Book Image

Drupal 9 Module Development - Third Edition

By : Daniel Sipos
Book Image

Drupal 9 Module Development - Third Edition

By: Daniel Sipos

Overview of this book

With its latest release, Drupal 9, the popular open source CMS platform has been updated with new functionalities for building complex Drupal apps with ease. This third edition of the Drupal Module Development guide covers these new Drupal features, helping you to stay on top of code deprecations and the changing architecture with every release. The book starts by introducing you to the Drupal 9 architecture and its subsystems before showing you how to create your first module with basic functionality. You’ll explore the Drupal logging and mailing systems, learn how to output data using the theme layer, and work with menus and links programmatically. Once you’ve understood the different kinds of data storage, this Drupal guide will demonstrate how to create custom entities and field types and leverage the Database API for lower-level database queries. You’ll also learn how to introduce JavaScript into your module, work with various file systems, and ensure that your code works on multilingual sites. Finally, you’ll work with Views, create automated tests for your functionality, and write secure code. By the end of the book, you’ll have learned how to develop custom modules that can provide solutions to complex business problems, and who knows, maybe you’ll even contribute to the Drupal community!
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
3
Chapter 3: Logging and Mailing

Summary

In this chapter, we talked a bit about automated testing in Drupal 9. We started with an introduction about why it's useful and actually important to write automated tests, and then briefly covered a few of the more popular types of software development testing methodologies.

Drupal has the capability for quite a lot of methodologies, as we've seen. We have unit tests—the lowest level form of testing that focuses on single architectural units and which are by far the fastest running tests of them all. Then we have Kernel tests, which are integration tests focusing on lower-level components and their interactions. Next, we have Functional tests, which are higher-level tests that focus on interactions with the browser. And finally, we have the FunctionalJavascript tests, which extend the latter and bring Selenium and Chrome into the picture to allow the testing of functionalities that depend on JavaScript.

We've also seen that all these different types...