13. Extending Plone#

In this part you will:

  • Get an overview over the technologies used to extend Plone

Topics covered:

  • Component Architecture

  • ZCML

  • GenericSetup

As a developer you want to go further than simply configuring Plone, you want to extend and customize it. Plone is built to be extended. Extendability is not an afterthought but is the core of Plone and the systems it is based on. Plone started as an extension for CMF, which is an extension for Zope.

13.1. Extension technologies#

How do you extend Plone?

This depends on what type of extension you want to create.

  • You can create extensions with new types of objects to add to your Plone site. Usually these are contenttypes.

  • You can create an extension that changes or extends functionality. For example to change the way Plone displays search results, or to make pictures searchable by adding a converter from jpg to text.

For most projects you mix all kinds of methods to extend Plone.

13.1.1. Component Architecture#

The best way to extend Plone is via Components.

A bit of history is in order.

When Zope started, object-oriented design was the silver bullet.

Object-oriented design is good at modeling inheritance, but breaks down when an object has multiple aspects that are part of multiple taxonomies.

Some object-oriented programming languages like Python handle this through multiple inheritance. But it's not a good way to do it. Zope objects have more than 10 base classes. Too many namespaces makes code that's hard to maintain. Where did that method/attribute come from?

After a while, XML and Components became the next silver bullet (Does anybody remember J2EE?).

Based on their experiences with Zope in the past, Zope developers thought that a component system configured via XML might be the way to go to keep the code more maintainable.

Before Zope Components functionality was often extended by a practice called Monkey Patching: Changing code in other modules by importing and then modifying it at runtime.

Monkey Patching, like subclassing via multiple inheritance, does not scale. Multiple plugins might overwrite each other, you would explain to people that they have to reorder the imports, and then, suddenly, you will be forced to import feature A before B, B before C and C before A, or else your application won't work.

As the new concepts were radically different from the old Zope concepts, the Zope developers renamed the new project to Zope 3. But it did not gain traction, was eventually renamed to Bluebream and then died out.

But the component architecture itself is quite successful and the Zope developers extracted it into the Zope Toolkit. The Zope toolkit is part of Zope, and Plone developers use it extensively.

This is what you want to use.

13.1.2. Configuring Zope Components with ZCML#

ZCML, the Zope Configuration Mark-up Language is an XML based language used to configure Zope Components. With ZCML you declare utilities, adapters and browser views.

Components are distinguished from one another by the interfaces (formal definitions of functionality) that they require or provide.

During startup, Zope reads all these ZCML statements, validates that there are not two declarations trying to register the same components and registers everything. All components are registered by interfaces required and provided. Components with the same interfaces may optionally also be named.

It may seem a little cumbersome that you have to register all components. But thanks to ZCML, you hardly ever have a hard time to find what and where extensions or customizations are defined. ZCML files are like a phone book.

Explicit is better than implicit

—The Zen of Python

13.1.3. GenericSetup#

The next thing is Products.GenericSetup.

GenericSetup lets you define persistent configuration in XML files. GenericSetup parses the XML files and updates the persistent configuration according to the configuration. This is a step you have to run on your own!

You will see many objects in Zope or the ZMI that you can customize through the web. If they are well behaving, they can export their configuration via GenericSetup and import it again.

Typically you use GenericSetup to change workflows or add new content type definitions.

GenericSetup profiles may also be built into Python packages. Every package that is listed on the add-on package list inside a Plone installation has a GS profile that details how it fits into Plone. Packages that are part of Plone itself may have GS profiles, but are excluded from the active/inactive listing.

Example:

metadata.xml:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<metadata>
  <version>1000</version>
  <dependencies>
    <dependency>profile-pas.plugins.ldap:default</dependency>
    <dependency>profile-collective.folderishtypes.dx:default</dependency>
    <dependency>profile-collective.geolocationbehavior:default</dependency>
    <dependency>profile-collective.behavior.banner:default</dependency>
  </dependencies>
</metadata>

Most settings are stored in a tool called portal_registry. Since it has great import/export handlers for GenericSetup it can be configures with registry.xml:

registry.xml:

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<registry>
  <record name="plone.site_title" >
    <value>Mastering Plone Development</value>
  </record>
</registry>