Book Image

Mastering Drupal 8

By : Sean Montague, Chaz Chumley, William Hurley
Book Image

Mastering Drupal 8

By: Sean Montague, Chaz Chumley, William Hurley

Overview of this book

Drupal is an open source content management system trusted by governments and organizations around the globe to run their websites. It brings with it extensive content authoring tools, reliable performance, and a proven track record of security. The community of more than 1,000,000 developers, designers, editors, and others have developed and maintained a wealth of modules, themes, and other add-ons to help you build a dynamic web experience. Drupal 8 is the latest release of the Drupal built on the Symfony2 framework. This is the largest change to the Drupal project in its history. The entire API of Drupal has been rebuilt using Symfony and everything from the administrative UI to themes to custom module development has been affected. This book will cover everything you need to plan and build a complete website using Drupal 8. It will provide a clear and concise walkthrough of the more than 200 new features and improvements introduced in Drupal core. In this book, you will learn advanced site building techniques, create and modify themes using Twig, create custom modules using the new Drupal API, explore the new REST and Multilingual functionality, import, and export Configuration, and learn how to migrate from earlier versions of Drupal.
Table of Contents (25 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Author
About the Reviewer
Customer Feedback
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Working with dependency injection


Dependency injection is an example of an inversion of control software design pattern. Inversion of control is a principle that involves having a generic and reusable framework to make calls and delegate to more custom code. In Drupal 7, an example of this is the menu system. A request comes in and is matched to a route and then Drupal loads the module file and calls the appropriate function. Dependency injection specifically allows you to define when your class needs a dependency and have those needs fulfilled by the system.

When creating new functionality in Drupal 8, you write your dependencies into your class constructor and, when the system creates your class, they are passed into it.

A key advantage to using dependency injection is that you do not have to know how to instantiate the services that your class depends on. Take, for example, a simple database connection. In order to connect to the database you need the appropriate driver, username, password...