If you are not familiar with how file roles install, read the
introduction to file roles
first. This segment of the documentation assumes you are familiar with
concepts such as baseinstalldir
and with what a file
role means in terms of installation location.
Custom file roles can implement a single role, and are defined by
an xml file that is noted in package.xml with the customrole
file role. The XML format is defined and validated by pyrus with the
customrole-2.0.xsd
XSchema file.
Here is a human-readable custom file role xml file definition.
Optional elements are enclosed in [brackets], and if there is a choice of
values, they are delimited with a vertical bar |
and
enclosed in (parentheses).
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <role version="2.0" xmlns="http://pear2.php.net/dtd/customrole-2.0"> <name>rolename</name> <class>MyPlugin_Rolename</class> [<validationmethod>validate</validationmethod>] [<autoloadpath>relative/path/to/MyPlugin</autoloadpath>] (<releasetype>php</releasetype>|<releasetype>extsrc</releasetype>| <releasetype>extbin</releasetype>|<releasetype>zendextsrc</releasetype>| <releasetype>zendextbin</releasetype>) <installable>(1|0)</installable> <locationconfig>config_var</locationconfig> <honorsbaseinstall>(1|0)</honorsbaseinstall> <unusualbaseinstall>(1|0)</unusualbaseinstall> <executable>(1|0)</executable> [<configvar> <name>config_name</name> <type>string</type> <default> <![CDATA[ <?php $default = 'hi'; ?> ]]> </default> <doc>Extensive, multi-line documentation</doc> [<validset>val1</validset><validset>val2</validset>...] <prompt>summary documentation</prompt> <group>Custom</group> <configtype>(system|user|channel-specific)</configtype> </configvar>]* </role>
This is the same method used for all plugins, and is documented here.
Some roles benefit from the ability to validate the files they represent
at packaging time. For instance, a customcommand
file
is checked to ensure it conforms to its XML schema, so that a custom command
with invalid XML cannot be distributed by mistake.
By convention, a validation method should be named validate
,
although the xml supports any name. The method name should be placed in
the <validationmethod
tag, and the method itself should
have the same method signature as this example from Pyrus's
customrole
validation:
<?php
function validate(\PEAR2\Pyrus\IPackage $package, array $file)
{
$parser = new \PEAR2\Pyrus\XMLParser;
$schemapath = \PEAR2\Pyrus\Main::getDataPath();
if (!file_exists(\PEAR2\Pyrus\Main::getDataPath() . '/customrole-2.0.xsd')) {
$schemapath = realpath(__DIR__ . '/../../../../data');
}
$taskschema = $schemapath . '/customrole-2.0.xsd';
try {
$taskinfo = $parser->parse($package->getFilePath($file['attribs']['name']), $taskschema);
} catch (\Exception $e) {
throw new \PEAR2\Pyrus\Installer\Role\Exception('Invalid custom role definition file,' .
' file does not conform to the schema', $e);
}
}
?>
A custom file role package-time validator should throw a
PEAR2_Pyrus_Installer_Role_Exception
exception object
with an error message describing the reason for validation failure, or simply
return on success.
The <releasetype>
element is used to tell Pyrus
which releases can contain a file with this role. For instance, the
src
role only has meaning in a PHP extension source release,
and is only allowed in extsrc
and zendextsrc
release types.
There are 5 release types that Pyrus recognizes:
php
- this is for PEAR-style packages distributing PHP code
extsrc
- this is for PHP extension source packages
extbin
- this is for PHP extension binary packages
zendextsrc
- this is for PHP Zend extension source packages
zendextbin
- this is for PHP Zend extension binary packages
If set to 0
, the file will not actually be installed onto
the system. Most file roles should set this to 1
.
This element is used to tell Pyrus which configuration variable should be used to determine where to install the file. This can be a custom configuration variable.
The <honorsbaseinstall>
element tells Pyrus to
honor the baseinstalldir
attribute (documentation on
baseinstalldir is here)
for roles like php
.
The <unusualbaseinstall>
element tells Pyrus to
honor the baseinstalldir
attribute for roles like
data
that also prepend channel/package name to the
installation location.
If <executable>
is set to 1
,
Pyrus will make the installed file an executable file on unix systems
(the equivalent of
chmod +x filename
).
A custom file role can optionally define a single or multiple custom
configuration variables. There are 3 kinds of configuration variables
that Pyrus supports, system
, user
and
channel-specific
. Documentation on configuration is
available here. Read that before
continuing in order to understand how different configuration variables work.
Pyrus supports one type of configuration variable: string
.
The values can be restricted to a specific set of values with the
<validset>
element.