.. _extending_chapter: Extending An Existing :mod:`repoze.bfg` Application =================================================== If the developer of a :mod:`repoze.bfg` application has obeyed certain constraints while building the application, a third party should be able to change the behavior of that application without needing to modify the actual source code that makes up the application. The behavior of a :mod:`repoze.bfg` application that obeys these constraints can be *overridden* or *extended* without modification. Rules for Building An Extensible Application -------------------------------------------- There's only one rule you need to obey if you want to build an extensible :mod:`repoze.bfg` application: you must not use the ``@bfg_view`` decorator or any other decorator meant to be detected via the ZCML ```` directive. Instead, you must use :term:`ZCML` for the equivalent purpose. :term:`ZCML` statements that belong to an application can be "overridden" by integrators as necessary, but decorators which perform the same tasks cannot. It's also often helpful for third party application "extenders" (aka "integrators") if the ZCML that composes the configuration for an application is broken up into separate files which do very specific things. These more specific ZCML files can be reintegrated within the application's main ``configure.zcml`` via ```` statements. When ZCML files contain sets of specific statements, an integrator can avoid including any ZCML he does not want by including only the ZCML files which contain the registrations he needs. He is not forced to "accept everything" or "use nothing". Extending an Existing Application --------------------------------- If you've inherited a :mod:`repoze.bfg` application that you'd like to extend which uses ``@bfg_view`` decorators, you'll unfortunately need to change the source code of the original application, moving the view declarations out of the decorators and into :term:`ZCML`. Once this is done, you should be able to extend or modify the application like any other. To extend or override the behavior of an existing application, you will need to write some :term:`ZCML`, and perhaps some implementations of the types of things you'd like to override (such as views), which are referred to within that ZCML. The general pattern for extending an application looks something like this: - Create a new Python package. The easiest way to do this is to create a new :mod:`repoze.bfg` application using the "paster" template mechanism. See :ref:`creating_a_project` for more information. - Install the new package into the same Python environment as the original application (e.g. ``python setup.py develop`` or ``python setup.py install``). - Change the ``configure.zcml`` in the new package to include the original :mod:`repoze.bfg` application's ``configure.zcml`` via an include statement, e.g. ````. Alternately, instead of including the "main" ``configure.zcml`` of the original application include only specific ZCML files from the original application using the ``file`` attribute of the ```` statement, e.g. ````. - On a line in the new package's ``configure.zcml`` file that falls after (XML-ordering-wise) the all ``include`` statements of original package ZCML, put an ``includeOverrides`` statement which identifies *another* ZCML file within the new package (for example ````. - Create an ``overrides.zcml`` file within the new package. The statements in the ``overrides.zcml`` file will override any ZCML statements made within the original application (such as views). - Create Python files containing views (and other overridden elements, such as templates) as necessary, and wire these up using ZCML registrations within the ``overrides.zcml`` file. These registrations may extend or override the original view registrations. The ZCML ```` statements you make which *override* application behavior will usually have the same ``for`` and ``name`` (and ``request_type`` if used) as the original. These ``>`` statements will point at "new" view code. The new view code itself will usually be cut-n-paste copies of view callables from the original application with slight tweaks. For example:: A similar pattern can be used to *extend* the application. Just register a new view against some existing model type and make sure the URLs it implies are available on some other page rendering. - Change the Paste ``.ini`` file that starts up the original application. Add a ``configure_zcml`` statement within the application's section in the file which points at your *new* package's ``configure.zcml`` file. See :ref:`environment_chapter` for more information about this setting. Dealing With ZCML Inclusions ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sometimes it's possible to include only certain ZCML files from an application that contain only the registrations you really need, omitting others. But sometimes it's not. For brute force purposes, when you're getting ``view`` or ``route`` registrations that you don't actually want in your overridden application, it's always appropriate to just *not include* any ZCML file from the overridden application. Instead, just cut and paste the entire contents of the ``configure.zcml`` (and any ZCML file included by the overridden application's ``configure.zcml``) into your own package and omit the ```` ZCML statement in the overriding package's ``configure.zcml``.