Developer Overview
This is a quick developer introduction to Elgg. It covers the basic approach to working with Elgg as a framework, and mentions some of the terms and technologies used.
See the Developer Guides for tutorials or the Design Docs for in-depth discussion on design.
Database and Persistence
Elgg uses MySQL 5.7 or higher for data persistence, and maps database values into Entities (a representation of an atomic unit of information) and Extenders (additional information and descriptions about Entities). Elgg supports additional information such as relationships between Entities, activity streams, and various types of settings.
Plugins
Plugins change the behavior or appearance of Elgg by overriding views, or by handling events. All changes to an Elgg site should be implemented through plugins to ensure upgrading core is easy.
Actions
Actions are the primary way users interact with an Elgg site. Actions are registered by plugins.
Events
Events are used in Elgg Plugins to interact with the Elgg engine under certain circumstances. Events are triggered at strategic times throughout Elgg’s boot and execution process, and allows plugins to modify or cancel the default behavior.
Views
Views are the primary presentation layer for Elgg. Views can be overridden or extended by Plugins. Views are categories into a Viewtype, which hints at what sort of output should be expected by the view.
JavaScript
Elgg uses an AMD-compatible JavaScript system provided by RequireJs. Bundled with Elgg are jQuery, jQuery UI, jQuery Form, and jQuery UI Autocomplete.
Plugins can load their own JS libs.
Internationalization
Elgg’s interface supports multiple languages, and uses Transifex for translation.
Caching
Elgg uses two caches to improve performance: a system cache and SimpleCache.
3rd party libraries
The use of 3rd party libraries in Elgg is managed by using Composer dependencies. Examples of 3rd party libraries are jQuery, RequireJs or Laminas mail.
To get a list of all the Elgg dependencies check out the Packagist page for Elgg.
Database Seeding
Elgg provides some base database seeds to populate the database with entities for testing purposes.
You can run the following commands to seed and unseed the database.
# seed the database
vendor/bin/elgg-cli database:seed
# unseed the database
vendor/bin/elgg-cli database:unseed
Plugins can register their own seeds via 'seeds', 'database'
event. The handler must return the class name of the seed,
which must extend \Elgg\Database\Seeder\Seed
class.