should add here the names of any fields you added in L. Params: =over =item C - A arrayref containing an array of column names. Push your column name(s) onto the array. =back =head2 bug_format_comment Allows you to do custom parsing on comments before they are displayed. You do this by returning two regular expressions: one that matches the section you want to replace, and then another that says what you want to replace that match with. The matching and replacement will be run with the C switch on the regex. Params: =over =item C An arrayref of hashrefs. You should push a hashref containing two keys (C and C) in to this array. C is the regular expression that matches the text you want to replace, C is what you want to replace that text with. (This gets passed into a regular expression like C.) Instead of specifying a regular expression for C you can also return a coderef (a reference to a subroutine). If you want to use backreferences (using C<$1>, C<$2>, etc. in your C), you have to use this method--it won't work if you specify C<$1>, C<$2> in a regular expression for C. Your subroutine will get a hashref as its only argument. This hashref contains a single key, C. C is an arrayref that contains C<$1>, C<$2>, C<$3>, etc. in order, up to C<$10>. Your subroutine should return what you want to replace the full C with. (See the code example for this hook if you want to see how this actually all works in code. It's simpler than it sounds.) B Failing to do so could open a security hole in Bugzilla. =item C A B to the exact text that you are parsing. Generally you should not modify this yourself. Instead you should be returning regular expressions using the C array. The text has not been parsed in any way. (So, for example, it is not HTML-escaped. You get "&", not "&".) =item C The L object that this comment is on. Sometimes this is C, meaning that we are parsing text that is not on a bug. =item C A L object representing the comment you are about to parse. Sometimes this is C, meaning that we are parsing text that is not a bug comment (but could still be some other part of a bug, like the summary line). =item C The L object representing the user who will see the text. This is useful to determine how much confidential information can be displayed to the user. =back =head2 bug_start_of_update This happens near the beginning of L, after L is called, but before all other special changes are made to the database. Once use case is this allows for adding your own entries to the C hash which gets added to the bugs_activity table later keeping you from having to do it yourself. Also this is also helpful if your extension needs to add CC members, flags, keywords, groups, etc. This generally occurs inside a database transaction. Params: =over =item C The changed bug object, with all fields set to their updated values. =item C A bug object pulled from the database before the fields were set to their updated values (so it has the old values available for each field). =item C The timestamp used for all updates in this transaction, as a SQL date string. =item C The hash of changed fields. C<< $changes->{field} = [old, new] >> =back =head2 bug_url_sub_classes Allows you to add more L sub-classes. See the C extension to see how things work. Params: =over =item C - An arrayref of strings which represent L sub-classes. =back =head2 buglist_columns This happens in L, which determines legal bug list columns for F and F. It gives you the opportunity to add additional display columns. Params: =over =item C - A hashref, where the keys are unique string identifiers for the column being defined and the values are hashrefs with the following fields: =over =item C - The name of the column in the database. =item C - The title of the column as displayed to users. =back The definition is structured as: $columns->{$id} = { name => $name, title => $title }; =back =head2 buglist_column_joins This allows you to join additional tables to display additional columns in buglists. This hook is generally used in combination with the C<buglist_columns> hook. Params: =over =item C<column_joins> - A hashref containing data to return back to L<Bugzilla::Search>. This hashref contains names of the columns as keys and a hashref about table to join as values. This hashref has the following keys: =over =item C<table> - The name of the additional table to join. =item C<as> - (optional) The alias used for the additional table. This alias must not conflict with an existing alias already used in the query. =item C<from> - (optional) The name of the column in the C<bugs> table which the additional table should be linked to. If omitted, C<bug_id> will be used. =item C<to> - (optional) The name of the column in the additional table which should be linked to the column in the C<bugs> table, see C<from> above. If omitted, C<bug_id> will be used. =item C<join> - (optional) Either INNER or LEFT. Determine how the additional table should be joined with the C<bugs> table. If omitted, LEFT is used. =back =back =head2 search_operator_field_override This allows you to modify L<Bugzilla::Search/OPERATOR_FIELD_OVERRIDE>, which determines the search functions for fields. It allows you to specify custom search functionality for certain fields. See L<Bugzilla::Search/OPERATOR_FIELD_OVERRIDE> for reference and see the code in the example extension. Note that the interface to this hook is B<UNSTABLE> and it may change in the future. Params: =over =item C<operators> - See L<Bugzilla::Search/OPERATOR_FIELD_OVERRIDE> to get an idea of the structure. =item C<search> - The L<Bugzilla::Search> object. =back =head2 bugmail_recipients This allows you to modify the list of users who are going to be receiving a particular bugmail. It also allows you to specify why they are receiving the bugmail. Users' bugmail preferences will be applied to any users that you add to the list. (So, for example, if you add somebody as though they were a CC on the bug, and their preferences state that they don't get email when they are a CC, they won't get email.) This hook is called before watchers or globalwatchers are added to the recipient list. Params: =over =item C<bug> The L<Bugzilla::Bug> that bugmail is being sent about. =item C<recipients> This is a hashref. The keys are numeric user ids from the C<profiles> table in the database, for each user who should be receiving this bugmail. The values are hashrefs. The keys in I<these> hashrefs correspond to the "relationship" that the user has to the bug they're being emailed about, and the value should always be C<1>. The "relationships" are described by the various C<REL_> constants in L<Bugzilla::Constants>. Here's an example of adding userid C<123> to the recipient list as though he were on the CC list: $recipients->{123}->{+REL_CC} = 1 (We use C<+> in front of C<REL_CC> so that Perl interprets it as a constant instead of as a string.) =item C<users> This is a hash of L<Bugzilla::User> objects, keyed by id. This is so you can find out more information about any of the user ids in the C<recipients> hash. Every id in the incoming C<recipients> hash will have an object in here. (But if you add additional recipients to the C<recipients> hash, you are B<not> required to add them to this hash.) =item C<diffs> This is a list of hashes, each hash representing a change to the bug. Each hash has the following members: C<field_name>, C<bug_when>, C<old>, C<new> and C<who> (a L<Bugzilla::User>). If appropriate, there will also be C<attach_id> or C<comment_id>; if either is present, there will be C<isprivate>. See C<_get_diffs> in F<Bugzilla/BugMail.pm> to see exactly how it is populated. Warning: the format and existence of the "diffs" parameter is subject to change in future releases of Bugzilla. =back =head2 bugmail_relationships There are various sorts of "relationships" that a user can have to a bug, such as Assignee, CC, etc. If you want to add a new type of relationship, you should use this hook. Params: =over =item C<relationships> A hashref, where the keys are numbers and the values are strings. The keys represent a numeric identifier for the relationship. The numeric identifier should be a negative number between -1 and -127. The number must be unique across all extensions. (Negative numbers are used so as not to conflict with relationship identifiers in Bugzilla itself.) The value is the "name" of this relationship that will show up in email headers in bugmails. The "name" should be short and should contain no spaces. =back =head2 config_add_panels If you want to add new panels to the Parameters administrative interface, this is where you do it. Params: =over =item C<panel_modules> A hashref, where the keys are the "name" of the panel and the value is the Perl module representing that panel. For example, if the name is C<Auth>, the value would be C<Bugzilla::Config::Auth>. For your extension, the Perl module would start with C<Bugzilla::Extension::Foo>, where "Foo" is the name of your Extension. (See the code in the example extension.) =back =head2 config_modify_panels This is how you modify already-existing panels in the Parameters administrative interface. For example, if you wanted to add a new Auth method (modifying Bugzilla::Config::Auth) this is how you'd do it. Params: =over =item C<panels> A hashref, where the keys are lower-case panel "names" (like C<auth>, C<admin>, etc.) and the values are hashrefs. The hashref contains a single key, C<params>. C<params> is an arrayref--the return value from C<get_param_list> for that module. You can modify C<params> and your changes will be reflected in the interface. Adding new keys to C<panels> will have no effect. You should use L</config_add_panels> if you want to add new panels. =back =head2 email_in_before_parse This happens right after an inbound email is converted into an Email::MIME object, but before we start parsing the email to extract field data. This means the email has already been decoded for you. It gives you a chance to interact with the email itself before L<email_in> starts parsing its content. =over =item C<mail> - An Email::MIME object. The decoded incoming email. =item C<fields> - A hashref. The hash which will contain extracted data. =back =head2 email_in_after_parse This happens after all the data has been extracted from the email, but before the reporter is validated, during L<email_in>. This lets you do things after the normal parsing of the email, such as sanitizing field data, changing the user account being used to file a bug, etc. =over =item C<fields> - A hashref. The hash containing the extracted field data. =back =head2 enter_bug_entrydefaultvars B<DEPRECATED> - Use L</template_before_process> instead. This happens right before the template is loaded on enter_bug.cgi. Params: =over =item C<vars> - A hashref. The variables that will be passed into the template. =back =head2 error_catch This hook allows extensions to catch errors thrown by Bugzilla and take the appropriate actions. Params: =over =item C<error> A string representing the error code thrown by Bugzilla. This string matches the C<error> variable in C<global/user-error.html.tmpl> and C<global/code-error.html.tmpl>. =item C<message> If the error mode is set to C<ERROR_MODE_WEBPAGE>, you get a reference to the whole HTML page with the error message in it, including its header and footer. If you need to extract the error message itself, you can do it by looking at the content of the table cell whose ID is C<error_msg>. If the error mode is not set to C<ERROR_MODE_WEBPAGE>, you get a reference to the error message itself. =item C<vars> This hash contains all the data passed to the error template. Its content depends on the error thrown. =back =head2 flag_end_of_update This happens at the end of L<Bugzilla::Flag/update_flags>, after all other changes are made to the database and after emails are sent. It gives you a before/after snapshot of flags so you can react to specific flag changes. This generally occurs inside a database transaction. Note that the interface to this hook is B<UNSTABLE> and it may change in the future. Params: =over =item C<object> - The changed bug or attachment object. =item C<timestamp> - The timestamp used for all updates in this transaction, as a SQL date string. =item C<old_flags> - The snapshot of flag summaries from before the change. =item C<new_flags> - The snapshot of flag summaries after the change. Call C<my ($removed, $added) = diff_arrays(old_flags, new_flags)> to get the list of changed flags, and search for a specific condition like C<added eq 'review-'>. =back =head2 group_before_delete This happens in L<Bugzilla::Group/remove_from_db>, after we've confirmed that the group can be deleted, but before any rows have actually been removed from the database. This occurs inside a database transaction. Params: =over =item C<group> - The L<Bugzilla::Group> being deleted. =back =head2 group_end_of_create This happens at the end of L<Bugzilla::Group/create>, after all other changes are made to the database. This occurs inside a database transaction. Params: =over =item C<group> The new L<Bugzilla::Group> object that was just created. =back =head2 group_end_of_update This happens at the end of L<Bugzilla::Group/update>, after all other changes are made to the database. This occurs inside a database transaction. Params: =over =item C<group> - The changed L<Bugzilla::Group> object, with all fields set to their updated values. =item C<changes> - The hash of changed fields. C<< $changes->{$field} = [$old, $new] >> =back =head2 install_before_final_checks Allows execution of custom code before the final checks are done in checksetup.pl. Params: =over =item C<silent> A flag that indicates whether or not checksetup is running in silent mode. If this is true, messages that are I<always> printed by checksetup.pl should be suppressed, but messages about any changes that are just being done this one time should be printed. =back =head2 install_filesystem Allows for additional files and directories to be added to the list of files and directories already managed by checksetup.pl. You will be able to also set permissions for the files and directories using this hook. You can also use this hook to create appropriate .htaccess files for any directory to secure its contents. For examples see L<FILESYSTEM> in L<Bugzilla::Install::Filesystem>. Params: =over =item C<files> Hash reference of files that are already present when your extension was installed but need to have specific permissions set. Each file key points to another hash reference containing the following settings. Params: =over =item C<perms> - Permissions to be set on the file. =back =item C<create_dirs> Hash reference containing the name of each directory that will be created, pointing at its default permissions. =item C<non_recurse_dirs> Hash reference containing directories that we want to set the perms on, but not recurse through. These are directories not created in checksetup.pl. Each directory key's value is the permissions to be set on the directory. =item C<recurse_dirs> Hash reference of directories that will have permissions set for each item inside each of the directories, including the directory itself. Each directory key points to another hash reference containing the following settings. Params: =over =item C<files> - Permissions to be set on any files beneath the directory. =item C<dirs> - Permissions to be set on the directory itself and any directories beneath it. =back =item C<create_files> Hash reference of additional files to be created. Each file key points to another hash reference containing the following settings. Params: =over =item C<perms> - The permissions to be set on the file itself. =item C<contents> - The contents to be added to the file or leave blank for an empty file. =back =item C<htaccess> Hash reference containing htaccess files to be created. You can set the permissions for the htaccess as well as the contents of the file. Each file key points to another hash reference containing the following settings. Params: =over =item C<perms> - Permissions to be set on the htaccess file. =item C<contents> - Contents of the htaccess file. It can be set manually or use L<HT_DEFAULT_DENY> defined in L<Bugzilla::Install::Filesystem> to deny all by default. =back =back =head2 install_update_db This happens at the very end of all the tables being updated during an installation or upgrade. If you need to modify your custom schema or add new columns to existing tables, do it here. No params are passed. =head2 install_update_db_fielddefs This is used to update the schema of the fielddefs table before any other schema changes take place. No params are passed. This hook should only be used for updating the schema of the C<fielddefs> table. Do not modify any other table in this hook. To modify other tables, use the L</install_update_db> hook. =head2 db_schema_abstract_schema This allows you to add tables to Bugzilla. Note that we recommend that you prefix the names of your tables with some word (preferably the name of your Extension), so that they don't conflict with any future Bugzilla tables. If you wish to add new I<columns> to existing Bugzilla tables, do that in L</install_update_db>. Params: =over =item C<schema> - A hashref, in the format of L<Bugzilla::DB::Schema/ABSTRACT_SCHEMA>. Add new hash keys to make new table definitions. F<checksetup.pl> will automatically add these tables to the database when run. =back =head2 job_map Bugzilla has a system - L<Bugzilla::JobQueue> - for running jobs asynchronously, if the administrator has set it up. This hook allows the addition of mappings from job names to handler classes, so an extension can fire off jobs. Params: =over =item C<job_map> - The job map hash. Key: the name of the job, as should be passed to Bugzilla->job_queue->insert(). Value: the name of the Perl module which implements the task (an instance of L<TheSchwartz::Worker>). =back =head2 mailer_before_send Called right before L<Bugzilla::Mailer> sends a message to the MTA. Params: =over =item C<email> - The C<Email::MIME> object that's about to be sent. =item C<mailer_args> - An arrayref that's passed as C<mailer_args> to L<Email::Send/new>. =back =head2 object_before_create This happens at the beginning of L<Bugzilla::Object/create>. Params: =over =item C<class> The name of the class that C<create> was called on. You can check this like C<< if ($class->isa('Some::Class')) >> in your code, to perform specific tasks before C<create> for only certain classes. =item C<params> A hashref. The set of named parameters passed to C<create>. =back =head2 object_before_delete This happens in L<Bugzilla::Object/remove_from_db>, after we've confirmed that the object can be deleted, but before any rows have actually been removed from the database. This sometimes occurs inside a database transaction. Params: =over =item C<object> - The L<Bugzilla::Object> being deleted. You will probably want to check its type like C<< $object->isa('Some::Class') >> before doing anything with it. =back =head2 object_before_set Called during L<Bugzilla::Object/set>, before any actual work is done. You can use this to perform actions before a value is changed for specific fields on certain types of objects. Params: =over =item C<object> The object that C<set> was called on. You will probably want to do something like C<< if ($object->isa('Some::Class')) >> in your code to limit your changes to only certain subclasses of Bugzilla::Object. =item C<field> The name of the field being updated in the object. =item C<value> The value being set on the object. =back =head2 object_columns This hook allows you to add new "fields" to existing Bugzilla objects, that correspond to columns in their tables. For example, if you added an C<example> column to the "bugs" table, you would have to also add an C<example> field to the C<Bugzilla::Bug> object in order to access that data via Bug objects. Don't do anything slow inside this hook--it's called several times on every page of Bugzilla. Params: =over =item C<class> The name of the class that this hook is being called on. You can check this like C<< if ($class->isa('Some::Class')) >> in your code, to add new fields only for certain classes. =item C<columns> An arrayref. Add the string names of columns to this array to add new values to objects. For example, if you add an C<example> column to a particular table (using L</install_update_db>), and then push the string C<example> into this array for the object that uses that table, then you can access the information in that column via C<< $object->{example} >> on all objects of that type. This arrayref does not contain the standard column names--you cannot modify or remove standard object columns using this hook. =back =head2 object_end_of_create Called at the end of L<Bugzilla::Object/create>, after all other changes are made to the database. This occurs inside a database transaction. Params: =over =item C<class> The name of the class that C<create> was called on. You can check this like C<< if ($class->isa('Some::Class')) >> in your code, to perform specific tasks for only certain classes. =item C<object> The created object. =back =head2 object_end_of_create_validators Called at the end of L<Bugzilla::Object/run_create_validators>. You can use this to run additional validation when creating an object. If a subclass has overridden C<run_create_validators>, then this usually happens I<before> the subclass does its custom validation. Params: =over =item C<class> The name of the class that C<create> was called on. You can check this like C<< if ($class->isa('Some::Class')) >> in your code, to perform specific tasks for only certain classes. =item C<params> A hashref. The set of named parameters passed to C<create>, modified and validated by the C<VALIDATORS> specified for the object. =back =head2 object_end_of_set Called during L<Bugzilla::Object/set>, after all the code of the function has completed (so the value has been validated and the field has been set to the new value). You can use this to perform actions after a value is changed for specific fields on certain types of objects. The new value is not specifically passed to this hook because you can get it as C<< $object->{$field} >>. Params: =over =item C<object> The object that C<set> was called on. You will probably want to do something like C<< if ($object->isa('Some::Class')) >> in your code to limit your changes to only certain subclasses of Bugzilla::Object. =item C<field> The name of the field that was updated in the object. =back =head2 object_end_of_set_all This happens at the end of L<Bugzilla::Object/set_all>. This is a good place to call custom set_ functions on objects, or to make changes to an object before C<update()> is called. Params: =over =item C<object> The L<Bugzilla::Object> which is being updated. You will probably want to do something like C<< if ($object->isa('Some::Class')) >> in your code to limit your changes to only certain subclasses of Bugzilla::Object. =item C<params> A hashref. The set of named parameters passed to C<set_all>. =back =head2 object_end_of_update Called during L<Bugzilla::Object/update>, after changes are made to the database, but while still inside a transaction. Params: =over =item C<object> The object that C<update> was called on. You will probably want to do something like C<< if ($object->isa('Some::Class')) >> in your code to limit your changes to only certain subclasses of Bugzilla::Object. =item C<old_object> The object as it was before it was updated. =item C<changes> The fields that have been changed, in the same format that L<Bugzilla::Object/update> returns. =back =head2 object_update_columns If you've added fields to bugs via L</object_columns>, then this hook allows you to say which of those columns should be updated in the database when L<Bugzilla::Object/update> is called on the object. If you don't use this hook, then your custom columns won't be modified in the database by Bugzilla. Params: =over =item C<object> The object that is about to be updated. You should check this like C<< if ($object->isa('Some::Class')) >> in your code, to modify the "update columns" only for certain classes. =item C<columns> An arrayref. Add the string names of columns to this array to allow that column to be updated when C<update()> is called on the object. This arrayref does not contain the standard column names--you cannot stop standard columns from being updated by using this hook. =back =head2 object_validators Allows you to add new items to L<Bugzilla::Object/VALIDATORS> for particular classes. Params: =over =item C<class> The name of the class that C<VALIDATORS> was called on. You can check this like C<< if ($class->isa('Some::Class')) >> in your code, to add validators only for certain classes. =item C<validators> A hashref, where the keys are database columns and the values are subroutine references. You can add new validators or modify existing ones. If you modify an existing one, you should remember to call the original validator inside of your modified validator. (This way, several extensions can all modify the same validator.) =back =head2 page_before_template This is a simple way to add your own pages to Bugzilla. This hooks C<page.cgi>, which loads templates from F<template/en/default/pages>. For example, C<page.cgi?id=fields.html> loads F<template/en/default/pages/fields.html.tmpl>. This hook is called right before the template is loaded, so that you can pass your own variables to your own pages. You can also use this to implement complex custom pages, by doing your own output and then calling C<exit> at the end of the hook, thus preventing the normal C<page.cgi> behavior from occurring. Params: =over =item C<page_id> This is the name of the page being loaded, like C<fields.html>. Note that if two extensions use the same name, it is uncertain which will override the others, so you should be careful with how you name your pages. Usually extensions prefix their pages with a directory named after their extension, so for an extension named "Foo", page ids usually look like C<foo/mypage.html>. =item C<vars> This is a hashref--put variables into here if you want them passed to your template. =back =head2 path_info_whitelist By default, Bugzilla removes the Path-Info information from URLs before passing data to CGI scripts. If this information is needed for your customizations, you can enumerate the pages you want to whitelist here. Params: =over =item C<whitelist> An array of script names that will not have their Path-Info automatically removed. =back =head2 post_bug_after_creation B<DEPRECATED> (Use L</bug_end_of_create> instead.) This happens after a bug is created and before bug mail is sent during C<post_bug.cgi>. Note that this only happens during C<post_bug.cgi>, it doesn't happen during any of the other methods of creating a bug. Params: =over =item C<vars> - The template vars hashref. =back =head2 product_confirm_delete B<DEPRECATED> - Use L</template_before_process> instead. Called before displaying the confirmation message when deleting a product. Params: =over =item C<vars> - The template vars hashref. =back =head2 product_end_of_create Called right after a new product has been created, allowing additional changes to be made to the new product's attributes. This occurs inside of a database transaction, so if the hook throws an error, all previous changes will be rolled back, including the creation of the new product. (However, note that such rollbacks should not normally be used, as some databases that Bugzilla supports have very bad rollback performance. If you want to validate input and throw errors before the Product is created, use L</object_end_of_create_validators> instead, or add a validator using L</object_validators>.) Params: =over =item C<product> - The new L<Bugzilla::Product> object that was just created. =back =head2 quicksearch_map This hook allows you to alter the Quicksearch syntax to include e.g. special searches for custom fields you have. Params: =over =item C<map> - a hash where the key is the name you want to use in Quicksearch, and the value is the name from the C<fielddefs> table that you want it to map to. You can modify existing mappings or add new ones. =back =head2 sanitycheck_check This hook allows for extra sanity checks to be added, for use by F<sanitycheck.cgi>. Params: =over =item C<status> - a CODEREF that allows status messages to be displayed to the user. (F<sanitycheck.cgi>'s C<Status>) =back =head2 sanitycheck_repair This hook allows for extra sanity check repairs to be made, for use by F<sanitycheck.cgi>. Params: =over =item C<status> - a CODEREF that allows status messages to be displayed to the user. (F<sanitycheck.cgi>'s C<Status>) =back =head2 template_before_create This hook allows you to modify the configuration of L<Bugzilla::Template> objects before they are created. For example, you could add a new global template variable this way. Params: =over =item C<config> A hashref--the configuration that will be passed to L<Template/new>. See L<http://template-toolkit.org/docs/modules/Template.html#section_CONFIGURATION_SUMMARY> for information on how this configuration variable is structured (or just look at the code for C<create> in L<Bugzilla::Template>.) =back =head2 template_before_process This hook is called any time Bugzilla processes a template file, including calls to C<< $template->process >>, C<PROCESS> statements in templates, and C<INCLUDE> statements in templates. It is not called when templates process a C<BLOCK>, only when they process a file. This hook allows you to define additional variables that will be available to the template being processed, or to modify the variables that are currently in the template. It works exactly as though you inserted code to modify template variables at the top of a template. You probably want to restrict this hook to operating only if a certain file is being processed (which is why you get a C<file> argument below). Otherwise, modifying the C<vars> argument will affect every single template in Bugzilla. B<Note:> This hook is not called if you are already in this hook. (That is, it won't call itself recursively.) This prevents infinite recursion in situations where this hook needs to process a template (such as if this hook throws an error). Params: =over =item C<vars> This is the entire set of variables that the current template can see. Technically, this is a L<Template::Stash> object, but you can just use it like a hashref if you want. =item C<file> The name of the template file being processed. This is relative to the main template directory for the language (i.e. for F<template/en/default/bug/show.html.tmpl>, this variable will contain C<bug/show.html.tmpl>). =item C<context> A L<Template::Context> object. Usually you will not have to use this, but if you need information about the template itself (other than just its name), you can get it from here. =back =head2 user_preferences This hook allows you to add additional panels to the User Preferences page, and validate data displayed and returned from these panels. It works in combination with the C<tabs> hook available in the F<template/en/default/account/prefs/prefs.html.tmpl> template. To make it work, you must define two templates in your extension: F<extensions/Foo/template/en/default/hook/account/prefs/prefs-tabs.html.tmpl> contains a list of additional panels to include. F<extensions/Foo/template/en/default/account/prefs/bar.html.tmpl> contains the content of the panel itself. See the C<Example> extension to see how things work. Params: =over =item C<current_tab> The name of the current panel being viewed by the user. You should always make sure that the name of the panel matches what you expect it to be. Else you could be interacting with the panel of another extension. =item C<save_changes> A boolean which is true when data should be validated and the DB updated accordingly. This means the user clicked the "Submit Changes" button. =item C<handled> This is a B<reference> to a scalar, not a scalar. (So you would set it like C<$$handled = 1>, not like C<$handled = 1>.) Set this to a true value to let Bugzilla know that the passed-in panel is valid and that you have handled it. (Otherwise, Bugzilla will throw an error that the panel is invalid.) Don't set this to true if you didn't handle the panel listed in C<current_tab>. =item C<vars> You can add as many new key/value pairs as you want to this hashref. It will be passed to the template. =back =head2 webservice This hook allows you to add your own modules to the WebService. (See L<Bugzilla::WebService>.) Params: =over =item C<dispatch> A hashref where you can specify the names of your modules and which Perl module handles the functions for that module. (This is actually sent to L<SOAP::Lite/dispatch_with>. You can see how that's used in F<xmlrpc.cgi>.) The Perl module name will most likely start with C<Bugzilla::Extension::Foo::> (where "Foo" is the name of your extension). Example: $dispatch->{'Example.Blah'} = "Bugzilla::Extension::Example::Webservice::Blah"; And then you'd have a module F<extensions/Example/lib/Webservice/Blah.pm>, and could call methods from that module like C<Example.Blah.Foo()> using the WebServices interface. It's recommended that all the keys you put in C<dispatch> start with the name of your extension, so that you don't conflict with the standard Bugzilla WebService functions (and so that you also don't conflict with other plugins). =back =head2 webservice_error_codes If your webservice extension throws custom errors, you can set numeric codes for those errors here. Extensions should use error codes above 10000, unless they are re-using an already-existing error code. Params: =over =item C<error_map> A hash that maps the names of errors (like C<invalid_param>) to numbers. See L<Bugzilla::WebService::Constants/WS_ERROR_CODE> for an example. =back =head1 SEE ALSO L<Bugzilla::Extension>