Those eagle-eyed developers who have been tracking the Elgg core SVN may have noticed that I have recently committed a bunch of captcha related changes, including a simple captcha module.
I just thought I’d write a quick post about it as this module makes use of a bit of Elgg functionality which has been around for a while, but that I know a number of plugin developers have missed.
Namely, the ability to extend actions.
When the Elgg framework calls an action the Action handler triggers a plugin hook called “action” before executing the action itself. This hook looks like this:
$event_result = true;
$event_result = trigger_plugin_hook('action', $action, null, $event_result);
Where $action
is the action being called. If the hook returns false then the main action will not be executed.
The captcha module uses this to intercept the register
and user/requestnewpassword
actions and redirect them to a function which checks the captcha code. This check returns true if valid or false if not (which prevents the associated action from executing).
This is done as follows:
register_plugin_hook("action", "register", "captcha_verify_action_hook");
register_plugin_hook("action", "user/requestnewpassword", "captcha_verify_action_hook");
.
.
.
function captcha_verify_action_hook($hook, $entity_type, $returnvalue, $params)
{
$token = get_input('captcha_token');
$input = get_input('captcha_input');
if (($token) && (captcha_verify_captcha($input, $token)))
return true;
register_error(elgg_echo('captcha:captchafail'));
return false;
}
As you can see, this lets a plugin extend an existing action without the need to replace the action itself. In the case of the captcha plugin it allows the plugin to provide captcha support in a very loosely coupled way.
Happy coding!