* @license GNU General Public License version 2 or later; see LICENSE */ namespace Joomla\CMS\Event; use BadMethodCallException; use Joomla\Event\Event; use Joomla\Event\Event as BaseEvent; use Joomla\String\Normalise; // phpcs:disable PSR1.Files.SideEffects \defined('JPATH_PLATFORM') or die; // phpcs:enable PSR1.Files.SideEffects /** * This class implements the base Event object used system-wide to offer orthogonality. Core objects such as Models, * Controllers, etc create such events on-the-fly and dispatch them through the application's Dispatcher (colloquially * known as the "Joomla! plugin system"). This way a suitable plugin, typically a "system" plugin, can modify the * behaviour of any internal class, providing system-wide services such as tags, content versioning, comments or even * low-level services such as the implementation of created/modified/locked behaviours, record hit counter etc. * * You can create a new Event with something like this: * * $event = AbstractEvent::create('onModelBeforeSomething', $myModel, $arguments); * * You can access the subject object from your event Listener using $event['subject']. It is up to your listener to * determine whether it should apply its functionality against the subject. * * This AbstractEvent class implements a mutable event which is allowed to change its arguments at runtime. This is * generally unadvisable. It's best to use AbstractImmutableEvent instead and constrict all your interaction to the * subject class. * * @since 4.0.0 */ abstract class AbstractEvent extends BaseEvent { use CoreEventAware; /** * Creates a new CMS event object for a given event name and subject. The following arguments must be given: * subject object The subject of the event. This is the core object you are going to manipulate. * eventClass string The Event class name. If you do not provide it Joomla\CMS\Events\ * will be used. * * @param string $eventName The name of the event, e.g. onTableBeforeLoad * @param array $arguments Additional arguments to pass to the event * * @return static * * @since 4.0.0 * @throws BadMethodCallException If you do not provide a subject argument */ public static function create(string $eventName, array $arguments = []) { // Get the class name from the arguments, if specified $eventClassName = ''; if (isset($arguments['eventClass'])) { $eventClassName = $arguments['eventClass']; unset($arguments['eventClass']); } /** * If the class name isn't set/found determine it from the event name, e.g. TableBeforeLoadEvent from * the onTableBeforeLoad event name. */ if (empty($eventClassName) || !class_exists($eventClassName, true)) { $bareName = strpos($eventName, 'on') === 0 ? substr($eventName, 2) : $eventName; $parts = Normalise::fromCamelCase($bareName, true); $eventClassName = __NAMESPACE__ . '\\' . ucfirst(array_shift($parts)) . '\\'; $eventClassName .= implode('', $parts); $eventClassName .= 'Event'; } // Make sure a non-empty subject argument exists and that it is an object if (!isset($arguments['subject']) || empty($arguments['subject']) || !\is_object($arguments['subject'])) { throw new BadMethodCallException("No subject given for the $eventName event"); } // Create and return the event object if (class_exists($eventClassName, true)) { return new $eventClassName($eventName, $arguments); } /** * The detection code above failed. This is to be expected, it was written back when we only * had the Table events. It does not address most other core events. So, let's use our * fancier detection instead. */ $eventClassName = self::getEventClassByEventName($eventName); if (!empty($eventClassName) && ($eventClassName !== Event::class)) { return new $eventClassName($eventName, $arguments); } return new GenericEvent($eventName, $arguments); } /** * Constructor. Overridden to go through the argument setters. * * @param string $name The event name. * @param array $arguments The event arguments. * * @since 4.0.0 */ public function __construct(string $name, array $arguments = []) { parent::__construct($name, $arguments); $this->arguments = []; foreach ($arguments as $argumentName => $value) { $this->setArgument($argumentName, $value); } } /** * Get an event argument value. It will use a getter method if one exists. The getters have the signature: * * get($value): mixed * * where: * * $value is the value currently stored in the $arguments array of the event * It returns the value to return to the caller. * * @param string $name The argument name. * @param mixed $default The default value if not found. * * @return mixed The argument value or the default value. * * @since 4.0.0 */ public function getArgument($name, $default = null) { $methodName = 'get' . ucfirst($name); $value = parent::getArgument($name, $default); if (method_exists($this, $methodName)) { return $this->{$methodName}($value); } return $value; } /** * Add argument to event. It will use a setter method if one exists. The setters have the signature: * * set($value): mixed * * where: * * $value is the value being set by the user * It returns the value to return to set in the $arguments array of the event. * * @param string $name Argument name. * @param mixed $value Value. * * @return $this * * @since 4.0.0 */ public function setArgument($name, $value) { $methodName = 'set' . ucfirst($name); if (method_exists($this, $methodName)) { $value = $this->{$methodName}($value); } return parent::setArgument($name, $value); } }