Drupal Online Tutorials

Drupal (/ˈdrpəl/) is a free and open-source web content management system (CMS) written in PHP and distributed under the GNU General Public License. Drupal provides an open-source back-end framework for at least 14% of the top 10,000 websites worldwide and 1.2% of the top 10 million websites—ranging from personal blogs to corporate, political, and government sites. Drupal can also be used for knowledge management and for business collaboration.

Drupal
Original author(s)Dries Buytaert
Developer(s)Drupal community
Initial releaseJanuary 15, 2001; 23 years ago (2001-01-15)
Stable release
11.0.9 Edit this on Wikidata / 22 November 2024; 27 days ago
RepositoryDrupal Repository
Written inPHP, using Symfony
Operating systemUnix-like, Windows
PlatformWeb platform
Size140 MB (uncompressed Drupal 9.1 core)
TypeContent management framework
Content management system
Blog software
Open-source
Knowledge management
LicenseGPL-2.0-or-later
Websitedrupal.org

As of March 2022, the Drupal community had more than 1.39 million members, including 124,000 users actively contributing, resulting in more than 50,000 free modules that extend and customize Drupal functionality, over 3,000 free themes that change the look and feel of Drupal, and at least 1,400 free distributions that allow users to quickly and easily set up a complex, use-specific Drupal in fewer steps.

The standard release of Drupal, known as Drupal core, contains basic features common to content-management systems. These include user account registration and maintenance, menu management, RSS feeds, taxonomy, page layout customization, and system administration. The Drupal core installation can serve as a simple website, a single- or multi-user blog, an Internet forum, or a community website providing for user-generated content.

Drupal also describes itself as a web application framework. When compared with notable frameworks, Drupal meets most of the generally accepted feature requirements for such web frameworks.

Although Drupal offers a sophisticated API for developers, basic Web-site installation and administration of the framework require no programming skills.

Drupal runs on any computing platform that supports both a web server capable of running PHP and a database to store content and configuration.

In 2023/2024, Drupal received over 250,000 Euros from Germany's Sovereign Tech Fund.

History

edit
Latest major and supported releases
Version Release date
Current stable version: 11.0.9 22 November 2024
Old version, yet still maintained: 10.3.1 4 July 2024
Old version, yet still maintained: 7.103 4 December 2024
Old version, no longer maintained: 9.5.11 September 20, 2023
Old version, no longer maintained: 8.9.20 December 17, 2021
Old version, no longer maintained: 6.38 February 24, 2016
Old version, no longer maintained: 5.23 August 11, 2010
Old version, no longer maintained: 4.7.11 January 10, 2008
Old version, no longer maintained: 3.0 September 15, 2001
Old version, no longer maintained: 2.0 March 15, 2001
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.0 January 15, 2001
Legend:
Old version, not maintained
Old version, still maintained
Latest version
Latest preview version
Future release
Legend:
Old version
Old version, still maintained
Latest version
Latest preview version
Future release

Drupal was originally written by Dries Buytaert as a message board for his friends to communicate in their dorms while working on his Master's degree at the University of Antwerp. After graduation, Buytaert moved the site to the public internet and named it Drop.org. Between 2003 and 2008 Dries Buytaert worked towards a PhD degree at Ghent University.

The name Drupal represents an English rendering of the Dutch word druppel, which means "drop" (as in a water droplet). The name came from the now-defunct Drop.org, whose code slowly evolved into Drupal. Buytaert wanted to call the site "dorp" (Dutch for "village") for its community aspects, but mistyped it when checking the domain name and thought the error sounded better.

Drupal became an open source project in 2001. Interest in Drupal got a significant boost in 2003 when it helped build "DeanSpace" for Howard Dean, one of the candidates in the U.S. Democratic Party's primary campaign for the 2004 U.S. presidential election. DeanSpace used open-source sharing of Drupal to support a decentralized network of approximately 50 disparate, unofficial pro-Dean websites that allowed users to communicate directly with one another as well as with the campaign. After Dean ended his campaign, members of his Web team continued to pursue their interest in developing a Web platform that could aid political activism by launching CivicSpace Labs in July 2004, "...the first company with full-time employees that was developing and distributing Drupal technology." Other companies began to also specialize in Drupal development.

By 2013, the Drupal website listed hundreds of vendors that offered Drupal-related services.

As of 2014, Drupal is developed by a community. From July 2007 to June 2008, the Drupal.org site provided more than 1.4 million downloads of Drupal software, an increase of approximately 125% from the previous year.

As of January 2017 more than 1,180,000 sites use Drupal. These include hundreds of well-known organizations, including corporations, media and publishing companies, governments, non-profits, schools, and individuals. Drupal has won several Packt Open Source CMS Awards and won the Webware 100 three times in a row.

Drupal 6 was released on February 13, 2008, on March 5, 2009, Buytaert announced a code freeze for Drupal 7 for September 1, 2009. Drupal 7 was released on January 5, 2011, with release parties in several countries. After that, maintenance on Drupal 5 stopped, with only Drupal 7 and Drupal 6 maintained.

Drupal 7's end-of-life was scheduled for November 2021, but given the impact of COVID-19, and the continuing wide usage, the end of life has been pushed back until November 1, 2023, to be reviewed annually. Drupal 7 end-of-life has been extended once more as of June 2023. It is now set for January 5, 2025. This is expected to be the final extension for Drupal 7.

In October 2022, Drupal released an open source headless CMS accelerator, allowing the front end to be managed outside of the core system.

Core

edit

In the Drupal community, "core" refers to the collaboratively built codebase that can be extended through contributory modules and—for versions prior to Drupal 8—is kept outside of the "sites" folder of a Drupal installation. (Starting with version 8, the core is kept in its own 'core' sub-directory.) Drupal core is the stock element of Drupal. Common Drupal-specific libraries, as well as the bootstrap process, are defined as Drupal core; all other functionality is defined as Drupal modules including the system module itself.

In a Drupal website's default configuration, authors can contribute content as either registered or anonymous users (at the discretion of the administrator). This content is accessible to web visitors through a variety of selectable criteria. As of Drupal 8, Drupal has adopted some Symfony libraries into Drupal core.

Core modules also include a hierarchical taxonomy system, which lets developers categorize content or tag with keywords for easier access.

Core modules

edit

Drupal core includes modules that can be enabled by the administrator to extend the functionality of the core website.

The core Drupal distribution provides a number of features, including:

  • Access statistics and logging
  • Advanced search
  • Books, comments, and forums
  • Caching, lazy-loading content (using BigPipe) and feature throttling for improved performance
  • Custom content type and fields, and user interface to create, manage, and display lists of content.
  • Descriptive URLs
  • Multi-level menu system
  • Multi-site support
  • Multi-user content creation and editing
  • RSS feed and feed aggregator
  • Security and new release update notification
  • User profiles
  • Various access control restrictions (user roles, IP addresses, email)
  • Workflow tools (triggers and actions)

Core themes

edit

Drupal includes core themes, which customize the "look and feel" of Drupal sites,[65] for example, Garland and Bartik.

The Color Module, introduced in Drupal core 5.0, allows administrators to change the color scheme of certain themes via a browser interface.[66]

Localization

edit

As of September 2022, Drupal is available in 100 languages including English (the default).[67][68] Support is included for right-to-left languages such as Arabic, Persian, and Hebrew.[69]

Drupal localization is built on top of gettext, the GNU internationalization and localization (i18n) library.

Auto-update notification

edit

Drupal can automatically notify the administrator about new versions of modules, themes, or the Drupal core.[69] It's important to update quickly after security updates are released.

Before updating it is highly recommended to take backup of core, modules, theme, files and database. If there is any error shown after update or if the new update is not compatible with a module, then it can be quickly replaced by a backup. There are several backup modules available in Drupal.

On 15 October 2014, an SQL injection vulnerability was announced and update was released.[70] Two weeks later the Drupal security team released an advisory explaining that everyone should act under the assumption that any site not updated within 7 hours of the announcement was compromised by automated attacks.[71] Thus, it can be extremely important to apply these updates quickly and usage of a tool like drush to make this process easier is highly recommended.

Database abstraction

edit

Prior to version 7, Drupal had functions that performed tasks related to databases, such as SQL query cleansing, multi-site table name prefixing, and generating proper SQL queries. In particular, Drupal 6 introduced an abstraction layer that allowed programmers to create SQL queries without writing SQL.

Drupal 9 extends the data abstraction layer so that a programmer no longer needs to write SQL queries as text strings. It uses PHP Data Objects to abstract the database. Microsoft has written a database driver for their SQL Server. Drupal 7 supports the file-based SQLite database engine, which is part of the standard PHP distribution.

Windows development

edit

With Drupal 9's new database abstraction layer, and ability to run on the Windows web server IIS, it is now easier for Windows developers to participate in the Drupal community.

A group on Drupal.org is dedicated to Windows issues.[72]

Accessibility

edit

Since the release of Drupal 7, Web accessibility has been constantly improving in the Drupal community.[73] Drupal is a good framework for building sites accessible to people with disabilities, because many of the best practices have been incorporated into Drupal Core.

Drupal 8 saw many improvements from the Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines (ATAG) 2.0 guidelines which support both an accessible authoring environment as well as support for authors to produce more accessible content.

The accessibility team is carrying on the work of identifying and resolving accessibility barriers and raising awareness within the community.

Drupal 8 has good semantic support for rich web applications through WAI-ARIA. There have been many improvements to both the visitor and administrator sides of Drupal, especially:

  • Drag and drop functionality
  • Improved color contrast and intensity
  • Adding skip navigation to core themes
  • Adding labels by default for input forms
  • Fixing CSS display:none with consistent methods for hiding and exposing text on focus
  • Adding support for ARIA Live Regions with Drupal.announce
  • Adding a TabbingManager to support better keyboard navigation[74]

The community also added an accessibility gate for core issues in Drupal 8.[75]

Extending the core

edit

Drupal core is modular, defining a system of hooks and callbacks, which are accessed internally via an API.[76] This design allows third-party contributed modules and themes to extend or override Drupal's default behaviors without changing Drupal core's code.

Drupal isolates core files from contributed modules and themes. This increases flexibility and security and allows administrators to cleanly upgrade to new releases without overwriting their site's customizations.[77] The Drupal community has the saying, "Never hack core," a strong recommendation that site developers do not change core files.[61]

Modules

edit

Contributed modules offer such additional or alternate features as image galleries, custom content types and content listings, WYSIWYG editors, private messaging, third-party integration tools,[78] integrating with BPM portals,[79] and more. As of December 2019 the Drupal website lists more than 44,000 free modules.[16]

Some of the most commonly used contributed modules include:[80]

  • Content Construction Kit (CCK): Allows site administrators to dynamically create content types by extending the database schema. "Content type" describes the kind of information. Content types include, but are not limited to, events, invitations, reviews, articles, and products. The CCK Fields API is in Drupal core in Drupal 7.[81][82]
  • Views: Facilitates the retrieval and presentation, through a database abstraction system, of content to site visitors. Basic views functionality has been added to core of Drupal 8.[83]
  • Panels: Drag and drop layout manager that allows site administrators to visually design their site.
  • Rules: Conditionally executed actions based on recurring events.
  • Features: Enables the capture and management of features (entities, views, fields, configuration, etc.) into custom modules.
  • Context: Allows the definition of sections of site where Drupal features can be conditionally activated
  • Media: Makes photo uploading and media management easier
  • Services: Provides an API for Drupal.

Themes

edit

As of December 2019, there are more than 2,800 free community-contributed themes.[17] Themes adapt or replace a Drupal site's default look and feel.

Drupal themes use standardized formats that may be generated by common third-party theme design engines. Many are written in the PHPTemplate engine[84] or, to a lesser extent, the XTemplate engine.[85] Some templates use hard-coded PHP. Drupal 8 and future versions of Drupal integrate the Twig templating engine.[86]

The inclusion of the PHPTemplate and XTemplate engines in Drupal addressed user concerns about flexibility and complexity.[87] The Drupal theming system utilizes a template engine to further separate HTML/CSS from PHP. A popular Drupal contributed module called 'Devel' provides GUI information to developers and themers about the page build.

Community-contributed themes on the Drupal website are released under a free GPL license.[88][89]

Distributions

edit

In the past, those wanting a fully customized installation of Drupal had to download a pre-tailored version separately from the official Drupal core. Today, however, a distribution defines a packaged version of Drupal that upon installation, provides a website or application built for a specific purpose.

The distributions offer the benefit of a new Drupal site without having to manually seek out and install third-party contributed modules or adjust configuration settings.[90] They are collections of modules, themes, and associated configuration settings that prepare Drupal for custom operation. For example, a distribution could configure Drupal as a "brochure" site rather than a news site or online store.

Architecture

edit

Drupal is based on the Presentation Abstraction Control architecture, or PAC.

The menu system acts as the Controller. It accepts input via a single source (HTTP GET and POST), routes requests to the appropriate helper functions, pulls data out of the Abstraction (nodes and, from Drupal 5 onwards, forms), and then pushes it through a filter to get a Presentation of it (the theme system).

It even has multiple, parallel PAC agents in the form of blocks that push data out to a common canvas (page.tpl.php).[91]

Community

edit

Drupal.org has a large community of users and developers who provide active community support by coming up with new updates to help improve the functionality of Drupal.[92] As of January 2017 more than 105,400 users are actively contributing.[15] The semiannual DrupalCon conference alternates between North America, Europe and Asia.[93] Attendance at DrupalCon grew from 500 at Szeged in August 2008, to over 3,700 people at Austin, Texas, in June 2014.

Smaller events, known as "Drupal Camps" or DrupalCamp, occur throughout the year all over the world.[94] The annual Florida DrupalCamp brings users together for Coding for a Cause that benefits a local nonprofit organization, as does the annual GLADCamp (Greater Los Angeles Drupal Camp) event, Coders with a Cause.

The Drupal community also organizes professional and semi-professional gatherings called meetups at numerous venues around the world.

There are over 30 national communities[95] around drupal.org offering language-specific support.

Media

edit

There are several Drupal specific forms of Media. The most popular is podcasts. DrupalEasy, TalkingDrupal and the Lullabot Podcast all have hundreds of episodes and thousands of regular listeners.

Recently, The Drop Times[96] has become a Drupal focused media outlet, highlighting stories of relevance to the Drupal community.

Users

edit

Notable Drupal users include:

  • NBC[97]
  • Taboola
  • Patch
  • We the People[98]
  • Oxford
  • NASA[99]
  • Nokia
  • European Commission
  • UNICEF[100]
  • Wish
  • Qualcomm[101]
  • AMD (Advanced Micro Devices)[101]
  • TSMC (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited)
  • Rainforest Alliance[102]
  • VISA
  • Olympic Games[100]
  • Smithsonian Institution[103]
  • Universal Music Group[103]
  • Pfizer[103]
  • Johnson & Johnson[103]
  • Princeton University[103]
  • Columbia University[103]

Security

edit

Drupal's policy is to announce the nature of each security vulnerability once the fix is released.[104][105]

Administrators of Drupal sites can be automatically notified of these new releases via the Update Status module (Drupal 6) or via the Update Manager (Drupal 7).[106]

Drupal maintains a security announcement mailing list, a history of all security advisories, a security team home page, and an RSS feed with the most recent security advisories.[107][108][109]

In mid-October 2014, Drupal issued a "highly critical" security advisory regarding an SQL injection bug in Drupal 7, also known as Drupageddon.[110][111][112] Downloading and installing an upgrade to Drupal 7.32 fixes the vulnerability, but does not remove any backdoor installed by hackers if the site has already been compromised.[113] Attacks began soon after the vulnerability was announced. According to the Drupal security team, where a site was not patched within hours of the announcement, it should be considered compromised and taken offline by being replaced with a static HTML page while the administrator of its server must be told that other sites on the same server may also have been compromised. To solve the problem, the site must be restored using backups from before October 15, be patched and manually updated, and anything merged from the site must be audited.[114]

In late March 2018, a patch for vulnerability CVE-2018-7600, also dubbed Drupalgeddon2, was released. The underlying bug allows remote attackers without special roles or permissions to take complete control of Drupal 6, 7, and 8 sites.[115][116] Drupal 6 reached end-of-life on February 24, 2016, and does not get official security updates (extended support is available from two paid Long Term Services Vendors).[117] Starting early April, large scale automated attacks against vulnerable sites were observed, and on April 20, a high level of penetration of unpatched sites was reported.[118]

On December 23, 2019, Drupal patched an arbitrary file upload flaw. The file-upload flaw affects Drupal 8.8.x before 8.8.1 and 8.7.x before 8.7.11, and the vulnerability is listed as moderately critical by Drupal.[119][120]

In September 2022, Drupal announced two security advisories for a severe vulnerability in Twig for users of Drupal 9.3 and 9.4.[121] That week, Drupal also announced a patch for the S3 File System to fix an access bypass issue.[86]

In January 2023, Drupal announced software updates to resolve four vulnerabilities in Drupal core and three plugins.[122]

Headless Future

edit

Drupal's future direction is increasingly embracing a headless CMS architecture, transforming the landscape of content management systems. This approach decouples the frontend (presentation and publishing) from the backend (content), allowing for greater flexibility and innovation in content delivery. Notably, Drupal, a long-time competitor to WordPress, has invested significantly in this headless approach. Drupal creator Dries Buytaert has discussed Acquia's new open-source headless starter kit, which is integral to the Drupal-based Acquia CMS. This kit enables organizations to deliver content beyond traditional web browsers, catering to a range of digital mediums like digital signage, wearable devices, chatbots, mobile applications, and kiosks.[123]

See also

edit
  • Backdrop CMS Drupal 2013 fork
  • Comparison of web frameworks
  • List of content management systems

References

edit

Further reading

edit
  • Abbott/Jones (2016), Learning Drupal 8, England, Packt Publishing. ISBN 978-1-78216-875-1
  • Pol, Kristen (2012). Drupal 7 Multilingual Sites. Birmingham, England: Packt Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84951-818-5.
  • Mercer, David (2010). Drupal 7. Birmingham, England: Packt Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84951-286-2.
  • Travis, Brian (2011). Pro Drupal 7 for Windows Developers. Berkeley: APress. ISBN 978-1-4302-3153-0.
  • Butcher, Matt; Larry Garfield; John Wilkins; Matt Farina; Ken Rickard; Greg Dunlap (2010). Drupal 7 Module Development. Birmingham, England: Packt Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84951-116-2.
  • Bhavin, Patel (Aug 2010). Drupal 6 Panel Cookbook. Canada: Packt Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84951-118-6.
  • Beighley, Lynn (2009). Drupal for Dummies. New York: For Dummies. ISBN 978-0-470-55611-5.
  • Herremans, D. (2009). Drupal 6: Ultimate Community Site Guide. Switzerland. ISBN 978-2-8399-0490-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Peacock, Michael (2008). Selling Online with Drupal e-Commerce. Birmingham, England: Packt Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84719-406-0.
  • VanDyk, John K. (2008). Pro Drupal Development, Second Edition. New York: Springer Verlag/Apress. ISBN 978-1-4302-0989-8.
  • Kafer, Konstantin; Emma Hogbin (Apr 2009). Front End Drupal: Designing, Theming, Scripting. Jersey, USA: Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-713669-8.
edit
  • Official website