Rethinking Blogs at The New York Times

The New York Times

See Also: The Technology Behind the NYTimes.com Redesign

The Blogs at the Times have always run on WordPress. The New York Times, as an ecosystem, does not run on one platform or one technology. It runs on several. There are over 150 developers at the Times split across numerous teams: Web Products, Search, Blogs, iOS, Android, Mobile Web, Crosswords, Ads, BI, CMS, Video, APIs, Interactive News, and the list goes on. While PHP is frequently used, Elastic Search and Node make an appearance, and the Newspaper CMS, “Scoop,” is written in Java. Interactive likes Ruby/Rails.

The “redesign,” which launched last week, was really a re-platform: where Times development needs to head, and a rethinking of our development processes and tools. The customer-facing redesign was 2 main pieces:

  • a new Article “app” that runs inside of our new platform
  • the “reskinning” of our homepage and section fronts

What is launching today is the re-platform of Blogs from a WordPress-only service to Blogs via WordPress as an app inside of our new platform.

The Redesign

Most people who use the internet have visited an NYTimes article page –

the old design:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/29/arts/music/lordes-royals-is-class-conscious.html

Lorde

the new:
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/15/arts/music/jay-z-offers-a-view-of-his-legacy-at-barclays-center.html?ref=music

Jay-Z at Barclay's

What is not immediately obvious to the reader is how all of this works behind the scenes.

Non-Technical

To skip past all of the technical details, click here:

How Things Used to Work

For many years at the Times, article pages were generated into static HTML files when published. This was good and bad. Good because: static files are lightning fast to serve. Bad because: those files point at static assets (CSS, JavaScript files) that can only change when the pages are re-generated and re-published. One way around this was to load a CSS file that had a bunch of @import statements (eek), with a similar loading scheme for JS (even worse).

Blogs used to load like any custom WordPress project:

  • configured as a Multisite install (amassing ~200 blogs over time)
  • lots of custom plugins and widgets
  • custom themes + a few child themes

A lot of front-end developers also write PHP and vice versa. At the Times, in many instances, the team working on the Blogs “theme” was not the same team working on the CSS/JS. So, we would have different Subversion repos for global CSS, blogs CSS; different repos for global JS, blogs JS; and a different repo for WordPress proper. When I first started working at the Times, I had to create a symlink farm of 7 different repos that would represent all of the JS and CSS that blogs were using. Good times.

On top of that, all blogs would inherit NYTimes “global” styles and scripts. A theme would end up inheriting global styles for the whole project, global styles for all blogs, and then sometimes, a specific stylesheet for the individual blog. For CSS, this would sometimes result in 40-50 (sometimes 80!) stylesheets loading. Not good.

WordPress would load jQuery, Prototype, and Scriptaculous with every request (I’m pretty sure some flavor of jQuery UI was in there too). As a result, every module within the page would just assume that our flavor of jQuery global variable NYTD.jQuery was available anywhere, and would assume that Prototype.js code could be called at will. (Spoiler alert: that was a bad idea.)

WordPress does not use native WP comments. There is an entire service at the Times called CRNR (Comments, Ratings, and Reviews) that has its own user management, taxonomy management, and community moderation tools. Modules like “CRNR” would provide us with code to “drop onto the page.” Sometimes this code included its own copy of jQuery, different version and all.

Widgets on blogs could be tightly coupled with the WordPress codebase, or they could be some code that was pasted into a freeform textarea from some other team. The Interactive News team at the Times would sometimes supply us code to “drop into the C-Column” – translation: add a widget to the sidebar. These “interactives” would sometimes include their own copy jQuery (what version…? who knows!).

How Things Work Now

The new platform has 2 main technologies at its center: the homegrown Madison Framework (PHP as MVC), and Grunt, the popular task runner than runs on Node. Our NYT codebase is a collection of several Git repos that get built into apps via Grunt and deployed by RPMs/Puppet. For any app that wants to live inside of the new shell (inherit the masthead, “ribbon,” navigation automatically), they must register their existence. After they do, they can “inherit” from other projects. I’ll explain.

Foundation

Foundation is the base application. Foundation contains the Madison PHP framework, the Magnum CSS/Responsive framework, and our base JavaScript framework. Our CSS is no longer a billion disparate files – it is LESS manifests, with plenty of custom mixins, that compile into a few CSS files. At the heart of our JS approach is RequireJS, Hammer, SockJS and Backbone (authored by Times alum Jeremy Ashkenas).

Madison is an MVC framework that utilizes the newest and shiniest OO features of PHP and is built around 2 main software design patterns: the Service Locator pattern (via Pimple), and Dependency Injection. The main “front” of any request to the new stack goes through Foundation, as it contains the main controller files for the framework. Apps register their main route via Apache rewrite rules, Madison knows which app to launch by convention based on the code that was deployed via the Grunt build.

Shared

Shared is collection of reusable modules. Write a module once, and then allow apps to include them at-will. Shared is where Madison’s “base” modules exist. Modules are just PHP template fragments which can include other PHP templates. Think of a “Page” module like so:

Page
- load Top module
- load Content module
- load Bottom module

Top (included in Page)
- load Styles module
- load Scripts module
- load Meta module

...

In your app code, if you try to embed a module by name, and it isn’t in your app’s codebase, the framework will automatically look for it in Shared. This is similar to how parent and child themes work in WordPress. This means: if you want to use ALL of the default modules, only overriding a few, you need to only specify the overriding modules in your app. Let’s say the main content of the page is a module called “PageContent/Thing” – you would include the following in your app to override what is displayed:

// page layout
$layout = array(
    'type' => 'Page',
    'name' => 'Page',
    'modules' => array(
        array(
            'type' => 'PageContent',
            'name' => 'Thing'
        ),
        .....
    )
);

// will first look in
nyt5-app-blogs/Modules/PageContent/Thing.tpl.php
// if it doesn't find it
nyt5-shared/PageContent/php/src/Thing.tpl.php

So there’s a lot happening, before we even get to our Blogs app, and we haven’t even really mentioned WordPress yet!

App-specific

Each app contains a build.json file that explains how to turn our app into a codebase that can be deployed as an application. Each app might also have the following folder structure:

js/
js/src
js/tests
less/
php/
php/src
php/tests

Our build.json files lists our LESS manifests (the files to build via Grunt) and our JS mainifests (the files to parse using r.js/Require). Our php/src directory contains the following crucial pieces:

Module/ <-- contains our Madison override templates
WordPress/ <-- contains our entire WP codebase
ApplicationConfiguration.php <-- optional configuration
ApplicationController.php <-- the main Controller for our app
wp-bootstrap.php <-- loads in global scope to load/parse WordPress

The wp-bootstrap.php file is the most interesting portion of our WordPress app, and where we do the most unconventional work to get these 2 disparate frameworks to work together. Before we even load our app in Madison proper, we have already loaded all of WordPress in an output buffer and stored the result. We can then access that result in our Madison code without any knowledge of WordPress. Alternately, we can use any WP code inside of Madison. Madison eschews procedural programming and enforces namespace-ing for all classes, so collisions haven’t happened (yet?).

Because we are turning WP content in Module content, we no longer want our themes to produce complete HTML documents: we only to produce the “content” of the page. Our Madison page layout gives us a wrapper and loads our app-specific scripts and styles. We have enough opportunities to override default template stubs to inject Blog-specific content where necessary.

In the previous incarnation of Blogs, we had to include tons of global scripts and styles. Using RequireJS, which leans on Dependency Injection, we ask for jQuery in any module and ensure that it only loads once. If we in fact do need a separate version somewhere, we can be assured that we aren’t stomping global scope, since we aren’t relying on global scope.

Using LESS imports instead of CSS file imports, we can modularize our code (even using 80 files if we want!) and combine/minify on build.

Loading WordPress in our new unconventional way lets us work with other teams and other code seamlessly. I don’t need to include the masthead/navigation markup in my theme. I don’t even need to know how it works. We can focus on making blogs work, and inherit the rest.

What I Did

For the first few months of the project, I was able to work in isolation and move the Blogs codebase from SVN to Git. I was happy that we were moving the CSS to LESS and the JS to Require/Backbone, so I took all of the old files and converted them into those modern frameworks. The Times had 3 themes that I was given free reign to rewrite and squish into one lighter, more flexible theme. Since the Times has been using WordPress since 2005, there was code from the dark ages of the internet that I was able to look at with fresh eyes and transition. Once a lot of the brute force initial work was done, I worked with a talented team of people to integrate some of the Shared components and make sure we had stylistic parity between the new Article pages and Blogs.

To see some examples in action, a sampling:

Dealbook

Bits

Well

The Lede

City Room

ArtsBeat

Public Editor’s Journal

Paul Krugman

WordPress: Autowiring Custom Post Type Metadata

The New York Times Co.

Write Less Code

I recently did a project at the New York Times, a corporate website that was highly dynamic. A lot of the front-end work was done ahead of time with dummy content. I was brought in at the end to rewrite the core logic and set up all of the dynamic pieces. EVERYTHING had to be dynamic. There were several times that I had to quickly replace a dummy HTML list with content from a collection of objects belonging to a custom post type. I didn’t want to re-invent the wheel every time I added a new post type. I wanted to write one register_post_type() call with a helper as the value for 'register_meta_box_cb'.

Here’s How

Custom post types in WordPress are really object types, much like a blog post is an instance of the Post object type. When you register a custom post type, you are really registering a new “thing” that isn’t really a “post,” it’s something else. Once you have registered this thing, you will probably use the same API as Post to interact with your data: WordPress core functions to retrieve and save your data.

By far the most annoying things about custom post types are how much code it takes to register one and how much duplicate code it takes to save arbitrary metadata. An example:

I want to create a new object called “nyt_partner” – I am going to use the title, the content, and featured image, but I also need to associate some arbitrary data with each instance of “nyt_partner”: phone number, address, twitter account, etc. I am only going to read the data (not search for it), so object (post) metadata works just fine.

Here is some example code for how one currently registers the post type, then registers the metabox to display a form for new fields, and then saves the data when the post is saved:

All that code, and all we are doing is saving a twitter field. Gross. What if our site is very custom and we are using objects all over the place? What if everything on the site needs to be editable? This code is going to bloat almost immediately, so we need to find more ways to reuse.

The first thing we need to do is use a class to contain our logic, and ditch all of the procedural code from the last example. We are going to seriously optimize this code later, but here it is as a class:

This object is better, but it can still bloat very quickly. For each post type that has custom data, you have to add a meta box in one callback, and then register the UI in another. Every time your new object is saved, you have to run it through your own save logic, which adds even more bloat. For objects that are really complex, you actually might want to create a class per type, but most of the time, the data you are saving are attributes or simple fields. It would be great if we could create a few methods to autowire the creation and saving of a field.

In the next example, we will use closures and parent scope to dramatically decrease the necessary code to register a field:

For the time being, if I need to add another post type that has one field, I can just add these lines and be done with it:

All of the magic is rolled up into the NYT_Post_Types::create_field_box() method. So, if you need to add a bunch of post types at once that only save a field, you only have to edit the init method. This works if I have only one field. If I have several, I need to add a method:

To specify the fields while registering the post type:

Another piece of magic that we wired up – you can autowire a save method for a post type (that does not use autowiring for the UI) by adding a save_{post_type} method to your class. If you create a post type called balloon, all you have to do is add a method called save_balloon to your class. Our one registered save_post callback is smart enough to call it. This is great because you don’t have to duplicate the logic to determine if the post is eligible for save.

The autowiring methods (create_field_box() and create_fields_box()) dynamically create class properties with closures, but first look for an existing method. You can’t have both. Closures actually create properties on the class, not new class methods. This makes sense because you are really decorating your object with instances of the Closure class, which is what closures are. Closures should look very familiar to you if you write JavaScript with jQuery.

Some of your custom post types will need unique method callbacks for 'register_meta_box_cb', but my bet is that MOST of them can share logic similar to what I have demonstrated above. At eMusic, we had 56 custom post types powering various parts of the site. I used similar techniques to cut down the amount of duplicated logic across the codebase.

You may not need to use these techniques if your site is simple. And note: you can’t use closures in any version of PHP before 5.3.

WordPress 3.5 + Me

WordPress 3.5 dropped today. This is a special release for me because my picture made it to the Credits and I had 30-40 of my patches committed. Here’s the full list: https://core.trac.wordpress.org/search?q=wonderboymusic&noquickjump=1&changeset=on

The hightlights:

I have 55 patches on deck for 3.6 already, excited to see what makes it! If anyone out there is thinking about contributing to core and is hesitant, don’t be. 90% of success is showing up. Be There. Subscribe to Trac. Comment on tickets. Test patches. Occasionally check in on IRC. The people who are making WordPress are there. You could be one of them.

I was just a little lad with a dream 2 years ago at my first WordCamp in NYC when I grilled Nacin and Koop about using IDs instead of classes in the CSS selectors for Twenty Ten. Koop talked to me afterward and suggested I contribute to core. My first patch was at the after-party for WordCamp San Francisco 2011 at 2am at the old Automattic space at the Pier on the Embarcadero. I got 1 patch into 3.2. 1 patch into 3.3. Zero into 3.4. And here we are.

WordPress + Regionalization

Regionalized merch, regionalized promos, regionalized blog posts, and the list goes on and on

Regionalized merch, regionalized promos, regionalized blog posts, and the list goes on and on

One of the coolest things about WordPress is that it is built from the ground up with translation tools. Many blogs want to vibe in a language other than English, and many blogs want to get their international game on and present content to people in several languages.

But what if you want to detect a user’s geographic location and display content based on their country code (“US” for USA, “FR” for France, et al) or your own regional site code (“EU” for European Union countries, for example)? This is not built-in but can be built by you if you know what you are doing. Let’s learn!

Btdubs, eMusic makes extensive use of regionalization. We have 4 regional sites: US, UK, EU, CA. We regionalize everything, so almost every database query on our site has to be subject to some filtering. We also have to intersect WP with our regionalized catalog data and in various places link them together magically.

Custom Taxonomy: Region

Creating new taxonomies in WP requires code, but adding terms to that taxonomy can be done by anyone in the admin. Let’s get the code out of the way:

/**
 * Shortcut function for assigning Labels to a custom taxonomy
 *
 * @param string $term
 * @param string $plural If not specified, "s" is added to the end of $term
 * @return array Labels for use by the custom taxonomy
 *
 */
function emusic_tax_inflection( $str = '', $plural = '' ) {
    $p = strlen( $plural ) ? $plural : $str . 's';

    return array(
        'name'              => _x( $p, 'taxonomy general name' ),
        'singular_name'     => _x( $str, 'taxonomy singular name' ),
        'search_items'      => __( 'Search ' . $p ),
        'all_items'         => __( 'All ' . $p ),
        'parent_item'       => __( 'Parent ' . $str ),
        'parent_item_colon' => __( 'Parent ' . $str . ':' ),
        'edit_item'         => __( 'Edit ' . $str ),
        'update_item'       => __( 'Update ' . $str ),
        'add_new_item'      => __( 'Add New ' . $str ),
        'new_item_name'     => __( 'New ' . $str . ' Name' ),
        'menu_name'         => __( $p ),
    );
}

$post_types = get_post_types( array( 'exclude_from_search' => false, '_builtin' => false ) );

$defaults = array(
    'hierarchical'      => true,
    'public'            => true,
    'show_ui'           => true,
    '_builtin'          => true,
    'show_in_nav_menus' => false,
    'query_var'         => true,
    'rewrite'           => false
);

register_taxonomy( 'region', $post_types, wp_parse_args( array(
    'labels' => emusic_tax_inflection( 'Region' )
), $defaults ) );

Because we load a bunch of custom taxonomies, this code helps us stay modular. But yes, this is the amount of code required if you only have one taxonomy!

All you *really* need to know is: we made a hierarchical taxonomy. It’s called region. We are now going to use it EVERYWHERE.

Boom

So now that we have a taxonomy for region, we want to be able to assign region(s) to posts.

Sorting

We also want to view the region in the posts list table. We can add custom columns to the posts table and make the region column sortable. We need some more code for that:

class CustomClassNamedWhatever {

.......

/**
 * Filters for Admin
 *
 */
function admin() {
    add_filter( 'manage_posts_columns', array( $this, 'manage_columns' ) );
    add_action( 'manage_posts_custom_column', array( $this, 'manage_custom_column' ), 10, 2 );
    add_filter( 'posts_clauses', array( $this, 'clauses' ), 10, 2 );

	// this is an internal method that gives me an array of relevant post types
    foreach ( $this->get_post_types( false ) as $t ) {
        add_filter( "manage_edit-{$t}_sortable_columns", array( $this, 'sortables' ) );
    }
}

/**
 * Register sortable columns
 *
 * @param array $columns
 * @return array
 */
function sortables( $columns ) {
    $post_type_obj = get_post_type();

    if ( is_object_in_taxonomy( $post_type_obj, 'region' ) )
	$columns['region'] = 'region';

    return $columns;
}

/**
 * Add custom column headers
 *
 * @param array $defaults
 * @return array
 */
function manage_columns( $columns ) {
    $columns['region'] = __( 'Region' );
    return $columns;
}

/**
 * Output terms for post in tax
 *
 * @param int $id
 * @param string $tax
 */
function _list_terms( $id, $tax ) {
    $terms = wp_get_object_terms( $id, $tax, array( 'fields' => 'names' ) );
    if ( ! empty( $terms ) )
        echo join( ', ', $terms );
}
/**
 * Output custom HTML for custom column row
 *
 * @param string $column
 * @param int $id
 */
function manage_custom_column( $column, $post_id ) {
    if ( 'region' === $column )
	$this->_list_terms( $id, $column );
}

/**
 * Filter SQL with this monstrosity for sorting
 *
 * @global hyperdb $wpdb
 * @param array $clauses
 * @param WP_Query $wp_query
 * @return array
 *
 * TODO: fix this
 */
function clauses( $clauses, $wp_query ) {
    global $wpdb;

    if ( isset( $wp_query->query['orderby'] ) &&
        'region' === $wp_query->query['orderby'] ) {
        $tax = $wp_query->query['orderby'];

        $clauses['join'] .= <<term_relationships} ON {$wpdb->posts}.ID={$wpdb->term_relationships}.object_id
LEFT OUTER JOIN {$wpdb->term_taxonomy} USING (term_taxonomy_id)
LEFT OUTER JOIN {$wpdb->terms} USING (term_id)
SQL;

        $clauses['where'] .= " AND (taxonomy = '{$tax}' OR taxonomy IS NULL)";
        $clauses['groupby'] = "object_id";
        $clauses['orderby']  = "GROUP_CONCAT({$wpdb->terms}.name ORDER BY name ASC) ";
        $clauses['orderby'] .= ( 'ASC' == strtoupper( $wp_query->get('order') ) ) ? 'ASC' : 'DESC';
    }

    return $clauses;
}

........

}

After all of that, we can sort our posts by region:

Sorting

If you’re new to WordPress, you may have just barfed. Just know that we added relevant code to make the Region column sortable. Meanwhile, we still haven’t done anything to make our site regionalized. If we let WordPress just do its thing, you would still get content from every region, not to the one you are specifically targeting.

Geolocation

We have very specific values we check to regionalize users. If you’re anonymous, we get an X-Akamai-Edgescape HTTP header that can parsed, and it contains a value for “country_code.” Based on that country code, we can assign you to a region. Anybody with a debug console can probably view this header in their eMusic requests. If you’re logged-in or “cookied” – we pin you to your original country code.

At the end of the day, we want to be able to set some constants:

/**
 * Register default constants
 *
 */
if ( ! defined( 'THE_COUNTRY' ) )
    define( 'THE_COUNTRY', get_country_code() );

if ( ! defined( 'THE_REGION' ) )
    define( 'THE_REGION', get_region() );

if ( ! defined( 'CURRENCY_SYMBOL' ) ) {
    global $currency_symbol_map;
    if ( isset( $currency_symbol_map[THE_REGION] ) ) {
	define( 'CURRENCY_SYMBOL', $currency_symbol_map[THE_REGION] );
    } else {
	define( 'CURRENCY_SYMBOL', $currency_symbol_map['US'] );
    }
}

get_country_code() and get_region() are very specific to eMusic, so I won’t bore you with them, but they both return a 2-character-uppercase value for country or region, “US” and “US” for example. Now, anywhere in our code where we need to refer to region or country, THE_REGION and THE_COUNTRY will do it.

Linking Region to Taxonomy

Ok cool, we have a taxonomy, and we have some vague representation of region / country defined as constants. We still don’t have regionalized content. One way we could link region to taxonomy terms would be to make a map and refer to it when necessary:

$regions_map = array(
    'US' => 3,
    'UK' => 6,
    'CA' => 9,
    'EU' => 11,
);

This method sucks. Why? Are those IDs term_ids or term_taxonomy_ids? What if they change? Also, grabbing a PHP global every time you need to translate region code to term_id is weird. How else can we get the terms belonging to the region taxonomy? Let’s try this database call which is cached in memory after the first time it is retrieved:

get_terms( 'region' );

That’s great, but what do I do with it? Because your Region codes are also the names of your region terms, you could dynamically create your map like this:

$map = array();
foreach ( $terms as $term )
    $map[$term->name] = $term->term_taxonomy_id;

Next question: where do I set this, and how do I account for crazy stuff like switch_to_blog()? Try this:

/**
 * Automatically resets regions_tax_map on switch_to_blog()
 * Because we switch_to_blog() in sunrise.php, this function is
 * called when plugins_loaded to create initial values
 *
 * @param int $blog_id
 *
 */
function set_regions_tax_map( $blog_id = 0 ) {
     if ( ! isset( get_emusic()->regions_tax_maps ) )
	get_emusic()->regions_tax_maps = array();

     if ( ! taxonomy_exists( 'region' ) )
	return;

     if ( empty( $blog_id ) )
	$blog_id = get_current_blog_id();

     if ( isset( get_emusic()->regions_tax_maps[$blog_id] ) ) {
	get_emusic()->regions_tax_map = get_emusic()->regions_tax_maps[$blog_id];
	return;
    }

    $terms = get_terms( 'region' );

    $map = array();
    foreach ( $terms as $term )
	$map[$term->name] = $term->term_taxonomy_id;

    get_emusic()->regions_tax_maps[$blog_id] = $map;
    get_emusic()->regions_tax_map = get_emusic()->regions_tax_maps[$blog_id];
}

/**
 * The initial setting of $emusic->regions_tax_map on load
 *
 */
add_action( 'init', 'set_regions_tax_map', 20 );
/**
 * Resets context on switch to blog
 *
 */
add_action( 'switch_blog', 'set_regions_tax_map' );

STILL, we don’t have regionalized content, we just have a standard way of mapping region code to term_taxonomy_ids. So why do I care about the IDs? Because we have to use them to alter our default WP queries so that posts only intersect the region of the current user.

Tax Query

Tax Query is an advanced way of altering WP_Query. If you load a page of WP posts, you ran WP_Query. A developer can make their own instances of WP_Query or alter the global one. We need to alter the global one and we don’t want to ever use query_posts to do that. The first thing we need to do is retrieve our map of Term Name => Term Taxonomy ID:

/**
 * Gets a map of region name => term_taxonomy_id
 *
 * @return array
 */
function get_current_regions_tax_map() {
    return get_emusic()->regions_tax_map;
}

Now that we have that, we want to use it in the tax query that we are going to inject into WP_Query. One step at a time, here’s the tax_query portion, encapsulated in a function that always returns the proper context:

/**
 * Encapsulates common code to create a regionalized tax_query
 *
 * e.g. $tax_query = array( get_region_tax_query() );
 *
 * @param int $region
 * @param int $all
 * @return array
 */
function get_region_tax_query( $region = '', $all = true ) {
	$regions_tax_map = get_current_regions_tax_map();
	if ( empty( $regions_tax_map ) )
		return;

	$terms = array();
	$terms[] = $regions_tax_map[ empty( $region ) ? THE_REGION : strtoupper( $region ) ];
	if ( true === $all )
		$terms[] = $regions_tax_map['ALL'];

	$tax_query = array(
		'operator'		=> 'IN',
		'taxonomy'		=> 'region',
		'field'			=> 'term_taxonomy_id',
		'terms'			=> $terms,
		'include_children'	=> false
	);

	return $tax_query;
}

Being able to query by term_taxonomy_id is important, because it is the primary key for the term / taxonomy relationship. If I had passed term_ids, they would need to be translated into term_taxonomy_ids by WP_Tax_Query before WP_Query could complete its logic. I helped nurse this new functionality along in WordPress core (3.5): https://core.trac.wordpress.org/ticket/21228

Ok cool, we have the tax_query portion, but we haven’t applied it to the global WP_Query yet, let’s do that next.

“pre_get_posts”

Here is what you may use in your theme or plugin to apply regionalization to WP_Query. The best place to hook in is “pre_get_posts.” In this hook, we can directly alter the query:

class MyAwesomeExampleThemeClass {

.....

protected function regionalize() {
    add_filter( 'pre_get_posts', array( $this, 'pre_posts' ) );
}

/**
 *
 * @param WP_Query $query
 * @return WP_Query
 */
function pre_posts( $query ) {
    if ( $query->is_main_query() && ! is_admin() && ( is_archive() || is_front_page() || is_search() ) ) {
        if ( ! $query->is_post_type_archive() )
            $query->set( 'post_type', $this->post_types );

        $query->set( 'tax_query', array( get_region_tax_query() ) );

        $query = apply_filters( 'emusic_pre_get_posts', $query );
    }
    return $query;
}

....

}

The above will regionalize posts in search results and on archive pages. If you want to alter a query inline, now all you have to do is something like this:

$results = new WP_Query( array(
    'tax_query'	=> array( get_region_tax_query() ),
    'orderby' => 'comment_count',
    'order' => 'DESC',
    'posts_per_page'=> $limit
) );

In Action

View eMusic in multiple regions:

From the US
From France in the EU
From Canada (CA)
From Great Britain, mate (UK)

Installing PHP 5.4 (like a boss) with MacPorts

PHP 5.4.7 is the latest stable release of PHP. WordPress has a minimum required version of 5.2.6. Most developers aren’t using the PHP 5.4 branch. Actually, most aren’t even rocking PHP 5.3. This disgusts me.

PHP 5.3 added support for closures. If you come from the world of JavaScript, you know how useful they can be. If you have used PHP 5.3 and closures in classes, you will be happy to know that PHP 5.4 allows you to use $this in closures in class methods.

If you haven’t messed around with PHP 5.3, you can install these MacPorts to get started:

php5 +apache2+fastcgi+pear
php5-apc
php5-curl
php5-gd
php5-http
php5-iconv
php5-imagick
php5-mbstring
php5-mcrypt
php5-memcached
php5-mysql +mysqlnd
php5-openssl
php5-tidy

If you already have PHP 5.3 and want to upgrade to PHP 5.4, these are some tricks to get you on the right path:

sudo -s // use sudo mode throughout

port uninstall php5
// won't work if you have extensions installed,
// so uninstall everything that has PHP5 as a dependency first

port install php54
cd /opt/local/etc/php54 && sudo cp php.ini-development php.ini

Install a bunch of PHP extensions:

port install php54-apc php54-curl php54-gd php54-http php54-iconv php54-imagick php54-mbstring php54-mcrypt php54-memcached php54-mysql php54-openssl php54-tidy

To use mysqlnd with a local MySQL server, edit /opt/local/etc/php54/php.ini and set

mysql.default_socket, mysqli.default_socket and pdo_mysql.default_socket
to

/opt/local/var/run/mysql5/mysqld.sock

Make sure PHP 5.4.6 is the default PHP binary:

which php

If it’s something like /usr/bin/php:

cd /usr/bin && sudo rm -rf php
sudo ln -s /opt/local/bin/php54 php

You now have PHP 5.4.6 and your extensions, but you no longer have the apache variant.

port install php54-apache2handler

cd /opt/local/apache2/modules
sudo /opt/local/apache2/bin/apxs -a -e -n php5 mod_php54.so

vi /opt/local/apache2/conf/httpd.conf (remove the old php5.so)

You now have PHP 5.4 and the apache handler, but you no longer have the PEAR variant. You can try to make this work:

port install pear-PEAR

Or you can do the following:

cd #
curl http://pear.php.net/go-pear.phar -o go-pear.phar
sudo php go-pear.phar

You will prompted to specify config vars, we want to change #1 and #4.

Press 1 – Installation base ($prefix) – and enter:

/opt/local/lib/php54

Press 4 – Binaries directory – and enter:

/opt/local/bin

More checks for PEAR:

pear info pear && rm go-pear.phar
pear config-set auto_discover 1

// make sure PEAR is in the PHP include path
pear config-get php_dir

// if you don't see "/opt/local/lib/php54/share/pear" in there
php54 -i|grep 'php.ini'
// you should see "/opt/local/etc/php54" - if you don't:
sudo vi php.ini
// change include_path to:
include_path = ".:/opt/local/lib/php54/share/pear"

PEAR is installed, let’s install some PEAR stuffs:

// Unit tests
pear install pear.phpunit.de/PHPUnit
// Documentation generator
pear install pear.apigen.org/apigen

Restart Apache:

sudo /opt/local/apache2/bin/apachectl restart

You can start Apache and Memcached, et al by using commands like:

sudo port load apache2
sudo port unload apache2

sudo port load memcached
sudo port unload memcached

// memcached debugging, start with:
memcached -vv

WP + You + OOP

A lot of the programming associated with WordPress is inherently not object-oriented. Most of the theme mods or plugins that developers write for their blog(s) are one-off functions here or there, or a small set of filters and actions with associated callback functions. As WordPress matures into an “application framework” (everyone else’s words, not mine), the need for better code organization, greater maintainability, and the self-documenting powers of Object Oriented Programming become immediately apparent.

Because a majority of WordPress sites aren’t complex, the audience for discussions like this are small. Probably 99% of WordPress installs don’t need extra PHP code for them to work how their site owner(s) want. A majority of sites don’t use Multisite. A majority of sites have no need for Web Services, and when they do: they just install some Twitter widget or the like that does the heavy lifting for them. But I don’t think anyone involved with WordPress core wants that to be the future of WordPress. When people talk about the future of WordPress, they talk about how it can run any web application, but there aren’t a large number of compelling examples of WP doing that yet.

Almost by accident, I think eMusic has become a great example of how to not only run WordPress at scale, but how to write a site using WordPress as an application framework, and I have many examples of how we organize our code that can help anyone else who is struggling to make sense of a pile of code that an entire team needs to decipher and maintain.

Before we dig into how to write better OO code, we need to first figure out how we are going to organize our codebase.

Some Setups Tips

  • Run WordPress as an svn:external: This should almost be mandatory. You want your directory structure to look like so:
    /index.php
    /wp-config.php
    /wordpress
    /wp-content
    /wp-content/themes
    /wp-content/plugins
    /wp-content/mu-plugins
    /wp-content/requests
    /wp-content/site-configs
    /wp-content/sunrise.php
    
    // in the root of your site
    svn propedit svn:externals .
    
    // add this code
    wordpress http://core.svn.wordpress.org/branches/3.4/

    This is important so that you never overwrite core, and so you can’t check-in whatever hacks you have added while debugging core code.

    Because we are using an external, you need to add these lines to wp-config.php:

    define( 'WP_CONTENT_URL', 'http://' . DOMAIN_CURRENT_SITE . '/wp-content' );
    define( 'WP_CONTENT_DIR', $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'] . '/wp-content' );

    You also need to alter index.php to look like this:

    define( 'WP_USE_THEMES', true );
    
    /** Loads the WordPress Environment and Template */
    require( './wordpress/wp-blog-header.php' );
  • Use Sunrise:
    If you are using Multisite, Sunrise is the best super-early place to hook in and alter WordPress. In wp-config.php:

    define( 'SUNRISE', 1 );

    You then need to a file in wp-content called sunrise.php.

  • Use Site Configs:
    One of the main things we use sunrise.php for is site-specific configuration code. I made a folder in wp-content called site-configs that houses files like global.php (all sites), emusic.php (site #1), emusic-bbpress.php (site #2), etc
  • Separate HTTP Requests:
    I made a folder in wp-config called requests that houses site and page-specific HTTP logic. Because a big portion of our main site is dynamic and populates its data from Web Services, it makes sense to organize all of that logic in one place.
  • Use “Must Use” plugins:
    If you have classes or code that are mandatory for your application, you can autoload them by simply placing each file in your wp-content/mu-plugins folder. If your plugin requires a bunch of extra files: it is not a good candidate for mu-plugins.

Use classes to encapsulate plugins and theme configs

MOST plugins in the WordPress plugin repository are written using procedural code – meaning, a bunch of function and global variables (whadup, Akismet!). Hopefully you know enough about programming to know that is a bad idea. 1) Global variables suck and are easily over-writable and 2) PHP will throw a fatal error if you try to overload a function (declare a function with the same name twice).

Because you have to protect your function names against this, most procedural plugin authors namespace their functions by prepending an identifier to their function names:

function my_unique_plugin_name_woo_hoo( ) {
    return 'whatever';
}
// call me maybe
my_unique_plugin_name_woo_hoo( );

If you declare a bunch of function callbacks for actions and filters in your plugin, you can see how this would be gross:

function my_unique_plugin_name_alter_the_content() { ... }
add_filter( 'the_content', 'my_unique_plugin_name_alter_the_content' );

function my_unique_plugin_name_red() { ... }
add_filter( 'the_content', 'my_unique_plugin_name_red' );

function my_unique_plugin_name_green() { ... }
add_filter( 'the_content', 'my_unique_plugin_name_green' );

function my_unique_plugin_name_blue() { ... }
add_filter( 'the_content', 'my_unique_plugin_name_blue' );

If we instead use an OO approach, we can add all of our functions to a class as methods, ditch the namespacing, and group our filters and actions together into one “init” method.

class MyUniquePlugin {
    function init() {
        add_filter( 'the_content', array( $this, 'alter_the_content' ) );
        add_filter( 'the_content', array( $this, 'red' ) );
        add_filter( 'the_content', array( $this, 'green' ) );
        add_filter( 'the_content', array( $this, 'blue' ) );
    }

    function alter_the_content() { ... }
    function red() { ... }
    function green() { ... }
    function blue() { ... }
}

How we call this class is up for debate, and I will discuss this at length later. But for right now, let’s call it like this:

$my_unique_plugin = new MyUniquePlugin;
$my_unique_plugin->init();

The init method is used like a constructor, but it ditches any ambiguity between __construct() and class MyPlugin { function MyPlugin() {} }. Could you use __construct() in any of my examples throughout instead of init() now that we are all in PHP5 syntax heaven? Probably. However, we don’t really want to use either, because we don’t want to give anyone the impression that our plugin classes can be called at will. In almost every situation, plugin classes should only be called once, and this rule should be enforced in code. I’ll show you how.

The Singleton Pattern

The Singleton Pattern is one of the GoF (Gang of Four) Patterns. This particular pattern provides a method for limiting the number of instances of an object to just one.

class MySingletonClass {
    private static $instance;
    private function __construct() {}
    public static function get_instance() {
        if ( !isset( self::$instance ) )
            self::$instance = new MySingletonClass();

        return self::$instance;
    }
}

MySingletonClass::get_instance();

Why do we care about limiting the number of instances to one? Think about a class that encapsulates code used to connect to a database. If the database connection is made in the constructor, we should share that connection across all instances of the class, we shouldn’t try to open a connection every time we need to make a SQL query.

For WordPress plugin classes, we want to store all of our actions and filters in a constructor or a class’s init() method. We don’t want to register those filters and actions more than once. We also don’t need or want multiple instances of our plugin class. This makes a plugin class a perfect candidate to implement the Singleton pattern.

class MyUniquePlugin {
    private static $instance;
    private function __construct() {}
    public static function get_instance() {
        if ( !isset( self::$instance ) ) {
            $c = __CLASS__;
            self::$instance = new $c();
        }

        return self::$instance;
    }

    function init() {
        add_filter( 'the_content', array( $this, 'alter_the_content' ) );
        add_filter( 'the_content', array( $this, 'red' ) );
        add_filter( 'the_content', array( $this, 'green' ) );
        add_filter( 'the_content', array( $this, 'blue' ) );
    }

    function alter_the_content() { ... }
    function red() { ... }
    function green() { ... }
    function blue() { ... }
}

MyUniquePlugin::get_instance();

// or, store the value of the class invocation
// to call public methods later
$my_plugin = MyUniquePlugin::get_instance();

Ok, so great, we implemented Singleton and limited our plugin to only one instance. We want to do this for all of our plugins, but it would be great if there was a way to not repeat code in every plugin, namely all of the class members / methods needed to implement Singleton:

    private static $instance;
    private function __construct() {}
    public static function get_instance() {
        if ( !isset( self::$instance ) ) {
            $c = __CLASS__;
            self::$instance = new $c();
        }

        return self::$instance;
    }

To do so, we are going to need a base or intermediate class that can be extended. Here is a base class, but we have a few problems:

class BaseSingleton {
    // this won't work, since $instance will get overwritten
    // every time BaseSingleton is instantiated by a sub-class
    private static $instance;

    // this won't work, because the child class
    // needs to be able to call parent::__construct,
    // meaning the parent constructor has to be as visible
    // as the child - the child has to have >= visibility
    private function __construct() {}

    public static function get_instance() {
        if ( !isset( self::$instance ) ) {
            // this won't work, because __CLASS__ refers
            // to BaseSingleton,
            // not the class extending it at runtime
            $c = __CLASS__;
            self::$instance = new $c();
        }

        return self::$instance;
    }
}

Let’s try to fix is:

class BaseSingleton {
    // store __CLASS__ = (instance of class) as key => value pairs
    private static $instance = array();

    // let the extending class call the constructor
    protected function __construct() {}

    public static function get_instance( $c = '' ) {
        if ( empty( $c ) ) 
            die( 'Class name is required' );
        if ( !isset( self::$instance[$c] ) )
            self::$instance[$c] = new $c();

        return self::$instance[$c];
    }
}

We’re getting closer, but we have some work to do. We are going to use OO features of PHP and some new stuff in PHP 5.3 to make a base class that implements Singleton and works the way we want (we don’t want to do this hack: ClassName::get_instance( 'ClassName' ) ).

Abstract Classes

Abstract classes are kinda like Interfaces:

Classes defined as abstract may not be instantiated, and any class that contains at least one abstract method must also be abstract. Methods defined as abstract simply declare the method’s signature – they cannot define the implementation.

When inheriting from an abstract class, all methods marked abstract in the parent’s class declaration must be defined by the child; additionally, these methods must be defined with the same (or a less restricted) visibility.

Here’s an example:

abstract class BaseClass {
    protected function __construct() {}
    abstract public function init();
}

As we can see, BaseClass does nothing except provide a blueprint for how to write our extending class. Let’s alter it by adding our Singleton code:

abstract class BasePlugin {
    private static $instance = array();
    protected function __construct() {}

    public static function get_instance( $c = '' ) {
        if ( empty( $c ) ) 
            die( 'Class name is required' );
        if ( !isset( self::$instance[$c] ) )
            self::$instance[$c] = new $c();

        return self::$instance[$c];
    }

    abstract public function init(); 
}

Our base class now has the following properties:

  • Declared abstract, cannot be called directly
  • Encapsulates Singleton code
  • Stores class instances in key => value pairs (we’re not done with this)
  • Instructs the extending / child class to define an init() method
  • Hides the constructor, can only be called by itself or a child class

Here’s an example of a plugin extending BasePlugin:

class MyPlugin extends BasePlugin {
    protected function __construct() {
        // our parent class might
        // contain shared code in its constructor
        parent::__construct();
    }

    public function init() {
        // implemented, but does nothing
    }
}
// create the lone instance
MyPlugin::get_instance( 'MyPlugin' );

// store the instance in a variable to be retrieved later:
$my_plugin = MyPlugin::get_instance( 'MyPlugin' );

Here’s is what is happening:

  • MyPlugin is extending BasePlugin, inheriting all of its qualities
  • MyPlugin implements the required abstract function init()
  • MyPlugin cannot be instantiated with the new keyword, the constructor is protected
  • MyPlugin is instantiated with a static method, but because an instance is created, $this can be used throughout its methods

We’re almost done, but we want to call get_instance() without our hack (passing the class name).

Late Static Binding in PHP 5.3

get_called_class() is a function in PHP 5.3 that will give us the name of the child class that is calling a parent class’s method at runtime. The class name will not be resolved using the class where the method is defined but it will rather be computed using runtime information. It is also called a “static binding” as it can be used for (but is not limited to) static method calls.

Here’s an easy example to explain how this works:

class A {
    public static function name() {
        echo get_called_class();
    }
}

class B extends A {}

Class C extends B {}

C::name(); // outputs "C"

get_called_class() is new to PHP 5.3. WordPress only requires PHP 5.2, so you might need to upgrade to be able to implement this class like so:

abstract class BasePlugin {
    private static $instance = array();
    protected function __construct() {}
    public static function get_instance() {
        $c = get_called_class();
        if ( !isset( self::$instance[$c] ) ) {
            self::$instance[$c] = new $c();
            self::$instance[$c]->init();
        }

        return self::$instance[$c];
    }

    abstract public function init();
}

Now we can instantiate our plugin like so:

// create the lone instance
MyPlugin::get_instance();

// store the instance in a variable to be retrieved later:
$my_plugin = MyPlugin::get_instance();

Base Classes for Plugins and Themes

Just like it says: USE BASE CLASSES for plugins AND themes. If you aren’t using Multisite, you probably don’t have the problem of maintaining code across parent and child themes that might be shared for multiple sites. Each theme has a functions.php file, and that file, in my opinion, should encapsulate your theme config code (actions and filters, etc) in a class. Parent and Child themes are similar to base and sub classes.

Because we don’t want to repeat ourselves, code that would be copied / pasted into another theme to inherit functionality should instead be placed in a BaseTheme class. Our theme config classes should also implement Singleton.

One of the pieces of functionality we need to share across themes at eMusic is regionalization. Regionalization is accomplished by using a custom taxonomy “region” and some custom actions and filters. For a theme to be regionalized, it needs to override some class members and call BaseTheme::regionalize().

Here’s part of our BaseTheme class:

abstract class BaseTheme implements Singleton {
    var $regions_map;
    var $regions_tax_map;
    var $post_types = array( 'post' );

    private static $instance = array();

    public static function get_instance() {
        $c = get_called_class();
        if ( !isset( self::$instance[$c] ) ) {
            self::$instance[$c] = new $c();
            self::$instance[$c]->init();
        }

        return self::$instance[$c];
    }

    protected function __construct() {}
    abstract protected function init();

    protected function regionalize() {
	add_filter( 'manage_posts_columns', array( $this, 'manage_columns' ) );
	add_action( 'manage_posts_custom_column', array( $this, 'manage_custom_column' ), 10, 2 );
	add_filter( 'posts_clauses', array( $this, 'clauses' ), 10, 2 );
	add_filter( 'manage_edit-post_sortable_columns',array( $this, 'sortables' ) );
	add_filter( 'pre_get_posts', array( $this, 'pre_posts' ) );
    }

    ...
}

Here is a theme extending it in its functions.php file:

if ( ! isset( $content_width ) )
    $content_width = 448;

class Theme_17Dots extends BaseTheme {
    function __construct() {
        global $dots_regions_tax_map, $dots_regions_map;

        $this->regions_map = $dots_regions_map;
        $this->regions_tax_map = $dots_regions_tax_map;

        parent::__construct();
    }

    function init() {
        $this->regionalize();

        add_action( 'init', array( $this, 'register' ) );
        add_action( 'after_setup_theme', array( $this, 'setup' ) );
        add_action( 'add_meta_boxes_post', array( $this, 'boxes' ) );
        add_action( 'save_post', array( $this, 'save' ), 10, 2 );
        add_filter( 'embed_oembed_html', '_feature_youtube_add_wmode' );
    }

    ....
}

“Must Use” Plugins

Let’s assume we stored our BaseTheme and BasePlugin classes in files called class-base-theme.php and class-base-plugin.php. The next question is: where should these  files go? Probably the best place for them to go is wp-content/mu-plugins. The WordPress bootstrap routine will load files in that directory automatically. Because our BaseTheme class is not immediately invoked within the file, the loading of the file just makes the class available for our theme child class in functions.php to extend.

Sunrise

sunrise.php can be viewed as a functions.php for your whole network. Aside from letting you switch the context of $current_blog and $current_site, you can also start adding actions and filters.

In the eMusic sunrise.php, I take this opportunity to load “site configs,” mainly to filter which plugins are going to load for which site, and which plugins will load for the entire network of sites (plugins that load for every site). To accomplish this, we need a “global” config and then a config for each site like so:

require_once( 'site-configs/global.php' );

if ( get_current_blog_id() > 1 ) {
    switch ( get_current_blog_id() ) {
    case 2:
        require_once( 'site-configs/bbpress.php' );
	break;

    case 3:
        require_once( 'site-configs/dots.php' );
	break;

     case 5:
        require_once( 'site-configs/support.php' );
	break;
    }

    add_filter( 'pre_option_template', function () {
	return 'dark';
    } );
} else {
    require_once( 'site-configs/emusic.php' );
}

Site Configs

In our global site config, we want to filter our active network plugins. As I have said in previous posts and presentations, relying on active plugins being correct in the database is dangerous and hard to keep in sync across environments.

We can filter active network plugins by filtering the active_sitewide_plugins site option:

add_filter( 'pre_site_option_active_sitewide_plugins', function () {
    return array(
        'batcache/batcache.php'                         => 1,
        'akismet/akismet.php'                           => 1,
        'avatar/avatar.php'                             => 1,
        'bundle/bundle.php'                             => 1,
        'cloud/cloud.php'                               => 1,
        'download/download.php'                         => 1,
        'emusic-notifications/emusic-notifications.php' => 1,
        'emusic-ratings/emusic-ratings.php'             => 1,
        'emusic-xml-rpc/emusic-xml-rpc.php'             => 1,
        'johnny-cache/johnny-cache.php'                 => 1,
        'like-buttons/like-buttons.php'                 => 1,
        'members/members.php'                           => 1,
        'minify/minify.php'                             => 1,
        'movies/movies.php'                             => 1,
        'shuffle/shuffle.php'                           => 1,
        'apc-admin/apc-admin.php'                       => 1,
        //'debug-bar/debug-bar.php'                     => 1
    );
} );

Filtering plugins in this manner allows to do 2 main things:

  • We can turn plugins on and off by commenting / uncommenting
  • We can visually see what our base set of plugins is for our network without going to the admin or the database

We have a lot of other things in site-configs/global.php, but I mainly want to demonstrate how we can load classes in an organized manner. In a site-specific config, we will filter what plugins are active for that site only.

For the main eMusic theme, we use these plugins:

add_filter( 'pre_option_active_plugins', function () {
    return array(
        'artist-images/artist-images.php',
        'catalog-comments/catalog-comments.php',
        'emusic-post-types/emusic-post-types.php',
        'discography.php',
        'emusic-radio/emusic-radio.php',
        'gravityforms/gravityforms.php',
        'super-ghetto/super-ghetto.php'
        //,'theme-check/theme-check.php'
    );
} );

This is just another example of us not repeating ourselves. When we think about everything in an object-oriented manner, everything can be cleaner and more organized.

HTTP Requests

Another area where we need to organize our code is around HTTP requests. We have “pages” in WordPress that aren’t populated via content from the database, but from a combination of Web Service calls based on request variables.

We use the following files:

// base class
/wp-content/mu-plugins/request.php

// extended by theme classes implementing the Factory pattern
// "dark" is a theme
/wp-content/requests/dark.php

// the theme class, where applicable,
// loads a request class when required by a certain page
/wp-content/requests/home.php
/wp-content/requests/album.php
/wp-content/requests/artist.php
... etc ...

As an example, an album page loads AlbumRequest:

class AlbumRequest extends RequestMap { ... }
class RequestMap extends API { ... }

// the API class implements CURL
class API {}

// CURL implements the cURL PHP extension, curl_multi(), etc
class CURL {}

Our organization of HTTP files is example of OO principles in action, and includes ways to organize our codebase in a way that is not specified by WordPress out of the box.

This is also an example of the self-documenting nature of object-oriented programming. Rather than show you each line of AlbumRequest, we can assume that it deals with requests specific to the Album page, inheriting functionality from RequestMap, which calls methods available in API, which at its core is implementing cURL.

Conclusion

Hopefully after reading all of this, you can clearly see some of the benefits of organizing your code in an object-oriented manner. The basics of OOP are outside the scope of this post but are essential for all developers to learn, especially those who work on teams whose members have varying degrees of skill.

Organized and readable code is essential, and the patterns available to us from the history of computer programming so far should be used to help get it there.

A few notes on bbPress

I have been spending a lot of time off and on the past week creating a bbPress (message boards, or “forum software,” or “bulletin board”) theme for eMusic. Theming is fun because you get to touch almost every feature of the product, bbPress and/or WordPress. In the midst of this, I’ve been discovering how bbPress does things and making some modifications along the way. Those mods may only exist in eMusic and never make it into bbPress, but I have shared ideas with JJJ so I figured I would share them here as well for anyone to check out and supply feedback.

Queries within Queries with Queries

bbPress abstracts almost everything. For most WordPress-y things, there is a bbPress-y thing. One thing that will immediately confuse and potentially wreak havoc is the way “topics” are queried. Because the default WordPress query is the page or custom post type you are on, the topics for a forum are queried using a second mechanism: bbp_has_topics( ), which upon success, returns a WP_Query object.

That’s all well and good, but at any given time, there is only 1 bbPress query and no hardened reference to the original query. If you are using the default theme or just modifying its presentation, you probably don’t care. If you are implementing a design that has multiple “topics” queries, you are kinda up shit’s creek unless you roll your own code. The template tags / functions provided by bbPress will work to an extent, but they will also shift bbPress’s entire context every time you call bbp_has_topics( ).

The solution espoused to me was to roll my own WP_Query objects to replicate what bbPress is doing in the background, but I don’t want to do that. I want to use bbPress functions and fix whatever context is set along the way when necessary. WordPress maintains state and stores the main query by using $wp_the_query and $wp_query, for the main query and then the current query, respectively. bbPress clobbers $bbp->topic_query every time bbp_has_topics( ) is run. bbPress is treating bbp_has_topics( ) like query_posts( ) in WordPress, not like new WP_Query( ). Ask Nacin how he feels about query_posts( ).

bbPress makes an attempt to provide query context by providing the function bbp_set_query_name( $name )

Guess what it does internally… basically nothing. So I wanted to fix this, here’s some code I am using:

global $emusic_the_bbp_query;
$emusic_the_bbp_query = array();
function emusic_set_bbp_query( $name = 'main', $params = array() ) {
    global $emusic_the_bbp_query;
    $bbp = bbpress();

    bbp_set_query_name( $name );

    if ( !empty( $bbp->topic_query ) && empty( $emusic_the_bbp_query ) )
        $emusic_the_bbp_query['main'] = $bbp->topic_query;

    if ( !empty( $name ) && isset( $emusic_the_bbp_query[$name] ) ) {
        $bbp->topic_query = $emusic_the_bbp_query[$name];
        return $bbp->topic_query;
    }

    if ( !empty( $params ) ) {
        bbp_has_topics( $params );
        $emusic_the_bbp_query[$name] = $bbp->topic_query;
        return $bbp->topic_query;
    }
}

function emusic_reset_bbp_query() {
    global $emusic_the_bbp_query;
    $bbp = bbpress();
    $bbp->topic_query = $emusic_the_bbp_query['main'];
    bbp_set_query_name();
}

My code does a few things:

  • Sets $emusic_the_bbp_query whenever you start to change context the first time
  • Always allows you to retrieve the default context when you are done with a sub-query for topics
  • Non-persistently caches topic queries by name

So where’s my use case? I want to show a “snapshot” of your subscribed-to topics, favorite topics, popular topics, and super-sticky topics in the sidebar on every page, and I want to reuse theme code (template parts) to do so. Imagine calling query_posts( ) 5 times in a template on the WordPress side…

Could I have accomplished this with WP_Query? Yeah, but… I want to use the bbPress stuff. So here’s what I do:

<?php if ( is_user_logged_in() ):   ?>
<div class="meta-block">
    <h3>Your Topics</h3>
    <span class="double-line-narrow"></span>
    <?php
    if ( bbp_is_subscriptions_active() ) : ?>
        <h4 class="sub-head">
            Subscribed
            <a class="aux" href="<?php bbp_user_profile_url( get_current_user_id() ) ?>">view all</a>
        </h4>
        <span class="double-line-narrow"></span>
        <?php
        $subscriptions = bbp_get_user_subscribed_topic_ids( get_current_user_id() );
        if ( !empty( $subscriptions ) ):
            emusic_set_bbp_query( 'bbp_user_profile_subscriptions', array( 'post__in' => $subscriptions, 'posts_per_page' => 3 ) );

            while ( bbp_topics() ) : bbp_the_topic();

                bbp_get_template_part( 'loop' , 'single-sidebar-topic' );

            endwhile;
        else:
            printf( '<p>%s</p>', __( 'You haven't subscribed to any posts.' ) );
        endif;

        emusic_reset_bbp_query();

    endif; ?>

    <h4 class="sub-head">
        Favorites
        <a class="aux" href="<?php bbp_user_profile_url( get_current_user_id() ) ?>">view all</a>
    </h4>
    <span class="double-line-narrow"></span>
    <?php
    $favorites = bbp_get_user_favorites_topic_ids( get_current_user_id() );
    if ( !empty( $favorites ) ):
        emusic_set_bbp_query( 'bbp_user_profile_favorites', array( 'post__in' => $favorites, 'posts_per_page' => 3 ) );

        while ( bbp_topics() ) : bbp_the_topic();

            bbp_get_template_part( 'loop' , 'single-sidebar-topic' );

        endwhile;
    else:
        printf( '<p>%s</p>', __( 'You haven't favorited any posts.' ) );
    endif;

    emusic_reset_bbp_query();
?>
</div>
<?php endif ?>

<?php
$super_stickies = get_option( '_bbp_super_sticky_topics', array() );
if ( !empty( $super_stickies ) ): ?>
    <div class="meta-block">
        <h3>Featured Discussions</h3>
        <span class="double-line-narrow"></span>
        <?php
        emusic_set_bbp_query( 'bbp_super_stickies', array( 'post__in' => $super_stickies, 'posts_per_page' => 4 ) );

        while ( bbp_topics() ) : bbp_the_topic();

            bbp_get_template_part( 'loop' , 'single-sidebar-topic' );

        endwhile;
        ?>
    </div>
<?php endif ?>

Meta Queries like whoa

First of all, JJJ has done an awesome job making bbPress a plugin, and it is super sweet how seamlessly it integrates with everything else in WordPress. The two areas I would like to help make improvements in are 1) cache and non-persistent cache 2) Meta Query performance in WordPress as a whole. bbPress makes Meta Queries like (holy shit) whoa. For 99% of installs, who cares. For us, my current dataset is already 100s of 1000s of posts and 2-3 million rows of postmeta. A meta query basically says:

  • I need stuff from the posts table
  • I need stuff joined from the postmeta table
  • I have indexed columns in both
  • Fuck that noise, let’s join on an unindexable LONGTEXT column and pray for mercy

I wish meta_query never existed in WordPress. But it does, and bbPress sings its song throughout. I have a few ideas for reducing number of queries made and also splitting the query into 2, so that PHP can compare integers instead of trying to sort them as text in MySQL. I have done a lot of performance testing on meta_queries, and I actually ditched them in a few places for WP_Query because they do not scale out of the box.

But I’m not just gonna whine about it, I’m gonna try to contribute and I’ll report back when I do.

WordCamp NYC 2012: “Cloud, Cache, and Configs”

Here are the slides from my talk today:

I spoke for 40 minutes to a room full of people that had no idea what I was saying. Seriously.

Have any of you made a plugin before? Silence / crickets. Cool, well let me dive into scaling HTTP parallelization for 15 minutes…

Installing libmemcached on CentOS

I recently updated the Memcached WP Object Cache plugin to use the Memcached PHP extension – it currently uses the Memcache extension. My plugin is called Memcached Redux, and it’s delicious. The Memcached PHP extension implements methods from libmemcached, the C / C++ Memcached library.

Installing the extension on MacPorts is beyond easy:

port install php5-memached

Installing on Amazon EC2 instance running CentOS 5 is WAY more esoteric. I spent about 2 hours mucking around until I figured it out, so here it is (this assumes you are already using memcached and have libevent, libzlib, etc installed):

cd /etc/yum.repos.d/
wget http://rpms.famillecollet.com/remi-enterprise.repo
wget http://syslogserver.googlecode.com/files/epel-release-5-3.noarch.rpm
wget http://rpms.famillecollet.com/enterprise/remi-release-5.rpm
rpm -Uvh remi-release-5*.rpm epel-release-5*.rpm
yum --enablerepo=remi install libmemcached*
pecl install memcached

vi /etc/php.ini

// (under Dynamic Extensions) Add "extension=memcached.so":

extension=apc.so
extension=http.so
extension=memcache.so
extension=memcached.so

Servers have to be restarted – this has be done before code is deployed or the class won’t exist, which will cause a fatal error.

This process looks harmless, but I had to read 3.7 million blog posts before I found the right path forward.

Audio Redux + Updated Plugins

I had the pleasure recently of realizing that some of my plugins had disappeared from the WordPress dot org plugins repo because I haven’t updated them in 1.5ish years. Last year at WordCamp San Francisco, I used part of my talk to explain why plugins aren’t always awesome, and me not updating my own plugins is a great example of why. You might think to yourself, “Scott’s pretty good, I’m sure his plugins are awesome, I could probably get pregnant just by activating one of them!” To which I would reply: “If you are using my Movies plugin, I have absolutely no idea if it still works, and I’m sure every javascript library in it is 50-75 versions behind.”

So I am trying to right this wrong and update my code. Back in 2010, I was still under the impression that procedural programming was da bomb. Needless to say, the plugins should work a lot better now and will be maintained / are more maintainable.

Here are some of the plugins that are updated, along with their companion blog posts:

Minify
Plugin: http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/minify/
Blog Post: http://scotty-t.com/2012/05/24/minify-redux/

Shuffle
Plugin: http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/shuffle/
Blog Post: http://scotty-t.com/2010/11/15/my-first-plugin-shuffle/

Audio
Plugin: http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/audio/
Blog Post: http://scotty-t.com/2010/11/22/new-plugin-audio/

Audio is awesome, and here’s why:

  • WordPress doesn’t come packaged with an mp3 player
  • Your player can be styled 100% with CSS – (drop in a replacement: STYLESHEETPATH . ‘/audio.css’)
  • If you use Shuffle, you can attach .ogg files to your .mp3s, and they will be used in native HTML5 browsers that don’t natively support .mp3
  • If you use your own styles, you can style a playlist automatically, and with Shuffle, attach image(s) to each MP3

BOOM. I will try to be a better man in the future and keep my plugins bleeding edge.

xoxo