> My first reaction when I read this was "You shouldn't" 😅...
* this was my first reaction as well; in many years of BD and Drupal dev I've never had occasion for this; so i'm curios as to what your use case is.
> Can I do this securely?
depends on a lot
what is the bash script doing? is just `ls` then prolly fine
who can access it; admin only; everyone?
> Can anyone point me at any existing sample code?
@bwpanda has shown how `drush` is doing it; should work in backdrop too, but it should be pointed out a `drush` user is a cli user and already has access to cli and bash scripting ... that is a big difference
> How would I do this?
the how is in the `drush` example.
Might be better to tell us about your use case and find an alternate method to what you are trying to accomplish.
But I agree with everyone else, however that gets called needs to be completely locked down. My off the cuff suggestion is to not have this in a module, but have it embedded into a page and use the normal roles/permissions to lock the page down. Basically KISS.
However, it's not clear to me that this is a good option and I understand the concerns.
We are currently experimenting with another option. We have set up a script that runs on periodic basis. Each time the script runs, it checks the database for a new request. If there is a new request for a specific action, it runs another script on the server to fulfill that request.
In this case, the script is only looking for specific values and if that specific value is present, it takes the action requested.
This seems like it's a lot safer. Any thoughts?
Happy to discuss the specifics with anyone in Zulip. :-)
Thanks, I wasn't aware of that. That goes back to D7 ways! I do like that these config files are JSONish, and so I can edit them easily by hand (for doing bulk substitution), which is painful in...
Hi @onyx. When you prepare your module files you can add the config for those views into the module folder under config. When someone installs the module then the config is copied into their...
Posted2 hours 42 min ago by Martin Price | System Horizons Ltd (yorkshirepudding) on:
@onyx - I do not have a good answer for you.
Remember, BackdropCMS now allows you to store all of your config in the database, if you prefer.
https://docs.backdropcms.org/change...
Thanks, I see! So you're trying the same method as I did. At the moment, I don't have ideas why it should fail on your site. Maybe have a look at the database log (admin/reports/dblog)?
Posted1 day 1 hour ago by Olaf Grabienski (Olafski) on:
Comments
Here's an example of Drush calling the `fix-permissions.sh` script: https://github.com/backdrop-contrib/drush/blob/2b439610d644a0d82f541b047...
You could use that as a basis for your hypothetical code.
My first reaction when I read this was "You shouldn't" 😅...
...but if you are to, then I would suggest to also pair it with a
user_access()
and/oruser_has_role()
check.If you want to run the script while not logged in, then I'd also add a token to the mix (see how the cron URL token works).
> My first reaction when I read this was "You shouldn't" 😅...
* this was my first reaction as well; in many years of BD and Drupal dev I've never had occasion for this; so i'm curios as to what your use case is.
Might be better to tell us about your use case and find an alternate method to what you are trying to accomplish.
Ignoring "If you should..."
A Backdrop module is just PHP, so, first result from Google:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/11052162/run-bash-command-from-php
# # #
But I agree with everyone else, however that gets called needs to be completely locked down. My off the cuff suggestion is to not have this in a module, but have it embedded into a page and use the normal roles/permissions to lock the page down. Basically KISS.
Best, Michael
I did some experimenting and was able to run a bash script located within the Drupal directory using the php function: https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.exec.php
However, it's not clear to me that this is a good option and I understand the concerns.
We are currently experimenting with another option. We have set up a script that runs on periodic basis. Each time the script runs, it checks the database for a new request. If there is a new request for a specific action, it runs another script on the server to fulfill that request.
In this case, the script is only looking for specific values and if that specific value is present, it takes the action requested.
This seems like it's a lot safer. Any thoughts?
Happy to discuss the specifics with anyone in Zulip. :-)