I need to change one character in the file, but Asterisk overwrites that file. How can I make the changes persistent?
That file is automatically created by FreePBX on every reload, as stated in the header:
;--------------------------------------------------------------------------------;
; Do NOT edit this file as it is auto-generated by FreePBX. All modifications to ;
; this file must be done via the web gui. There are alternative files to make ;
; custom modifications, details at: http://freepbx.org/configuration_files ;
;--------------------------------------------------------------------------------;
;
To override an existing dialplan, you need to put your code into /etc/asterisk/extensions_override_freepbx.conf. Despite that you only want to change one character, you will need to copy the entire context into this file.
To create new dialplan, as mentioned in the answer from MichelV69, you would indeed use /etc/asterisk/extensions_custom.conf. This will not work for modifying existing dialplan, due to order in which files are included.
You don't. Per the documentation, you reproduce the section you want to override in extensions_custom.conf and make your changes there.
Also, this is for "FreePBX", not "Asterisk". Asterisk natively doesn't use / come-with "extensions_additional.conf".
Related
One of the DDEV sites I manage uses a database that includes a prefix. The default behavior for DDEV is to recreate the settings.ddev.php on every start. But that obviously overwrites anything added, purging any manual addition of the prefix.
Is the assumed solution to stop DDEV from overwriting the file? Or to create another settings file (like settings.local.php) to override what's been overridden? Or am I missing something?
This just seems like something that would exist as a simple variable in the config to generate a more accurate settings.ddev.php file. Thanks!
There are a few straightforward answers:
Don't let ddev fiddle with settings at all. Change the project type to 'php' and ddev won't mess with it.
Make the changes you want to db settings in settings.php after the inclusion of settings.ddev.php. That should work no matter what. And it should work on your prod site as well.
Do the work in settings.local.php, but include it after settings.ddev.php in your settings.php file
Take over settings.ddev.php and do whatever you want with it. This just means deleting the line that contains #ddev-generated in settings.ddev.php. After that, ddev won't muck with it at all.
I decided to use a version of the second suggestion:
// Automatically generated include for settings managed by ddev.
$ddev_settings = dirname(__FILE__) . '/settings.ddev.php';
if (getenv('IS_DDEV_PROJECT') == 'true' && is_readable($ddev_settings)) {
require $ddev_settings;
$databases['default']['default']['prefix'] = "drupal_";
}
I just added the $databases line. The rest was already there.
I'd like to make Brackets.io extension that would both save active file and execute my code on Ctrl-S.
I tried to use command-line-shortcuts extension to do that but it throws error
/command/KeyBindingManager.js:749 Cannot assign Ctrl-S to
extension.commandline.run.0. It is already assigned to file.save
So is it possible to assign two 'actions' to one key binding?
It seems to be opened issue on Brackets github. So for now it can't be done.
I've just started learning discovering the changes to Drupal 7, and I just found the files[] array now required in the mymodule.info. From what I've found, it is required to add the mymodule.module file to the list, but what other uses does it have?
From what I've read I figured I should be able to separate my code into several files, for example I wanted to make a mymodule.blocks.inc to contain all the code for my blocks, but it seems like the mymodule_block_info() function never runs.
Am I doing something wrong, or is this not how it is supposed to be used?
As the documentation says:
files (Optional) Drupal now supports a dynamic-loading code registry.
To support it, all modules must now declare any code files containing class or interface declarations in the .info file.
This is only used if the file you specify in files[] contains a class or an interface. If so, the file will be auto-loaded only when needed.
No other files should be declared using files[].
At the beginning it was to make a files registry for each module, but it's not longer used as Drupal do it by himself.
If you want separate your module in multiple files, you should include them in the top of your .module file.
The way I see it, files specified as files[] are meant to be supporting files and called upon when needed. Implemented default Drupal hooks should be specified in the .module file or in the $module.$group.inc file in order for Drupal to recognize them. See hook_hook_info().
Also, see the note in the documentation under files at http://drupal.org/node/542202.
A bit of a followup from a previous question.
As I mentioned in that question, my overall goal is to call a Ruby script after ImageCache does its magic with generating thumbnails and whatnot.
Sebi's suggestion from this question involved using hook_nodeapi.
Sadly, my Drupal knowledge of creating modules and/or hacking into existing modules is pretty limited.
So, for this question:
Should I create my own module or attempt to modify the ImageCache module?
How do I go about getting the generated thumbnail path (from ImageCache) to pass into my Ruby script?
edit
I found this question searching through SO...
Is it possible to do something similar in the _imagecache_cache function that would do what I want?
ie
function _imagecache_cache($presetname, $path) {
...
...
// check if deriv exists... (file was created between apaches request handler and reaching this code)
// otherwise try to create the derivative.
if (file_exists($dst) || imagecache_build_derivative($preset['actions'], $src, $dst)) {
imagecache_transfer($dst);
// call ruby script here
call('MY RUBY SCRIPT');
}
Don't hack into imagecache, remember every time you hack core/contrib modules god kills a kitten ;)
You should create a module that invokes hook_nodeapi, look at the api documentation to find the correct entry point for your script, nodeapi works on various different levels of the node process so you have to pick the correct one for you (it should become clear when you check the link out) http://api.drupal.org/api/function/hook_nodeapi
You won't be able to call the function you've shown because it is private so you'll have to find another route.
You could try and build the path up manually, you should be able to pull out the filename of the uploaded file and then append it to the directory structure, ugly but it should work. e.g.
If the uploaded file is called test123.jpg then it should be in /files/imagecache/thumbnails/test123/jpg (or something similar).
Hope it helps.
I'm writing an nginx module.
From looking at other examples I'm registering my header filter in my modules postconfiguration hook:
static ngx_int_t
mod_py_postconfig(ngx_conf_t *cf)
{
ngx_http_next_header_filter = ngx_http_top_header_filter;
ngx_http_top_header_filter = mod_py_headers_filter;
return NGX_OK;
}
But the handler is never called. I've set a breakpoint in gdb on ngx_http_top_header_filter change and it seems my module's postconfig is called first, but then runs postconfig of the ngx_http_write_filter_module which overrides ngx_http_top_header_filter w/o storing the old value:
static ngx_int_t
ngx_http_write_filter_init(ngx_conf_t *cf)
{
ngx_http_top_body_filter = ngx_http_write_filter;
return NGX_OK;
}
it seems like it is designed to be the very last on called, so how come my module's postconfig is called first?
From what I can see the order of modules is set in objs/ngx_modules.c
I was able to fix the problem by manually reordering the modules there so that my module comes after ngx_http_header_filter_module, but this feels like an ugly hack, and also makes it hard to automate build process as ./configure overwrites this file each time.
OK, so I figured it out myself. Documenting it here in case anyone else will need it.
I was adding my module to the wrong list. The nginx module is configured through a 'config' file insed module's directory. My had the following line in it:
HTTP_MODULES="$HTTP_MODULES ngx_http_my_module_name"
I searched for HTTP_MODULES usage and found nginx/auto/modules script which actually builds ngx_modules.c file. It turns out there are several possible module lists used by nginx/auto/modules. I needed to add my module to the HTTP_AUX_FILTER_MODULES list like so:
HTTP_AUX_FILTER_MODULES="$HTTP_AUX_FILTER_MODULES ngx_http_my_module_name"
This placed my module at the right place just after HTTP_HEADERS_FILTER_MODULE and fixed the problem.