Раздел 11. Developer Documentation RU EN Пункт 218. Apache 2.x Hook Functions WarningThis document is still in development and may be partially out of date. In general, a hook function is one that the Apache HTTP Server will call at some point during the processing of a request. Modules can provide functions that are called, and specify when they get called in comparison to other modules. Core HooksThe httpd's core modules offer a predefinined list of hooks
used during the standard request processing
phase. Creating a new hook will expose a function that
implements it (see sections below) but it is essential to undestand that you will not
extend the httpd's core hooks. Their presence and order in the request processing is in fact
a consequence of how they are called in Reading guide for developing modules and request processing before proceeding is highly recomended. Creating a hook functionIn order to create a new hook, four things need to be done: Declare the hook functionUse the AP_DECLARE_HOOK(int, do_something, (request_rec *r, int n)) This should go in a header which modules will include if they want to use the hook. Create the hook structureEach source file that exports a hook has a private structure which is used to record the module functions that use the hook. This is declared as follows: APR_HOOK_STRUCT( APR_HOOK_LINK(do_something) ... ) Implement the hook callerThe source file that exports the hook has to implement a
function that will call the hook. There are currently three
possible ways to do this. In all cases, the calling function is
called Void hooksIf the return value of a hook is AP_IMPLEMENT_HOOK_VOID(do_something, (request_rec *r, int n), (r, n)) The second and third arguments are the dummy argument declaration and the dummy arguments as they will be used when calling the hook. In other words, this macro expands to something like this: void ap_run_do_something(request_rec *r, int n) { ... do_something(r, n); } Hooks that return a valueIf the hook returns a value, then it can either be run until the first hook that does something interesting, like so: AP_IMPLEMENT_HOOK_RUN_FIRST(int, do_something, (request_rec *r, int n), (r, n), DECLINED) The first hook that does not return Alternatively, all hooks can be run until an error occurs. This boils down to permitting two return values, one of which means "I did something, and it was OK" and the other meaning "I did nothing". The first function that returns a value other than one of those two stops the loop, and its return is the return value. Declare these like so: AP_IMPLEMENT_HOOK_RUN_ALL(int, do_something, (request_rec *r, int n), (r, n), OK, DECLINED) Again, Call the hook callersAt appropriate moments in the code, call the hook caller, like so: int n, ret; request_rec *r; ret=ap_run_do_something(r, n); Hooking the hookA module that wants a hook to be called needs to do two things. Implement the hook functionInclude the appropriate header, and define a static function of the correct type: static int my_something_doer(request_rec *r, int n) { ... return OK; } Add a hook registering functionDuring initialisation, the server will call each modules hook registering function, which is included in the module structure: static void my_register_hooks() { ap_hook_do_something(my_something_doer, NULL, NULL, APR_HOOK_MIDDLE); } mode MODULE_VAR_EXPORT my_module = { ... my_register_hooks /* register hooks */ }; Controlling hook calling orderIn the example above, we didn't use the three arguments in
the hook registration function that control calling order of
all the functions registered within the hook.
There are two mechanisms for doing this. The first, rather
crude, method, allows us to specify roughly where the hook is
run relative to other modules. The final argument control this.
There are three possible values: All modules using any particular value may be run in any
order relative to each other, but, of course, all modules using
Note that there are two more values,
The other method allows finer control. When a module knows that it must be run before (or after) some other modules, it can specify them by name. The second (third) argument is a NULL-terminated array of strings consisting of the names of modules that must be run before (after) the current module. For example, suppose we want "mod_xyz.c" and "mod_abc.c" to run before we do, then we'd hook as follows: static void register_hooks() { static const char * const aszPre[] = { "mod_xyz.c", "mod_abc.c", NULL }; ap_hook_do_something(my_something_doer, aszPre, NULL, APR_HOOK_MIDDLE); } Note that the sort used to achieve this is stable, so
ordering set by |