Extension:BetaFeatures/ko

The BetaFeatures extension allows other MediaWiki extensions to register beta features with the list of user preferences on the wiki. It uses the existing user preferences architecture and a few special pages to accomplish its function.

Using the new hooks in your extension
Using this extension to support your beta feature is easy. Register a hook of type "GetBetaFeaturePreferences" in your extension's main file - the syntax is almost identical to the GetPreferences hook, with small changes to support the type of preference we need in this case.

Then, you can use the convenience function provided by BetaFeatures to check whether the feature is enabled.

You can also use a normal preference check, but don't check against truthy or falsy values - use the values from the HTMLFeatureField class.

Because the BetaFeatures class should be present everywhere, you could use the convenience function in any hook, special page, or anything else you wanted. Just be aware of potential performance or caching issues you may introduce with those changes.

Advanced usage
Want to see something really cool?

Auto-enroll groups
With this example, we register a preference that's an "auto-enroll" one - if a user checks this, and new features come out that are in a particular group, the user will be automatically enrolled in those features.

Dependency management
Next up, we can actually define dependency management per-feature. To do this we first register the name of a hook that we want to use for this with the hook "GetBetaFeatureDependencyHooks", then we register a hook of that type that checks some dependency, and returns true if it's met or false if not.

You can abuse use this feature to do per-wiki disabling of features, if they're marked as dependent. But that sounds really hacky. You probably shouldn't. I can hear you thinking about it right now, just stop it.

Database stuff
There's a database table defined, and used, by BetaFeatures. But you might get confused by it if you try to use it locally.

We use the job queue to run updates for this table, when the cache expires (30 minutes TTL). If your wiki is configured to run jobs on each request, this will make about one request every 30 minutes reeeeeeally slow, but the rest will be relatively fast. If you configure your wiki to run jobs via cron, things will work much better.