This repository contains the markdown files for the book as well as a Drupal installation complete with config files and database dumps. It also has some code that was used to check the accuracy of the book.
If you want to contribute, select the gh-pages branch from the branches button near the top of this page. You can then directly click the pencil button to edit (and automatically fork the repo).
Thanks for visiting and contributing.
TL;DR click here to contribute to the gh-pages branch
The recommended way to use drush on a ddev project is to use ddev drush cr
etc.
For my own convenience, I prefer to just use drush cr
while in the directory for my project. This does require an installation of PHP 8.1, drush and the drush launcher. If you see errors when trying this, try editing your web/sites/default/settings.php (or web/sites/default/settings.local.php) by adding the putenv command below. This may help.
putenv("IS_DDEV_PROJECT=true");
When you want to do some debugging, this can be a really useful setting to enable. It will display the template names in the HTML source.
- Copy
sites/example.settings.local.php
tosites/default/settings.local.php
- Add this to the bottom of
sites/default/settings.php
:
if (file_exists($app_root . '/' . $site_path . '/settings.local.php')) {
include $app_root . '/' . $site_path . '/settings.local.php';
}
NOTE: sites/default/settings.php
references sites/default/settings.local.php
, which references sites/development.services.yml
- Create a
sites/development.services.yml
, with the following contents: - toggle the debug: false line to view templates being used for each element on site
- Run
drush cr
after modifying the file to have changes take effect - Warning. Make sure your site is actually running before you make this change otherwise it will not run and make you very frustrated.
# Local development services.
#
# To activate this feature, follow the instructions at the top of the
# 'example.settings.local.php' file, which sits next to this file.
parameters:
http.response.debug_cacheability_headers: true
twig.config:
# Twig debugging:
#
# When debugging is enabled:
# - The markup of each Twig template is surrounded by HTML comments that
# contain theming information, such as template file name suggestions.
# - Note that this debugging markup will cause automated tests that directly
# check rendered HTML to fail. When running automated tests, 'debug'
# should be set to FALSE.
# - The dump() function can be used in Twig templates to output information
# about template variables.
# - Twig templates are automatically recompiled whenever the source code
# changes (see auto_reload below).
#
# For more information about debugging Twig templates, see
# https://www.drupal.org/node/1906392.
#
# Not recommended in production environments
# @default false
debug: false
# Twig auto-reload:
#
# Automatically recompile Twig templates whenever the source code changes.
# If you don't provide a value for auto_reload, it will be determined
# based on the value of debug.
#
# Not recommended in production environments
# @default null
auto_reload: true
# Twig cache:
#
# By default, Twig templates will be compiled and stored in the filesystem
# to increase performance. Disabling the Twig cache will recompile the
# templates from source each time they are used. In most cases the
# auto_reload setting above should be enabled rather than disabling the
# Twig cache.
#
# Not recommended in production environments
# @default true
cache: false
services:
cache.backend.null:
class: Drupal\Core\Cache\NullBackendFactory
If you haven't used DDEV, you should be using it! It makes development soooo much nicer.
ddev start
- start containers
ddev stop
- stop containers, delete them and keep db intact
ddev restart
- rebuild containers if changing configuration of ddev
ddev ssh
- ssh into container
ddev composer <blah>
- run composer in container e.g. composer install
ddev describe
- show the sql connection ports etc. for connecting sequel pro
ddev list -A
- list sites and urls
ddev export-db --f dbdump1.sql.gz
- Backup the db often so you can recover in a pinch. I use dbdump1 and dbdump2 files so I have a way back to my previous db too.
ddev import-db --src=dbdump1.sql.gz
- Restore the db quickly and painlessly
Use these commands. be sure to disable after debugging because xdebug has a significant performance impact.
ddev xdebug on
and
ddev xdebug off
- check out the repo
cd d9book
composer install
- this requires composer 2.x installedddev config
- this requires ddev to be installed. Follow the default promptsddev start
- this starts the containersddev import-db --src=dbdump2.sql.gz
- import the databaseddev drush cr
- clear drupal cacheddev launch
- start the site
Create a local instance in Lando with these commands.
git clone https://github.com/selwynpolit/d9book
cd d9book/
lando start
lando composer install
lando drush site:install --db-url=mysql://drupal9:drupal9@database/drupal9 -y
lando db-import dbdump2.sql.gz
lando drush cache:rebuild
lando drush uli -l https://d9book.lndo.site
ddev stop --remove-data --omit-snapshot
- if db corrupt and containers won’t start. Follow this up with ddev start. You may also have to restart docker.